Thursday, November 26, 2009

Portmouth appoint avram grnt as new manager

Grant was already at Fratton Park as director of football
Former Chelsea boss Avram Grant has been appointed Portsmouth manager after Paul Hart was relieved of the role.
The 54-year-old Israeli was already at the club in his second spell working as director of football.
He will take charge of Saturday's home game with Manchester United in that role as his work permit needs to be changed before he can become manager.
"He knows the club, players and set-up so it was logical to make him manager," said chief executive Peter Storrie.
Grant first came to Fratton Park as technical director in June 2007 but was soon snapped up by Chelsea and within months became coach at Stamford Bridge after Jose Mourinho left the Blues.
Grant has built up a good reputation, topped with managing Chelsea. He wouldn't go into this lightly with us unless he knew that he'd have something available for the transfer window
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In the 2007/2008 season, Grant guided Chelsea to second place in the Premier League and also to the Champions League final, where the Blues lost on penalties to Manchester United and which turned out to be his last game in charge.
Portsmouth are currently bottom of the Premier League, with only seven points from their 13 games so far.
"Avram is a very experienced and respected manager who has managed at the highest level," added Storrie.
"The board believes he is the man to help steer the club out of the relegation zone.
"He will take charge of training on Friday alongside first-team coaches Paul Groves and Ian Woan."
The position of Grant's predecessor Hart remains unclear.
Initially he was offered the chance to return to his old post of working in youth development, which he declined, but he is believed to have had second thoughts.
Hart, who was director of youth operations before replacing the sacked Tony Adams as manager in February 2009, was in charge during a particularly turbulent part of Portsmouth's history.
He kept them up last season but lost several high-profile players such as Peter Crouch and Glen Johnson over the summer, and this season the club's ownership has been in doubt.
Arab businessman Sulaiman Al Fahim bought the club from Alexander Gaydamak in August, but failed to come up with fresh investment, leading to a situation where players' wages were not paid on time in September.
In October Al Fahim sold his majority shareholding in the club to Saudi tycoon Ali Al Faraj, but any hopes Hart may have had of this making his job easier were hit when the Premier League imposed a transfer embargo on the club over debts owed to other club

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