Oliver Kay
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As he walked out of the manor house in the Oxfordshire hamlet of Chippinghurst in April 2006, Sam Allardyce was quietly confident that he had got the job. Not just the job, but The Job. He had just bowled over the FA’s six-man interview panel with a mightily impressive presentation on his plans to succeed Sven-Göran Eriksson as England head coach and, while reluctant to get too far ahead of himself, he told those closest to him that he was happy with how it had gone.
Less than two years later, Allardyce must wonder whether his chauffeur ran over a black cat on their way home that afternoon. He freely admitted to being “devastated” at losing out to Steve McClaren for the England job and, as he sought to recover from that blow, he was quickly hit by another: the BBC Panorama documentary that alleged corruption at Bolton Wanderers involving his son, Craig, an agent.
Soon he began to talk of stress and sleepless nights, a combination that compounded his gut feeling that he had taken Bolton as far as he could, and then came an offer that, fatefully, he could not refuse: an opportunity to drink from the poisoned chalice that the Newcastle United manager’s job has become.
If Allardyce could turn back the clock, he might have got on his knees and begged as he left the FA councillors in the drawing room at Chippinghurst Manor. He might have encouraged his son to distance himself from Bolton in his business dealings — or at least to be more discreet when confronted with an undercover reporter from Panorama. He might even have chosen to stay at the Reebok Stadium and to attempt to lead the club into another Uefa Cup campaign after their seventh-placed finish in the Premier League last season. But he almost certainly would not have accepted the job at Newcastle had he known that he would be given half a season to show that he was the manager to turn around the club’s ailing fortunes.

Allardyce is a manager whose diverse methods — many of them based on sports science, psychology and extreme physical conditioning — were never going to work overnight at Newcastle, so it seemed imperative that he was given time to implement them.
With more time, he might have done — or, alternatively, his players might have been so unreceptive to his ideas that they would have done more harm than good. By hiring Allardyce, the previous Newcastle board, led by Freddy Shepherd, bought into a five-year plan, but, with results suffering and the spirits of supporters plumbing new depths, the new owner, Mike Ashley, felt that he had seen enough after less than five months of the new campaign.
When he was approached by Newcastle in 2004, after the dismissal of Sir Bobby Robson, Allardyce rejected the job, partly because he felt he still had work to do at Bolton and partly because he sensed that the club were in a mess that nobody could sort out.
Last summer, having left Bolton with a fortnight of the season remaining, he finally said yes to Shepherd because he felt that, after the dismissals of Robson, Graeme Souness and Glenn Roeder in quick succession, the new man would be given time to rebuild the club from the bottom up. Maybe, had it not been for the takeover by Ashley, he would have been granted a little more time, although Shepherd’s track record in that regard hardly inspires confidence.
Perhaps last night’s decision will prove the right one for Newcastle — and perhaps for Allardyce, too. The “break” that he prescribed himself on his departure from Bolton last April never transpired, so maybe it will now as he attempts to recover from the turbulent events of the past two years, perhaps by spending a few weeks at his house in Spain, where his holidays are usually interrupted constantly by telephone calls from agents.
But Allardyce, at 53, will not want to stay idle for long. An educated punt is that his availability may spark interest from Wolverhampton Wanderers, where Mick McCarthy is said to be vulnerable. Just down the road from his native town of Dudley, a club in need of inspiration as they look to return to their former glories: doubtless to the concern of McCarthy, it already sounds like the perfect fit.

The stats on Sam
Newcastle managers in Premier League: Win percentage
Kevin Keegan: 55
Bobby Robson: 44
Glenn Roeder: 40
Kenny Dalglish: 34
Sam Allardyce: 33
Graeme Souness: 29
Ruud Gullit: 27

This season’s departures
Sept 20 José Mourinho, Chelsea
Oct 17 Sammy Lee, Bolton
Oct 25 Martin Jol, Tottenham
Nov 5 Chris Hutchings, Wigan
Nov 19 Steve Bruce, Birmingham
Nov 26 Billy Davies, Derby
Dec 21 Lawrie Sanchez, Fulham
Jan 9 Sam Allardyce, Newcastle
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As an ex-Bolton season ticket holder I would like to say that Sam's limit was to take a hard-working team to sixth position. Given time he could've done the same at Newcastle. That was unacceptable at Newcastle but would have been a big step-up for them from recent years. I was glad to see Sam leave Bolton (tho not impressed with replacement) and would have liked to see someone with flair appointed like the ex Deportivo la Coruna manager.............. we all want style as well as 'relative' success !
John K, Arnside, England
and delighted that Steve McLaren did?
John Hinckley, Westhoughton, ancashire
he was ok at a pub league team like bolton but in newcastle he was at a big club and crapped himself so it will be back to pub football for sam. of corse there will always some fool with to much money that will employ him
seamus, dublin, ireland
It was heart breaking, disappointing, devastating, surprising, shocking. However so where many of his decisions. The bottom line is he wasnt doing his job. His job, to create stability to get results and to build foundations to get Newcastle back where they belonged. He set out in this direction but recent results have shown that he got horribly lost. His naivety in placing any sort of trust onto prisoner Joseph Barton was laughable. One ingredient the Toon didnt need was another bad boy midfielder after getting rid of two "problem kids" in Bowyer and Dyer. He didnt cut the mustard simple as. Now the Toon Army must wait and see who is next in line.
it is a massive decision for Ashley as this will be in truth the start of his "term". It must be a leading manager with a proven track record of success. Theres not too many of those about. Kevin Keegan anyone?
Thomas Keenan, belfast, antrim
When is it going to sink into Newcastle's fans that their team just isn't capable of taking on the Big Four and hasn't been for a while. The manner in which Bolton now seem to be nosediving is proof of just how good a manager big Sam is. To be honest they've done him good by sacking him now as opposed to him wasting any more of his time there.
Ruairi Maxwell, London, UK
Alladyce deserves to be fired, after kicking off from team
and Newcastle Turkish team captain and one of the best
players in his team EMRE. No wonder his team Newcastle went down from bad to worse in the Premier League and
Cup ties.
H. Dulagil
Turkey.
hasan dulagil, Bodrum, Turkey
Ray from London have you miseed the last two years? Had Sam got the England job we would almost certainly be looking forward to some International football this summer, he would have been far better than second choice Steve.
Jim White, Liverpool, UK
We can tolerate less than excellent results but the dire boring play on the pitch is what led to SAM'S demise and that he had the misfortune to be appointed b the previous regime - however he was the wrong man for the job and represented the last bad decision of the Shepherd reign.
Life is too short to be bored at St James!
Angus , Guisborough,
In the past 10 years Newcastle have finished in the bottom half of the table 6 times. In the past 3 years they've finished 7th, 13th and 14th so quite why 11th is viewed as so disastrous that they need to sack Big Sam is beyond me. And as for complaining about the lack of quality football, give over, only the big 4 wouldn't settle for a forward line of Martins, Owen and Viduka. If you were expecting sexy football why hire Alladyce in the first place, Bolton were never a pretty team. I've nothing personal against Newcastle but a lot of their fans are deluded, it's lunacy to get rid of someone with Alladyce's record after half a season.
Rich, Leicester, UK
I'm all for giving managers time, but Sam is a small club manager at best. He just can't handle the pressure. Sven and Juande Ramos are just two examples of great managers that with time on their side, the clubs they manage will be successful. On the other hand, Big Sam was found out. It's as simple as that. End of.
Mike Watts, Houston, Texas
I'm not normally one to gloat, but what a fantastic day for Newcastle FC and their supporters. Just goes to show that some decisions by chairmen/owners in football are correct, if at times, a little slow.
Every England supporter should be thanking their lucky stars that Allardyce didn't get 'the England job'.
Ray Dixon, London,