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Championship bosses living on borrowed time

Dismissed second-tier bosses last just 1.04 years, as stated by 2012/13 figures – a significant drop from the 1.96-year average recorded the previous campaign.

Blackburn Rovers sacked three managers last season – Steve Kean, Henning Berg and Michael Appleton – while Wolverhampton Wanderers dismissed Ståle Solbakken and Dean Saunders after relegation to League One.

In total there were 19 managerial casualties in the Championship – the highest of England’s four leagues – 13 sackings and six resignations.

In the Premier League, the average tenure of dismissed managers stands at 2.81 years – boosted by the sacking of long-serving Stoke City Tony Pulis after almost seven years. Without the much-maligned Welshman it would be a much lower 2.22 years.

After Sir Alex Ferguson’s retirement and David Moyes’ subsequent move to Old Trafford, Arsene Wenger is the runaway leader at the top of the loyalty charts. His 16.7-year spell at Arsenal is followed by Paul Tisdale’s seven years at Exeter City.

Meanwhile in League Two, average managerial tenures leapt to 2.57 years from 1.46 thanks to the dismissals of Terry Brown from Wimbledon and Micky Mellon of Fleetwood. League One’s average marginally improved from 1.39 to 1.37 years.

Nick Moore

Nick Moore is a freelance journalist based on the Isle of Skye, Scotland. He wrote his first FourFourTwo feature in 2001 about Gerard Houllier's cup-treble-winning Liverpool side, and has continued to ink his witty words for the mag ever since. Nick has produced FFT's 'Ask A Silly Question' interview for 16 years, once getting Peter Crouch to confess that he dreams about being a dwarf.