TOM COLLOMOSSE finally reveals Steve Cooper’s Leicester appointment is a risk for both parties

Steve Cooper’s Leicester appointment is a risk for both parties, writes TOM COLLOMOSSE… the Foxes boss needs to start well to banish any misgivings about his previous employers

As England kicked off their Euro 2024 campaign with a 1-0 win over Serbia on June 16, new Leicester boss Steve Cooper allowed himself a quiet smile of satisfaction.

Four of the starting XI – Marc Guehi, Trent Alexander-Arnold, Bukayo Saka and Phil Foden – had been coached by Cooper during their rise to senior international football. A fifth, Conor Gallagher, was a second-half substitute, while another two, Dean Henderson and Cole Palmer, were on the bench.

This ability to improve young players was one of the factors that persuaded Leicester to move for Cooper following Enzo Maresca’s departure for Chelsea at the start of June.

Graham Potter had been a top target but chairman Aiyawatt Srivaddhanaprabha was never convinced that the former Chelsea and Brighton boss was fully sold on Leicester – and he was probably right.

Despite his two-year spell with Leicester’s East Midlands rivals Nottingham Forest, Cooper’s enthusiasm for the job was palpable and he has signed a three-year contract.

On the face of it, there are significant obstacles to overcome: Leicester are likely to receive a points deduction this season for breaking spending rules, and players may be sold this month to ensure they can stay within the regulations for the current accounting period. With transfer spending limited, the squad may start the Premier League campaign weaker than it was when they lifted the Championship title.

Yet this is nothing compared with what greeted Cooper when he arrived at Forest in September 2021. The club were bottom of the Championship and the brief was to keep the ailing giant out of League One. By May, they had been promoted to the Premier League and in August they will begin their third straight season there.

Cooper comes alive on the training ground and given Leicester’s £95million is one of the best in the world, he should be in his element. ‘He started his coaching career early and he has worked incredibly hard in that period to fine-tune his process,’ says Coventry defender Jake Bidwell, who played for Cooper at Swansea from 2019-2021. ‘He has so much confidence in it.

‘Nine times out of 10 if we lost a game it was because we did not carry out the plan. On a Monday you would go to training knowing exactly how the week would look.

‘Nothing shocked us. He had always done that much homework that he could predict exactly what was going to happen in a certain game. He took my game to the next level.’

Many players would say the same. Cooper backed Brennan Johnson on taking charge and the forward, an academy product, joined Tottenham last summer for £47.5m. Guehi speaks glowingly of Cooper after working with him at Swansea and with England’s age-group sides – just like Gallagher.

Cooper and his team are at the training ground early and after sessions are complete, they will review them and prepare for the games ahead. These analyses are usually divided into four categories – in possession; out of possession; transitions; and set pieces.

Meetings are a vital part of Cooper’s approach and he will speak individually to his players and staff as often as he can. He will often speak to them over FaceTime or voice calls to gauge their mood and what makes them tick and he does not focus on his squad alone. At Forest, Cooper would often visit the City Ground during the week to pop into the club shop and greet office staff.

Cooper thinks of little else beyond family and football. With his family still living near Wrexham, the 44-year-old will spend most of his weeks at his East Midlands base. Cooper will work well into the evenings and devotes the majority of that time to watching matches. Three concepts – belief, self-worth, and ownership – underpin his work.

While there is no doubting Cooper’s ability as a coach this is an appointment with risk on both sides. Though the rivalry between Forest and Leicester is not as fierce as the one between Forest and Derby, it still exists and while fans will not hold the club’s financial difficulties against Cooper, he needs to start well to banish any misgivings about his previous employers.

Forest visit King Power Stadium on October 26 and while Cooper and Forest will say publicly that the game is no more important than any other, don’t believe a word of it.

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*