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Last chance for Hodgson to prove reputation

Premier League Fulham
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Roy Hodgson

When Fabio Capello was appointed England manager, it was said there were no suitable English-born candidates who could do the job.

One possible choice whose name was barely mentioned was Roy Hodgson, one of Europe's most respected coaches, who has now been given the task of saving Fulham from the Premier League trap door.

The 60-year-old has taken charge of Fulham, a job that is likely to be his last chance to prove to his homeland what the rest of Europe already knows.

Hodgson is considered one of the continent's most astute tactical thinkers, having worked wonders with Switzerland and Finland as well as with Italian giants Inter Milan.

He has huge respect in the corridors of Uefa and Fifa headquarters thanks to spells on various technical study groups.

But Hodgson's legacy in England is slightly less emphatic, which could go some way to explaining why the challenge at Craven Cottage proved too difficult to resist.

The Cottagers are precariously placed in 18th place in the Premier League, having won just two games all season.

The club said that relegation would not be tolerated when they sacked Lawrie Sanchez, so Hodgson faces one of the stiffest tests of his 31-year managerial career.

His short-term goal is simple - keep Fulham in the Premier League. He inherits a squad low on confidence with minimal time to assess who stays and who goes before the transfer window opens on 1 January.

Hodgson is more than likely to dip into his extensive contacts book to address long-standing problems - namely a goalscorer and a commanding centre-back among others.

However chairman Mohamed Al Fayed will expect Hodgson to be slightly more discerning with his money than he was during his 17-month tenure at Blackburn should the London club spend on reinforcements during the January transfer window.

Hodgson arrived at Ewood Park in June 1997 with a huge fanfare after snaring him from Inter. All seemed to go to plan in his first year in charge, guiding the Lancashire club to sixth place in the Premier League and securing a berth in the Uefa Cup.

However it was in his second season when things began to go horribly wrong, especially in the transfer market where he made more than the odd faux pas liberally spending the late Jack Walker's profound coffers.

He spent £7.5m on Kevin Davies, a then promising 20-year-old striker who had scored nine goals in 25 games for Southampton.

He then paid up an astonishing £5.3m for Derby's Scotland international Christian Dailly, an honest defender who was probably just as staggered as the Rams's board when they discovered the value of his transfer fee.

Rovers began the 1997/8 season badly as Davies failed to find the back of the net and Dailly struggled to make an impression. The club found themselves at the bottom of the league with just nine points from 14 games and inevitably Hodgson received his marching orders.

Since the nadir at Blackburn, Hodgson has rebuilt his reputation with various clubs across Europe including a second spell at Inter, FC Copenhagen, Udinese and latterly with Finland, whom he took to the brink of qualification for Euro 2008 for the first time in their history.

So the next stage of his illustrious career moves to south-west London and a club in dire need of a quick fix.

But more importantly for Hodgson, it will probably be his last opportunity to prove to his native country just how good a coach he really is.



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posted Dec 29, 2007

I hope he succeeds.. He has managed quite well outside England.. His CV is not as good as Capello or Sven.. But it is not that bad also.. if he stays at Fulham for 1.5 years and stabilize them it is good baragin for Fulham..

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posted Dec 29, 2007

What on earth is a 'profound coffer'?? Another less than competent BBC writer. Why is it that the only decent jounalists on the sports boards seem to be the 5Live commentators?

As to Hodgson, a highly competent coach. The only question marks against him are in the arena of transfers. An international manager obviously doesn't have that to worry about. Unfortunately he never had the profile in this country to be considered for the England job. The press would have been only too happy to see him fail so that they could lay into the FA all over again, had he been appointed! Hodgson has shown time & again that he is superb at getting the best out of a fixed pool of players. I expect him to save Fulham from relegation this season, simply because he has the nous to get the best out of the squad he's inherited. Where he may fail is next season after he's had a chance to rebuild the squad to his liking.

I hope he does well, even though I'm not a Fulhamite. It's nice to see a club appoint an experienced manager for a change, instead of a wet-behind-the-ears big name ex-pro. It's long since time some of the talented managers from the lower divisions, who've served their 'apprenticeship' the old fashioned way, were given a chance too. Far more so than the likes of Bryan Robson, Steve Bruce, et al, who've done nothing despite having huge resources to spend.

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posted Dec 30, 2007

A rather poorly researched text.....Blackburn struggled in 1996-97 not 1997-98 where they were actually up amongst the front runners for a long time. It was 1998-99 where they ended up being relegated. Hodgson is another long-ball merchant at the end of the day

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posted Dec 31, 2007

Just remember, when Roy Hodgson left Blackburn, he left them bottom of the premier league.

Roy Hodgson may have experience, but that is just because he is old and been around - if he was successful, then he wouldn't have managed so many teams.

Personally I hope you get relegated.

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posted Dec 31, 2007

i feel sorry for fulham, do you fans actually know how bad of a manager he is?

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posted Dec 31, 2007

He'll need to spend, that's the way of the premiership, Mohammed Al Fayed has got Roy from the Rovers up against Yoman Avramsmebich just for starters, moneys gonna flow, what we need now is for QPR to get promotion and some rich Sheik to buy Sunderland (sun!) to put his chips on the table, substitutes will be on a bonus just for warming up! laugh

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posted Dec 31, 2007

I am afraid that trying to compare the appointment of Howard Wilkinson to any blunder in the history of mankind is really just a futile gesture !yikes

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posted Jan 1, 2008

If this guys merits are solely based on his international achievements then Fulham are in trouble. Sanchez was appointed for the same reason.

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posted Jan 1, 2008

Even Steve Mclaren would have been a better appointment than Hodgsonsadfacesadfacesadfacesadfacesadfacesadface

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posted Aug 8, 2008

you mugs have all been proved wrong
hodgson is a legend
forever fulham

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