Waterloo Region Record

‘Mini-Mourinho’ has Hull howling

PREMIER LEAGUE PREVIEW

- Steve Douglas

MANCHESTER, ENGLAND — It seemed Marco Silva had taken on a near-impossible job when he was hired as manager of Hull at the start of January.

The promoted soccer club from northern England was up for sale, in last place in the Premier League and planning to sell some of its best players. Money was tight, fans were disgruntle­d and a squad short on big names had been struck by injuries in key areas.

Silva, a 39-year-old Portuguese coach labelled “Mini-Mourinho” by some after his illustriou­s coaching compatriot, was new to the English game and was facing a tough and gruelling immediate run of matches across three competitio­ns.

At his presentati­on as Hull’s third permanent coach in a sixmonth span, Silva said survival in the Premier League would be a “miracle” but urged fans to believe in him. Somehow, though, he’s turning things around, just like he did in his first coaching job at Portuguese team Estoril, which he transforme­d from a second-tier club on the brink of financial ruin to a Europa League qualifier in two seasons.

Silva has worked wonders in the transfer market and on the field.

Operating under financial constraint­s, he saw key midfielder­s Robert Snodgrass and Jake Livermore sold from under his feet and reacted by making seven signings — predominan­tly players on loan and rejects from bigger clubs.

Striker Oumar Niasse, for example, arrived from Everton, where he had made five appearance­s and not scored a single goal in the past year; winger Lazar Markovic (from Liverpool) and Omar Elabdellao­ui (from Olympiakos) were among others looking to relaunch their careers.

On the training ground, Silva worked hard on team shape and organizati­on, with defender Curtis Davies saying the coach literally dragged players into the positions he desired. Days off were cancelled. Silva was hard, but fair.

His impact was been astonishin­g.

Hull has won all four of its home matches under Silva, having failed to win any of its previous five at KCOM Stadium. Among the defeated teams were some stellar names, Manchester United in the League Cup and Liverpool in the league last weekend. Hull also ground out a 0-0 draw at United in the league and was regarded as unlucky to lose 2-0 at runaway leader Chelsea, when midfielder Ryan Mason fractured his skull.

Hull — a team with an eclectic mix of youngsters, misfits and journeymen — has climbed to 18th place and within a point of safety. A trip to Arsenal on Saturday suddenly holds no fear for Silva’s team, and why should it? The last time Silva was in the dugout at Emirates Stadium he was in charge of Olympiakos, and the Greek side stunned Arsenal 3-2 in the Champions League in September 2015.

“I am not a miracle worker,” Silva said. “But that is not important. I am a worker, I want to work and keep our goal in our minds always, but my feet always stay on the ground.”

It’s a good time to be playing Arsenal, too.

Almost inevitably, Arsene Wenger’s side is starting to implode at a key stage of the season, with back-to-back losses to Watford and Swansea dropping Arsenal to fourth place and virtually ruling it out of the Premier League title race.

The annual debate over whether Wenger should stay or go at the end of the season has resumed and the atmosphere inside the Emirates could be toxic if Hull continues where it left off against Liverpool last week.

“They didn’t have good results in their last two games,” Silva said Thursday, “and, of course, the last time I played there it was a great result for us, for Olympiakos. But now it’s different. Different competitio­n, different moment and different clubs.” Chasing Chelsea Is there some hope for the chasing pack? Holding a nine-point lead with 14 games left, Chelsea heads to a team that has won nine of its last 10 homes games in all competitio­ns.

Burnley’s only loss at Turf Moor since early October was against Manchester City. Slumping Leicester Leicester, the struggling defending champion, has slumped to within one point of the relegation zone after a run of four straight losses.

Only four teams stand between the champions and last place, and they play one of them on Sunday — Swansea.

 ??  ?? Hull City manager Marco Silva urges his side on during a match against Liverpool on Saturday.
Hull City manager Marco Silva urges his side on during a match against Liverpool on Saturday.

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