Derby County: 132 Years of Change
The story of Derby for the past few years has been pure disappointment for the club's fans. The arrival of former England manager Steve McClaren, 'The Wally with the Brolly' as his nationally known nickname goes, due to the overuse of his umbrella in charge of England sparked optimism around the club following Nigel Clough's dismissal of his managing role at the club he had taken over from Paul Jewell in 2009.
Many knew Clough already due to being the son of Derby legend
Brian Clough who led the Rams from the depths of the Second Division, where they had been rooted for 12 years in a row. Clough took Derby from where they had finished the previous season, 18th, right up to winning the league the very next season from his controversial, but successful management style.
Whilst Derby's first season in Division One was successful, finishing 4th in their first season in Division One since 1953, got even better. Derby finished 9th the next season which seemed like it had taken the momentum out of the side but that wasn't it. In the 1971/72 season, Clough led his Derby County to be the champions of England, which was followed by a strong European Cup campaign the next season.
That now seems a distant memory for many fans, and with the new generation of Derby supporters, they haven't had much to shout about since. Managers such as former MK Dons boss Karl Robinson and Dave Jones have taken the reigns at Derby since McClaren's sacking back in December 2013, 3 years ago. It was Karl Robinson who took the club down to League 1 in the 2013/14 season and he was eventually sacked in 2015. This led to Welshman
Dave Jones taking over for just one season in which they sold wonderkid
Will Hughes for a steal of £1.9m to West Bromwich Albion under Jones' management. They also sold fans favourites
Luke Ayling and
Johnny Russell for fees of £1.8m and £650k. Under Jones, Derby finished one point off the final play-offs spot which obviously wasn't good enough to keep his job. Jones was sacked by Derby in June 2016.
Then, following weeks upon weeks of speculation came along a rumour which shocked not just Derby fans but football fans worldwide. Champions League winning manager
Armando Azevedo had reportedly shown interest in taking the managerial role at Pride Park. This caused huge amounts of optimism on social media and Derby forums. Azevedo had been manager at Braga for three years and in that time
won ten trophies. That was enough to encourage the Derby board to offer the Braga manager the role.
In September, Azevedo took over from the role left behind by Dave Jones. He added eleven players from his old club, Braga and it added a continental feel to the club. Something that the lower leagues of English football have never experienced before, and as soon as the team started gelling, that was when the results came. Torrado and Domej added pace and strength to the back line. Rafa, Capezzi, Viviani and Abreu brought flair and creativity in the middle of the park whilst Labidi and new signing Nilmar brought pace and width to either side. Andy Delort and Anthony Lozano have brought goals, 33 goals in just 44 games just shows what a deadly partnership they are proving to be.
Whilst lower league managers prefer a simple 4-4-2 which includes route one football or just very direct football, Azevedo has implemented his own tactic on League 1. He plays 3-5-2. Very risky but it has proven to be very beneficial for strikers and midfielders who can easily pack out the midfield due to higher numbers in the center of the park whilst feeding the strikers with some brilliant passes. Teams have tried to expose the limited numbers in defence but due to the high standard of the additions, the attackers get closed down easily.
Some Derby fans are already going as far as saying that Azevedo is a better version of Brian Clough, they may be right but Azevedo still has to lift a trophy yet to even compete with the attitude and success of Clough. It's been a positive change for Derby, though.