Gianfranco Zola won only 23 of the 80
games he was in charge of West Ham United. Photograph: Barry Coombs/PA
Gianfranco Zola
appeared doomed from the moment David Gold and David Sullivan strode
into Upton Park in January to take charge and began what seemed a public
undermining of the Italian.
Whether the 43-year-old deserved to
go is the point that will now exercise supporters. While Zola's first
season ended in him guiding the club to ninth place, an admirable
achievement, this year's campaign was a regression.
West Ham United flirted with
relegation and many fans had accepted they were destined to go down
following the nadir that was the 3-1 hammering at home by Wolves on 23
March. But then a late-season run of seven points from four games
allowed them to escape: they ended a place above the drop zone with 35
points, 16 fewer than last year.
That Wolves result, which had
been West Ham's fifth consecutive defeat, prompted Gold and Sullivan to
ramp up their good cop, bad cop act. The latter published his infamous
open letter on the club's website, which was scathing about Zola's team,
while Gold told anyone who would listen that the Italian was still
his man.
Sullivan labelled the side "shambolic" and "pathetic" and
wrote: "I was angry at the disorganised way we played, allowing Wolves
too much space so that they looked like Manchester United. Individually
we have some very good players but this is not being converted into a
good team performance.
"Nobody at the club should delude
themselves that we are a good team. The table does not lie."
The
timing of Sullivan's intervention was curious. In the middle of a
relegation dog-fight Zola was having to man-manage his players and now
his owners, the extra plate all managers struggle to keep spinning. He
had to strike a balance between repelling the notion he was "soft"
(Sullivan's word when pondering if Zola could hack management), while
hoping to corral enough morale from his furious players to improve
performances.
Sullivan's gamble seemed to have failed when the
next game, against Stoke City, was lost. But Ilan's late header at
Everton rescued a point and Zola began his salvage job despite his noisy
owners' struggle to stay on-message, even with themselves.
As
recently as a fortnight ago Gold, whose Rolls-Royce has always been
visible on press day at the Chadwell Heath training ground, said: "I'm
desperately hoping he [Zola] will stay. He's been to hell and back in
the last 12 months." But then, the telling contradiction: "He may feel
he needs to take a sabbatical or something."
"Something"
turned out to be the sack, which is a rare occurrence in these days
of departure by mutual consent. West Ham's statement was terse. Part of
it read: "West Ham United confirm that they have terminated the
contract of Gianfranco Zola."
While more is to emerge regarding
the precise details of the former Chelsea midfielder's departure from
West Ham, for the moment here is a statistic (possibly telling) from
Zola's 21 months in charge: Played 80 Won 23 Lost 36.
Whether
Avram Grant, Slaven Bilic or any other of the potential candidates feel
comfortable working for Gold and Sullivan may become clearer over the
next few days.
guardian.co.uk