As we can see here, keeping your manager after a certain spell of five game weeks gives you similar results compared to switching, although hiring seems slightly more favorable. For teams scoring less than 0.5PPM over a five gameweek run, you are ‘on-average’ almost the exact same off keeping ...
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Take a look at this season for example. Between GW9 and 13, Aston Villa scored 2 points (0.4PPM). However, they kept the same manager, and scored 9 points in the next five (1.8PPM). So perhaps, a 'new manager bounce' is inevitable after hiring because of a ...
It might be different however when clubs have played bad all season.
PART 2
In this part, we will be comparing the average PPM of a manager in his first five games after his arrival to the average seasonal PPM of his team before his arrival. As stated before, managers ...
It is interesting to note however that in the category 0.5-1.5, newly hired managers actually seem to have had a great advantage over managers who stayed in their seats.