Sam Allardyce Is Back in the Top Flight but Will Old Truths Still Apply?

Sam Allardyce has never been relegated from the Premier League and has been hired to keep 19th-placed West Bromwich Albion in the top flight. Photograph: Ian West/PA
Sam Allardyce has never been relegated from the Premier League and has been hired to keep 19th-placed West Bromwich Albion in the top flight. Photograph: Ian West/PA
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Sam Allardyce Is Back in the Top Flight but Will Old Truths Still Apply?

Sam Allardyce has never been relegated from the Premier League and has been hired to keep 19th-placed West Bromwich Albion in the top flight. Photograph: Ian West/PA
Sam Allardyce has never been relegated from the Premier League and has been hired to keep 19th-placed West Bromwich Albion in the top flight. Photograph: Ian West/PA

There’s a knock on the sunbed. The lid swings ominously open, filling the room with an eerie blue ultraviolet glow. A 66-year-old man of medium to heavy build climbs out, accepts the bathrobe that is wordlessly proffered to him. There is a car out front with its engine running. A freshly-pressed suit and referee’s whistle hanging in the back. Destination: the West Midlands, and the Monster HydroSport Training Ground. And with that, Sam Allardyce returns.

Was this how it happened? On reflection, probably not. But then this has always been the thing about Allardyce, who has been summoned from the managerial antechamber by West Bromwich Albion after two years out of the game: the mythology performs as crucial a function as the man himself. When you hire Allardyce, what you’re paying for is not so much a coach or an employee, but a brand, a creed, a lifestyle. You’re buying wholesale into allardycismo as an idea. You’re painting your world, or your little corner of it, a vivid shade of Big Sam.

It fits. It works. For a club 19th in the Premier League with plenty of history and tradition but very little you would describe as a direction or discernible identity, it makes perfect sense. Indeed, on some level it is surprising that Allardyce hasn’t already managed West Brom at some point, in the same way you occasionally need to remind yourself that James McArthur never actually played for Everton. (I know, right? Look it up!)

Taking a broader view, the summary dismissal of Slaven Bilic after a commendable 1-1 draw at Manchester City offers the first breach of the uneasy armistice that seemed to have developed between managers and their boards over this pandemic-inflected year. Until this week, Nigel Pearson at Watford was the Premier League’s only managerial casualty in 2020.

But with the table beginning to shake out and the full bleakness of the post-Covid landscape only now beginning to emerge, the old orthodoxies are beginning to resurface. Chris Wilder seems safe at Sheffield United for now. Likewise Sean Dyche, Mikel Arteta, Scott Parker, Steve Bruce. And yet prepare for things to get very messy very quickly, gritted teeth and stoic resilience giving way to fear, financial black holes, and endless screaming: a journey that largely mirrors the country’s as a whole.

And so in he prowls, thundering on about shape and tightness and winning your battles and respecting the point. There’s always been a part of Allardyce that resented being pigeonholed as a survival specialist, that always longed to build something: the welder by day who dreams of being a dancer by night but is just too damn good at welding to give up the day job. Also, people keep asking him to weld things. Also, he’s not actually that good at dancing.

But equally there has always been a part of Allardyce that has secretly relished the struggle, taken genuine pride in his record of never being relegated from the Premier League. The easy life never suited him. Semi-retirement, with its interminable carousel of easy media gigs, never gave him the satisfaction he craved. And so ultimately the call of the dugout – the warm embrace of the freezing training pitch, the big lights of the big league – proved impossible to resist.

There are two big unknowns here. The first is Allardyce himself. He has been out of football for two years, which as he admits is his longest career break since he left school at 15. Has he changed? Has the world changed? Do the old truths still apply in a new landscape? In a game that has never felt more adrift, more bereft of simple hope and simple joy, crying out for a meaning and a purpose, is Allardyce really the man to supply it?

The second is the squad he inherits: a raw, fragile, deeply unbalanced mixture of the promising, the unfulfilled, and the overpromoted. Sam Johnstone, Darnell Furlong, Semi Ajayi, Matheus Pereira, Conor Gallagher, Grady Diangana: there are the fringes of a good team here. But there are also too many makeweights, not enough change-makers, not enough goalscorers. Does Allardyce have a creative solution for any of this? Or will he simply bin the flair players, stack what’s left in a 5-4-1 and hope Charlie Austin and Branislav Ivanovic can head them to safety?

Perhaps this is exactly what West Brom need right now. Perhaps, by the same token, 18 months down the line they will decide they need the exact opposite. To grasp the appeal of allardycismo, you really need to look at what comes before and after it: Ronald Koeman and Marco Silva at Everton, Alan Pardew and Frank de Boer at Crystal Palace. At West Ham, the enterprise and panache of Bilic was deemed the perfect antidote to four years of Allardyce. Now, with a satisfying irony, the reverse appears to be true.

This is how the ecosystem of football re-balances itself: allardycismo as the natural corrective to bilicismo and vice versa, yin following yang following yin following yang. Here’s to Sam Allardyce: the cause of, and solution to, all of your team’s problems. Mother Nature breathes a sigh. The world keeps turning.

(The Guardian)



Home Favorite Raducanu Still Searching for Magic Formula

Tennis - Eastbourne Open - Devonshire Park Lawn Tennis Club, Eastbourne, Britain - June 24, 2025 Britain's Emma Raducanu celebrates winning her round of 32 match against Ann Li of the US Action Images via Reuters/Paul Childs
Tennis - Eastbourne Open - Devonshire Park Lawn Tennis Club, Eastbourne, Britain - June 24, 2025 Britain's Emma Raducanu celebrates winning her round of 32 match against Ann Li of the US Action Images via Reuters/Paul Childs
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Home Favorite Raducanu Still Searching for Magic Formula

Tennis - Eastbourne Open - Devonshire Park Lawn Tennis Club, Eastbourne, Britain - June 24, 2025 Britain's Emma Raducanu celebrates winning her round of 32 match against Ann Li of the US Action Images via Reuters/Paul Childs
Tennis - Eastbourne Open - Devonshire Park Lawn Tennis Club, Eastbourne, Britain - June 24, 2025 Britain's Emma Raducanu celebrates winning her round of 32 match against Ann Li of the US Action Images via Reuters/Paul Childs

Emma Raducanu reclaimed the British number one spot this month but still looks some way from rediscovering the spark that propelled her career into the stratosphere in 2021.

Yet, despite her lowered expectations, the 22-year-old remains one of Britain's most recognizable female athletes and will arrive at Wimbledon regarded as the country's main hope for a long-awaited women's singles champion, Reuters reported.

Few players in the history of tennis have experienced such a rapid and unexpected breakthrough as Raducanu managed in 2021, when she claimed the US Open title and became the first qualifier to win a major in the Open Era (since 1968).

It set the bar ridiculously high for the Toronto-born player and she would be the first to admit that her trajectory since then has been anything but smooth.

Having rocketed into the world's top 10 on the back of her Flushing Meadows fairytale, Raducanu has since struggled with a succession of wrist and foot injuries, poor form and a revolving door of coaches as she tries to find the magic formula.

That astonishing US Open remains Raducanu's only title, but there are signs that she is trending in the right direction.

A quarter-final run at Miami, reaching the last-16 in Rome and then the quarter-finals at Queen's Club have helped Raducanu back to a ranking of 38, although she has come up well short against the big hitters of women's tennis.

Mark Petchey, the former British player who guided twice Wimbledon champion Andy Murray in the early stages of his illustrious career, is the latest coach to try and unlock the full potential of Raducanu's game, joining her team in April.

Petchey neatly summed up the challenge Raducanu has faced in the years since she won the US Open.

"I feel as though everybody's still living in 2021. The game has changed massively," he said after accepting the challenge.

"The balls are four times heavier than they were back in 2021 and Emma isn't one of the biggest hitters out there.

"My mantra to her since Miami has been: 'You know, you're starting your career now'. Unfortunately for Emma, she's living her career in reverse."

Some have suggested Raducanu's off-court commitments and the lucrative sponsorship deals that flooded in after her breakthrough have softened her focus on the daily grind, a charge Petchey is quick to dismiss.

She has also been the victim of a stalker and continues to struggle with a nagging back injury that forced her to pull out of the Berlin Open in the Wimbledon build-up.

Raducanu can also expect questions during Wimbledon about her friendship with men's champion Carlos Alcaraz after their announcement that they would play together in a new US Open mixed doubles event fueled romance rumors.

Yet, despite all the distractions, Raducanu has the game to worry the world's best and is clearly up for the fight as she bids to better her two runs to the fourth round.

Home fans will hope that when Raducanu walks through the Wimbledon gates the shackles will be released and the carefree tennis she showed as a teenager will return.