The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Jamie Carragher Benitez is wasted at Newcastle

Treading water to maintain a poor team’s place in the Premier League is a misuse of my old manager’s talents

- JAMIE CARRAGHER

If Ashley stays, Rafa will have to go – those were my final words when I dedicated a column to Newcastle last season. Looking at the situation at the club at the start of this one, from a footballin­g perspectiv­e, it is difficult to explain why my former manager is still there.

For a coach of Rafael Benitez’s pedigree to be treading water with no prospect of doing anything beyond retaining Premier League status is incomprehe­nsible. There is nothing more he can do at St James’ Park. Not without regime change, and that is not happening.

The current arrangemen­t is no more than a marriage of convenienc­e, a short-term alliance with no future beyond the season.

Mike Ashley cannot afford to sack Benitez. Why would he anyway since he is the best man to keep them up and it would only rile disillusio­ned fans even further?

Rafa will see out his contract because it would cost £6 million to buy out its final year. Newcastle are a big, prestigiou­s club, Benitez is on a lucrative salary and he retains the overwhelmi­ng support of the St James’ Park crowd, but the reality is that they are an institutio­n limping along until an inevitable parting next summer.

Yet again, the Newcastle fans will suffer when this has played itself out. While they cherish Benitez’s coaching talent, those running the club are wasting it.

It would be fascinatin­g to hear from Ashley what exactly his plan is for Newcastle. Not just this season, but beyond. Does he have one? Is there anyone sitting in his boardroom working out where the club need and want to go and how they intend to get there?

A top-class club can never solely think short term, they have to constantly think ahead.

Ashley’s only concern is preserving Premier League status, so while he has a manager who can keep the club up, the constant sniping at his ownership has no effect. I do not even believe he is actively trying to sell the club.

Other than the continued employment of Benitez, everything at St James’ Park smacks of zero ambition. Is there anyone at Newcastle drawing a list of managerial successors to

Benitez when his contract expires in

June?

What kind of manager can

Newcastle expect to lure once Benitez has gone?

No one of his calibre will go near the job given they know how little money has been spent on the team.

Rafa was given full control of the football operations when he decided to stay to regain promotion, but what does it amount to?

We continuous­ly hear about targets not being pursued vigorously enough by the hierarchy, players’ wages being considered too excessive to complete a deal, and a multitude of reasons being presented not to secure a transfer a month before the signing eventually arrives on deadline day – thus ensuring they need a month to fully adjust to the new set-up.

Ashley can argue Benitez is one of the highest-paid managers in the Premier League, so he has spent more than he is credited with, but the transfer fees over the past four years and beyond paint a different picture. The club came out of the past transfer window with £23.2 million profit at a time when they had to spend a minimum of £40 million net to improve the team – and that is a conservati­ve estimate in this era of spending. Ashley (right) has baulked at players’ salaries. Newcastle are a club who used to dream of fighting with the top sides for players; now they cannot even compete with promoted teams such as Wolves and Fulham for the same targets. At the moment, they are losing out to the likes of Burnley who are more willing to meet contract expectatio­ns. That is what happened when both clubs pursued Jack Cork a year ago. The owner must calculate that he can save money now by relying on Benitez to keep the club up, but it is a false economy. The bill will come later as a less capable manager will need cash to match the job he is doing next season. Given the demanding fixture list so far, it is no surprise Newcastle are in the bottom three. A truer judgment of the side’s quality can be made with today’s trip to Crystal Palace. Games against Leicester, Brighton, Southampto­n and Watford follow soon. The season has to kick into shape now.

But the reality is Newcastle travel to Selhurst Park today as underdogs. Crystal Palace, on paper, are a superior side. There is no one of Wilfried Zaha’s class in the Newcastle squad, which is why Benitez has opted for a defensive approach to keep the team up. Leicester are far better, too. They are the type of club Newcastle fans must watch and think, “why can’t we be like them?” We all talk about the miracle of their Premier League win – and given the standard of opposition in the top six, it was – but look deeper and it was achieved with smart investment. Leicester’s owners appointed a renowned former Valencia, Chelsea and Napoli manager and spent money to build the team

– as they still do with signings such as James Maddison for £25 million. It does not guarantee the unpreceden­ted success of a title, but it ensures you go into every game believing you can win, even against the top sides.

It is a long time since Newcastle could say this. I criticised Benitez’s style last season, believing they should be more positive at home regardless of the calibre of opponents. I stand by that, but in a strange way I think taking on the Newcastle job and being prepared to set up his side in such a manner is brave from Benitez, knowing the criticism that will come, and the damage it can do to him when trying to attract the attentions of a club competing in the Champions League – a competitio­n he had spent 13 consecutiv­e years managing in prior to his move to Newcastle.

It was telling that when the Arsenal job came up in the summer, they turned to a manager less successful in Spanish football and without his Premier League experience.

Knowing Rafa as I do, he will be desperatel­y missing the Champions League, watching those games in midweek and so frustrated he is not trying to outsmart those younger coaches. He will feel he has one more crack at the European elite in him, but he would have to go back overseas to do it.

The shame for Newcastle is they could have been that “one last big job” if they had just some of the cash – and ambition – of Premier League rivals.

Newcastle fans justifiabl­y argue they can never achieve such lofty ambitions until Ashley gets out of St James’ Park.

For Benitez to satisfy his and enhance a decorated list of honours, he will go first.

A top-class club can never solely think short term, they have to constantly think ahead While the fans cherish Rafa’s coaching talent, those running the club are wasting it

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 ??  ?? Status in decline: Rafael Benitez was never in the frame for the Arsenal job
Status in decline: Rafael Benitez was never in the frame for the Arsenal job
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