@Judge Jules posted the below in one of the other threads:
It got me wondering. Are we particularly unlucky or is it the case that no manager can really fix things once they start to go badly wrong?
It feels like managers get caught up in a perfect storm of negativity from the supporters, media and players that is very hard to rise above and a change for both club and manager always feels like the only way to move forward.
A manager sticking tightly to his beliefs can be a two-edged sword though. Over recent years too many Liverpool managers - including Rodgers - have ultimately fallen by the wayside because they couldn't or wouldn't adapt sufficiently when things began to go wrong.
It got me wondering. Are we particularly unlucky or is it the case that no manager can really fix things once they start to go badly wrong?
It feels like managers get caught up in a perfect storm of negativity from the supporters, media and players that is very hard to rise above and a change for both club and manager always feels like the only way to move forward.