Liverpool manager
Kenny Dalglish has been
relieved of his duties at the club, and the search for a new manager has begun.
John
W. Henry and Tom Werner will be looking for a manager that can deliver
instant success. Dalglish wasn't given much time, and the next man won't
either.
Speculation over who will be the next in charge will be rife with options for possible replacements.
5. Rafa Benitez
A manager who has been unemployed for more than a year,
ex-Liverpool gaffer Rafa Benitez must surely be under the consideration
of the Liverpool owners.
Hired in the summer of 2004, Rafa Benitez
would go on to become one of the club's most successful managers ever.
Though he failed to deliver a hallowed Premier League title, Benitez led
his side to a Champions League win, an FA Cup triumph and four straight
top-four finishes. He was relieved of his duties in June 2010.
The 52-year-old Spaniard, who was sacked by
Inter Milan
in December 2010, would surely welcome a move back to Anfield. With
funds now available to him that weren't last time he was in charge,
Benitez could finally bring Liverpool that long-awaited Premier League
title.
4. Brendan Rodgers
Anytime a manager can take a team from being a mid-table club
to a promotion-bound one, he must be doing something right. That is what
Brendan Rodgers has accomplished at
Swansea City.
A
39-year-old from Northern Ireland, Rodgers is known mostly for his
ability to instill a never-say-never mentality in his players, something
that was evident in Swansea's 1-0 victory over Liverpool at the Liberty
Stadium on Survival Sunday.
A shy and honest manager, Rodgers led his team to an 11th place finish this Premier League season, riding home wins against
Arsenal,
Manchester City and the Reds in an impressive year.
Rodgers
could be a highly-sought after man this summer, with a number of clubs
seeking new bosses. If Liverpool think he is the one, then they'll need
to swoop soon.
3. Andre Villas-Boas
Perhaps the most highly-rated manager in the world, Andre
Villas-Boas is currently unemployed, and will undoubtedly be looking for
a new job.
Villas-Boas was snapped up by
Chelsea last summer after a hugely successful 2010-11 season at Porto that saw him win the Portuguese
Primeira Liga, Portuguese Supercup, Championship of Portugal and Europa League in his first year in European competition.
However, he was laid off in March after just 40 games in charge at Chelsea—and has been unemployed ever since.
Last January, Liverpool
reportedly considered Villas-Boas for their own managerial position before giving Kenny
Dalglish the job full-time. It is quite possible that Liverpool will take another look at the 34-year-old Villas-Boas.
2. David Moyes
There aren't many managers in the Premier League who have been able to find the relative success that David Moyes has.
A
manager known for his uncanny ability to bring the best out of the
players he has, the 49-year-old Scot led his team to an impressive
seventh-place finish this season (above Liverpool, despite having a
comparatively weak squad).
His intermittent employment of a hybrid
4-6-0 formation is a credit to his ability to make do with what he has,
and make the most of his situation.
At just over 10 years in
charge, the Glasgow native (last season, there were more managers from
Glasgow [six] in the Premier League than managers from England) is the
third-longest-tenured manager in the Premier League, behind only Sir
Alex Ferguson and Arsene Wenger.
With the funds Liverpool can
provide and the talent and potential the club can attract, David Moyes
could find a job at Anfield easy. He could be the perfect candidate for
the managerial position.
Henry will just have to pry him away from his cross-city rivals first.
1. Roberto Martinez
Undoubtedly one of the most underrated managers in the Premier
League, Roberto Martinez is ready to take the step up to managing an
elite club.
The 38-year-old Spaniard has spent the last three
seasons fighting to save Wigan from a seemingly perennial relegation
battle after leading Swansea to a League One title in 2007-08. Despite
an often stingy chairman in Dave Whelan, Martinez has been able to make
the most out of his situation at the DW Stadium, seeing public opinion
of him around the Premier League steadily rise with his relative
success.
Martinez is known for his shrewdness in the transfer
market, a characteristic that will surely be at the forefront of the
minds of the Liverpool owners as they handpick their new manager.
He
secured the services of stars Franco Di Santo, Shaun Maloney, James
McCarthy and Victor Moses for a combined fee of less than £7 million.
This shows that Martinez knows how to navigate the transfer window—and
with recent transfer disasters such as Charlie Adam and Stewart Downing
highlighting the Reds' squad, Henry will be keen to add a manager with
the calibre of Martinez to his backroom staff.
Roberto Martinez could well find himself in charge at Anfield next season.
WISH .....WE CAN GET THIS FELLA AS OUR MANAGER
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Pep Guardiola |
HOPEFULLY NOT THESE
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Selangor Team Coach |
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Malaysia National Team Coach | | | | | | |
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