'Pozzo was the solution... now he's the problem'published at 14:16 BST 4 May
14:16 BST 4 May
Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,
Ed Still, right, was the 23rd different manager Watford have had under the ownership of Gino Pozzo, left, and his family since 2012
We asked for your thoughts after Watford head coach Ed Still was sacked less than three months since taking over from Javi Gracia at Vicarage Road.
The 35-year-old was the Hornets' 23rd different boss - both permanent and interim - in 14 years under the ownership of the Pozzo family, and won just three of his 15 league games in charge as Watford finished 16th in the Championship.
Here are a selection of your responses.
Steve: Yes Ed should have been sacked, obviously the players are lacking motivation and leadership. However, who wants the poisoned chalice of a three to six-month contract at WFC before the Pozzos give them the chop?
Martin A: Unless there is a major change in strategy or ownership, nothing will change. Ten years ago, Pozzo was the solution and we thank him for that, but now has become the problem. Does not matter which players he brings in, the new manager will not have respect of the players as they know he will soon be gone.
Ian: The Pozzos have been positive for the club in the past, but seem to have lost interest and happy to allow the club to slide, which could be disastrous for a club I've been watching for nearly 60 years. I worry we will follow Leicester into League One, and maybe worse.
Richard: As usual, Watford in complete disarray. Watford should have kept faith with Tom Cleverley, look what he is doing at Plymouth. I have supported Watford for over 60 years and was privileged enough to be around when Graham Taylor was manager. I really am totally disgusted by what my team has become under the Pozzo family. Whenever we get a new signing, they mostly come from Udinese. Watford must soon realise that things won't get better under this regime.
Martin M: Ed Still was never going to work out, however we look at Tom Cleverley. Doing well at Plymouth, backed by their owners. At Watford we liked him, he liked us. But after a few bad games he was gone.
Ryan: Ultimately the manager role is redundant at the club. Until Scott Duxbury, Mogi Bayat and Gino Pozzo depart the club we will keep going in this cycle. No decent manager will take on the role.
Matt: Please, please change the approach. Scott Parker has just become available and he would bring one of the best Championship records around. Oh, and sack the recruitment team. Listen to what Javi told you.
Neil: Go and get Scott Parker if you are serious about getting back to the promised land.
Divs: Whether Pozzo et al are still involved next season, we need to take our situation seriously. A decent experienced manager, and experienced Championship or lower Premier League level players to accompany the young stars like Maama, Baah, Vata etc. No more cheap, short-term "fixes" like Pezzolano or Still.
Tracey: I think it is the right decision. The end of this season has been painful, and I am sure it would have been the same next season if he had stayed. I feel for Ed, and I wish him well for the future, but we need a complete change. I hope that whoever comes in next has the backing he needs from the board. I personally would like to see some players with Championship experience coming into the club that can bring more stability to the team. We need to have more players that understand how to play at this level, and we then might have a good chance of having a better next season.
Have your say on Still's Watford departurepublished at 11:31 BST 3 May
11:31 BST 3 May
So, Hornets fans, Ed Still's brief stint at the helm at Vicarage Road is over, less than three months after he arrived.
Do you think it was the right decision for the board to part ways? Five straight defeats, and the manner of them, to end the campaign surely made things pretty untenable?
Who would you like to see take over in the hottest hot seat in English football? Do you think there are enough quality players at the club to launch a play-off push next season? Who is key to your hopes for a brighter future?
'The end of the season is needed'published at 18:55 BST 2 May
18:55 BST 2 May
Media caption,
Still: 'Now there's plenty of time to reset'
Watford head coach Ed Still admitted the end of the season was 'needed' by his team after they lost 4-0 at home to champions Coventry in their final game.
It extended the Hornets' losing run to five matches and increased the speculation about the Belgian's future at Vicarage Road.
"Our job is to put a team together, create a balance and make sure you're creating more - and better - opportunities than the opponent, and not giving away much (at the back)," he told BBC Three Counties Radio.
"We had more than enough chances to come level (at 1-1) and we don't do it, and the phase we've been in for the last few weeks, we know oppositions are going to put balls in the top corner from 30 yards - that's when you feel just how fragile the whole team is at the moment."
He added: "The end of season is needed and there is plenty of time to reset, reshape and start again afresh from the summer.
"We have young defenders, lack of Championship experience, lack of focus and you get punished. For the third (goal), we were eight against four, or six against three, a massive overload.
"You can't be as soft as that in the box, you'll get punished for it, especially against teams on such a high."
Pick of the stats: Watford v Coventry Citypublished at 14:07 BST 30 April
14:07 BST 30 April
Watford come into their final game of the season bottom of the Championship's form guide with no wins and five defeats from their past six games
Coventry will hope to bid farewell to the second tier with an eighth game unbeaten when they travel to Vicarage Road on Saturday (12:30 BST).
Watford are winless in eight league meetings with Coventry City (D4 L4) since a 3-2 victory in November 2020.
After their 3-1 win in October, Coventry could complete their first league double over Watford since the 2004-05 season.
Watford have only won their final league game in two of the past 13 seasons (D3 L8), drawing 1-1 with Sheffield Wednesday last term.
After their 2-0 win over Middlesbrough on MD46 last year, Coventry could win their final game of successive Championship seasons for the first time since 2005-06/2006-07.
Among managers to take charge of 100+ Championship games, only Scott Parker (1.95) and Daniel Farke (1.92) have a better points per game ratio than Coventry City's Frank Lampard (1.82).
A 'really painful' result - Stillpublished at 12:50 BST 26 April
12:50 BST 26 April
Media caption,
Still: 'The result is really painful for everyone'
Watford head coach Ed Still said the 5-1 defeat away at Middlesbrough was "really painful" for everyone.
The defeat is the Hornets fourth in a row and sees them drop to 16th in the Championship table.
"The result is really painful for everyone - myself, the fans, the club, the players," Still told BBC Three Counties Radio.
"There were two parts to it. As strange as it sounds, the first-half performance was a really, really good performance.
"The control we had in midfield, we caused them problems. We should have been 2-1 up.
"They've had a moment of brilliance with the free-kick, and the second goal sums up our patchy form in our defensive box.
"But the actual result isn't just based on this game, but the whole season. Not creating enough togetherness, not creating enough resilience, and that's what happens at the end of a season, unfortunately."
With morale at all-time low, Watford blame game beginspublished at 18:23 BST 23 April
18:23 BST 23 April
Geoff Doyle BBC 3CR sports editor
Image source, Getty Images
It seems Watford are going to be appointing another head coach in the summer. The club have not admitted it yet but Ed Still's time is surely up.
The atmosphere at games in the last few weeks is the worst it has been since the Pozzo family took over.
The owner is now taking heavy criticism from a sizeable part of the fanbase and the surprising gamble on appointing Still has backfired badly.
His record is six defeats, four draws and three wins. At Watford that is sackable in itself but the toxicity that this run has brought means his position is untenable.
Morale at the club and among the players is at an all-time low and a vicious blame game has begun.
Previous head coach Javi Gracia predicted this downfall. He felt lack of leadership and experience was going to be the Hornets' undoing.
Despite a good first half of the season, Gracia felt it couldn't be sustained and he was right. The board made a mistake in not backing him in January and Gracia left so he didn't have to deal with the inevitable mess.
The appointment of Still has also proved to have been a mistake. Bringing in an inexperienced, relatively unknown manager into a young, fractured dressing room never felt a good fit and he's looked out of his depth.
The players must accept blame too, for poor attitudes (numerous instances of turning up late for training) and lack of desire but as has been the case so often with Watford, the players themselves will be cheesed off about the cultural set-up of the club: the hiring and firing of managers, the 'player-development' recruitment policy, the infighting, the lack of discipline inside the camp.
Which leaves the fans. Upset, disgruntled, annoyed - there is now even a sense of apathy. The players and the club need them in this time of need, but their patience has run out - again.
We have been here before, albeit not as bad as this.
The supporters have every right to be as critical as they are but just need to be mindful that someone has to pay the bills (Watford most recently suffered a £16m loss), unless there's a billionaire out there who wants to take over and doesn't care about losing money.
Watford will not change under Gino Pozzo but to get the fans back on-side, he's going to have to run the club better. With the Premier League days long gone and finances tighter, it would benefit him too.
Pick of the stats: Middlesbrough v Watfordpublished at 17:20 BST 23 April
17:20 BST 23 April
Middlesbrough will hope to keep their automatic promotion bid alive as they host Watford on Saturday (12:30 BST).
Boro won their first home game in seven league matches when Morgan Whittaker scored the winner against Sheffield Wednesday on Wednesday.
But they are still three points adrift of the second spot with four teams all vying for the coveted second automatic promotion position.
Middlesbrough have lost each of their last three league meetings with Watford, their longest ever losing run against the Hornets.
Watford, 1-0 winners in this exact fixture last season, are looking to win back-to-back league visits to Middlesbrough for the first time since April 1992 (3 in a row).
Middlesbrough have only won their final home league game in two of the last six seasons (D2 L2), although one of those was against Watford in 2023-24 (3-1).
Watford have lost their final away league game in nine of the last 10 seasons (D1 – v Sunderland in 2022-23) since a 2-0 win at Brighton in 2014-15.
Watford have lost each of their last three league games, all without scoring; outside of the top-flight, only from December 1971 to February 1972 have they ever lost more in a row without reply (7)
Luca Kjerrumgaard never looked like scoring, captain Imran Louza was dropped to the bench and the heads of Egil Selvik and his backline dropped further as each goal went in.
You would expect a confident Selvik to come and punch away the cross for the second goal, but he freezes, leading to a finger-pointing blame game in the six-yard box.
While it was clear that West Brom had something to play for in a match that secured their Championship status for another season, a performance of that standard by Watford is not acceptable.
And now the attention of supporters turns to just how low we may finish in the table.
Not long ago the discussion was whether the Hornets would be the team to snatch the final play-off spot - and now it looks like we will finish closer to the relegation zone than the top six.
The Ed Still experiment has not been a total disaster, as nobody expected a play-off spot with the age, quality and profile of this season's squad.
But the worrying disconnect between the players themselves, as well as between the squad and the fans, is a cause for concern.
That mixed with a string of negative results may signal the end of the manager.
Whether the board will pull the trigger before the final two matches are played waits to be seen. But it certainly would not be unusual - or unjust - for them to do so.
The only positive to take is that the season is almost over - and relegation is not mathematically possible.
'You answer to your fans' - Stillpublished at 22:58 BST 21 April
22:58 BST 21 April
Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,
Watford have not won in their past six games under Ed Still
Watford manager Ed Still says he and his players are accountable to the club's supporters in the wake of their poor run of Championship form which continued with a 3-0 defeat by West Bromwich Albion on Tuesday.
The Hornets are now winless in six league matches and have lost their past three games without scoring, a run of form which has seen them slip out of play-off contention and down the table.
Still, who replaced Javi Gracia in charge in February, has conceded that he and the playing staff must be answerable to the club's fanbase.
He told Three Counties Radio: "It's the same emotion as the last game. There's that feeling that every little thing that can go against you does go against you.
"The lack of confidence that there is in the team...it's like a sucker punch, once one of those small moments goes against you.
"Confidence being low is a part of high-level sport and football and when it happens, it's how to get over it. It's not by just relying on individual brilliance which comes from within the collective - it's about everyone standing together."
Asked whether his young squad have been left surprised by the response from supporters, Still added: "If they are surprised, it's something to learn quickly.
"You have to answer to your fans. The support they've given us, how committed they are, how much they spend on their team...we are accountable to them first and foremost. It's something you have to learn if you aren't aware of that."
Pick of the stats: West Bromwich Albion v Watfordpublished at 15:26 BST 20 April
15:26 BST 20 April
Image source, Opta
West Bromwich Albion will hope to secure their Championship status for another season when they host Watford on Wednesday night (kick-off 19:45 BST).
The Baggies are 20th and five points clear of 22nd-placed Oxford United with three games to play.
If Albion win and the U's fail to do so at home to Wrexham, James Morrison's side will be mathematically safe - though there is still a potential points deduction for breaching financial rules which could change the final standings.
West Brom are undefeated in their past eight league games, while Watford, who cannot reach the play-offs or go down, are without a win in five (D2 L3).
West Brom have won just one of their past 10 league games against Watford (D4 L5), though it was in this exact fixture last season (2-1).
Following their 2-1 win in October, Watford are looking to complete the league double over West Brom for the first time since 1994-95.
No side has drawn more home games in the Championship this season than West Brom (9), with five of their past seven league matches at the Hawthorns ending all square (W1 L1).
Watford have lost each of their past three away league games, one more defeat than in their previous 12 league matches on their travels (W4 D6).
Watford's Imran Louza has been involved in nine league goals away from home this season (4 goals, 5 assists); the last player for the Hornets to reach 10 in a campaign was Troy Deeney in 2018-19 (6 goals, 4 assists).
'A difficult day, but I don't give up' - Stillpublished at 18:28 BST 18 April
18:28 BST 18 April
Media caption,
Still: 'It's a very difficult day'
Watford manager Ed Still spoke to BBC Three Counties Radio following their 2-0 home defeat by Sheffield United.
"A very difficult day. When we lose, we lose together. I'm not going to throw anybody under the bus or criticise or point my finger at anybody," he said.
"Everybody's made mistakes in the defeat. It's important that when you're in a moment like this everybody gets together.
"I'm not someone who gives up. I'm a fighter. I'm a winner. So for me it's about working out how to take the next step forwards."
Pick of the stats: Watford v Sheffield Unitedpublished at 14:01 BST 16 April
14:01 BST 16 April
Image source, Opta
Sheffield United will hope to officially confirm their status as a Championship club for another season when they visit Watford on Saturday (kick-off 15:00 BST).
The Blades are 10 points clear of the relegation zone with four games to play and need a win to guarantee survival - although a draw or even defeat would be enough should Oxford lose at Derby.
Chris Wilder's side ended a run of six games without a win (D3 L3) by beating Hull 2-1 last time out.
As for the Hornets, their hopes of a play-off place are all but over as they sit 11 points behind sixth-placed Hull with only four games remaining - and have failed to win any of their past four (D2 L2).
Watford have lost their previous four league games against Sheffield United, having been unbeaten in the previous six against the Blades (W4 D2).
Sheffield United won this exact fixture 2-1 last season, having failed to score in each of their previous four league visits to Watford (D1 L3).
Since winning four in a row between December 2025 and January 2026, Watford have only won three of their past 17 games in the Championship (D7 L7).
Sheffield United have only kept two clean sheets in their past 20 Championship matches – indeed, no team in the division has kept fewer than the Blades since Boxing Day 2025.
Imran Louza has been directly involved in 16 goals in the Championship this season (seven goals, nine assists), just one fewer than the most by a Watford player across their previous 10 league campaigns (17 by Ismaila Sarr in 2022-23 and 2020-21).
Watford need to 'buck the trend' - Stillpublished at 14:46 BST 13 April
14:46 BST 13 April
Ben Miller BBC Sport
Image source, Getty Images
Head coach Ed Still says the whole of the Watford squad has to "step up and take responsibility" if they are to "buck the trend" of finishing poorly in recent seasons.
The Hornets have failed to win any of their last four games, following three wins and two draws in their first seven matches after Still succeeded Javi Gracia in early February.
Sitting mid-table in 12th, having fallen out of play-off contention, it continues a recent trend where Watford have finished 11th, 15th and 14th in the Championship since their relegation from the Premier League in 2022.
"I'm not going to go into too much of an analysis of that, but there are patterns and trends that are there and it's something that needs to change," Still told BBC Radio Three Counties.
"These are times in the season when you need to stand up, compete and put everything on the pitch to match your ambitions and all the talk and everything you say and I say.
"I know I am one to be open and communicative but you then need to deliver on the pitch and we didn't do that [in Saturday's defeat at Oxford United].
"You've got to grow and learn. OK, there are a lot of young players – but it isn't just a team of young players.
"Everybody's got to step up and take responsibility, not point fingers or turn round and say 'it's his fault and it's his fault'.
"It's not – it's everybody. All of us have got to come together even more, push harder and buck the trend that's been happening over the past seasons and also, now, over the past few weeks.
"Before coming in, I knew exactly what I was walking into. It just is what it is.
"Fingers can be pointed [but] I'm very open, extremely hard working and I'm just going to work really hard with the staff and the players and push on."
Watford mired in 'annual end-of-season slumber'published at 10:24 BST 13 April
10:24 BST 13 April
Marc Webber Final Score reporter
Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,
Watford last won on the road in February when they beat Bristol City 2-1.
It's Groundhog Day for Watford. With the play-offs out of reach, the Hornets have slipped into their annual end-of-season slumber, with low-key performances which instigate boos from their own fans.
It started with the 2-0 loss at Oxford United on Saturday, when manager Ed Still had to apologise for not taking it to an opposition side "who wanted it more."
It remains to be seen how Watford navigate the next few games when there's no jeopardy.
Do you stick a rocket up the current squad and at least ask them to put a bit of personal pride in their performances to collectively get some results?
Do you motivate the players by giving them a target to end their four-game winless run away from home?
That could be achieved in the remaining two trips to West Brom and Middlesbrough. But both of those sides still need wins for different reasons.
Or do you try something more radical?
The manager has said planning has already begun for next season and is happening in between these games. But what happens if these games are more obviously being used in the planning process?
Perhaps he should tell players who think they are a shoe-in for next season that the next four games are a trial to decide their role in this club going forward.
That may mean some unusual formations, more risk-taking and a greater chance of further defeats.
The Watford fans would have to tolerate using the last few games as an experiment for building a better future. Will they just stay away if the defeats continue?
It's a brave strategy which may take more man and fan management. But if Still is determined to make this club his future, he may want to create disruption now to create a better Watford for next season.