The Journey Of The Gaffer

The Run IN:

The Gaffer’
s impact didn’t take long to show.

It started with a breakthrough—a 3–0 win over SC Cambuur, the kind of result that finally lifted the weight off the squad. Another big performance followed with a 5–1 win at FC Dordrecht, proving it wasn’t just a one-off.

There were setbacks, of course. A cup exit to PSV and narrow defeats to Heracles, Go Ahead Eagles, and Sparta Rotterdam showed how fine the margins still were.

But something had clearly changed.

ADO went toe-to-toe with the giants—holding Ajax to a 0–0 draw and earning a hard-fought 2–2 against Feyenoord. These weren’t the results of a team already down—they were signs of resilience, belief, and structure.

A crucial 1–0 win over Excelsior added to the growing sense that survival might not be impossible after all, even if consistency still slipped away at times, like the narrow loss to PSV and a stalemate with Utrecht.

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Laatste dag Hartzeer:

It almost became one of the great escapes. ADO gave themselves a chance—a 2–1 win over Almere City, followed by a massive 1–0 away win at NAC Breda. Suddenly, survival felt real. Momentum was building. Belief was everywhere.

Then came their best performance yet—a dominant 4–0 win over FC Twente.
Three wins in a row. The impossible was within reach.

All it needed… was one last result.

Away at AZ. Final day. Everything on the line.

But this time, it slipped.

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A 2–1 defeat—and just like that, it was over.

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The Crossroads


The dust hasn’t even settled on relegation, and already the next chapter is calling.

The Gaffer stands in the tunnel, long after the final whistle at AZ. The noise is gone. The season is over. And for the first time in a while—there’s no immediate decision to make on a team sheet, no tactic to tweak, no game to prepare for.

Just a question.

Stay… or go?
 
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Response Nobody Saw Coming


For months, ADO Den Haag looked broken. Winless. Bottom of the table. A club drifting toward disaster.

Now? They look unstoppable.

The Gaffer’s first full stretch in charge has completely transformed the mood around the club. Wins started arriving immediately— first against Jong PSV, then Jong AZ—and suddenly belief returned.

Then came the statement performances.

A ruthless 6–0 demolition of Emmen.
A dominant 4–0 away win at Volendam.
And finally, a stunning 7–1 destruction of MVV Maastricht that sent shockwaves through the league.

This wasn’t survival football anymore. This was a team playing with confidence, aggression, and freedom. Even the draws against Cambuur and Roda felt different—not setbacks, but signs of resilience from a side refusing to lose.

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The System Behind ADO’s Revival


The Gaffer didn’t just change results—he changed the entire identity of ADO Den Haag.

At the heart of the turnaround is an aggressive 3-back control system, built to dominate the ball while overwhelming teams in transition.

The shape is fluid:
  • Wingbacks push high and wide, stretching the pitch constantly
  • A deep-lying midfielder anchors everything, controlling tempo
  • Two attacking midfielders drift between the lines looking to overload central spaces
  • Up front, the strike partnership combines movement with physical presence—one dropping deeper, the other constantly attacking space.
What makes it dangerous is how quickly it shifts. Out of possession, ADO become compact and difficult to break down. But once the ball is won, the wingbacks explode forward and the front four swarm teams before they can reset.

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Den Haag Marching Towards Title:

ADO Den Haag
have turned into one of the most consistent sides in the division, and The Gaffer’s system is only becoming more dangerous with time.

January opened with a huge 2–0 away win over Jong PSV, immediately setting the tone for the new year. A frustrating slip against Emmen briefly halted momentum, but the response was emphatic—wins over Eindhoven and Cambuur showed a side that no longer lets setbacks linger.

That resilience carried into February.

A thrilling 4–2 victory against Roda JC highlighted the attacking quality flowing through the team, before another stumble against Volendam reminded everyone the promotion race would not come easy. Once again though, ADO answered immediately, calmly dispatching Helmond Sport away from home.

By March, confidence was surging.

A dominant 4–1 win over VVV-Venlo and a comfortable 3–0 victory against Excelsior showed a team playing with real authority, while even the draw against MVV Maastricht felt controlled rather than disappointing.

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With 8 games remaining it's more a question of when will ADO be named champions not can they... and just like that ADO Den Haag were crowned champions - heading back to the Eredivisie where they belong!

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Champions with 7 games to go!

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great title win and now the big question is do you stay another season or move elsewhere?
Steamrolled the title in the end - gave the youngsters gametime for final games & still won every game! The Gaffer will now take the summer break to decide what lies next....
 

The Gaffer Stays — And ADO Look Ready for the Next Level:


After dragging ADO Den Haag back from the brink, many expected The Gaffer to move on. Instead, he stayed.

And early signs suggest the project is only getting stronger.

Now back in the Eredivisie, ADO haven’t looked overwhelmed by the step up. They’ve looked organised, disciplined, and far more mature than many expected from a newly promoted side.

The season opened with a gritty 1–0 win over Heracles, immediately calming fears of a difficult return to the topflight. Draws against Sparta Rotterdam and Utrecht showed resilience away from home, while a commanding 3–0 win over Heerenveen gave supporters a glimpse of what this team can become.

There have been setbacks. A narrow defeat to Twente and a frustrating loss at Go Ahead Eagles reminded everyone that the margin for error in the Eredivisie is far smaller. But unlike the struggling side he first inherited, this ADO team responds to adversity instead of collapsing under it.

Victories over Cambuur, Dordrecht, and NAC Breda kept momentum alive, while a dominant 4–0 Dutch Cup win over Excelsior Maassluis showed the depth and confidence growing throughout the squad.

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The Journey Continues: The Gaffer Takes Over at Hull City


After rebuilding his reputation in Norway, surviving the chaos of France, and restoring belief at ADO Den Haag, The Gaffer has made his next move. He leaves ADO sitting in the top 8 with a host of young players coming through however ADO were unwilling to grant Gaffer his coaching badges so....

Hull City is the new destination. 🐯

The decision marks another major step in a career that continues to climb faster than anyone expected. Hull offered something impossible to ignore—not just a substantial transfer budget, but also the opportunity for The Gaffer to continue progressing through his coaching badges.

For a manager who started this journey with no badges, no experience, and no reputation, that matters.

And so does the scale of the challenge. Hull are a sleeping giant by Championship standards. Big stadium. Strong backing. Serious expectations. This is no longer a survival job or a rebuilding project hidden from the spotlight.

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Gaffer brings over his 3 back control formation that worked wonders in The Netherlands - Will success continue in England?

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Hull Begin to Show Their Potential Under Gaffer


Life in the Championship was never going to be straightforward, but The Gaffer’s Hull City are beginning to look like a side capable of competing with anyone in the division.

The run started with chaos—an electric 3–3 draw against Leeds followed by another hard-fought point away at Sheffield United. Hull looked open at times, but fearless going forward. December captured everything about this team.

One week they were blowing sides away, like the emphatic 4–0 win over Derby and a huge 1–0 victory against Burnley. The next, they were stumbling in frustrating defeats to Bolton and Plymouth. But unlike some of his previous sides, this Hull team never looked beaten mentally.

They kept responding.

A massive away win at Southampton showed the growing belief in the squad, while draws against Coventry, QPR, and Cardiff highlighted both their resilience and the fine margins separating promotion hopefuls in the Championship.

And then came the statement. 7–0 against Coventry in the FA Cup. Relentless. Ruthless. Unstoppable.

It was the kind of result that sends a message to the rest of the country: Hull City are becoming dangerous.

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Now with a 31 day-transfer window & 15 million pounds to spend Gaffer can now really push this Hull side towards greatness & promotion as done previously with Konsvinger & ADO Den Haag.

Transfers Thus Far:

In a move that already feels bigger than just a transfer, Jacob Greaves has returned to the club where he first rose through the professional ranks, joining Hull for £3.8 million.

At 31 years old, Greaves arrives with experience, leadership, and a deep connection to the badge. For supporters, this is more than a signing—it’s the return of someone who understands exactly what Hull City means. And for The Gaffer, it’s a statement of intent.

Greaves fits the system perfectly: aggressive defensively, composed on the ball, dominant in the air, and comfortable stepping forward from the back line. In a side built around brave football and high-intensity defending, his return brings both quality and stability.

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The Run In - Hull City Dreaming:

Hull City’
s promotion charge was beginning to feel real. After an inconsistent January threatened to slow momentum, The Gaffer’s side exploded into life through February and early March, producing some of their most complete performances of the season.

There were setbacks early on. A damaging defeat away at Portsmouth and another loss at Leicester exposed some defensive fragility, while a tense goalless draw at Millwall showed just how difficult the Championship grind could be. But once February arrived, Hull found another gear entirely.

Back-to-back home wins over Stoke and Watford restored belief before the FA Cup journey ended narrowly against Newcastle. Yet even in defeat, Hull competed fiercely against Premier League opposition — proof of how far the side had come in only a few months under the new regime.

Then came the statement performances.

A ruthless 4-0 demolition of Oxford United away from home was followed by another 4-0 victory against Swansea at the MKM Stadium. Confidence was surging, the attack was flowing, and the Tigers suddenly looked like one of the most dangerous sides in the division. Middlesbrough were swept aside 3-0 next, with Hull dominating from start to finish.

The biggest message came at Elland Road. Leeds, one of the league’s heavyweights, were dismantled 4-0 in a result that sent shockwaves through the Championship. The Gaffer’s aggressive tactical approach, built around intensity and fearless attacking football, had fully taken hold.

Even the chaotic 3-3 draw away at Wolves felt symbolic of Hull’s evolution — a side no longer trying to survive games but trying to win every single one.

From uncertainty to genuine promotion contenders, Hull suddenly looked like a club accelerating toward the Premier League at frightening speed.


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Hull City enter the final stretch of the Championship season with everything still to play for.

Seven matches remain, and the table could hardly be tighter. Hull currently occupy 6th place, but the gap between 4th and 11th is so small that every single weekend reshapes the playoff picture. One strong run could launch the Tigers into the automatic promotion conversation — one poor week could see them fall completely out of contention.

For The Gaffer, this is the defining period of the project so far.

The fixture list offers little room to breathe. Bristol City arrive first at the MKM Stadium in what feels like a pivotal home clash before Hull travel to face West Ham, another side chasing promotion ambitions of their own. From there, the pressure only intensifies with encounters against Charlton, Bolton, Derby, Sheffield United and finally Burnley on the last day of the campaign.

There are no easy fixtures left. Every opponent is fighting for something — promotion, playoffs, or survival — and the Championship’s brutal schedule leaves no margin for complacency.

Yet there is belief around Hull.

The Gaffer has transformed the mood at the club since arriving, turning Hull into one of the division’s most aggressive and entertaining sides. Big wins against promotion rivals have proven the Tigers can compete with anyone on their day, but consistency under pressure will now decide whether this remarkable turnaround ends in celebration or disappointment.

The race is officially on. Seven games to define a season.

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