Everton manager Roberto Martinez thinks the pressure on
his Manchester United counterpart Louis van Gaal is a reflection of the mad and volatile British football climate as Martinez says he is sad that British clubs now appear to
have adopted what he sees as a flawed approach towards securing sustainable
success.
Martinez thinks the widespread speculation surrounding the job status of
managers is a worsening trend when he was asked if he had sympathy for Van
Gaal's predicament, the Spaniard said. “I
have got a degree of sympathy about football in general. I think we have gone
mad in trying to sell new projects all the time and I think we need to accept
that in a football game you are going to win, draw or lose. You are not going
to win every week and we should try to give managers time to put their vision
across and find solutions, otherwise we are becoming so volatile and, after one
or two defeats, you are looking to sell a new project. A new person is going to
come in and be given another two games, and then we are going to look into a
new project”.
Martinez feels a win-now approach has become more established in recent
years and is a denial of traditional British football culture. “I don't think
British football has been based in that manner, I don't think the DNA of the
British game is about changing, going from one manager to another, not having
consistency in the projects. It is a real shame, we have changed immensely in
the last 15 years. I know that the change, with social media, and the way
everything is viewed from the outside, has a big impact. If we expect to get a
change of a manager every time you get a difficult period, you will never find
a successful team, you will never find the real successful stories that we had
over the years in the British game. It is really sad” he said.
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