Leeds United: More questions than answers after Heckingbottom's first month in charge

Paul Heckingbottom.Paul Heckingbottom.
Paul Heckingbottom.
Research has shown that the fabled bounce from appointing a new manager is often exactly that: in all but a small number of cases, no more than a short spike in form which soon regresses to its former level.

If Leeds United thought Paul Heckingbottom would turn their season into gold, they were blind to the fact that the average squad is only as good as its results. A month with Heckingbottom as head coach has shown that analysis of a head coach’s short-term impact to be largely accurate. There has, in terms of Leeds’ results alone, been no discernible bounce since Thomas Christiansen’s sacking last month and there is nowhere left for the club to point the finger, other than at the squad itself and the process which brought it together.

Christiansen’s flaws not withstanding, Leeds have morphed into a mid-table team since last season and it might be that Andrea Radrizzani realised as much when he paid Barnsley £500,000 for Heckingbottom in February.

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