How many managers sacked by Chelsea in recent years have not gone on to other jobs? He's young, if he wants to continue in management he will, and if he succeeds with some club in the future his Chelsea sacking will be forgotten.
Fair point! Having said that, if all you want to do is be a Manager and a failure like that means you never get another top job, it probably doesn't cushion the blow as much as we think it would or should.
I always said (probably like many other people) the Stevie G leaving Rangers on a high to manage Villa was a mistake. Too big, too soon. IMO it severely damaged his career.
I thought the same with Lampard at Coventry but I was wrong about that one.
Thing is with Rosenior he wasn't very good in the first place. Before he joined his record at Strasburg was pretty poor. Won none of their past Ligue 1 matches (familiar), 2 wins in 10, and dropped 13 point from winning positions.
I'm not wholly blaming Rosenior, he was out of his depth, the main blame is with the club owners/directors for 'transferring' him over rather the going for a an established top league, proven manager/coach.
Thing is with Rosenior he wasn't very good in the first place. Before he joined his record at Strasburg was pretty poor. Won none of their past Ligue 1 matches (familiar), 2 wins in 10, and dropped 13 point from winning positions.
I'm not wholly blaming Rosenior, he was out of his depth, the main blame is with the club owners/directors for 'transferring' him over rather the going for a an established top league, proven manager/coach.
and arguably Chelsea's issues, stemming from well before he was appointed, were more serious than things a change of manager was ever going to fix.
I think Boely and co are a good example of believing they can apply standard business practices to football i.e. the internal promotion of Rosenior, in the name of 'innovation'. They still don't seem to understand that football has it's own set of rules and if you don't work within them you quickly come unstuck.