Chris Hughton’s Honest Approach Strikes a Chord at Brighton

Brighton manager Chris Hughton. (Getty Images)
Brighton manager Chris Hughton. (Getty Images)
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Chris Hughton’s Honest Approach Strikes a Chord at Brighton

Brighton manager Chris Hughton. (Getty Images)
Brighton manager Chris Hughton. (Getty Images)

To the outside world, a manager’s decisions are the only way to judge their work. But to the inner circle, to the players and staff that make up the daily life of a team, it is not just the decision but the way it is imparted that tells you so much about a person’s true management style. Steve Sidwell was hitting his 35th birthday, with a long and varied career behind him, when he was called in to have a chat with Chris Hughton. Sidwell’s frustrating season – he broke an ankle in a freak accident just as he was almost fully recovered from surgery on a prolapsed disc – was about to take another hit. Hughton sat down with the midfielder and began to talk.

“He pulled me in before the transfer window shut and said: ‘I am looking to bring a striker in and if I do there might not be a space for you,’” Sidwell recalls. Being withdrawn from the Premier League’s 25-man roster, in effect cutting off any chance to play once he finished his latest rehab, was an obvious blow, even if Sidwell fully understood the logic behind a decision in the club’s best interests.

The midfielder responded with the honesty and courteous professionalism that Hughton had shown him. “The way you get treated determines how you react,” he explains. “In those meetings there was truthfulness and he confided in me. It might have been easy to throw toys out of the pram if I had been treated badly, but that wasn’t it. So I offered to do anything off the pitch, in the dressing room, around certain individuals, going to watch matches for him. It is just about playing your part as best as you can.”

The exchange gives an insight into the atmosphere at Brighton under Hughton. Having been out of English football’s top flight for decades, having fought for their very existence, it would have been understandable for Brighton to have got a bit too excited, or felt a bit too anxious, about this season in the big time. But Hughton likes his football environment to be as measured as possible.

According to Liam Rosenior it has served Brighton extremely well. “The manager sets the tone for the culture of a football club,” he says. “As a person he is just a very consistent guy. He is very honest and humble. When you have those qualities they automatically transfer to your work. He doesn’t treat everybody the same but he treats everyone with the same amount of respect – whether that is tactical, off the field things with our lives, how we conduct ourselves.

“Throughout the week he will speak to people one-to-one, that is one of his strengths. When you are playing for someone like that you don’t want to let them down. The way he motivates is not to shout or single players out for mistakes or having a bad game. He has the foresight to know he can lose a player. He is always looking at it from an improvement point of view. He never gets too upset if we lose a game or too happy if we win. There is a real calmness throughout the squad and that is down to him.”

Brighton took on Arsenal on Sunday on the back of their most upbeat sequence of the season – four wins and two draws in all competitions have helped them to move upwards after a difficult couple of months. They feel buoyant but also cautious, knowing that their run-in brings a series of high profile opponents. This period of the season is key to survival. Everything is well organized and confidence is being maintained. The attitude brought fruition and Brighton defeated Arsenal 2-1, compounding Arsene Wenger’s dismal season.

Sidwell is impressed with how Brighton have adapted to Premier League life. “When we got promoted there was a lot of excitement, a lot of nervous energy,” he says. “The first handful of games was a mixed bag and it hit the lads how hard the Premier League is. They took picking up wins most weeks for granted in the Championship.

“The steadiness all comes from the manager. He never lets us get above our station or lets us panic or worry when things get tricky. While the majority of the time he is very calm, when he needs to give us a kick up the backside we have seen that. It is not the chucking of teacups but it is not nicey-nicey either. It is a controlled aggression.

“For a small person he puffs his chest out and lets you have it. When he does, because it isn’t commonplace, you sit back and think: ‘Wow.’ You know you have to buck your ideas up. His honesty is fantastic. His door is always open – and I have been at other clubs where the manager says the door is open and you go to knock on it and it’s ‘come back another day’.”

The combination of human and footballing qualities has struck a strong chord. Sidwell argues that Hughton is underrated because he does not like to make a managerial noise. Having played for the likes of Wenger, José Mourinho, Martin O’Neill and Gérard Houllier, Sidwell regards Hughton’s match‑day preparation as the most enjoyable he has come across.

“I have been lucky to work under some of the best managers this country has seen, and I would put him up the top with them. Because he doesn’t scream and shout from the rooftops and doesn’t like the spotlight on him that goes against him. People are starting to take note. If he continues at the top level who knows if a bigger job, or even the England job, will come?”

Whatever does come will be treated with the same measured, thorough, understated values.

The Guardian Sport



Alcaraz, Sinner Would Benefit from New Big Three, McEnroe Says

Tennis - Laver Cup - Uber Arena, Berlin, Germany - September 20, 2024 Team World captain John McEnroe reacts during Team World's Thanasi Kokkinakis match against Team Europe's Stefanos Tsitsipas REUTERS/Annegret Hilse
Tennis - Laver Cup - Uber Arena, Berlin, Germany - September 20, 2024 Team World captain John McEnroe reacts during Team World's Thanasi Kokkinakis match against Team Europe's Stefanos Tsitsipas REUTERS/Annegret Hilse
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Alcaraz, Sinner Would Benefit from New Big Three, McEnroe Says

Tennis - Laver Cup - Uber Arena, Berlin, Germany - September 20, 2024 Team World captain John McEnroe reacts during Team World's Thanasi Kokkinakis match against Team Europe's Stefanos Tsitsipas REUTERS/Annegret Hilse
Tennis - Laver Cup - Uber Arena, Berlin, Germany - September 20, 2024 Team World captain John McEnroe reacts during Team World's Thanasi Kokkinakis match against Team Europe's Stefanos Tsitsipas REUTERS/Annegret Hilse

The emergence of a third young star to challenge the supremacy of Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner would push the duo's already scintillating rivalry to new heights, tennis great John McEnroe said.

Alcaraz and Sinner are coming off a French Open final for the ages and head into next week's Wimbledon having evenly split the last six majors between them, Reuters reported.

"It's going to be an interesting time to see if there's another player or two who can break in with those two the way Novak (Djokovic) did when he was trying to get to the same level as Roger (Federer) and Rafa (Nadal)," McEnroe told reporters on Wednesday.

"It shows you what type of a player he was that he was able to do that. But right now, there's a void."

Djokovic, Federer and Nadal enjoyed a two-decade stranglehold on men's tennis and their era of dominance was made even richer by the three-sided nature of the rivalry.

In a Roland Garros showdown of unsurpassed quality, 22-year-old Alcaraz of Spain saved three successive match points to battle back from two sets down and beat the Italian in the longest French Open final in history.

Miami Open champion Jakub Mensik, 19, and 18-year-old Brazilian Joao Fonseca are two teenagers McEnroe could envision breaking into the Alcaraz-Sinner rivalry, as well as big-serving American Ben Shelton.

"One of those two guys or Ben would be my choice right now," said seven-time Grand Slam champion McEnroe.

"I think it would be important to get another guy or two to add to the mix. That would be really helpful."

McEnroe said the future of men's tennis is in great hands provided Alcaraz, who is seeking a hat-trick of Wimbledon titles next month, and world number one Sinner stay healthy.

"It was unheard of what we watched over the last 20 years and you can make the argument that what we're seeing now is even faster and different from what we saw even five years ago," he said.

"I can't wait to see what it's going to be like in 10 years, or five years even."