The Irish Mail on Sunday

So why didn’t bosses go straight into the dugout?

- By Chris Wheeler AT GOODISON PARK

IN THE blue corner, Carlo Ancelotti. Er, actually no, it’s Duncan Ferguson. And managing Arsenal today, please welcome Mikel Arteta. Wrong again. It’s Freddie Ljungberg.

The Premier League has never seen anything like it. One new manager sat up in the directors’ box watching the team he has taken over, yes. But two of them sat just yards apart? Very peculiar.

It used to be the case that a newly-appointed coach couldn’t wait to get to work.

To get out there on the touchline to give his team the ‘bounce’ that so often happens at football clubs when there is a change in the dugout.

These days there seems to be a growing trend towards managers sitting out their first game and opting instead for the comfort zone of the directors’ box.

Win and the new man can nick a bit of the credit, as Sam Allardyce once did here after watching Everton beat West Ham following his appointmen­t in November 2017. Lose, and simply blame it on the caretaker.

To be fair to Ancelotti, it may have been asking too much for the 60-year-old Italian to step straight in when he was only installed a couple of hours before kick-off.

He didn’t meet the players for the first time until after the game.

It’s also worth considerin­g that Duncan Ferguson’s record as Everton interim coach wasn’t too shabby: a win over Chelsea, a draw at Manchester United and a Carabao Cup exit to Leicester on penalties prior to this.

Best leave Ferguson in charge and let Ancelotti start afresh today.

But what about Arteta? Arsenal have now won just once in six games since the sacking of Unai Emery last month, and stand-in Ljungberg has led the calls for an urgent appointmen­t.

This is a team in need of leadership and the new leader wasn’t there.

Arteta, 37, was only unveiled on Friday but his appointmen­t had been widely expected throughout the week. Surely the former Manchester City No2 could have

taken charge. He was an Arsenal player as recently as 2016 who, unlike Ancelotti, knows his club inside out. It was, he acknowledg­ed on Friday, like coming home.

‘I have been preparing for a few years for this challenge to come. I know the expectatio­ns, level and stature of this club and what it deserves. I am ready for that challenge,’ said Arteta who also spoke of the need for an ‘immediate impact’.

So what was holding him back? Get cracking and get this Arsenal team back up the table. Given the mess he has inherited at the Emirates, there was only so much to be gained by being in the directors’ box.

What Arsenal needed at Goodison Park was the new manager out there alongside them, and it felt like Arteta took the safe option alongside Ancelotti. The A-team. How did that old TV show used to go? ‘If you have a problem, if no one else can help, and if you can find them, maybe you can hire the A-Team.’

Just don’t expect them to start straight away.

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