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Rodgers - a case for the defence

Yesterday's announcement was unexpected. Not because it was undeserved, but because most of us Leicester fans expected Top to stick rather than twist. To keep with his man, to keep trusting the process, to continue to do the same thing but magically expect a different result - the very definition of insanity.

We will no doubt be lambasted by the media and opposition fans alike. We mercilessly dispensed with Ranieri after he guided us to the Premier League title, and now we're at it again, showing no appreciation for the man who gave us our first ever FA Cup win. And we will respond as one. What do you know? Have you seen the last 12 months? He was taking us down. Brendan is only in it for himself.

But does the media have a point? Are the opposition fans right to criticise?

Will we come to look back on the Brendan Years through blue-tinted spectacles?

Purely on statistics, his record stands up. Two top 5 finishes in the PL plus an 8th place finish; that FA Cup win; a Community Shield win; a semi-final appearance in the Europa Conference. By most conventional metrics he is one of the best, if not the best, manager in the history of the club.

On a personal level, I was one of the lucky 20,000 in the covid-era attendance at Wembley for the 2021 Cup Final, and I will never forget the pride I felt at seeing my team lift the famous old trophy. I am old enough (just) to have been alive when we last reached a final in 1969, and the cup means so much to my generation. Winning the Premier League and the FA Cup in my lifetime is more than I ever dreamt of - as a Leicester fan, I almost feel like my work is done!

Last season I visited Eindhoven and celebrated joyously with 5,000 other City fans as we won the Conference League QF. I went on to Rome for the SF and had a brilliant few days in Italy. I was ready for the final in Albania, but it wasn't to be.

Some of the football under Brendan has been a joy to watch. He came to the club with a blueprint honed at Liverpool and Celtic. He set up his teams to play out from the back, to dominate possession and to score goals. Having watched some truly miserable Leicester teams over the years under the stewardship of Dave Bassett, Gary Megson, and numerous others, it was a pleasure to watch good, quality, on-the-ground football. At least for 2 or 3 years.

It would however, be disingenuous to claim Rodgers' tenure has not been without its problems.

He was brought in to do a job - to challenge for the European places on a consistent basis, and he was promised the funds to do this. He was provided with a world-class £100m training facility; our best players were retained with top PL wages; millions were spent on new talent. And for 2 to 3 years he delivered.

So what went wrong?

In short - Covid and poor leadership.

He was dealt a very poor hand by his Chairman. Covid delivered a wrecking ball to the finances of the King Power Group. A business firmly entrenched in the travel and hospitality market, it suffered through the pandemic and lost 2/3 of its £4.5bn valuation in 2 years. Tough times call for tough and decisive leaders and unfortunately our owner and chairman, Top, has been found wanting.

I will always be grateful to Top and his late father, Vishai, for leading our club to glories I never imagined would be ours. Mid-table obscurity was as much as most Leicester fans could hope for. Winning the league? The FA Cup? Not for the likes of us.

But whilst it pains me to say it, Top has let us down in the last 12 months. He should have stood up in Jan 22 and told us all - manager, players, fans - that his finances were in a mess, and consequently the club's finances were too. That his dream of European football was on hold. That this was a time to pull together, to hunker down, and fight for our very Premier League lives. That players would be sold, that incoming talent would be limited. That Brendan had been sold one dream but would now have to manage another - the nightmare that the pandemic had created. But he didn't, at least not publicly. He kept silent, and he let Brendan release the bad news through a series of increasingly frustrated and seemingly ungrateful press conferences. Good businesses have leaders at every level and from Vishai at the top to Schmeichel on the pitch we have lost the best of ours.

In the last 12 months Brendan has been dealt a poor hand, and he failed. He failed to act like a Leader. He failed to keep on board those who could have helped him (notably Schmeichel). He failed to motivate the players at his disposal and outrightly alienated several. He failed to communicate with the fans. His time was up. No argument from me.

Is he a bad manager? No, his record speaks for itself. He was put in a difficult situation and dealt with it badly, in the last few months very badly.

But, for this Leicester fan, he will always be remembered fondly through blue tinted spectacles for the good times.

posted on 3/4/23

Where do Leicester turn now? Potter?

posted on 3/4/23

You make some very valid points, FFS.

There have certainly been some good moments during the Rodgers reign. The football we played in the first 12 months of his tenure was, for the most part, fantastic. The way in which we played our game at ease and tore teams apart was joyous and the closest we have got to reliving the 15-16 season. And, of course, the FA Cup win was something that we had waited for so long to enjoy - he deserves credit for that.

I also agree that he is not the only culprit responsible for our decline. The financial situation at the club has been allowed to fester and get out of control, leading us to nearly breaching FFP. Yes, some of that is due to COVID and it's impact on KP, but the contract situation and devaluing of many key assets is something that was avoidable. The 2021 summer window was a disaster and the squad did need a refresh - Top's failure to manage expectations and tell us fans the truth about our financial situation sooner left us all thinking we would get a refresh that never game. If Rodgers was promised something that was not delivered on, he has a right to feel aggrieved.

This, I'm afraid, is where my sympathy for Rodgers ends. Over the past 18 months, he has led the club on an accelerated decline that leaves us on the brink of relegation. He has failed to get the best out of what is at his disposal and most players in the squad have regressed massively. His behaviour since last summer and selfish attempts to protect his own brand at the expense of club unity and has played a massive part in our slide towards the bottom of the league. He has talked down the players at every attempt, destroying their confidence and hiding his own inadequacies behind blaming everyone and everything else. His poor management and terrible tactics have just amplified all the bad things he has done off the pitch. As good as the first year or two were, the last 18 months have been disastrous and a warning to other clubs about the dangers of keeping a manager due to misplaced loyalty when they have clocked out and are in self preservation mode.

Is he a bad manager? No. But he's not as good as his travelling circus of sycophants in the media would like people to believe. He will do fine for a season or two and play some good football, but then he will destroy things when someone says no to him. One of the biggest barometers of judging a manager is whether they leave the club in a better position than what they inherited. For all the good football we played early in his tenure and the successful FA Cup and Community Shield wins, I don't think anyone can say he leaves us in a better place now than we were in 2019.

Will history be kind to him? I suspect the next 10 games will decide that. Stay up and people will emphasize the good parts of his reign over the negative. Go down and I suspect he'll join Peter Taylor in the chapter entitled 'managers who destroyed the football club'. Time will tell.

My overwhelming emotion today is relief. Relief that we no longer have to care what Brendan Rodgers does or says. Relief that the destructive last few months have been brought to an end, albeit several months too late. Relief that we now have a chance of survival when before there was none. I am happy that he has gone, and happy to have some hope and optimism again at long last.

comment by Silver (U6112)

posted on 3/4/23

Remains to be seen the outcome but to expect the coach to be CEO of the football club and parent group as well as 24/7 head of football operations was probably a stretch. The correlation of finishing position and spend in the EPL is pretty much a straight line. Always has, always will. A different manager may have managed a slightly better or worse end placing but the fundamentals were there for the inevitable relegation. A hope might be huge contact clauses in that event that reduces the outgoings.

posted on 3/4/23

Rodgers was at the end of his shelf life at Leicester a year or more ago. If he had went then his reputation would have been enhanced but not now. He's a guy that has always been able to coach a team to play good football but has struggled to keep his players on board longer term.

He could go to Spurs now and do well for 2 seasons and the same would happen which is why they will probably give him a miss. It's been his cycle at every team.

Leicester would do well to avoid Potter. His replacement did better than him, both of them have been lucky that Brighton are an extremely well run club that would make most competent managers looks like good ones.

posted on 3/4/23

We'll settle for a competent manager now thanks very much.

posted on 3/4/23

I'd wager Potter employed now would take Leicester down.

posted on 3/4/23

It’s a really good balanced assessment FFS. I personally don’t think the reason the club finances are in a mess is because of Covid though. There’s no doubt that’s impacted all football owners but FFP and poor planning are the driving factors behind our financial nightmare- not Covid.

FFP restricts football clubs outside of the top 6 who can’t rely on massive commercial sponsorship deals and global merchandise revenue. FFP means Top can’t just put his hand in and bail us out any time he likes - our wages to turnover revenue needs to fit within a certain ratio. That means a club like us has to earn money from European football qualification or cut its cloth accordingly. We didn’t do the last bit

After the failure to secure CL football in May 2021 (where all our troubles started), Top took a ludicrous gamble in breaking the financial model of selling a high profile asset and went on a net spend drive with high wages that meant we HAD to get European football last season to pay for it. We didn’t.

What we now have is the result of that stupidity - unable to spend money because we’re stuck with bang average players on massive wages - some of which we will lose for nothing cos we haven’t managed their contracts. On top of that we have created a situation where players don’t see their long term futures here and thus don’t care. It’s a perfect storm for relegation. We are in deep deep trouble and that’s not down to Covid

posted on 3/4/23

I personally don’t think the reason the club finances are in a mess is because of Covid though. There’s no doubt that’s impacted all football owners but FFP and poor planning are the driving factors behind our financial nightmare- not Covid
___________________________________________

I think the cause of the financial melt-down is nuanced 99. Covid has undoubtedly impacted our owners more than some, but the lack of leadership, the poor communication and the apparent inability to plan and execute the plan has seriously affected performance at all levels throughout the club.

As you say, Top gambled on European football and he lost. Instead of standing up and being counted and dealing with the issue head-on, he buried his head in the sand and hoped Rodgers would reach the oasis of PL safety. Unfortunately, it all appears to have been a mirage.

Leading in adversity is a challenge and one that neither Top nor Brendan have risen to with any degree of competency.

posted on 3/4/23

Yeah I totally agree with that - they are both devoid of leadership qualities

posted on 4/4/23

In regard to the original post, Rodgers has tarnished his record with his self-serving antics over the last year or so, so much so that I wanted him gone, which is an unusual position for me to take. He undoubtedly had to deal with a difficult financial situation that the club got itself into and consequent lack of transfers to support him but he has not covered himself in glory recently for sure.

One of the main reasons for me normally backing our managers is I don't like the idea that the Board panics and removes them without having a proper plan in place. Unfortunately they have done exactly that, it couldn't have been much worse. The signs have been there all season, they should have acted on 18 September after the Spurs debacle with us bottom of the League, having harvested only 1 point from the opening 7 games we were always likely to have a difficult season. We would probably have had Dyche in charge from that point and be comfortably mid-table by now.

Strangely, having waited all season for Rodgers to get the boot, which I would have been very happy with, once it became apparent that it was not going to happen I'd changed my mind and wanted him to see it out until after May when he could have been replaced.

The rationale here of course being that we had got to the stage where a new manager would simply not have enough time to make a difference. So in my view getting rid of him with less than 2 months and only 10 games to go is a crazy way to go about things. We're obviously stuck with it now so need to get behind the team from here on. I suspect it may be quiet tonight though once we go behind - here's hoping I'm wrong on both counts!

Having indicated my displeasure at Brendan over the last year or so, there is no doubt that he gave us an incredible period of success for a couple of years. For getting us a first FA Cup win alone he will get legend status.

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