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Where Ivan Juric ranks in the worst Premier League managers of all time

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Being a football manager is brutal, and at the top level, the level of scrutiny and pressure to perform is even greater.

Southampton’s record-breaking relegation from the Premier League recently highlighted this, with the Saints hierarchy overseeing two of the worst top-flight managerial tenures in history this season.

Ivan Juric’s departure brings an ill-fated stint at St Mary’s to an abrupt end, but how do his shortcomings stack up against the worst the Premier League has ever seen?

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Here are the worst Premier League managers based on points earned per game. Some of these managers proved or even redeemed themselves at other top-flight clubs, but there’s no escaping these horror appointments.

For this list, only permanent managers who were in charge for at least four games are included.

Worst Premier League managers based on points per game

Rank

Manager

Club

Matches

Points

PPG

1

Frank de Boer

Crystal Palace

4

0

0

2

Paul Jewell

Derby

24

5

0.21

3

Sam Allardyce

Leeds

4

1

0.25

4

Mick McCarthy

Sunderland

37

10

0.27

5

Ivan Juric

Southampton

14

4

0.29

6

Russell Martin

Southampton

16

5

0.31

7

Terry Connor

Wolves

13

4

0.31

8

Jan Siewert

Huddersfield

15

5

0.33

9

Nathan Jones

Southampton

8

3

0.38

10

Billy Davies

Derby

14

6

0.43

11

Alan Pardew

West Brom

18

8

0.44

12

Roy Hodgson

Watford

18

9

0.5

13

Daniel Farke

Norwich

49

26

0.53

13

Daniel Farke (Norwich City)

0.53 points per game

daniel-farke-leeds-championship

Daniel Farke has yet to excel in the Premier League, despite getting Norwich City

promoted twice from the Championship.

Across his 49 top-flight games in charge – spanning three seasons as a result of relegation in 2019/20 – the German only oversaw six victories, which include a shock result against then-champions Manchester City in September 2019.

He left the club in November 2021, bizarrely not long after securing a first win of the campaign.

12

Roy Hodgson (Watford)

0.50 points per game

roy-hodgson-watford

Roy Hodgson has had a glittering managerial career, but after making an unexpected comeback to football with Watford, his bid to save them from relegation couldn’t have gone much worse.

He only managed two wins in 18 games at Vicarage Road, and the Hornets were ironically relegated following a defeat to Hodgson’s former – and future – club, Crystal Palace.

It won’t diminish his stature as one of the managerial greats, but not many have done worse than the ex-England boss during this unforgiving spell.

11

Alan Pardew (West Brom)

0.44 points per game

Former Newcastle manager Alan Pardew

Alan Pardew was a highly experienced Premier League manager, so coming into West Brom, he must have backed himself to turn the club’s ailing fortunes around.

In the end, one win and eight consecutive defeats in the Premier League was his undoing, with just eight points taken from a possible 54.

West Brom were eventually relegated without Pardew in the dugout, and the manager’s career has been low-key ever since.

10

Billy Davies (Derby)

0.43 points per game

billy-davies

Taking Derby County into the Premier League for the first time in five years via the play-offs will have made Billy Davies a hero at Pride Park, but the beginning to their fateful 2007/08 campaign was a disaster.

The Rams’ sole win on matchday 6 was the only highlight post-promotion, and failure to repeat the trick in the eight games that followed saw Derby and Davies part ways.

The Scot’s only solace is perhaps that even his successor – who features below – couldn’t get a tune out of the team, either.

9

Nathan Jones (Southampton)

0.38 points per game

Nathan-Jones-Southampton

After impressing at Luton Town, Nathan Jones got his big break when Southampton came calling following the sacking of Ralph Hasenhuttl in November 2022.

But Jones and his unpredictable methods saw his tenure last just eight Premier League games, with the Saints only managing one win over Everton in that time.

With 0.38 points per game, he comfortably has one of the worst records in Premier League history.

8

Jan Siewert (Huddersfield)

0.33 points per game

jan-siewert-huddersfield

When Jan Siewert was drafted in to save Huddersfield Town’s Premier League status, even he must have been daunted at the size of the mountain he will have had to climb.

Arriving with the Terriers 10 points adrift at the bottom of the table, it would have taken a miracle to salvage anything positive from the campaign.

Siewert earned one win and lost eight on the spin before being relegated, lasting just three (winless) Championship games before he was dismissed.

7

Terry Connor (Wolves)

0.31 points per game

terry-connor-wolves

Terry Connor was handed a somewhat poisoned chalice after Mick McCarthy’s spell at Molineux turned sour, and he was unable to get a tune out of Wolves as they battled relegation in 2011/12.

Promoted from assistant to head coach with the Old Gold staring down the barrel of demotion, Connor oversaw a hapless, winless run that consigned his side to Championship football.

Connor didn’t take another full-time managerial role until joining the Grenadian national team in 2023, and is now assistant manager at National League side Dagenham & Redbridge.

6

Russell Martin (Southampton)

0.31 points per game

russell martin

Russell Martin set out his stall following Southampton’s promotion last season, vowing to play his way towards Premier League survival.

That turned out to be a horrendous call, with the Saints losing game after game, earning just five points before his eventual sacking in December 2024.

But if Southampton thought Martin’s average of 0.31 points per match was bad, they were in for a nasty surprise with his successor.

5

Ivan Juric (Southampton)

0.29 points per game

ivan-juric-southampton-manager

Ivan Juric had left Roma before joining Southampton to save their Premier League skin.

But after starting his tenure with six straight defeats, it was clear that Southampton were never going to turn the corner under the Croatian.

Losing by four goals or more on three occasions in his 14-match spell, the Southampton hierarchy have to take some of the blame, with their run of appointments in the top flight being almost completely useless.

4

Mick McCarthy (Sunderland)

0.27 points per game

mick-mccarthy-sunderland

Throughout his Sunderland tenure, Mick McCarthy recorded one relegation and two disastrous Premier League campaigns.

In 2002/03, McCarthy replaced Howard Wilkinson in the Sunderland hot seat, but endured nine straight defeats as the Wearsiders recorded what was a record low Premier League points total.

He did get the Black Cats up at the second time of asking, but McCarthy’s second attempt at top-flight success in the north-east ended having lost all but six of his games in charge.

3

Sam Allardyce (Leeds)

0.25 points per game

Leeds-United-Sam-Allardyce-Premier-League

Sam Allardyce was spectacularly parachuted in to save Leeds United from Premier League relegation, but a dismal four-game spell saw the Whites lose their top-flight status.

His only point earned during that time came from a 2-2 draw against Newcastle, but back-to-back defeats saw Leeds sink to the second tier when one more win would have been enough.

It may be a small sample size, but Allardyce surely regrets heading to Elland Road.

2

Paul Jewell (Derby)

0.21 points per game

paul-jewell-derby

Paul Jewell had worked survival magic in the past, leading Bradford City and Wigan Athletic to relegation salvation.

But after being called upon by Derby in November 2007, that magic had run out. Zero wins, five draws and 19 defeats gave Jewell one of the worst managerial records in a single spell.

The Rams were relegated with the lowest points haul in Premier League history, though at the time of writing, Southampton could yet eclipse this.

1

Frank de Boer (Crystal Palace)

0 points per game

frank-de-boer-crystal-palace

Frank de Boer’s appointment at Crystal Palace will have to go down as an absolute misfire.

His horror spell at Selhurst Park bore no goals, no points and 77 days of misery. Bar a 2-1 victory over Ipswich Town in the League Cup, it was a completely pointless endeavour.

We’ll never know how well he would have fared with more time, though the Eagles’ decision to get rid was at least vindicated, surviving comfortably under the tutelage of Roy Hodgson.

https://static0.footballfancastimages.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/premier-league-worst-managers-farke-juric-mccarthy.jpg

2025-04-07 13:39:56

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