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The story behind Southampton

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My_Blood_Bleeds_Red

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http://www.bbc.com/sport/0/football/25420261

Southampton: Nicola Cortese at heart of Saints success story

By Ben Smith BBC Sport
Southampton have become the envy of English football this season, so it has been no surprise to learn of Tottenham's admiration for manager Mauricio Pochettino following the sacking of Andre Villas-Boas.
This progressive young Argentine has been praised for his tactical nous but he will not have given a second thought to swapping Saints for Spurs for one reason and one reason only - executive chairman Nicola Cortese.
Much has been written about the secret of Southampton's success, the reason for the club's rise from the brink of liquidation and the depths of League One in 2009-2010, to the upper echelons of the Premier League.
Former managers and Pochettino have rightly been lauded, as have the club's academy directors after producing a string of bright young English talent. But the players, staff and Pochettino himself speak with one voice when they say Cortese is the one man the club cannot do without.
Rise and rise of Southampton

  • July 2009: Marcus Liebherr completes the purchase of the club with Cortese taking on the day-to-day running
  • August 2009: Southampton begin the season on minus 10 points in League One after entering administration under the previous regime
  • March 2010: They win the Johnstone's Paint Trophy at Wembley - the club's first silverware in 34 years
  • May 2010: Finish the season seventh in League One, one spot and seven points short of a place in the play-offs
  • August 2010: Manager Alan Pardew is sacked and replaced by Nigel Adkins
  • May 2011: Promotion to the Championship is secured with victory at Plymouth
  • May 2012: They win automatic promotion to the Premier League after a seven-year absence, beating Coventry to secure second place
  • January 2013: Adkins is replaced by Pochettino
  • May 2013: Southampton secure safety with memorable home wins over Manchester City, Liverpool and Chelsea
The Italy-born Swiss has been portrayed as a ruthless megalomaniac. When he sacked Nigel Adkins last January, he was described as "an embarrassment", accused of not understanding the game and questioned by fans and former players alike. The critics have since gone quiet.
Spend a few hours at Southampton's Marchwood training centre and you will form a different view of Cortese, The kit men and the groundsmen know him as Nicola, not Mr Chairman. He knows the names of their wives and family. He sends birthday cards. He actually seems to care.
Is he fiercely ambitious? Yes. Is he incredibly driven? Definitely. But everyone at the club seems to agree there is no great secret behind their success.
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Southampton executive chairman Nicola Cortese is fiercely ambitious
Southampton focus on themselves, they play the same way whether they are playing Manchester United away or Hull City at home. They train that way, from the academy through to the first team. Formations are not discussed. Numbers are not used. It is about shape, structure not 4-3-3 or 4-5-1. Under Cortese, this is a slick operation where no detail is overlooked.
Marginal gains are everything at Southampton. Small improvements on and off the field that add up to continued and consistent improvement. The players talk about their chairman as someone who constantly surprises them, challenges them and demands more from them. The new training ground is a case in point.
The first team are expected to move into it next summer but the players are already talking among themselves safe in the knowledge that it will be the best, simply because their chairman has overseen the entire project. Southampton want to create an environment where the players want to stay around after training and want to mix with each other. The main building will resemble a five-star hotel, as will the staff.
Three Saints to watch

  • Nathaniel Clyne: One of the club's most consistent and impressive performers, Clyne is on the brink of the England squad with only Glen Johnson and Kyle Walker ahead of him
  • Luke Shaw: Chelsea and Manchester United are long-term admirers of this young left-back. Having just turned 18, Shaw has a bright future but for now that is at Saints
  • James Ward-Prowse: Has shot to prominence this season after being handed his league debut on the opening weekend of last season against Manchester City
The 12 pitches have been built on different levels to avoid creating a large, windswept area. Gardeners will be employed, terracing installed and the playing surfaces will vary from pitch to pitch to replicate the many different types of grass and artificial grass that is woven into Premier League pitches.
The scouting set-up is the envy of the biggest clubs in England; it is focused, structured and unerringly accurate. Targets are identified months in advance. Panic buys are a thing of the past. The development of young English players stems from Cortese's vision - he wants to field a team of them - as does the style of play which Pochettino has realised so brilliantly this season.
Southampton's incredible rise to prominence in recent seasons is not a fluke, it was carefully planned. And the planning is now focusing on new goals.
Last April, the players were shown a film called the "Southampton Way". It charted the development of the team from League One to the Premier League and, at the end, insiders say, asked not if Southampton can win the Premier League, but how.
That is the ultimate target for this project and there is a belief throughout the club that it is attainable and realistic, however impossible those outside might deem it. Many of the players have committed themselves to the club because of their chairman.
They say he encourages them to talk to each other, encourage each other to sign new deals and grow together. Interest in the manager is futile at this stage because he is committed to the Southampton way and committed to Cortese beyond all else. Leading clubs in Italy and Germany have expressed an interest in Southampton's executive chairman.
Were Cortese to leave in the future, Pochettino would follow suit and many of the club's leading players would also question their future. The club's success is the realisation of Cortese's vision. Pochettino would be the first to deflect any suggestions that this season is down to him.
For now, Southampton's project remains very much on course. As long, as the chairman remains at the helm, anything is possible.
So the question now is not whether Southampton can hang on to Pochettino, but whether they can keep Cortese.
 
I find this an interesting read.

Also, I would assume most, if not all clubs, are already implementing a similar sort of model as Southampton, especially with the advancement made in today's game. You read a lot about how clubs build and run their academies, yet only a handful of them have really been successful throughout the years.

I suppose, it really does take more than an idealistic framework. Execution is equally important, and like any successful organization, everyone from top-down has to be on the same page.
 
They do look well run from the outside, but the entire analysis is missing one glaring bit of information - money
 
they didn't spend lots, did they ? not sure bout this.

as far as i know, a lot of their star players were 'home' grown i.e. from the academy.
 
On a more serious note, the training ground pitches being different types to mimic the varying pitches in the league is a boss idea. Training on the same type of surface with the same type of bounce & ball speed the week before the match on it has to make a difference, whether a small one or not, it's worth doing.
 
Looking at the core of the team, not taking into consideration signings of Lovren, Wanyama and Osvaldo, its definitely a remarkable job done.

Boruc: free transfer from Celtic
Clyne: free transfer from Crystal Palace (compensation fee paid) in their 1st season back in top flight
Fonte: signed from Crystal Palace while Southampton were in League 1
Shaw: joined at age of 8, progressed through academy
Schneiderlin: signed at 19 yo from Strasbourg for a fee that could rise to £1.2m
Ward-Prowse: been with the club since 8, progressed through academy
Davis: £800k compensation fee from Rangers
Rodriguez: signed from Burnley for £7m
Lallana: signed at 12 yo from Bournemouth for £25k
Lambert: cost £1m from Bristol Rovers

Then there's the academy graduates over the years: Oxlade-Chamberlain, Walcott, Bale, Bridge, Nathan Dyer etc.
 
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