Newcastle
JUST IN: Newcastle highlights Eddie Howe’s credentials As Coach
The staff at Newcastle United knew Eddie Howe was different from the rest when he detailed his Saturday matchday routine.
If kick-off was 3pm at home, he would need his office at St James’ Park ready by 9.30am to allow him time to undertake final preparations in peace and quiet. Given that even a manager as meticulous as Rafael Benítez had tended to stroll into the ground sometimes after midday on such Saturdays it was clear that Howe stood apart from his predecessors.
Where past Newcastle managers would sometimes linger at St James’ long after the final whistle, enjoying a post match drink before heading out to sociable dinners, Howe routinely goes straight his home in Northumberland. Once there his wife and three sons know he will spend part of the evening re-watching a recording of the entire match.
Related: Newcastle will fight to keep Eddie Howe after Gareth Southgate’s England exit
That routine is so entrenched that bystanders were taken by surprise when, after Newcastle beat Paris Saint-Germain in the Champions League last October, the manager, for once, remained at St James’ Park to celebrate, arriving home too late to review the match footage.
Although Newcastle ultimately, and narrowly, failed to progress from a Champions League group containing not just PSG but the eventual finalists Borussia Dortmund the tactical astuteness of that deconstruction of Kylian Mbappé and co emphasises precisely why Howe could prove an excellent successor to Gareth Southgate.
Newcastle’s manager is evidently not merely twiddling his thumbs when he routinely drives into the training ground at 6.30am every morning and, much more importantly, his extreme assiduity is reflected on the pitch.
Just ask, among others, Fabian Schär. Howe’s predecessor, Steve Bruce, was not alone in believing that the Switzerland international was unsuited to deployment in a Premier League back four. Howe had heard the theory that the centre half needed to be fielded in a back five operating a low block but envisaged a very different future for Benitez’s £3m signing. Schär remains an accomplished ball playing defender but, these days, he shines in a 4-3-3 formation and is accustomed to being part of a very high line as Newcastle press.
Extracting hitherto latent potential from individuals is something of a Howe speciality with not merely Schär but Miguel Almirón, Sean Longstaff, Joe Willock and Jacob Murphy improved beyond recognition on his watch.
Yet if the idea of Howe bringing the very best out in Phil Foden, Jude Bellingham, Harry Kane and company for England represents an enticing prospect, there are caveats. He has admitted himself his training sessions are “very difficult and demanding” and the England and Newcastle winger Anthony Gordon has said that, after leaving Everton, it took him six months to fully comprehend how he was supposed to play.
Such is the nuanced choreography of Newcastle’s pressing system that it begs the question as to whether Howe might be better suited to the day-to-day life of a club coach. Moreover something of a loner who openly admits he “cannot be friends” with fellow managers and is notoriously guarded about allowing outsiders into his inner circle might struggle with the national coach’s need to be collegiate. Could Howe persuade managers he once cold shouldered to release their stars for friendlies?
Southgate’s role in changing the culture surrounding the England team for the better and publicly confronting assorted social issues including, most notably, racism was exemplary.
Howe is equally articulate yet a manager who invariably chooses the right words at the right time and speaks in immaculately constructed sentences has consistently body-swerved non footballing discussions. Admissions that he enjoys playing the piano, taking his Boxer dog for country walks and listening to A-ha songs are about the sum of what is known of the private life of a man who sometimes avoids attention by disguising himself in hats, glasses and out-size coats.
The days when reporters and supporters bumped into Alan Pardew in Waitrose in Ponteland and Benítez in the South Gosforth branch of Sainsbury’s are long gone but part of the problem is Newcastle’s contentious Saudi ownership. Howe has consistently stonewalled questions on the subject and would not relish it being revisited by reporters covering England.
That said it is not impossible to envisage the 46-year-old becoming a little more emboldened in an England tracksuit. Howe certainly does not shy away from confrontation. After exhibiting a willingness to ask his team to take breathers by sometimes adopting street-wise gamesmanship as Newcastle finished fourth in the Premier League in 2023, he willingly crossed swords with rivals including Arsenal’s Mikel Arteta and Liverpool’s Jürgen Klopp. “We’re not here to be popular, we’re here to compete,” he told Arteta.
His Newcastle tactics bear a certain resemblance to the heavy metal of Klopp’s early Liverpool but the style Howe has evolved on Tyneside since rescuing his team from near certain relegation in 2021-22 suggests he is enough of a chameleon coach to thrive internationally.
Related: Gareth Southgate’s next step: club management, TV or well-earned rest?
Granted, he always liked to attack at Bournemouth but during a sabbatical after leaving the south coast club Howe decided he needed to “modernise” his approach along with the handwritten training sessions he had just “digitalised”.
Training ground field trips to watch Diego Simeone, Ernesto Valverde, Andoni Iraola and Maurizio Sarri at work at Atlético Madrid, Athletic Bilbao, Rayo Vallecano and Empoli respectively duly ensued. The FA can rest assured Howe remains up to date with every international tactical trend and every possible set-piece innovation.
If he can be a closed book in public, privately Newcastle’s manager likes to bond with his players. Indeed shortly after arriving on Tyneside he turned emotional while telling squad members his life story. It possibly explains why the team leap through metaphorical hoops of flame for him. Significantly all new signings are expected to similarly bare their souls.
“I’d never previously felt comfortable confiding in a manager,” Joe Willock told the Guardian last year. “But Eddie Howe’s someone I trust a lot.” England could do an awful lot worse.
has stepped down as England manager following the 2-1 defeat to Spain in the Euro 2024 final.
The head coach was expected to step down this year before a possible change of heart. Now he has left, who should take the job?
Graham Potter
The bookmakers’ favourite to take the post is Graham Potter, who has been out of work since an ill-fated spell at Chelsea came to an end in April last year.
Prior to that stint at Stamford Bridge, the 49-year-old looked to be heading to the top of the club game and it speaks volumes to how the dynamic has shifted that the England post now looks far more attainable than another crack at one of the Premier League elite.
Potter has largely kept out of the spotlight since his Chelsea exit; an article in The Athletic cited giving a key-note speech to British troops in the Falklands among his more high-profile moves. He has been linked with at least a dozen jobs, most recently at Leicester, but either rejected or not been offered the lot.
But for those willing to put a line through his 31 matches in the west London madhouse, the case for Potter remains compelling. He remains a relatively young manager burnished by unconventional experience at Ostersund, quietly impressive at in the Championship with Swansea and then noisily so in the Premier League with Brighton.
The former defender’s coaching ability is not in question and as a tactician, he is both more detailed and flexible than Southgate. The nagging question after the Chelsea debacle, though, is as to whether he has the personality to deal with the most scrutinised job in English football.