A quirk of destiny meant Graham Potter’s final sport in administration was a 2-0 defeat to Aston Villa.
It price him his job at Chelsea in April 2023, because the Blues acted lower than 24 hours later to finish his transient Stamford Bridge reign.
Nearly two years later the 49-year-old returned to the dugout to undergo one other loss to Villa, this time within the FA Cup, in his first sport as West Ham boss.
At his Thursday unveiling, he spoke about accepting each the successes and the setbacks, his spell at Chelsea an ideal instance.
Potter stated the Hammers felt just like the “proper one” after beforehand coming near the roles at Ajax and Leicester.
He additionally stated he was now properly rested – however, after Friday’s sport at a freezing Villa Park, there’s prone to be a bit frustration.
Lucas Paqueta’s aim, in the course of the Hammers’ brilliant begin, had the brand new supervisor celebrating on the sidelines simply 9 minutes in.
At full-time, nonetheless, he was locked in dialog with assistant supervisor Bruno Satler on the touchline after Villa’s comeback had knocked out his new facet.
“The feelings had been pleasure,” stated Potter when he was requested how he felt earlier than the sport at his post-match information convention. “Friday evening, Villa Park, full home, 6,500 West Ham followers who had been superb.
“Our efficiency gave me loads of encouragement, the best way the gamers tried to do what we requested them to do. We’re simply upset now as a result of we’re out and needed to undergo.
“We simply attempt to get the group right into a good condition. The expertise is there however it’s nearly attempting to get the group collectively as a collective. That is what we’re attempting to do.”
After the ultimate whistle, he walked over to salute the travelling followers who might be hoping Potter will ship the type and substance they’re demanding
It’s one thing Julen Lopetegui was unable to do in his six months in cost and Potter turns into the membership’s fifth supervisor in 9 and a half years, counting David Moyes’ two spells.
