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Recent headlines and news,Premier league, champions league, European and world football football news.
The early betting showcased the ignorance of bookmakers about the club marooned at the bottom of the Premier League table. Sam Allardyce? David Moyes? No chance. This is not a team in need of a firefighter; this is a team in need of a firestarter.
Not even the most optimistic of fans believes the Terriers can stay in the Premier League this season – there will be no third miracle – so there is no logic in appointing a survival specialist. We do not even expect to go down fighting…simply to go down with a little more joy in our hearts.
As David Wagner grew more and more exhausted during an eight-game losing streak, so did the fans. Only a ridiculous few blamed the manager for failing to complete a hat-trick of triumphs at least as impressive as the Herbert Chapman-inspired treble of titles almost a century ago, but there was a collective weariness. The only thing worse than losing eight games in a row is losing eight games in a row while scoring just five goals. That eight-game run being ended by a 0-0 draw at Cardiff that featured just two shots on target seems incredibly apt for a season in which Town’s relative defensive solidity (five teams have conceded more goals) has not compensated for a chronic lack of creativity and desperate dearth of firepower.
This is not a team in need of ‘shoring up’; it would not benefit from going ‘back to basics’. There is a reason why Allardyce immediately declared the job to be too difficult. Having donned his firefighter’s uniform to rescue a cat from a tree at Everton, he would have arrived at Huddersfield to find no fire at all. What Town need is a man with matches, not water. The fans need awakening from their torpor with goals and just enough excitement to spark some optimism for next season – to draw games 3-3 instead of 0-0, even to lose 4-3 rather than 1-0. Could another manager spark something in Adama Diakhaby or Isaac Mbenza or Alex Pritchard? Could another manager find a way to service Steve Mounie? Not enough to stay up – that really does seem impossible – but to make the remainder of the season something other than a funeral march.
When Derby were relegated in 2008 with that pathetic points total, their final 16 games of the season brought just four draws and a depressing ten goals. Even after some serious summer restructuring, there was little surprise when the following season began with a 1-0 home defeat to Doncaster and never really improved; they finished 18th and it would be another five years before the club would regain a little spring in its step. To avoid a similar extended comedown, Huddersfield’s next managerial appointment really matters. Think Rafa Benitez at Newcastle in 2016. Despite relegation and despite a faith-sapping owner, the fans were smiling that summer. They bounced straight back.
No coaches of Benitez’s calibre will be attracted to Huddersfield but there is one stand-out name among the candidates – Slavisa Jokanovic. His Fulham side beat Huddersfield by an aggregate score of 9-1 in Town’s promotion season and his brand of possession-based attacking football could suit a squad moulded by Wagner. He has twice taken teams into the Premier League and been outscored only by the champions, while in 2016/17 his Fulham ended the season just one point behind Wagner’s Terriers but with a ridiculous 29 more goals.
It sounds a little perverse for the club in 20th to covet the manager who was sacked by the team in 19th, but this is no ordinary club – we have already proved that by emotionally mourning the departure of the hero who left us marooned at the bottom.
Sarah Winterburn