This time last year, Liam Rosenior had just been nominated as the Championship Manager of the Season. A month later, he was sacked after missing out on a play-off place with Hull City. Now, he’s on the brink of qualifying for European football with Strasbourg in Ligue 1. It’s been quite the journey.
By Alex Roberts
Let’s start at the beginning. When Rosenior was sacked by Hull, the fans didn’t take it well. The decision was met with widespread shock, with many believing he did a fantastic job considering the tools at his disposal. The East Yorkshire club have languished in the bottom half of the Championship ever since.
Young English managers rarely leave the homeland, it’s perhaps one of the main reasons there is a serious lack at elite level, which made it all the more surprising when the former Brighton midfielder rocked up at Strasbourg.
Fresh off the back of a BlueCo takeover and the disastrous appointment of Patrick Viera, Rosenior joined the French club at a time when fans were protesting and the players looked like they had given up.

Last summer was a busy time for Strasbourg, signing 12 players either permanently or on loan. Four of those – Andrey Santos, Djordje Petrovic, Caleb Wiley (who is now at Watford), and Diego Moreira came from sister club Chelsea. Looking back, the Premier League side could probably have done with keeping at least a couple of them.
Santos had spent the second half of the previous season at the club, quickly showing exactly what he was capable of, even if he only managed to score a single goal in his 11 games across all competitions.
Under Viera, Strasbourg were rigid, playing a traditional formation under a manager who exemplifies the ‘back in my day’ kind of mentality that ya’ dad might love but doesn’t translate particularly well with the modern generation of player.
Rosenior is different. Tactically astute, but more importantly, calm, commanding respect not because of his time as a player or past triumphs, but due to his willingness to listen and help his players.
There was a recent video of him talking to Valentín Barco in the dressing room after the 4-2 win over Lyon, giving him three days off after becoming a father. It may not sound like much, but it was easy to tell how much the players loved their boss.
For his first game at the helm, Rosenior fielded a starting XI in which every outfield player was under the age of 23 for the first time in Ligue 1 history. The game itself wasn’t quite as memorable, however, a pretty drab 1-1 draw with Montpellier.
More than anything, Rosenior demands intensity. His style of play depends on the opposition making a mistake through almost constant pressing and a high volume of short passes in the middle of the pitch to try draw them out of position.

It all starts with Petrovic, a goalkeeper who was shipped out by Enzo Maresca’s Chelsea at the very last minute for not being able to play out from the back. No other ‘keeper in Ligue 1 touches the ball as much as the Serbian, and he’s thriving.
Rosenior has played a 3-4-3 all season, seeking width from his wing-backs/wide midfielders. It’s the perfect formation for rapid counter-attacks, which is exactly how Rosenior wants to see his side play.
It’s a more modern style of play, there isn’t a Pirlo or a Busquets sitting at the base of the midfield, calling plays like a quarterback, the Strasbourg lads have to read the game in a different way, anticipating where the ball will be rather than where to put it.

As of writing this piece, Strasbourg are eight Ligue 1 games without defeat, scoring 14 goals and conceding just three. That streak has seen them become genuine contenders for Champions League football, placing them in fourth with 49 points from their 28 games with six remaining.
Hilariously, BlueCo may have a club in Europe’s elite club competition, but it’s looking more and more likely that it won’t be Chelsea. Both sides have a similar transfer policy, buying young in hopes of avoiding heftier fees down the line, but it’s working a lot better in France, largely due to Rosenior.
Much like fellow ex-pat Will Still at Lens, links to struggling Premier League sides have started to trickle in. Both Leicester City and Southampton are reportedly interested in bringing Rosenior back to England.
With all due respect to those two clubs, swapping possible Champions League football for the Championship would be daft. Todd Boehly and his billionaire mates have had their issues in London, but they’ve nailed it at Strasbourg.
Something truly special is happening at the club. Rosenior has a truly impressive squad of young players, even if some of the best ones have come on loan from Chelsea, what he’s done is pretty remarkable.

Strasbourg’s connection to Chelsea does mean one thing, however, they don’t HAVE to sell some of those prized assets, ones like striker Emanuel Emegha and wing-back Dilane Bakwa who are actually owned by the club.
Rejecting advances from English side’s whose ambitions are either to get back to the Premier League or merely survive would be wise for Rosenior, not that he needs us to tell him how to live his life.
It remains to be seen what BlueCo’s ambitions are regarding Strasbourg and the man they’ve hired to lead the players. Maresca isn’t exactly loved by Chelsea fans at the moment, perhaps we’ll see Rosenior at Stamford Bridge in the not too distant future.
(Cover image from IMAGO)
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