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View Full Version : Sammy Lee - next for the chop?


Edmund Blackwater
12-10-2007, 06:28 PM
http://football.guardian.co .uk/News_Story/0,,2189221,00.html

Sammy Lee's position at Bolton Wanderers was looking increasingly fragile last night as the club's board contemplated the repercussions of his falling-out with Gary Speed. Phil Gartside, the Bolton chairman, was deeply unimpressed that Lee had alienated a consummate professional such as Speed and that concern was shared by the club's owner, Eddie Davies.Speed relinquished his duties as first-team coach yesterday after a series of arguments culminated in him being left out of the squad, along with the captain Kevin Nolan, for Sunday's 1-0 defeat against Chelsea. Lee is now facing something approaching mutiny among his players, many of whom sympathise with Speed, and Nolan, and have expressed their concerns to an exasperated Gartside. The chairman in turn has spoken to Davies about how much longer they should give a manager who has taken only five points from nine Premier League games.

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Everyone associated with Bolton is entitled to fear the worst in their next game, against Arsenal at the Emirates Stadium tomorrow week, but Gartside is looking to the game against Aston Villa on October 28 as the one to determine whether Lee is sacked.Lee can hardly complain after winning only one league game since replacing Sam Allardyce towards the end of last season. The feeling within the dressing room is that he had begun to see Speed as a "threat". Sources close to the midfielder have gone as far as calling Lee "insecure and paranoid".
Speed had recently agreed, but not signed, a new contract which would have made him assistant manager, but he has been sceptical about Lee ever since the manager's appointment. Although Bolton claimed, somewhat disingenuously, that Speed had been "relieved of his coaching responsibilities", the decision was very much his own, in protest at Lee's management. "I decided it wasn't working out," he said. "It is up to me now to work hard, get back in the team and give 100%, as I always do."
Increasingly flustered in interviews and sensitive to any form of criticism, Lee is upset by several leaks from inside the club, describing them as "malignant rumours emanating from the dressingroom". One story is of senior players refusing to do interviews after the defeat to Birmingham City last month because they did not want to offer Lee their backing.
"Who are these people?" Lee demanded to know last night. "It's time for these 'senior sources' to stand up and be counted. I know it's not everybody, but I'd like those one or two to come and knock on my door."
He added: "I hear things about my methods but I've been with these lads for two years and I've been at the FA and with Liverpool. All I'm trying to do is make sure we can compete on all fronts. It's bitterly disappointing these things are leaking out. People are trying to undermine what we are trying to do."

ebenezer
12-10-2007, 06:52 PM
Maybe if he took that stupid ear-piece off and ignored his mole in the stand.

koka noodle
13-10-2007, 12:39 AM
he should have been sacked ages ago. his optimism in post match interviews was sickening. he took positives from everything, especially when they were just plain dire.

stevetharlear
13-10-2007, 01:22 AM
In fairness, he wasn't expected to last, bad move by the Bolton board by not bringing a highly respected coach in.

big Sam, like him or loathe him had a way to get through to big players, they wouldn't have come there otherwise.
Feel sad for Sammy though, I'm sure he's a great behind the scenes man.

M&M
13-10-2007, 01:55 AM
he should have been sacked ages ago. his optimism in post match interviews was sickening. he took positives from everything, especially when they were just plain dire.

First off... it wasn't possible to fire him "ages" ago, he's not in charge that long.

Second... Every manager will defend their players to the hilt after games. It's extremely rare for a manager to come out and say "yeah we were complete shit tonight". That's not to say he doesn't think the worst. But you don't portray any kind of weakness, frustration or conflict to the media.

koka noodle
13-10-2007, 02:00 AM
First off... it wasn't possible to fire him "ages" ago, he's not in charge that long.

Second... Every manager will defend their players to the hilt after games. It's extremely rare for a manager to come out and say "yeah we were complete shit tonight". That's not to say he doesn't think the worst. But you don't portray any kind of weakness, frustration or conflict to the media.

first off he has been there too long. even if its only been a few months. secondly a bit of honesty sometimes cross across better. moyes is one for it.

M&M
13-10-2007, 02:08 AM
first off he has been there too long. even if its only been a few months. secondly a bit of honesty sometimes cross across better. moyes is one for it.

Yeah, 6 months is an awfully long time all the same.

What any manager says to the media is a complete front. Look at Benitez "we create chances, we control the game". That's all he says, you could actually record one interview and play it over and over again. Just because that's what he's saying to the media doesn't mean that's what he's thinking.

ebenezer
13-10-2007, 11:41 AM
Yeah, I would love managers to come out and say ''we were poor today'' but it happens rarely. Our manager could find positives in a 47-0 defeat.