Premier League sack race odds: Erik Ten Hag odds slashed in the running
The Premier League sack race is a competition of its own with plenty of high-profile names linked with exits
31 October 2023 1
The Premier League sack race is a competition that frankly no one wants to win.
Last season saw a record-high 14 dismissals, with more bosses fired last term than in the first seven Premier League campaigns combined. From Scott Parker in August to Javi Gracia in May, no one was safe.
As far as the bookies are concerned, it's not going to change this season.
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No one has scored more than two goals for Sheffield United, who are rooted to the foot of the table. They haven't won and they've picked up just a single point thus far. Against Manchester United, Heckingbottom was forced to play a back four rather than his usual five, due to the severity of the injury crisis in defence and since the 8-0 shellacking at the hands of Newcastle United, the Blades haven't looked even likely to turn the tide.
Losing Iliman Ndiaye and Sande Berge has probably jammed a couple of spanners in Heckingbottom's plans – and there's a case that this side were perhaps promoted a little earlier than they expected. With Chris Wilder out of work, the bookies are putting two and two together for a potential return for the man who carried them to ninth in the table… before Heckingbottom replaced him.
It's been a wretched start to the season on the south coast with Bournemouth still in search of a first win of the season. They started the season with a tough run of games but failure to beat Brighton from a winning position has led to a severe drop in confidence.
Back-to-back defeats against Everton and Wolverhampton Wanderers followed. Iraola has extenuating circumstances – his assistant manager is still waiting for his work permit and yet to link up, while injuries ripped through the squad early on – but time is a resource that not all boards give their managers. A win against Burnley in view of chairman Bill Foehly, who flew in from Las Vegas to it, has eased pressure in the here and now… but how long will the grace last?
It's been a testing start to the season for Erik ten Hag, with five losses in 10 league fixtures and two in three in Europe – but the results tell just a portion of the story. Injuries and controversy have eaten away at this group of players, with Antony, Jadon Sancho, Lisandro Martinez, Luke Shaw and others all unavailable for varying reasons.
Fans aren't calling for Ten Hag's head. The Dutchman has credit in the bank and the fingers are instead being appointed above his head – but constant reports of fallouts with squad members and a dour style of play of late haven't helped his cause. Neither did a dreadful derby day defeat to Manchester City in which fingers started to point towards Ten Hag tactically. It's a slippery slop from here.
Burnley racked up over 100 points en route to the Premier League, playing an expansive, expressive brand of Kompanyball that had neutrals enraptured. It's given way to the difficult second season, as the Belgian juggles his side's will to be aggressive in attack with naivety and inexperience at this level.