Everyone Knows Better Than the Guy Getting Paid
The guy at the end of the bar was explaining to nobody in particular why Tottenham sacked their manager. He had theories. Everyone has theories. That’s the beautiful thing about football — eight billion people on this planet and every last one of them knows better than the guy getting paid to do it.
Thirty-one managerial changes this season across the English football pyramid. Thirty-one men shown the door, handed a check, told their vision wasn’t quite right. Forty-eight of the ninety-two current managers have been in their job for less than twelve months. My last landlord gave me more time than that, and he hated my guts.
The smart clubs use data now. Liverpool, when they knew Klopp was leaving, ran the numbers. Internal testing. They wanted someone whose teams moved the same way — dynamic, high-energy, the kind of football that makes you spill your beer. They found Arne Slott at Feyenoord. The spreadsheet liked him. It worked.
Brighton’s chairman keeps a list of potential replacements ready the moment he hires someone. You haven’t even hung your coat up and there’s already a folder somewhere with your successor’s name in it. That’s not paranoia. That’s English football.
And then there’s Leicester. They used to be smart about this too. Identified Brendan Rodgers through careful analysis, did everything by the book. Then Rodgers left and they lost their minds. Six managers in three years, each one contradicting the philosophy of the last. They interviewed a pragmatist who’d sooner eat glass than play possession football during the same process that ended with them hiring a possession coach. The data, apparently, was not consulted for that one.
Manchester United built a six-man shortlist, ran models, crunched numbers — and then hired someone who wasn’t on the list because agents kept whispering his name. Word of mouth. The oldest technology in human history, and it still beats the algorithm when someone important enough says the right words in the right ear.
I knew a foreman at a factory once, back when I was still sorting mail and losing arguments with my liver. Worst resume you’ve ever seen. Couldn’t spell his own name without a running start. But when he walked onto the floor and told you to do something, you did it. Not because he’d fire you — the man couldn’t figure out the paperwork for that. You did it because something in his voice made you believe the work mattered. That whatever pointless thing you were building at three in the morning actually meant something, because he said it did.
You can’t put that in a database. You can’t run regression analysis on whatever lived behind that man’s eyes when the shift ran clean. It’s not a metric. It’s not a data point. It’s the thing that separates a manager from a man with a clipboard.
That’s what gets me about all of this. Not the data itself — the data is fine, the data is just numbers trying to describe something that resists description. It’s the belief that you can reduce leadership to a spreadsheet. That you can quantify the thing that makes a group of overpaid athletes run through a wall for someone.
Down at Port Vale, they were sinking. Sixteenth in League Two, every metric pointing toward relegation. The director of football didn’t want a data-driven appointment. He wanted what he called a “hearts and minds” manager. Someone who could walk into a broken dressing room and make twenty-five men believe they weren’t as bad as the table said. They found their guy. It worked. Then the club needed something different, so they brought in a development coach. Then that stopped working, so they went traditional. Then the director himself got the boot.
The wheel keeps turning. That’s the part nobody puts in the presentation.
The longest-serving manager in the top four divisions of English football has been at his club since 2009. Led them from the sixth tier to the Football League. His secret? His dad owns the place. Sometimes the algorithm is just nepotism with better lighting.
Someone pointed out that sporting directors in England don’t really work because the manager holds all the power. In Germany, in France, the sporting director sits on the bench, gives the interviews, takes the heat. In England, you hire one man and make him responsible for tactics, training, recruitment, sports science, media relations, player development, and keeping the billionaire owner from having a tantrum. Then you give him eleven months and act shocked when it falls apart.
The data can tell you who plays possession football and who doesn’t. It can tell you whose teams stay healthy, whose players improve, whose results outperform their talent. What it can’t tell you is what happens when the star striker’s wife leaves him and he can’t find the net for three months. What it can’t tell you is whether the new man will look the owner in the eye and say your transfer target is garbage. What it can’t tell you is whether sixty thousand people will sing his name or turn on him the first time it rains and the team loses at home.
The human stuff. The stuff that actually decides it.
I finished my drink and looked back at the guy at the end of the bar. Still going. Still explaining what went wrong, what should happen next, who they should hire.
Everyone’s got the answers. Until they’re the one who has to make the call.
Source: How clubs recruit new managers: Data analysis, recruitment consultants or old-school word of mouth?