Am I going mad?
White Noise said it best on X: Marco Silva has not become a bad coach overnight.
So why am I seeing calls of support to reports this week that the Fulham board might be set to wield the axe?
We have had five years of near-constant success – certainly five years of upwards trajectory. And as soon as we hit our first slight challenge, there are rumblings of a change.
Football is a fickle game.
Look at West Ham. Fans were trotting out those classic lines you hear from time to time when they get bored of the status quo – the ones we’re hearing from some quarters now.
“It’s time to make a change.”
“He doesn’t look like he’s got it in him anymore.”
“It’s time to freshen things up.”
It doesn’t smell to fresh at the London Stadium today, despite two wins on the bounce. It certainly doesn’t smell as fresh as that major European trophy did.
And when I posed this opinion on X this week, someone replied with “Letting Moyes go wasn’t the issue. The recruitment of the next manager (and players) was”. To which I say: “Do you really think we’d get that right?”
Silva was a masterstroke appointment. But before that Shad Khan’s record of managers was pretty poor – bar Slavisa – who we unceremoniously dumped at a similar point in the season. And that worked out well, didn’t it?
Silva’s contract is the biggest stick people are using to beat him with. He hasn’t committed to a new deal, which runs out in the summer.
So what?
Some people argue that it will harm our attempts to sign players in January and the close season if we don’t have a committed manager.
Will it? We don’t sign players in January (who aren’t called Willian), and we don’t make any moves in the main window until late August , by which point we will have a replacement in if Silva walks, so what’s the problem? It’s only a issue if we have long-term plans in place, which we have consistently shown we do not.
Maybe Silva is waiting on certain transfer assurances before he signs a new deal? Or perhaps, despite murmurings, one has not yet been tabled for him to sign? If separate reports that Khan snr is on his way to England to advance talks about a new contract are to be believed, then perhaps this will all be moot anyway.
But for now, there could be many reasons why nothing has been announced. It doesn’t automatically equate to “Marco wants out” – but believing that makes it easier for some fans to call for him to go.
But even if his wish is to move on at the end of the season, that doesn’t make Silva any less committed to achieving success in the next 27 games. He’s worked hard to rehabilitate his reputation during the last five years.
No longer is he the Colin Farrell lookalike whose head is turned the moment another club flutters its eyelashes at him. He has shown time and again that he is committed to this project in SW6. And that commitment should be a two-way street.
Marco’s not infallible. There are things he could improve. He could have a more robust plan B; he could be less prickly at times when things don’t go his way; he could swallow his pride and get on board more with decisions that don’t go his way, for the good of the team (JKA, anyone?).
But he is in the top two managers I’ve seen in 30 years of supporting Fulham FC – and letting him go now would not only be a terrible decision in the context of the 2025/26 Premier League season, it would be potentially catastrophic for the next few years.
Stay the course. Trust the process. Keep the faith.
Ally McCoist responds when asked if Leeds United would take Fulham boss Marco Silva
Daniel Farke’s position remains under threat with the November international break now underway and Leeds United under intense pressure from the club’s supporters to make a change.
However, Farke is not the only manager facing criticism and a possible sacking over the next couple of weeks. There is Rob Edwards at Wolves, who will start his role at Molineux under massive pressure.
Eddie Howe will be feeling the heat at Newcastle after a poor start, while Marco Silva also faces losing his job. Especially because the Portuguese gaffer finds himself in the final year of his deal at Craven Cottage.
Fulham sit level on points with Leeds, having only won three of their 11 Premier League games. One of those wins was down to pure luck against Leeds, because of Gabriel Gudmundsson’s fluke own goal.
With Silva and Farke both under pressure, there have been some murmurs that Silva could end up at Elland Road in the next few weeks. If Fulham do choose to sack Silva, then compensation will be small.
Speaking to TalkSPORT (12/11, 9.25AM), Alan Brazil asked Ally McCoist if he could see Silva leaving Fulham and joining Leeds in due course. McCoist responded by urging Leeds to give Farke some time.
Alan Brazil asked: “If Marco became available, do Leeds bring him in to Elland Road?”
McCoist replied: “I don’t know. I have a great degree of sympathy for Farke. He wasn’t even in the top flight and people said he wasn’t the man to lead them, which was really unfair.
“All of the newly-promoted sides have started well, Sunderland the pick of the bunch. Leeds and Burnley are drifting into an area I thought they’d be. But in my opinion, I’m sticking with Farke,” McCoist added.
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