Premiership Football News: Avram Grant
Andy Greeves on why Avram has struggled to live in the shadow of the Special One
One of the most abiding images of the season so far was Avram
Grant’s reaction to Chelsea’s Champions League semi-final
victory over Liverpool. The Israeli crumbled to his knees as the
final whistle sounded in west London, overcome by a mixture of emotion.
He gave tribute to his father on Holocaust Memorial Day and celebrated
the Blues’ victory - a rare and personal moment of reflection
rarely afforded in the last nine months he has been in charge at
Stamford Bridge.
The focus on Grant since his appointment as Blues manager on 20
September, 2007, has been unprecedented and on occasions, unseemly.
Sections of the UK football media and Chelsea’s support base
have revelled at every opportunity to lead a character assassination
of the former Portsmouth technical director.
Grant has been portrayed as a hapless tactician, unable to communicate
with his players and ultimately a sub-standard replacement to Jose
Mourinho. Yet this is the manager who has led Chelsea, a club playing
in the second tier of English football less than twenty years ago,
to a Champions League final. In touching distance of landing a trophy
that was, until now, the stuff of simple football fantasy for those
in SW6.
But when has football ever been logical? For that matter, when
has it ever been fair? The achievement of leading any other English
club to the Champions League final would have guaranteed Grant near
immortal status amongst that side’s supporters.
As would matching, stride for stride, a seemingly irresistible
Manchester United until the final day of the Premiership season.
Yet going into the final, there is the feeling that not even landing
Europe’s biggest prize would secure love and admiration for
the Israeli at Stamford Bridge, let alone his Chelsea future.
So why is the man standing on the brink of Chelsea greatest glory
at the same time walking the most perilous of planks? The reasons
carried by press, fans and players alike are plentiful, but ultimately
the resentment of Avram Grant is quite simple - he is not Jose Mourinho.
The media pine for Mourinho’s flamboyance, unpredictability
and talk of omelettes and football teams. The players crave the
father figure that made them believe they were all special ones.
And the fans miss the man that put them on the world football map.
The comparisons drawn between Grant and Mourinho are as frequent
and tiresome as stories of the Israeli’s ‘inevitable’
sacking. Even after the semi-final win, the victory was referred
to most commonly as Grant going ‘one step further than the
Special One’, rather than becoming the first Chelsea manager
to take the Blues to a Champions League final. And on the eve of
the most significant match in their history, Didier Drogba claimed
all Grant needed to do to be successful at Stamford Bridge was to
turn up and ‘wait for the results to come along’. Just
as Mourinho could do no wrong in the eyes of players, fans and media,
it would appear Grant can do no right.
His lack of experience and UEFA recognised qualifications rankled
greatly with Chelsea’s supporters from the word go. Still
bitter over Mourinho’s departure, the arrival of a man perceived
as a relative nobody in their eyes was insulting appointment from
a board they felt had hounded their Portuguese cult hero out. The
popular consensus amongst the fans was that Grant got the top job
purely on the basis of being friends with club owner Roman Abramovich.
Rarely did anyone in The Shed or The Mathew Harding Stand mutter
that the new man had in fact managed at international level for
six years or that he had won four league titles in his native Israel.
He was lambasted for Chelsea’s 2-1 defeat to Tottenham Hotspur
in the League Cup Final in February. A game that, for whatever reason,
their opponents simply seemed to want to win more than the Blues.
He was roundly booed by the vast majority at Stamford Bridge after
going just a goal down to Arsenal in a home match Chelsea would
ultimately go on to win 2-1. He has even had to suffer the indignity
of fans singing Jose Mourinho’s name and waving flags with
their ex-boss’ name while Grant’s side are playing.
Worse still, anti-semitic abuse from a small section of Chelsea’s
support.
Grant has secured 26 victories in 37 games as Chelsea boss, losing
just three games - a results ratio (70.3%) almost identical to Jose
Mourinho’s at Stamford Bridge. He has engineered the resurgence
of Michael Ballack and to a lesser extend, Andrei Shevchenko, into
top Premiership players. And whatever the purists might like to
say, his side play with substance and purpose as great as any achieved
by Mourinho. His managerial qualities are surely therefore not in
doubt, yet his immediate future is.
Should Avram Grant go on to lift the Champions League in Moscow
on Wednesday, maybe, just maybe, the farcical questions of his worth
and the relentless comparisons with Mourinho may go away. But judging
on everything that has gone before, even then Grant may find that
‘The Special One’ is ultimately Chelsea’s Irreplaceable
One.
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