Anarchy reigns at Albion since 'headmaster's' exit

- Published

Albion were seventh in the Championship in December 2024 when Carlos Corberan left the club for La Liga side Valencia
Club captain Jed Wallace once described being summoned to former Albion boss Carlos Corberan's office as like being sent to see the headmaster.
Fast-forward 13 months and it is very clear the discipline Corberan instilled disappeared with him when he left the building.
The Baggies' players have since chewed up and spat out Albion bosses at an alarming rate.
Eric Ramsay is the third permanent incumbent of the Throstles' hot-seat since the Spaniard took his leave just over a year ago.
The fact his two predecessors had such short tenures tells you all you need to know about how their stewardship went.
Tony Mowbray was dismissed after a disastrous Easter weekend where his players seemed to visibly surrender in Midlands derbies against Coventry and Derby.
Ryan Mason outlasted Mowbray's 17-game tenure by 10 matches, largely thanks to spirited fightbacks against Oxford and Swansea when the former Spurs coach's head appeared to be on the chopping block.
Mason's downfall seemed not to be a lack of commitment from the players but a lack of focus and discipline.
For much of the season, the Baggies topped the Championship chart for mistakes leading to opposition shots on goal, while red cards at Coventry and Hull also proved costly.
So, after their individual errors cost Mason his job, the Albion players now have their third boss in just 43 league games.
And it hasn't started well.
Common issues reared their ugly head in Ramsay's first game as Albion went 2-0 down to high-flying Middlesbrough before a spirited fightback was rendered pointless by the Baggies conceding yet another late goal – a bad habit they have not been able to shake this season.
If there was optimism to be taken from the fact the team at least achieved parity before Boro's late winner, there were no such positives to take from Tuesday night as Albion were beaten 5-0 at home by relegation rivals Norwich City.
That is Albion's heaviest home defeat outside of the top flight and the way the players rolled over and allowed the Canaries to rattle in goal after goal spoke volumes about them.
Tony Mowbray gave BBC Radio WM these telling words in his final press conference as Albion boss: "I'm not concerned if the talent is there, I'm concerned if the character is there."
The culture at Albion has to be heavily questioned at this point. Results have, for over a year now, been steadily deteriorating.
While some big players have left the club in that time, on paper there still seems to be more than enough in this squad for it to be competitive.
However, since "headmaster" Corberan left, it feels like every other incumbent of the Baggies dugout has, at best, been treated like a substitute teacher.
And some might argue the current situation is more like Lord of the Flies, where the players try to govern themselves with disastrous results.
That's not to say Ramsay can't be the man to restore order. He has currently only had two games and a mere nine days in the job after all.
But it underlines the size of the job before him and the anarchy he seems to have inherited.
It also shows, quite clearly, that the problems at Albion run much deeper than who is sitting in the dugout.