Dean Smith Manager

#PLStories- Dean Smith says improved Norwich ‘deserved’ to beat Saints #NCFC

DEAN Smith called on Norwich and their supporters to turn Carrow Road into a fortress after they secured a second Premier League win of the season with a 2-1 victory over Saints. Goals from Teemu Pukki and captain Grant Hanley, on his 30th birthday, saw the Canaries make it back-to-back triumphs, after they also beat Brentford two weeks ago in what proved Daniel Farke’s last match in charge. “Winning two on the spin is hard to do and coming from behind is hard to do, so this should build on the belief gained from the Brentford game,” Smith said, having only been appointed on Monday. “Home form is really important. We know how hard the Premier League is and when you have home advantage and the supporters behind you, like they were, it is really important. “We want to make this a tough place to come, win, lose or draw. Whenever a team leaves, they have to say this was a tough place to come. “Southampton will say that. They were at a good level in first half but we improved and deserved to win.” Che Adams fired Saints in front after four minutes and Smith admitted his mind cast back two weeks to when a similar thing happened at St Mary’s after Adam Armstrong struck inside three minutes in a 1-0 defeat, which proved his last game at Aston Villa. Pukki levelled immediately to score the first goal of the new manager’s era and yet the visitors remained on the front foot before the half-time introduction of Josh Sargent and a slight tactical adjustment shifted the momentum, with the hosts pressing higher up the pitch. The Canaries pushed for a late winner and it arrived when Hanley’s header into the ground bounced over Alex McCarthy to clinch all three points. Smith added: “I thought it was a good team performance, especially second half, and they stuck together. “Young Brandon Williams was excellent, in particular defensively, and these players will grow. We have only had two training sessions and they will get better. “It was a tough first 45. They got off to a great start and I was thinking back to two weeks earlier when they got off to great start against Aston Villa when I was there, but the players showed great character.”
Dean Smith Manager

#PLStories- Dean Smith speaks ahead of taking his Carrow Road bow #NCFC

Please share“Analysing everything” will be the key to picking Dean Smith’s first City team, according to the Canaries’ new head coach.Smith’s first Colney training session came on Thursday, and with a crucial match against Southampton coming up tomorrow he’s been left with little time to draft a starting XI. He is comfortable in this scenario, however, having taken the reigns at Brentford and Aston Villa mid-season. So how will Smith go about his first selection? “Just examining them every day on the training ground … watching the little behaviours they’ve got, looking at the quality, the technical abilities. “Over the last week or so the sports science team have been passing me the numbers so I can have a look at their physical output as well. We’re analysing everything all the time to find out what’s our best team.” [embedded content] It’s been a hectic week for the 50-year-old, who only recently flew back to the UK from New York before being introduced to the club’s staff, as well as an unveiling to the press on Wednesday afternoon. The new City boss is focused on the Saints, however, and recognised the tough opposition they’ll provide in his first game in charge. “We know there are big problems,” said Smith. “We need to create more chances. We know how difficult it is at this level, especially against a Southampton team who aren’t conceding many at all. “We want to make Carrow Road a hard place to come for the opposition and we can start that on Saturday, although I’m very respectful of Ralph (Hasenhüttl) and his team; they’re in a good run of form and they’re a tough team to play against. “My abiding memory [of Carrow Road] is that the supporters are very welcoming. I want them to be welcoming to Norwich City on Saturday, but not so much to Southampton.” Please share
Dean Smith Manager

#PLStories- Norwich boss Dean Smith previews Southampton with team news #NCFC

NEW Norwich boss Dean Smith has labelled Saints “a hard team to play against” under Ralph Hasenhuttl, ahead of his first match. The former Villa manager knows better than most with his last game in management – just two weeks ago – bringing to an end his previous tenure, following the 1-0 St Mary’s defeat. The Norfolk outfit picked up their first win of the season with a 2-1 victory over fellow promoted side Brentford last time out, but still opted to replace Daniel Farke with Smith. Speaking ahead of his all-important first game at the helm, Smith warned of the threats that Saints pose his side: “We have really good backing from our supporters. I know they'll be behind us Saturday. “But we're very respectful of Ralph and Southampton, they're a hard team to play against. “We know how difficult it is at this level. Defensively, we need to be harder to beat and we want to start there. “But with the creative talent we've got, we need to be creating more chances.” In a boost for the relegation battlers, Smith did confirm that he has a full squad to choose from with the exception of two – Christoph Zimmerman and long-term absentee Sam Byram. There were doubts over the likes of defenders Grant Hanley, Andrew Omobamidele and Ozan Kabak. But Smith confirmed: “We have a fully fit squad at the moment, apart from Christoph Zimmermann still being out. “Sam Byram is going to play 45 minutes for the Under-23s this evening.”
Dean Smith Manager

#PLStories- Dean Smith brings much-needed positivity to the Norwich City head coach role #NCFC

Please shareThe ambition debate is not an unfamiliar one to Norwich City fans.From Premier League season to Premier League season, especially since Stuart Webber’s arrival at Carrow Road, the Canaries have been ridiculed nationally for failing to ‘have a go’. Little effort has been made to understand the nuances of City’s model, and it’s a sentiment that’s inspired abundant frustration in Norfolk. When success is found at Championship level that model is heralded, but at the top table – where City are front and centre and the world is free to judge – it doesn’t hold up. Never mind the faux passion that railed against Super League proposals and the plight of clubs like Bury and Bolton Wanderers, hungry neutrals want a football feast and Norwich just don’t satisfy their tastes. It must be said that under the Daniel Farke regime, little effort was made to communicate the ambition at Lotus Training Centre. Webber was signing international players and bringing in household names, while those around him were playing down the ambition this showed. Farke referred to the disadvantage his self-funded club was burdened with at almost every opportunity and the club’s internal top-17 goal was not made public for months. The City sporting director did eventually produce some fighting talk of his own, but the real turning point came on Wednesday afternoon when Farke’s successor finally put his new club’s ambition into words. “Mine and Craig (Shakespeare)’s job is to keep us in the league this season, and that’s firmly what we believe we can do,” said Dean Smith. “If I thought it was a risk then I wouldn’t have taken [the job]. We’ve got 27 games left in the Premier League, there’s a lot of points to play for, and we’re just off the back of a win. “I’ve seen how progressive this club has been, there’s enough quality, and that’s the biggest thing. Our aim is to stay in the Premier League, and if we can do that I think there are great building blocks and, hopefully, we can build on them.” Perhaps what Norwich needed was a man to whom the Premier League was familiar, whose last 87 league games have been in the top division and who isn’t ready to give up that status just yet. Perhaps what they needed was simply a passionate speaker, whose targets weren’t hidden and whose statements were clear. Of course, Smith must produce results on the pitch as well as in the press room, but nothing on his CV suggests that he won’t do so. The ex-Brentford manager arrives in NR1 with more pedigree than the large majority of men who’ve gone before him. He boasts a history of promotion, Premier League survival and a huge hand in the development of England’s most expensive ever player. The great City coaches; Mike Walker, Paul Lambert, even Farke, were on the up when they led the Canaries, hitting the peak of their managerial careers as they sealed the job. That Smith was seen as the non-big-name candidate ahead of his appointment now seems bizarre in itself – Norwich have gone from hiring an unknown coach from the German fourth division to acquiring a man who contentiously lost the Aston Villa job, and yet some, charmed by the bright lights of Frank Lampard, preferred a more glamourous character. Whether City’s new head coach can produce the type of performance they need at home to Southampton remains to be seen, but this is a great opportunity for him, and he’s certainly addressed fans in the right way. Among the managerial search, what’s been lost by the masses is the fact that three wins from three matches against the Saints, Wolves and Newcastle would equal the Canaries’ points total to their games played – the fight isn’t nearly over yet. Norwich have known that all along, but they needed somebody to say it. Please share
Dean Smith Manager

#PLStories- New Norwich boss Dean Smith’s verdict on stopping Southampton #NCFC

NEW Norwich City boss Dean Smith insisted he knew all about the threat posed by Saints, having managed Aston Villa against them earlier this month. Smith made a swift return to management just over a week after he was sacked by Villa, following five straight Premier League defeats. Saints were Smith’s last opponents while he was in charge of Villa, with a 1-0 loss followed by his exit two days later. Having now signed a two-and-a-half-year deal at Carrow Road, the manager’s first challenge will be to try to thwart Ralph Hasenhuttl’s men at Carrow Road on Saturday. He said: “I think certainly coming into the training ground here at Colney and meeting up with the staff, I already have an idea of how Southampton play because we came up against them so recently in the last game I managed for Villa. “So it should help me in terms of not having to catch up so much compared to if it was a club that I’ve not played against, but they beat Aston Villa 1-0 so we have to turn the result around with the performance.” Norwich are currently bottom of the pile on goal difference, having won just one of their first 11 contests. “The top of the in-tray is not to concede goals, we’ve conceded too many already and defensively we want to make our structure and organisation a lot stronger and we’ve got talented players and we need to go and score more goals obviously,” Smith said. “We haven’t scored as many as we would have liked to, but there’s definitely players there who can do both sides of the job. “When I spoke to Stuart (Webber, Norwich’s sporting director), he believes in the squad of players, I’ve looked at the squad of players with Craig (Shakespeare, assistant head coach) and we both believe that it’s a squad that probably aren’t producing the results they need and our job is to improve their performance levels. “If we do that then we’ll get the results.”