Watt View - Problems Run Far Deeper Than Will Still Tuesday, 4th Nov 2025 08:26 by Matt Watts Matt Watts gives his view on the latest events in and around Southampton Football Club and asking why the club has continued to make the same mistakes and not learn from them, is he right ? Read on and give your view in the comments section. Will Still’s dismissal feels harsh, if not unexpected. The young manager took on an unenviable task at Southampton FC, trying to steady a club that has lost both direction and identity. Yet his short tenure, and its abrupt end, says more about the state of the club than it does about his own ability in my opinion.
It is clear to many of us that the problems run far deeper than whoever happens to occupy the dugout. Since Sport Republic’s takeover in 2022, Saints have won around just 27 per cent of their league games - a damning statistic. In the last seventeen months, fans have seen just four league wins.
The financial picture tells a similar story of mismanagement. Over the summer the club spent around £40 million, yet generated £108.5 million in player sales. The result is a squad still lacking the quality and leadership required to compete. The spine of the team remains worryingly thin and light on both grit and quality. At the heart of this decline lies Sport Republic’s much-discussed multi-club model. It was presented as a forward-thinking strategy, intended to create collaboration and shared success across several clubs. In practice, it has raised more questions than answers. With players signed for Saints often immediately loaned out to Göztepe, the group’s Turkish side, often without making a single appearance. Fans are certainly entitled to wonder where the ownership’s priorities lie. Göztepe currently sit fifth in the Super Lig, chasing European football. Saints, meanwhile, appear adrift, languishing at the bottom end of the second tier. The contrast speaks volumes. Running a football club in England requires an understanding of its culture, pressures and traditions. Sport Republic, to date, have shown little evidence that they grasp any of these things.
Now, as Saints prepare to appoint their sixth permanent manager under this ownership, the cycle of instability continues. Russell Martin’s play-off triumph last season offered a rare moment of joy, but even that campaign exposed deeper structural issues - from tactical inflexibility to squad imbalance. For now, Tonda Eckert, the club’s Under-21s head coach, will take charge on an interim basis. His immediate task will be to lift morale and restore some belief, but the responsibility for fixing this crisis rests much higher up. The ownership must accept accountability for the club’s direction - or lack of it. There remains one small connection to the club’s more stable past. Katharina Liebherr, who retains a 20 per cent shareholding, remains a symbolic link to the values her late father, Markus, instilled when he rescued the club in 2009. His vision rebuilt Southampton FC from the brink. What is happening now bears little resemblance to that legacy and it’s painful for supporters to watch it unravel.
There are tentative signs, however, that lessons are being learned. The potential return of Oriol Romeu - a player who embodies professionalism, leadership and commitment - would be a welcome start. It might suggest that those in charge are beginning to understand the fans’ frustrations and the club’s need for identity - and experience. But one signing will not solve a structural problem. The club requires more than gestures, it needs a coherent plan. Sport Republic must stop hiding behind buzzwords and balance sheets and start demonstrating genuine footballing competence. Until that happens, the concern is that Still will not be the last to pay the price for a failure that goes far beyond the sidelines. All Photos Via Reuters Please report offensive, libellous or inappropriate posts by using the links provided.
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