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Interesting Head Coaches/Managers

King Binny

Part of the Furniture
Honorary Member
Monza's Raffaele Palladino

[article]Raffaele Palladino is the first under-40 coach to win at San Siro at Inter since Andrea Stramaccioni (Inter-Udinese 1-2, 7 December 2014).[/article]



The keys behind Monza’s turnaround: is Raffaele Palladino a one-season wonder or Italy’s best emerging coach?
[article]How Palladino turned things around at Monza

Despite several signings aimed at quickly raising the level of Monza’s squad to make them competitive for a mid-table finish in Serie A, the Biancorossi had a calamitous start to their first season ever in the top tier, losing all of their five opening games.

With promotion hero Giovanni Stroppa at the helm, the team seemed to lack the tools to cope with the quality, resilience and experience embodied by the majority of the Serie A sides. While Monza could show glimpses of brilliant football, they were not enough to prevent them from coming up short against every opponent.

When the Biancorossi were held to a 1-1 draw by Lecce, Galliani and Silvio Berlusconi decided they had seen enough and sacked Stroppa after six Serie A games, but the decision concerning his replacement left many amazed. After taking his first steps as a manager through Monza’s youth sector, Palladino had only managed the Primavera for one season and his credentials did not look suitable for a team that, looking at how things had started, were expected to fight for relegation until the end.

Yet, Galliani insisted Palladino’s potential was worth gambling on, adding that their choice to put him in charge was just as “brave” as the one Berlusconi and him made in 1987 by hiring a then-unproven Arrigo Sacchi.


The comparison was certainly a cumbersome one, but the newly-appointed coach took little time to prove he didn’t feel overwhelmed by this kind of burden. In his first test as Monza coach, Palladino steered his side to a historic 1-0 win over Juventus at home, lighting the spark of a revolution that would see the Biancorossi quickly climb the Serie A table, with serious hopes of competing for a spot in the top half.

The desire and discipline showcased by his side, alongside a rediscovered confidence, were even more impressive than the six wins from Palladino’s first 10 games in Serie A and the Coppa Italia, as he was able to quickly get his ideas across to his players.

Palladino’s Monza playing style
A former Genoa player between 2008 and 2011 under Gian Piero Gasperini, Palladino has admitted that he regards the current Atalanta coach as his teacher, with the back-three and an intense playing style being the main features that he seems to have inherited.

In addition to that, Monza’s approach is always aimed at dominating games by keeping possession and hindering opponents’ freedom to move the ball around through their extremely organised and collective pressure.

With the ball at their feet, the Biancorossi are able to either exploit the physicality of their lone striker, namely Andrea Petagna or Christian Gytkjær with direct plays or patiently make their way up the pitch, as Palladino deserves credit for the way he’s made the most of his midfield depth and boosted his wingers’ potential.

Options such as Nicolo Rovella, Stefano Sensi, Filippo Ranocchia and Jose Machin provided the coach with an exciting mix of technique, energy and vision that allows him to keep the whole team balanced and give the appropriate freedom to their most creative players.

Gianluca Caprari and Matteo Pessina often roam between the midfield and attacking line in order to both open and explore space, as their relentless movements make it hard for Monza’s opponents to keep track of them without opening up gaps. Their position is far from fixed and so are their tasks – Palladino can ask them to support his side’s build-up, make runs forward or combine with the wingers.

Left-back Carlos Augusto and right-winger Patrick Ciurria are also key pieces to Palladino’s setup, adding further unpredictability to the team as their athletic and technical skills allow them to either reach the byline to deliver crosses with pinpoint accuracy or cut inside to bring serious threat inside the penalty box, as the duo amassed a combined seven goals from Monza’s first 23 games in Serie A.[/article]
 
Hope Kjetil Knutsen gets a chance at a bigger club - his Bodo Glimt team was a joy to watch in the European matches.
 
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I think Inzhagi has done phenomenally well considering the limitations he has... not young but one to watch.
 



Article before yesterday's win:
Bo Svensson outstripping Jürgen Klopp and Thomas Tuchel with masterful Mainz
[article]With the 2022/23 season drawing to a close, Bo Svensson’s Mainz are firmly in the battle for European qualification, as the Danish coach continues to outshine his illustrious predecessors Jürgen Klopp and Thomas Tuchel.

Mainz fans are mostly a modest bunch. With a slim budget, no national titles and not even a DFB Cup final appearance in the club's history, their expectations are limited - but this season they have had a luxury of occasions to cherish.

Whether it was the 5-0 win against Cologne, the 5-2 victory over Bochum, the 4-0 outclassing of Borussia Mönchengladbach or the 3-0 statement win at RB Leipzig, Mainz have banished any doubt that they belong at the business end of the table.

A nine-match unbeaten run - currently the longest of any Bundesliga club, and the joint-longest single-season streak in their history - puts Mainz well on course to secure their second consecutive top-half finish. That's something the club have achieved only once before, under current Bayern Munich boss Tuchel. A result against the title-chasing Bavarians on Matchday 29 would top all of this season's big moments, and there's every chance of an upset.


When Svensson inherited a hopeless-looking situation in December 2020, nobody within the club - and perhaps not even the Dane himself – believed he could pull off a minor miracle by avoiding the drop. With just six points from their first 14 games, Mainz looked doomed, and history had already condemned them. Yet by picking up 33 out of a possible 60 points, Svensson managed to keep them in the Bundesliga, even beating Leipzig and Bayern for good measure.

After their great escape of 2020/21, the 05ers had a rather more stress-free 2021/22, never slipping below 11th place and eventually finishing comfortably in eighth. They opened the campaign with yet another win over Leipzig, and ran out 3-1 winners against Bayern on Matchday 32.

Svensson's impact goes beyond the results, though. While he initially set about steadying the ship - winning nine games by just a single goal - he slowly instilled a playing philosophy which has made Mainz one of the most exciting teams to watch in the Bundesliga and beyond. The parallels with Klopp’s Gegenpressing can be seen; Mainz play a high-intensity game which starts from the very back, with aggressive yet fair defending and a hounding mentality. Not only shalt thou not pass, thou shalt not even have time to consider it.

Klopp and Tuchel are Svensson’s best-known predecessors at Mainz, with both going on to lift countless titles - including the UEFA Champions League - with the likes of Borussia Dortmund, Liverpool, Chelsea and Paris Saint-Germain. Svensson has already acknowledged their influence, having played under both during his seven-year spell as a Mainz player. “I remember a lot, in technical and human terms: how to deal with people, lead a team,” said Svensson. “The way Mainz play, I was able to learn from both of them.”

After soaking up what he saw from Klopp and Tuchel, Svensson is now outstripping them in the Mainz dugout. He boasts an average of 1.48 points per game across his 82 in charge, of which 31 have been wins. Klopp averaged 1.13 while Tuchel – the club's most successful coach to date – averaged 1.41. To put it another way, Svensson has won 40 per cent of his matches as Mainz coach, and Tuchel 38 per cent.

To outperform the legends in whose shoes he has followed, Svensson has adapted their styles to his own beliefs and to the players at his disposal, helping to bring the best out of them. The powerful press is just the start. With possession regained, lightning transitions pave an efficient path to goal and suit the strengths of Karim Onisiwo, Jonathan Burkardt, Anton Stach, Leandro Barreiro, Anthony Caci and Dominik Kohr, all of whom have also taken huge strides forward under Svensson.

The tirelessly battling Onisiwo is Mainz's joint-top scorer this season with nine goals, alongside Marcus Ingvartsen. Befitting such a hard-working collective, the goals have been spread well around the squad throughout 2022/23, with Korean Jae-sung Lee netting seven and January signing Ludovic Ajorque already chipping in with five.

The big centre-forward, born on the French overseas territory Reunion Island, has taken to Mainz and the Bundesliga like a proverbial fish to water. His strike in the recent 1-1 draw in Cologne was his third in three consecutive league matches and his fifth direct goal involvement in five.

Ajorque possesses the kind of physicality and conviction in attack that Bayern may be envious of, given the injury concerns facing their former Mainz frontman Eric Maxim Choupo-Moting. The 05ers have adjusted to his presence and quickly become the Bundesliga team with the most goals from crosses hit in open play. Eight of their 10 strikes from this route have come in the second half of the season, with Ajorque netting three of them.

Svensson has no reason to fear hosting Bayern. As Mainz coach, he has a highly respectable record of two wins and two defeats against the record champions, including that 3-1 victory a year ago on Bayern's last league visit. The metrics show the extent of Mainz's mettle; they have run an average of 116.9 kilometres per match this season and contested more challenges than any other side (214), meaning Bayern must be at their best to get a result.

The Matchday 29 clash presents another test for new Bayern coach Tuchel. As for Svensson, two years after he took charge, he has already etched his name firmly into club folklore and could go on to join the list of managerial greats to have guided the side.

Whatever the result on Saturday, Mainz will be proud of another season of upsetting the odds and so many of the better-fancied Bundesliga sides along the way. As they go into the final six matches of the campaign just two points off sixth place, you wouldn't want to bet against the city of Mainz being back on the European map in 2023.[/article]
 
Monza's Raffaele Palladino

[article]Raffaele Palladino is the first under-40 coach to win at San Siro at Inter since Andrea Stramaccioni (Inter-Udinese 1-2, 7 December 2014).[/article]



The keys behind Monza’s turnaround: is Raffaele Palladino a one-season wonder or Italy’s best emerging coach?
[article]How Palladino turned things around at Monza

Despite several signings aimed at quickly raising the level of Monza’s squad to make them competitive for a mid-table finish in Serie A, the Biancorossi had a calamitous start to their first season ever in the top tier, losing all of their five opening games.

With promotion hero Giovanni Stroppa at the helm, the team seemed to lack the tools to cope with the quality, resilience and experience embodied by the majority of the Serie A sides. While Monza could show glimpses of brilliant football, they were not enough to prevent them from coming up short against every opponent.

When the Biancorossi were held to a 1-1 draw by Lecce, Galliani and Silvio Berlusconi decided they had seen enough and sacked Stroppa after six Serie A games, but the decision concerning his replacement left many amazed. After taking his first steps as a manager through Monza’s youth sector, Palladino had only managed the Primavera for one season and his credentials did not look suitable for a team that, looking at how things had started, were expected to fight for relegation until the end.

Yet, Galliani insisted Palladino’s potential was worth gambling on, adding that their choice to put him in charge was just as “brave” as the one Berlusconi and him made in 1987 by hiring a then-unproven Arrigo Sacchi.


The comparison was certainly a cumbersome one, but the newly-appointed coach took little time to prove he didn’t feel overwhelmed by this kind of burden. In his first test as Monza coach, Palladino steered his side to a historic 1-0 win over Juventus at home, lighting the spark of a revolution that would see the Biancorossi quickly climb the Serie A table, with serious hopes of competing for a spot in the top half.

The desire and discipline showcased by his side, alongside a rediscovered confidence, were even more impressive than the six wins from Palladino’s first 10 games in Serie A and the Coppa Italia, as he was able to quickly get his ideas across to his players.

Palladino’s Monza playing style
A former Genoa player between 2008 and 2011 under Gian Piero Gasperini, Palladino has admitted that he regards the current Atalanta coach as his teacher, with the back-three and an intense playing style being the main features that he seems to have inherited.

In addition to that, Monza’s approach is always aimed at dominating games by keeping possession and hindering opponents’ freedom to move the ball around through their extremely organised and collective pressure.

With the ball at their feet, the Biancorossi are able to either exploit the physicality of their lone striker, namely Andrea Petagna or Christian Gytkjær with direct plays or patiently make their way up the pitch, as Palladino deserves credit for the way he’s made the most of his midfield depth and boosted his wingers’ potential.

Options such as Nicolo Rovella, Stefano Sensi, Filippo Ranocchia and Jose Machin provided the coach with an exciting mix of technique, energy and vision that allows him to keep the whole team balanced and give the appropriate freedom to their most creative players.

Gianluca Caprari and Matteo Pessina often roam between the midfield and attacking line in order to both open and explore space, as their relentless movements make it hard for Monza’s opponents to keep track of them without opening up gaps. Their position is far from fixed and so are their tasks – Palladino can ask them to support his side’s build-up, make runs forward or combine with the wingers.

Left-back Carlos Augusto and right-winger Patrick Ciurria are also key pieces to Palladino’s setup, adding further unpredictability to the team as their athletic and technical skills allow them to either reach the byline to deliver crosses with pinpoint accuracy or cut inside to bring serious threat inside the penalty box, as the duo amassed a combined seven goals from Monza’s first 23 games in Serie A.[/article]


Monza inflicted Fiorentina's 2nd defeat in 16 games, after coming back from 2-0 down.

 
Just read about Jon Brady - nice to see how he has worked his way up the ladder.

2016 - joined Northampton Town as U16 coach

2017 - promoted to U18 coach

2021 - placed in temporary charge of the first team in Feb after Keith Curle was sacked; despite their subsequent relegation to League 2, was appointed permanent manager in May

2022 - could have won automatic promotion but in the last round of league matches "Bristol Rovers beat already relegated Scunthorpe United 7–0 to move into third place on goals scored having needed to better Northampton's result by a five-goal margin prior to the day"

Untitled.jpg

 
Think it's a much challenging task that Matthias Jaissle had then his predecessors who had star players in their teams (+ Jaissle's is the youngest).

Interesting to see how he cope with the departure of key players like Seiwald and Sesko.

Untitled.jpg
 
Roberto Di Zerbi is a good manager, its his first season but with 9 losses this season, I am reserving judgement that he is ready to take the leap to a really big club... till after next season. With Caicedo and Mac Ali leaving, how strong will they be?

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Roberto Di Zerbi is a good manager, its his first season but with 9 losses this season, I am reserving judgement that he is ready to take the leap to a really big club... till after next season. With Caicedo and Mac Ali leaving, how strong will they be?

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{th}D{/th}
{th}L{/th}
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{th}PPM{/th}
{/tr}
{tr}
{td}Total:{/td}
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{td}
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{td}1.61{/td}
{/tr}
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fac.png
FA Cup{/td}
{td}5{/td}
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EFL Cup{/td}
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I first heard of him when he was managing Sassuolo (and rightly earned a move to a bigger club, Shakhtar Donetsk) so rather than having doubts about his quality - my "concern" was how he would cope with managing in a foreign (to him) country - where communication may be a prob.

Dated Nov 2020
Sassuolo in the Serie A title race: How Roberto De Zerbi shook Italian football

[article]Caputo's story has captured the imagination in Italy, but even that tale might be topped by the one that is unfolding for his team. Little Sassuolo are in the race for the Serie A title.

For a brief few hours on Sunday, they even topped the table after victory at Verona, their fifth win of an unbeaten start that feels like the next step for De Zerbi's entertaining team.


The 41-year-old coach might not have been the architect of Caputo's unusual movements but since taking over in 2018 he has controlled just about everything else at Sassuolo, this tiny club that has spent more time in Italy's fifth tier than its first over the past four decades.

De Zerbi himself is something of a cult figure in coaching circles. On the face of it, his is an unremarkable record. After going close to promotion with Foggia, there was a short and unsuccessful stay at Palermo before a doomed attempt to save Benevento from the drop.

It might not sound like much but the devil is in the detail.

"De Zerbi is one of the most innovative coaches in football," insists Melidona. "And his Sassuolo team are one of the most important teams in Italy right now."

It is not just the results, although many of those have been spectacular. It is not even the fact that they have been achieved on a fraction of the budget of Sassuolo's rivals.

It is the way that they are doing it.

"De Zerbi might change the players who start the construction depending on the opponent but he never changes the principles," says Melidona. "The team's idea remains constant. The fundamental principle of De Zerbi's football is that he wants his team dominate the game by constructing the game from the back and by keeping the ball on the ground."

Even Pep Guardiola has praised Sassuolo for their expansive approach and that is appropriate given that it was on a visit to watch his Bayern Munich team in 2013 that De Zerbi's vision for the game was crystallised. He wanted his teams to play football like that.

Now, it is others visiting Sassuolo to learn from him.

A recent cohort of the UEFA Pro Master course went to see De Zerbi to understand his methods. "I have no secrets," he told them. His game is right there for everyone to see on the pitch every single weekend.

Sassuolo are the top scorers in Italy and, with a nod to Gian Piero Gasperini's Atalanta, they are playing the most attractive football too. No team has played as many passes this season, with 22-year-old midfielder Manuel Locatelli, a precocious talent, at the top of the list.

"Sassuolo not only plays the most passes but they play the fewest long balls," says Melidona. "It is a very ambitious style of play and the influence of Guardiola is clear. De Zerbi always plays with five or six men attacking. The left-back or right-back joins in. The idea is always to fill the half of the opponent with as many players as possible.

"Sometimes, he starts with three players and the goalkeeper. Other times, he starts with four players and the goalkeeper. But the principle is always to dominate the game starting from a low construction, to retain possession and to control with and without the ball.

"He uses the whole width of the field. Right now, his scheme is to play with four defenders, two midfielders, three players between the midfield and the striker, and one striker.

"It is very important for him to play with his two outside players in the attack as inverted wingers, with the left footer on the right and the right footer on the left. That is because he wants width but he needs the wide attackers to move inside the box in the final third."

An example of this came on Sunday when, in top scorer Caputo's absence through injury, Sassuolo's goals in a 2-0 win were provided by Domenico Berardi, their left-footed right-winger, and Jeremie Boga, the former Chelsea youngster, who cuts inside from the left.

Much like Guardiola's teams, Sassuolo's expansive approach can leave them susceptible to the counter-attack and that has been reflected in some crazy scorelines. Just last month they followed up a 4-3 away win against Bologna with a 3-3 draw at home to Torino.

On Saturday, Sassuolo face Antonio Conte's Inter, against whom they drew 3-3 last time out in June having lost this corresponding fixture 4-3 last season. Entertainment is guaranteed.

"The problem is that using so many players in attacks does leave a lot of space in behind when possession of the ball is lost," says Melidona. "This is why even when Sassuolo win, they sometimes concede goals. Maybe it is a risk but it is a principle of De Zerbi's football.

"Sassuolo always try to score one more than the opponent. Sometimes the problem is that when he plays against a big team, if they do not take their chances they cannot come back."

[/article]

 
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Thanks, @peekay I'm not sure if anyone reads threads like this or the interesting young players/reserves & academy players ones but thought I'll just share since I was reading/viewing those tweets/articles anyway.

Around 10-12 years I started a thread on upcoming managers just sharing an article focusing on two - Klopp and AVB. At that time, I felt AVB had more promise 🙂.

Of course, my thread didn't have detailed data and analysis like yours and definitely didn't go beyond the two of them. I will be very curious to revisit this thread from time to time and see who makes it and who doesn't. I am specifically interested in seeing how Gary O'Neil's career develops. He has gone under the radar but has done an outstanding job at Bournemouth.
 
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Around 10-12 years I started a thread on upcoming managers just sharing an article focusing on two - Klopp and AVB. At that time, I felt AVB had more promise 🙂)

Of course, my thread didn't have detailed data and analysis like yours and definitely didn't go beyond the two of them. I will be very curious to revisit this thread from time to time and see who makes it and who doesn't. I am specifically interested in seeing how Gary O'Neil's career develops. He has gone under the radar but has done an outstanding job at Bournemouth.

I think managers and backroom staffs don't get enough credit/attention than they deserve - usually takes silverware and/or some sort of "miraculous" run of results before we get to read/know more about them. Like the young/unknown players, it's also a nice feeling when these previously shared/followed managers end up doing well.

For Gary O'Neil, the takeover that took place in Dec might be something positive - the owner seems to be someone decent (willing to spend too )



Speaking of promising managers, I just saw this tweet - remember Owen Coyle? 😛:

 
I think managers and backroom staffs don't get enough credit/attention than they deserve - usually takes silverware and/or some sort of "miraculous" run of results before we get to read/know more about them. Like the young/unknown players, it's also a nice feeling when these previously shared/followed managers end up doing well.

For Gary O'Neil, the takeover that took place in Dec might be something positive - the owner seems to be someone decent (willing to spend too )



Speaking of promising managers, I just saw this tweet - remember Owen Coyle? 😛:



Bournemouth's owner is utterly committed to winning in general and not afraid to spend. He's got the Vegas hockey team into the semi-finals for the third time in their five years of existence, which is unprecedented in the modern era. He's spent to the limit of the NHL salary cap as well. Not all decisions have been smart - he seems impatient, maybe a bit like Boehly but more competent - but definitely not afraid to put himself about.
 
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