Thursday, May 23, 2019

By Tim Sigsworth
With Tony Pulis’ time as Boro manager well and truly over, speculation over who will be next to take to the Riverside hotseat has been running rife in the papers and on social media.
Despite the well-proven likes of Slavisa Jokanovic, Chris Hughton and Nigel Pearson (along with the less well-proven Gabriel Batistuta) attracting considerable attention from fans, journalists and bookmakers alike at varying points, Jonathan Woodgate has emerged as the consistent frontrunner for the role.
However, from the ever-confrontational Boro Twitter to the reactionary war-zone that is the Gazette’s comment section, this development has been met with widespread condemnation from many and derisory abuse from a minority.
Legitimate, reasoned criticisms of the potential appointment generally involve his history with the club and the current squad, his lack of previous managerial experience and his perceived style of play.
Negative interpretations of these three topics have dominated the discourse surrounding Woodgate and are what I will seek to counter, along with some elements of misinformation, in this article. Whether you agree with my opinions or not, I hope you recognise that my intention is to widen the conversation, not mock or disregard those who hold reasoned opinions to the contrary.
Improper Working Relationships and Jobs for the Boys
Woodgate’s previous coaching experience involves being a first-team coach under both Steve Agnew (one month) and Tony Pulis (seventeen months) and an assistant manager to Mark Tinkler with Boro’s U18s (four months). As such, he has spent the entirety of his professional coaching career at Rockcliffe Park.
Furthermore, several current squad members – Dimi, George Friend, Dael Fry, Daniel Ayala, Adam Clayton and Stewart Downing – are his former teammates, whilst the latter’ sister is Woodgate’s wife.
These circumstances have led to some arguing that Woodgate would be unable to maintain an effective working relationship as manager due to his close relationships with former teammates and with Boro’s top brass, who were likely important in securing the only coaching positions the now 39-year-old has ever held.
However, although his position as first-team coach probably involves more informal interactions with players than the position of manager would, it nevertheless requires a certain level of seniority and authority which, after seventeen months in the role, will be well-affirmed.
Moreover, his position within the Boro squad during the final years of his playing career was a senior one, with his experience at the top-level of the game and his captaincy of the club granting him a position of relative power, influence and respect among his teammates which would be conducive to the emergence of trust in and support for him as a manager.
It is not as if he is transitioning from player to manager in the same overnight way that Gareth Southgate did to ill-effect in 2006.
Accusations of matey-ness with those who would become his players therefore appear wide of the mark, especially given Stewart Downing’s inevitable departure at the end of this season and that leadership does not always have to be authoritarian. Rather, his relationship with the squad seems to me to be a factor in his favour – he possesses intimate knowledge of a squad which respects him as a figure of authority.
Similarly, his established relationship with the club also seems to me to be a positive.
Born and bred on Teesside and raised as a Boro fan, Woodgate not only understands the area, its people and the importance of enjoyable football to it but also, thanks to his experience within the club and its academy, the club’s philosophy, its ethos and the need to build on Pulis’ unifying internal reforms to create a long-term plan facilitative of a pathway from the academy to the first-team and indicative of the club’s long history in that regard.
His potential appointment would not be one borne out of the Hurworth Hierarchy’s supposed affinity for ‘jobs for the boys’, but one borne out of suitability.
Why should he get the job? Who’s he managed before?
Fair enough. Woodgate has never held a managerial position before. Although he took charge of Boro’s first team for friendlies against Rochdale and Hartlepool United last summer and, as explored above, is well-versed in the workings of MFC, that doesn’t make for the best reading.
Nevertheless, there are plenty of examples of inexperienced managers being successful from both the club’s history and the modern game.
Jack Charlton, Bryan Robson and Gareth Southgate all transitioned from players to successful Middlesbrough managers (less so in Southgate’s case) without any of the coaching experience that Woody boasts, whilst Steve McClaren and Aitor Karanka had spent more time coaching at a higher-level than Woodgate but had never managed before achieving success as first-time managers with Boro.
More recently, Lee Bowyer at Charlton Athletic, Graham Potter at Östersunds FK and Garry Monk at Swansea City have all achieved relative success without previous managerial or, in some cases, even coaching experience, let alone the playing career that Woodgate has had and the managers he has played for.
Woodgate also has experience as a scout, having worked as one for Liverpool in Spain and Portugal from the summer of 2016 to spring 2017. With experience in talent identification in two nations which a cost-effective recruitment strategy would inevitably look to exploit, this appears to suit the reformed, rough diamond-focused transfer policy which Boro look to be heading towards.
Accordingly, his experience as a coach, a scout and a top-level player lends itself to the potential for success, whilst similarly or less experienced managers have been successful at Boro and in the modern game before. As such, managerial experience isn’t the be all and end all in Woody’s case – although it obviously does help.
We’re sick of shite football, why would we want Pulis 2.0?
Another argument doing the rounds has been an assumption that because Woodgate has spent the vast majority of his coaching career working with Pulis, he will look to play the same torrid football that Boro’s supporters grew to despise last season.
Irrespective of him being in tune with supporter desires as a Boro lad and having spent time working as a coach in Boro’s possession-favouring academy and as a scout for Jurgen Klopp’s far-from-defensive Liverpool side, statements from Woodgate and those close to him contradict the assertion that he would be a Pulis 2.0.
On BBC Tees last Friday (17/05/19) Neil Maddison, a former Boro midfielder and current player liaison officer at the club, commented on the Woodgate speculation and dismissed claims that his relationship with Pulis would leave him inclined to play a safety-first, Pulis-esque style of football.
“Working under Tony Pulis, it's the manager's head on the block, you might say, 'I think you're wrong gaffer', but it's the manager's head on the chopping block and he'll go the way he thinks.
"I've talked to Woody a few times regarding how the team played and I remember him saying 'I love to see teams press and get in the face of the opposition'. So he might have a different philosophy and style of play.
“He understands the club and he understands the way it's got to be played in terms of last season what happened.”
Curtis Fleming, also a first-team coach under Pulis, echoed Maddo’s sentiment in an interview with BBC Tees on Tuesday (21/05/19).
“I think first and foremost Woody is a great lad. He works hard. He’s been at the Academy. He’s played at the top level. He knows the club. He’s a Boro lad and a Boro fan.
“It is a different kettle of fish stepping up the manager’s job but look at the lads who have stepped up this year: Lee Bowyer at Charlton, Scott Parker at Fulham, Frank Lampard and Derby. People talk about experience but it is about belief.
“Woody wants to play good football, he’s worked with some great coaches and he’s a good coach himself.
“It’s a totally different thing being No. 1 but no-one will know until you get the chance to do it.”
Furthermore, Woodgate himself spoke of his footballing philosophy with reference to then-manager Aitor Karanka in an interview with the Football League Paper in October 2015.
“The manager has been fantastic for me from day one here. It’s the same for all of the players. He has changed the club’s philosophy in terms of wanting to win every game, even every training session.
“If we lose a game we really know about it. Everybody is disappointed when it happens, but with this bloke it really is like World War Three.
“That’s something I will learn from him, which is how it should be. He is certainly the man to take the club forward.”
Regardless of misconceptions that Karanka-era football was similar to Pulis’, a philosophy of wanting to win every game contrasts starkly with Pulis’ football and suggests that Woodgate would likely introduce an enjoyable style of play without sacrificing defensive solidity as Garry Monk did.
Therefore, on the basis of those three quotes, a Woodgate-managed team featuring hungry, dynamic youngsters could actually be a quite attractive prospect.
Conclusion
Change is required at the club if last season’s 7th placed finish is to be built upon and if our financial resources shrink as predicted but what Boro don’t need is an expensive and time-costly iconoclastic overhaul which threatens the vehicles for long-term success introduced during Pulis’ ill-fated reign.
In that context, Woodgate is a solid option who, though he may not guarantee short-term success, will likely ensure the conception and implementation of a long-term, club-wide plan (if it isn’t already in place) which will set the club up well for the mid-to-long-term future and satisfy supporter desires in the short-term with an attractive style of play and the promotion of academy players to the first team.
Appointing a proven Championship or even a proven Premier League manager does not come without risks, the appointments of Garry Monk, Tony Pulis and even Gordon Strachan prove this. That isn’t to say that appointing Woodgate doesn’t come without risks, but they are certainly minimised by his knowledge of the club and his suitability to the noises which are coming from the club in terms of providing opportunities to academy players and implementing a cost-effective, foreign or lower league-focused recruitment model.
Perhaps he isn’t ready to become manager just yet. I’d certainly agree that Slavisa Jokanovic seems a better appointment in that the risk of failure appears lower and that his managerial experience and previous successes far outweigh Woodgate’s. By a long way.
What I don’t agree with is arguments against his appointment being made on the grounds of misinformation and assumed weaknesses rather than the known experience- and track record-based strengths of someone like Jokanovic.
Given that Woodgate hasn’t been removed from the club as other members of Pulis’ backroom staff have, it seems probable that he will remain a member of the new manager’s coaching team or perhaps be promoted to assistant manager. In context of the factors referenced throughout this piece, that can hardly be a dangerous prospect.
However, if he is appointed as manager, he deserves to be given a two-to-three year chance of developing his team and as a manager – his suitability to the club’s current circumstances, often incorrectly or dubiously criticised, stands as testament to that.

Woodgate v. The People (2019): Defending a Prospective Boro Manager

Monday, May 13, 2019

By Nathan Rayner
Despite winning five of their last six games of the season, Middlesbrough narrowly missed out on the final play-off place by a single point. From the outside, Boro’s season could perhaps be seen as one in which they were unlucky to finish just outside the play-offs and from which some positives could be taken. However, from those in and around the club, it will be remembered as one of failure and huge disappointment.
Worrying Signs
The season began with manager Tony Pulis recalling his first team squad to pre-season training two weeks earlier than all other Championship sides. A team brimming with players of undoubted second-tier quality headed out to Austria to be put through their paces at an intense rate in the hope that even if they couldn’t outplay other teams, they’d be able to outrun them.
Boro had already been given a boost with the signings of Northern Ireland international Paddy McNair and goal-scoring colossus Aden Flint, both of whom joined the club for the full preseason. Furthermore, despite links with a move away from the Riverside, Adama Traore, Boro’s Player of the Season in 2017/18, was still at the club and gearing up for the next campaign.
After a successful pre-season trip away, the team returned to Teesside with all of the main playing squad fit and well. However, with only a week and a half until the season was to commence with a trip to Millwall, key men Patrick Bamford, Ben Gibson, and Adama Traore were sold on to Leeds, Burnley and Wolves respectively.
During his first six months at the club, Tony Pulis had always maintained that the books needed to be balanced but things didn’t really add up.
Although the club’s main financial assets had been sold on for large profits, the positions that desperately needed strengthening weren’t filled. Despite trying to ‘balance the books’ and cut spending at the club, Boro continuously targeted big name players like Tammy Abraham, Aleksandar Mitrovic and Yannick Bolasie that would surely be on huge wages. Pulis’ frequent references to a need to cut the club’s transfer and wage budgets didn’t correlate with the club’s transfer targets, and would be a sign of things to come in terms of contradictory statements from the Welshman.
As such, Boro emerged from the tunnel at the New Den on the opening day of the season looking like they were down to the bare bones. Club captain Grant Leadbitter led the team out whilst, with his future at the club hanging in the balance, and forgotten man Martin Braithwaite started up front.
A shambolic first half display from Boro meant they went in at the break 2-0 down and it could’ve been much worse. In the second half; however, Pulis’ tactical and personnel changes salvaged Boro a point. Academy starlet Marcus Tavernier and non-league dynamo Lewis Wing played pivotal roles as Boro snatched a point in the dying embers of the game.
A Topsy-Turvy Early Season
Boro came out lucky from the opening weekend but quickly found themselves at the top of the Championship table after four wins and two draws from the opening six games.
However, all was not well. During Boro’s quick sprint to the Championship summit, Tony Pulis stated in his pre-match presser against Birmingham City, as well as the day after the transfer deadline, that the current Middlesbrough squad ‘isn’t good enough to get promotion’. Though probably a ploy to put pressure on the club’s higher-ups to secure vital loan signings, it will have undoubtedly had a detrimental impact on squad morale.
From the get-go, Pulis had set out his stall of excuses. With few of his main targets coming in through the doors at Rockliffe, he would repeatedly deflect the failings of the transfer window upon Boro’s supposedly limited financial capabilities (despite trying to sign big-name players on massive wages) over the course of the season.
Perhaps it wasn’t just the club who were responsible for these failings, too. Would the dynamic, tricky players that Boro were (and are still) really want to play in a Tony Pulis side of limited attacking freedom and persistent scapegoating?
A rather dry patch of results followed the opening six, with only eight points secured from the next possible fifteen. The final game before the next international break was against Aitor Karanka’s Forest side who arrived at the Riverside in good form and showed everything that Boro weren’t and aren’t. A mix of strong defensive resilience partnered with fast, fluid attacking football on the break secured a 2-0 win for the visitors, with Joe Lolley’s pace, directness and clinical finishing opitimising everything that Boro were crying out for.
Boro had been taught a footballing lesson by their former manager.
An important win at Hillsborough against Sheffield Wednesday on a Friday evening in late October sent Boro back to the Championship summit but was followed up with a dismal display at home against lowly Rotherham. Boro lacked cutting edge once again and, despite being joint top of the Championship table, were booed off at the Riverside.
All things were rosy in the Carabao Cup though as on Halloween night, Boro booked a place in the quarter-finals after defeating Crystal Palace 1-0 courtesy of a Lewis Wing wonder-strike. They were drawn against the lowest ranked team left in the competition, Burton Albion of League One. Since mid-October, Boro had been unbeaten and things were looking up.
Until Dean Smith’s rejuvenated Aston Villa came to town.
Mid-Season Frustration
Villa had a swagger about them as they stepped onto the Riverside pitch in early December and it showed throughout. With the strings being pulled in midfield by Jack Grealish and John McGinn, the attacking trio of Anwar El Ghazi and rumoured ex-Boro targets Tammy Abraham and Yannick Bolasie were allowed to shine. The front three in white and claret terrified the Boro defence with their pace, with Bolasie teeing up Abraham for the second, and they ran out 3-0 winners.
Villa’s quick and tricky frontline interchanged positions all night and caused Boro all kinds of problems with their clever movement. The Villa defeat was the only time in which Boro conceded three goals in a home game all season and felt like a wake-up call and once again emphasised the squad’s rigidness and lack of pace to deal with sides that attack with high intensity.
On the back of two inconsistent results against Blackburn Rovers and QPR, Boro returned to Carabao Cup action with a tie against Burton Albion, a game which provided the opportunity to reach the semi-finals of a cup competition since the infamous comeback victory over FC Basel in 2006. During the game, Boro once again allowed for a lot of their chances to go begging and paid a huge price for underestimating their opponents.
Early in the second half, the Brewers scored as a result of lackadaisical play from the Boro defence and Mo Besic in particular. Boro continued to pile on the pressure, creating many clear-cut chances but, once again, lacking the cutting edge needed to draw level. Aden Flint missed the chance of the game; a header from six yards out with the goalkeeper in no-man’s land which he nodded wide and Boro crashed out of the cup. Some at the final whistle booed off Boro as disappointment filled the Riverside. Boro needed to move on and quickly from such a defeat.
In the following three games, Boro picked up six points from a possible nine against Reading, Sheffield Wednesday and Ipswich Town as such entered the new calendar year still in the play-off places. Next up were play-off rivals Derby County at Pride Park. A point, courtesy of a Jordan Hugill headed goal, on a below-par day for Boro proved as a good result and was followed up with a fantastic win at St. Andrews against Birmingham City a couple of weeks later.
Then came one of the major high points of the season, a fixture against West Bromwich Albion at the Hawthorns. In a play-off six-pointer, Boro raced into an early lead thanks to George Saville before the Baggies turned it around to make it 2-1. The substitution of eventual match-winner Britt Assombalonga changed the game as the striker bagged a brace to send Boro back to Teesside with all three points. In the away end that day, a sense of togetherness emerged among the fans. Everybody sung in unison at the final whistle; every player applauded the travelling army behind the goal, and the result felt massive.
Downwards Spiral
A midweek FA Cup 3rd Round replay at Newport County. Off the back of the fantastic win at West Brom and with a home tie against Premier League champions Manchester City on the line, a strong side was fielded. However, Boro failed to perform in the pouring rain at Rodney Parade and were ran ragged in the second half by the Exiles. Goals from Robbie Wilmott, a shelf-stacker only two years prior, and former Hartlepool man Padraig Amond sent Boro crashing out of the cup. A 2-0 defeat proved that the win at Albion was nothing more than just another result, as reports of a bust-up at full time between some fans and players circulated online.
Following the defeat in the FA Cup, Boro drew with Leeds United and lost to Sheffield United at Bramall Lane, before stringing two wins together against Blackburn Rovers and QPR. The next seven games proved to be disastrous for Boro’s play-off push though, as they gained one point from a possible twenty-one and lost six on the bounce. Defeats at home to Brentford, Preston North End, Norwich City and Bristol City (and away to Aston Villa and Swansea City) meant Boro’s grasp on a play-off place, which had seemed certain only a month before, was weakening.
With frustrations with the style of play and results increasing, calls for Tony Pulis to be sacked were sung loud and clear and fans’ discontent was evident as banners and chants rained down on the Boro boss at both home and away fixtures in the wretched six-game losing run.
The drop in form seemed to coincide with issues off the pitch such as the contract of Stewart Downing. Downing had been a mainstay in the Boro team throughout the first half of the season; however, he didn’t start a league game between the end of December and the end of March due to a clause within his contract which stipulated that he was to make another league start, he would receive an automatic one-year extension to his current deal. With the club reluctant to commit to paying Downing’s current pay-packet for another season, Downing was ostracised from the first XI.
Downing is a player who makes the team much better by being the calibre of player that he is. The former England international provides such as calming influence to the rest of the side and this, coupled with his unbelievable array of passing ability helped Boro to tick in the first half of the season. The loss of the Teessider proved to be hugely pivotal to Boro falling away in the second half of the season as, with just two other recognised first-team wingers, alternative formational set-ups were limited.
A win away at administration-threatened Bolton Wanderers stopped the rot of losing and breathed life back into the Boro side and was followed by five victories in the final six games of the season. Unfortunately, the damage had already been done by poor results against lower-ranked sides in the division and the six-game losing run in March and Boro missed out on a play-off place.
There were some positives to take from Boro’s performances on the pitch this season though.
The implementation of Lewis Wing into the first team fold can be viewed as a massive positive from an otherwise disappointing season. The ex-Shildon man has arguably been Boro’s best outfield player and the side’s most creative asset going forward. To have such a quick development from a Northern League player to now a second-tier footballer has been quite astonishing.
Also, the performances of Garry Monk’s best signing as Boro boss, Darren Randolph, have been nothing short of magnificent. The Irishman has made many astounding saves this year to keep the team in games and without him, Boro would have not finished where they did. As a result of his fantastic season between the sticks for Boro, Randolph earned himself a place in the SkyBet Championship Team of Season, and also claimed the Player of the Year Award at Boro.
However, there’s no getting away from the failings on the field this season. A lack of excitement and a poor style of football has pushed fans away from the Riverside for the first time in years. Boro’s away support again this season has been magnificent with fans travelling up and down the country to watch Tony Pulis’ side; however, this season, it feels that Boro haven’t had the same numbers in away followings as in previous seasons. A real disconnect between those inside the club and the fans has formed, with some fans turning their back on the club for now.
Fans are sick and tired of constant negative football every week and they want change.
After a season of disappointment and silence from the club hierarchy, lots of questions need to be answered within the next few weeks. It has been reported that Tony Pulis will be leaving his post as Boro boss within the next couple of weeks, so that leaves a large vacancy to fill and the question of who will be the man to lead the club forward next season?

2018/19: Where do we go from here?