1danewhitehouse
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Look what Clough did with what he inherited in his first season.
Despite most of us thinking he was a good choice as manager , he more or less demotivated the side. I hear of cliques in the dressing room when he was here but he didn't sort it. In comparison to the short time Wilder has been here, Adkins was an abject failure.
He defended Hammond week in week out, despite his legs having gone. Unseen work etc. we went from a stubborn man in Clough to some waffle merchant quoting management guru books whilst it seemed some players did what they wanted while he went on about geese. There was virtually no team spirit on the pitch and he never got to grips with it. Now we have Wilder with a much less impressive cv who's shaken things up at all levels.
For me Adkins tenure is up there with the worst. The wrong fit argument doesn't work for me. When the crunch came, he wasn't up to it.
I agree he wasn't up to the task at hand and that he failed. I just think the difficulty of the circumstances he inherited is often overlooked. Wilder has been a revelation but the circumstances he inhereited were far more favourable. Being able to clear out the deadwood in one go on arrival meant he could put together a team of his choosing.
I take your point about what Clough did with what he inherited. Some managers are better at having an impact on what they inherit. Others are good at building successful teams. Clough was good at the former. Wilder has proven he is good at the latter. Adkins failed at the former and never got a chance at the latter.