While some supporters had no issues with the sacking of Wilder, many had problems with the way COH Sports handled the summer as a whole. The American consortium wanted their own manager (Selles), however, they failed to back their man in the summer which is what made Unitedites frustrated by the board.
The Blades began the campaign by fielding just one natural centre-back, Tyler Bindon, who was making his Championship debut. Alongside him was Rhys Norrington-Davies, a left-back, who had barely kicked a ball in anger for the Blades in 12 months due to injury troubles. This alone summed up Sheffield United’s lack of recruitment planning in pre-season.
Eventually, the board sanctioned a plethora of new signings in the final week of the transfer window. But by this point, the damage had already been done to the squad in terms of confidence.
The Spaniard failed to register a single point in his first five league matches, as United looked disjointed, passive, and completely devoid of confidence. By early September, the board dismissed Selles off the back of a 5-0 defeat away at Ipswich Town and made the shock decision to bring Wilder back less than 100 days after his original exit.
Can Chris Wilder Spark Life Back Into the Blades?
Wilder’s return to Bramall Lane so far has not seen much of an improvement across the first four matches, according to key performance metrics provided by Opta. That being said, this current international break has provided an opportunity for the players to work on sharpness, attacking patterns and defensive structure, something they’ve massively lacked in the nine league games they’ve played thus far.