If  clothes maketh the man, what sayeth the pitchside attire about the manager? The Angle... believes that what a manager wears speaks volumes  for the aspirations of the club whose fortunes they are seeking to turn around.  As  always, The Angle... is on hand with a guide to pitchside  attire:
The Tracksuit Manager

  
If you  peer through the gloom and driving rain to the touchline, to see if  there  is any activity down on the bench to liven up the drab proceedings, and you see your manager  wearing a sweatshirt with his initials emblazoned in the corner, I have some bad  news. For, whatever the hopes and aspirations the manager set out at the  beginning of the year, your team are just going to fall  short.
 Presumably, in a bid to be one of the boys and hold on  to the past, the tracksuit wearer will try and make up for his lack of ability  by becoming animated on the sideline. Sadly, the players they have bought and  the tactics they employ won’t quite be good enough to make the next  step.
Being a tracksuit manager is also rather thirsty work. More often than not, you will see them pacing over to the perimeter of their technical areas to clasp a Lucozade sports bottle, take an almighty swig, before placing it carefully back.
Models:  David Moyes, Martin O'Neill, Martin Jol, Alan Pardew, Stuart Pearce, Iain Dowie.
The Cheap Suit

A  manager in a bad suit can only mean one thing - a relegation dogfight. Favoured  by natural tracksuit-wearers from the lower divisions who have been promoted to the top flight,  the bad suit betrays two revealing emotions. The first is an absolute  desperation to be taken seriously, in the belief that a TopMan suit, a big  knotted tie and a determined look is all that is missing from his squad that  was playing in the lower reaches of the Championship about 18 months previously. The second is that, despite the  determined expression, he isn’t quite confident enough to go and buy an expensive  number, as he will more than likely be on the dole come March. If he is  lucky  enough to stay up, he is also lucky that he is not David Pleat and will not  be wearing the worst suit ever made as he goes scampering across the  pitch to celebrate his Great Escape.
    Models: Paul Sturrock, Paul Jewell, Aidy Boothroyd, Billy Davies        
  The Expensive Suit

The new  breed of young British managers are from the Sky-sponsored, 20-grand-a-week, post-1992 era.  This means that they have plenty of well-cut, expensive suits ready to wear in  yet another vain bid to be taken seriously. Graeme Souness appeared in Boys from  The Blackstuff in the trademark Scouse shiny grey suit, with sleeves rolled out. Two  years in Genoa, however,  and he came back with a knowledge of fine materials, tan shoes and a new, younger wife. Sadly he also signed Ali Dia - and therein lies the rub. They suffer  from the belief that dressing like Capello makes you as good as him. It  doesn’t.
Models:  Gareth Southgate, David Platt, Chris Coleman, Roy Keane, Graeme Souness
 
  Club Blazer, Club Tie

  This is  the uniform that all supporters should look for when demanding a new manager.  These men have experience, quality and silverware to their name. We’re thinking  Ferguson,  Benitez, Wenger, Graham and erm, Walter Smith. Unfortunately, the rule that governs all football - thou must always do as others have done before thee - mean that this is becoming a disguise for managers whose  natural habitat is either the bad suit or the tracksuit. However, The Angle...  isn’t fooled, as we know who you are...
  Models:  Sam Allardyce, Neil Warnock, Mark Hughes, Lawrie McMenemy
Coxie.
 
No comments:
Post a Comment