When the team is winning, the manager’s job suddenly looks
very easy. The hardest part of Martin Allen’s afternoon was the post-match
interview, when he seemed slightly lost for words, trying to work out whether
this was his team’s best performance of what has been, so far, a very strong season.
Confidence is high, both on the field and in the stands, and many of the ghosts
of the past few seasons are seemingly being laid to rest.
Allen’s appointment in the summer was met with a mostly
lukewarm response, but his early results have little short of spectacular. His
signing s have mostly worked out well, Nelson, Barrett, Allen and Weston being amongst
the standout players in the side. But he has also overseen vastly improved
performance from many of last year’s underachievers, Mark Fish and Danny
Kedwell in particular. The team look fitter than before, and have a purpose
about their playing that was often lacking.
The obvious conclusion to draw from this is that it is the
manager who has made the crucial difference. But the obvious conclusion isn’t
necessarily the right one. At the very least, there are other factors to take
into account. Gillingham’s strength in depth must be the envy of the division,
and so far this season Allen has added a two loan signings from the Championship
to his already would be wrong to say Gillingham have been lucky here, the money earned from players
brought through the clubs youth system and subsequently moved on with deals
that show benefit in the long term is down to hard work and good business, not
luck. But Allen is the lucky man who is now reaping the benefit of those deals.
Allen’s managerial record is very much hit and miss. Of
course, if it wasn’t for his failures, there’s no way he’d be at Gillingham
now. But by his own account he has changed his managerial style over the years.
As he told The Independent earlier in the season; “Management methods have had
to change. I have undertaken courses to look at leadership, being more
open-minded.” Maybe this is an example of club and manager finding each other
at the right time.
Even with his changed ways, some of Allen's methods and quotes are still somewhat left of centre. When the team is winning, all of these idiosyncrasies can seem endearing, the charm of a maverick. It's not so endearing when the results aren't going well, as anyone who has been watching Brendan Rodgers early season David Brent impression on Channel 5 will know.
Still, at the moment the players seem to be responding to Allen. Whether they like him or not, whether they respect him or find him slightly odd, the results seems to justify the methods. When Steve Evans left Crawley late last season, with the team in the promotion places with two games to go, footage emerged on Youtube of the players celebrating his departure. Evans is, of course, a particularly polarising figure, capable of making even Neil Warnock seem charming and likeable by comparison. It's easy to sympathise with his former charges feelings. There's nothing to suggest that Allen's relationship with his players is anything like as difficult. But even if it was, as long as the results and performances carry on as they've begun, few in the stands will worry too much.
Even with his changed ways, some of Allen's methods and quotes are still somewhat left of centre. When the team is winning, all of these idiosyncrasies can seem endearing, the charm of a maverick. It's not so endearing when the results aren't going well, as anyone who has been watching Brendan Rodgers early season David Brent impression on Channel 5 will know.
Still, at the moment the players seem to be responding to Allen. Whether they like him or not, whether they respect him or find him slightly odd, the results seems to justify the methods. When Steve Evans left Crawley late last season, with the team in the promotion places with two games to go, footage emerged on Youtube of the players celebrating his departure. Evans is, of course, a particularly polarising figure, capable of making even Neil Warnock seem charming and likeable by comparison. It's easy to sympathise with his former charges feelings. There's nothing to suggest that Allen's relationship with his players is anything like as difficult. But even if it was, as long as the results and performances carry on as they've begun, few in the stands will worry too much.