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Ross County's Next Permanent Manager


Who will be Ross County's Next Permanent Manager?  

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Roy should have a Zoom call scheduled with Tommy Wright for first thing Monday morning. I don't know if he'd want the job, but he has to be asked.

Derek Adams would be an interesting one. Standard lack of imagination, but not necessarily a bad idea. He's had a reasonably successful time in England and has hopefully developed his people management skills in that time. He's doing well at Morecambe in League 2 just now, so he might have loftier ambitions for his next job.

To John Hughes I say no thank you.

The club are operating on a much smaller budget than in recent years. Hopefully Roy is able to free up some additional funds for the new guy to save us from relegation. Might as well get the benefit of our much-envied benefactor.

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13 hours ago, G51 said:

See if Roy MacGregor woke up one day and thought "You know what, there are actually folk out there who know football a lot better than I do, I'll pay one of them to come in and run my club for me" Ross County would have the potential to be up there challenging for European places.

MacGregor is the reason they've come so far, but his inability to look beyond people he knows and trusts to run key positions at the club is holding County back. Bringing back Derek Adams, even if it does work out, is terrible decision making because the process behind it is so bad.

Great idea!

Why don't you write to ...

Steven Ferguson 

Chief Executive Officer 

Victoria Park

Dingwall

IV15 9QZ

 

 

 

 

 

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3 hours ago, Willie adie said:

Would Barry Robson be such a bad shout? 

No reason to think he wouldn't be another Kettlewell.  I’d be amazed if it wasn’t someone with a proven track record in Scottish football.  If it’s anyone other than Tommy Wright, it’ll be a surprise. 

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McGregor managerial decisions:

Cooper - Great appointment, went stale and eventually sacked

Smith - absolutely disastrous, sacked on holiday LOL

Robertson - disaster, walked out

Scott Leitch - disaster, sacked as he relegated us

Dick Campbell - did well but a disaster behind the scenes, sacked top of the league LOL

Adams - great appointment, moved to Hibs as Assistant.

McStay - disaster, sacked for being utter shite

Calderwood - considered good only as the bar was so low with McStay, still didn't really achieve much despite a Challenge Cup win, short term contract.

Adams II: The Glory Years - again great appointment but went stale and sacked.

McIntyre: we won a league cup, but league form was like a yo yo, eventually sacked when we turned turgid.

Coyle: disaster - sacked

Fergie/Kettlewell - got us relegated but largely because of Coyle, won us the league, returned to Premier, slowly turned to shite when Jamie Lindsay went.  Fergie moved up stairs, Kettlewell sacked.

McGregor going back to Adams is only because it's about the only good decision he has made as a chairman in terms of managerial appointments.  However Wright is the best candidate, regularly took St Johnstone to the top six with European adventures and won the Scottish Cup.

 

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Phrases like "short-term" "a character who will lift the dressing room" and "John Hughes" are giving me the fear.

 

https://www.ross-shirejournal.co.uk/sport/ross-county-look-to-appoint-new-manager-in-next-48-hours-222251/

Ross County will look to appoint new manager before clash with Celtic on Wednesday night


By Alasdair Fraser
 
Published: 07:00, 21 December 2020
 

Get the Ross-shire Journal sent to your inbox every week and swipe through an exact replica of the day's newspaper

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

ROY MacGregor says he will look to appoint a new Ross County manager within the next 48 hours.

Ross County are looking for their new manager. Ross County are looking for their new manager.

He has offered former manager Stuart Kettlewell who was sacked on Saturday, the chance to return to a role at the club's youth academy.

The chairman spoke of the distress and personal “shock” of an emotional parting of ways with Kettlewell immediately after Saturday’s 2-0 home defeat to Hamilton Accies.

Derek Adams, currently prospering at Morecambe in England’s League Two, and unemployed John Hughes and Tommy Wright are believed to be under consideration by the club financier.

But MacGregor, given County’s increasingly desperate struggles this season, admitted the appointment might initially be short-term in nature with sole focus on survival this season.

He aims to move swiftly to fill the post - preferably before Celtic’s visit on Wednesday.

Kettlewell, with over 11 years’ service as player, coach and manager, leaves with the club four points adrift at the foot of the Premiership and without a league win in 10 games since mid-September.

The 36-year-old’s record since taking sole charge at the start of the season, with Steven Ferguson moving upstairs to become chief executive, read played 24, lost 12 and won just five.

Only three of those wins were in the Premiership.

But Kettlewell’s legacy remains intact at the club where, as a player, he won a First Division title and Challenge Cup, while starring in the giant-killing team that reached the 2010 Scottish Cup final under Adams.

As youth coach, he masterminded a stunning Premiership development league title triumph, pipping Celtic, Rangers and Aberdeen to the youth crown.

As co-manager with Ferguson, he also won a Championship and Challenge Cup double.

Despite emotions running high, MacGregor’s sharp business mind was quickly on the case in the search for a successor - although he insists no moves were made before the sacking.

Announcing the new job offer to Kettlewell, MacGregor said: “It’s been an extremely tough one for us, not just on Saturday but for a few weeks.

“Everyone, including Stuart, was aware of the situation.

“We’d hoped he would get a reaction from the players, particularly in the last two games, but that didn’t happen.

“We had two games this week that looked winnable, but we didn’t look like winning either.

“It was affecting Stuart as well.

“He has been offered the opportunity to go back to his Academy post, so it is not a case of us putting him out the door.

“He stepped up into the managerial job willingly and is part of the fabric of Ross County. “We’re not ditching him, but this project hasn’t worked. That’s where we are.

“He’s having a think about that. He just wants some time.

“The family have had a new baby recently and all that pressure has been upon the family, so I told him to take two or three weeks off just to go and think about it.

“The club is prepared to look after him.

“(His appointment) was a project we were all behind as a club, and it hasn’t worked.”

MacGregor insists he waited longer than he might have to wield the axe, given Kettlewell’s closure relationship.

The chairman stressed: “It was emotional on Saturday, but myself, Steven Ferguson and Stuart all knew the situation.

“It had been talked about.

“On a human level, I’m in a little bit of shock. What we created at the club was a Ross County model, with Ross County people.

“This bit of it didn’t work. Everyone’s in shock with that, but we’ve also got to be real - it wasn’t working.”

Quizzed on the likely timescale was for the new appointment, MacGregor said: “I’ve just started to work on it now, out of respect for Stuart.

“I knew this scenario could arise, but I didn’t do anything about it until 9pm last night, when I began the process.

“I would think we will move very quickly.

“This is a short-term project, probably. We’re in a situation where we have four and a half months and 20 games remaining.

“We can’t take that as a long-term project. Any manager who is seeking a two or three year project would likely look to begin it in the summer.

“This is about trying to remobilise what we’ve got, probably take a few players in and try to get security again in this division - and then start a project.

“I think it will be a short-term appointment with, hopefully, a longer-term view.

“But the short-term is we have to patch-up this situation. We need a character who will lift the dressing room.”

Asked if assistant manager Richie Brittain and first team coach Don Cowie would take charge on Wednesday, MacGregor stressed: “I think something will happen before that.

“It is very unusual times and a wee bit more complicated than usual. I have to ensure whoever is coming in is tested. We’re all in bubbles. It is a wee bit more complicated than usual.

“I’m not sure how that will look as we go through this week.

“But we have four games, Wednesday-Saturday for two weeks, with 20 games to go.

“That’s a challenge at the best of times, but at least we have half the season to try to put it right - and we need to do that as quickly as possible.”

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