Past achievements may not be enough to keep Mancini and Adkins in their jobs

Sat, Nov 10, 2012, 00:00

   

SOCCER ANGLES:Perceived recent failings are already piling the pressure on two managers

“The two most powerful warriors are patience and time,” said Tolstoy.

“Patience is not passive; on the contrary, it is active; it is concentrated strength,” said someone else.

This internet lark helps sometimes.

Which brings us to Roberto Mancini and Nigel Adkins. When the Premier League season opened back in August, Manchester City’s first match as reigning champions was at home to Southampton, just promoted from the Championship.

The two managers were Mancini and Adkins. That remains the situation but it is a measure of the sliding status of patience within public life, not just sport, that the question hovering around both Mancini and Adkins nine league games on is: for how much longer?

Adkins had not even reached his second anniversary in the Southampton job when seeing his promoted side lose 3-2 at Eastlands. It was an afternoon that suggested the Saints would be an exciting addition to the Premier League.

Mancini will not see a third anniversary at City until next month. Both men are cherished by the respective club’s supporters for their achievements.

At City, Mancini has been the manager who won the FA Cup for the first time in 42 years and the league title for the first time in 44. Those triumphs were hardly Mancini’s alone, but his was the name above the door.

At St Mary’s Adkins inherited a fallen club flailing in the third division and led it to not one, but two promotions. Truly, this was the stuff of dreams.

Subside

But if Southampton lose at home to Swansea today and Manchester City lose at home to Tottenham tomorrow, the doubts about Adkins’ and Mancini’s survival in their posts would receive another forward push. Short-termism dictates that two home wins and the issue would temporarily subside.

But the debate as to the two men’s likely successors is already vigorous. The arrival of two figures at City from the Barcelona hierarchy – Ferran Soriano and Txiki Begiristain – mean that Pep Guardiola is being linked with a move to east Manchester, this despite the reality of a Mancini five-year contract signed in July.

This was signed, we know now, after a dalliance with Monaco and as many as seven other clubs according to Mancini himself last week.

“But I preferred to stay here because I’d worked well for three years,” Mancini explained. “The next three or four years will be important. With Begiristain and Ferran we can improve our team. I’ve always thought my future was here. I signed a contract for the next five years because I believe in this squad.”

But belief in the City squad, and Mancini’s ability to inspire it, is faltering, and without core belief, the vital quality of patience is undermined. Three or four years – 2015 or 2016 – feels about a decade away.

The Premier League table shows City to be the only unbeaten team in it, yet the higher measure – Europe – leaves City and the manager vulnerable.

Mancini was on the pitch at the end of Tuesday’s 2-2 draw with Ajax shouting “was goal, was goal” at the referee who had just ruled out Sergio Aguero’s onside strike.

That would have won the game and left City third in Group D on four points. As it stands, they are fourth on two points and Real Madrid visit before a last-day trip to Dortmund. City look to be on their way out and even if they win a second consecutive league title, it will come with the caveat: ‘But they didn’t do it in the Champions League’.

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