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On Sunday
afternoon we were promised that Queens Park Rangers were about
to enter a new era, when a new badge that we’d all seen already
was revealed there was a sense of “is that it” around the
stands. After the news of Luigi De Canio’s departure today
though it was clear that wasn’t just a simple strap line.
De Canio
leaves then after a mere six months in charge during which he
has masterminded our climb away from relegation, rebuilt a poor
squad into a competitive one and produced some of the best
football seen at Loftus Road in years.
So why has he
gone?
There had
been plenty of murmurings that this was going to happen and when
you added up all the snippets of news and rumours that were
floating around over the last two months it became clear that De
Canio and QPR was not a long term partnership.
The only
question remains did he jump or was he pushed? Mutual consent
departures are never quite as cut and dried as they sound,
perhaps Luigi had decided he hadn’t settled well enough in
England or maybe the club already have another man ready to come
in who they feel can take us ever further forward.
We will
probably never know and it truth it doesn’t really matter, he
has gone and now we must look forward. One thing is for sure,
for this first time in years we are sure to be absolutely
spoiled for choice!
It is so
important that the board gets this next appointment right and
already some of the rumours are filling me with dread! There are
far too many candidates to make any kind of informed guess but
there are several ways the owners could go with this.
First is the
glamour approach. If Briatore and co are genuine about creating
QPR as a true “global brand” then a manager that reflects that
ambition would be logical. A big name would attract big players
and put bums on seats fast and with the season ticket renewals
about to hit that could be a major consideration. The Zidane
rumour would fit into this strategy but how likely is it really?
Sam Allardyce would also fit into the big name category but how
palatable would the football be?
Second is the
prudent approach. Before they can create this QPR explosion we
have to get out of The Championship and they could go with a
local manager with a proven record of doing just that. This is
where it gets scary with someone like Iain Dowie being touted
around as the early favourite. No thanks. There’s also been
links to Chris Coleman and the like, again, this doesn’t really
excite to me.
Third, they
could stick with what they’ve got and go Italian. With the club
being run by Briatore and Paladini currently acting in a
Sporting Director role an Italian first team coach might be
preferred to maintain the status quo. They tried for Costacurta
before, maybe he could be in frame or perhaps the former
Cagliari manager Marco Giampaolo who was linked to the job in
Italy a few weeks ago when doubts over De Canio’s future first
surfaced could be a candidate? All this depends on if the
owners were happy with a foreign boss in the first place though.
As I said
previously there is just no way of knowing, if this situation is
something the club saw coming then a deal could be done and
dusted already and announced tomorrow, if it came a shock to
them there could be an air of panic around right now.
I have every
confidence that the board will make the right choice, they did a
good job with hiring De Canio despite no one here really having
heard of him previously, and they know this is a key decision
they can’t mess up. I just hope it’s put to bed soon as a whole
summer of being linked with every man and his dog does not
appeal at all.
Finally a
quick thank you to Gigi, he turned round our season, kept us
in the division after John Gregory’s disastrous reign, bought in
some fine players and gave us some good football to watch. Good
luck to him whatever he chooses to do next.
ron@qprnet.com |