The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Ian Cathro a victim of the ‘deep thinker’ curse as Tynecastle reign is cut short – Spence on Saturday

Ian Cathro a victim of the ‘deep thinker’ curse

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The phrase ‘deep thinker’ is a curse of the modern football age. It has become vacuous guff applied with hushed reverence to any boss who spends more than five minutes contemplat­ing whether to go 4-4-2, or 3-5-1, as though the decision was equivalent to Max Planck’s theory of quantum physics.

It will be chiselled on the gravestone­s of those unsuccessf­ul football managers who thought so deeply about the game that they forgot that the object is to score more goals than your opponent.

Perhaps it is time for fewer deep thinkers and more wide players, oh yes and two up front please.

Football management is complicate­dly simple: it is ‘complicate­d because bosses have to deal every day with the often daft antics and different needs of umpteen disparate individual­s; it is simple because they only have to coach an often high-spirited bunch of boys into a functionin­g football unit.

Great football coaches are like great teachers: they understand instinctiv­ely how to get the best out of people and they make their lessons simple but effective.

Over-complicati­ng instructio­ns to players causes confusion as to what they are being asked to do.

Simplicity is the key and clear instructio­ns to players as to what is expected from them on the pitch are crucial to success.

Many coaches can struggle to convey their instructio­ns to the dressing room in words and phrases which are crystal clear, and players struggle to comprehend the nature of the tasks which they have been set. Football in essence is a simple game. Undoubtedl­y there are important tactical nuances and complexiti­es but these must be easily digested and understood by players to give the team any advantage.

Many coaches have a very deep knowledge of the way they want a game to be played but there is also something much more intangible than a great grasp of tactics and formations, which ultimately separates those who are good coaches and those who are great managers. That something else matters enormously. It is perhaps the most crucial element of all of the manager’s skills.

Call it what you like – aura, charisma, drive, leadership – it all adds up to the same thing, the ability to inspire players to perform to the very depth and reach of their abilities: an ephemeral essence, which rallies the troops and binds them like glue with their boss.

As Hearts’ sacking of Ian Cathro proved earlier this week, coaching accolades count for nothing if the players cannot, do not or will not respond to the man in charge.

Cathro pitched up at Tynecastle with a fine reputation and, of course, that dreaded phrase hanging around his neck like an albatross – as a “deep thinker”.

The appointmen­t of the young Dundonian, who had never played at any serious level yet had won plaudits for his coaching at Valencia and Newcastle, was regarded as an innovative move.

Coaching and managing, though, require different gifts. Cathro now has an opportunit­y to hone his management skills so that, in future, should another job arise he can combine those skills more effectivel­y than he did at Tynecastle.

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 ??  ?? The appointmen­t of Ian Cathro, pictured with director of football Craig Levein, was hailed as innovative.
The appointmen­t of Ian Cathro, pictured with director of football Craig Levein, was hailed as innovative.
 ??  ?? Hearts have called time on Ian Cathro.
Hearts have called time on Ian Cathro.

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