Former Norwich City sporting director Stuart Webber has admitted he can perceive criticism from the membership’s fanbase, even when he doesn’t essentially agree with it.
The director of soccer has been speaking to Kicker in Germany relating to his profession to date, together with his departure from Norwich earlier this 12 months.
He had been sporting director at Carrow Road since 2017 after arriving from Huddersfield Town, the place he had loved large success that culminated in a spell within the Premier League.
Webber managed to repeat that with Norwich, finally constructing a staff that completed first within the Championship in 2018 and have been promoted again to the Premier League.
They completed 20th the next season earlier than one other first positioned end and promotion, earlier than then dropping again to the second flight after one other disappointing 20th positioned end.
They’ve not been again since, ending 13th final season in a poor marketing campaign that noticed questions requested and Webber within the firing line for the work he was doing behind the scenes.
His exit has not stopped the criticism or evaluation from the Norwich fanbase, and he admits he can see either side of the argument.
“Norwich asked me to continue working until my successor was found and hired,” he mentioned.
“I complied with this request. I’ve been here for six and a half years and now I’m ready for a new challenge. I’ll be 40 in January – and it’s time for a change.
“You know what football fans are like. You need someone to blame, that’s okay. It’s better to blame me than the coach, the players or the club management.
“But at the end of the day, when people look back on my time at Norwich City, they will realise that Norwich has become a very different football club in the last six and a half years.
“We won two titles; we built a new training centre that now has the standard of a Champions League contender. And we helped 21 players from our academy make their debut in the professional team.
“Absolutely,” he added when requested if the state of affairs was much like Huddersfield.
“Norwich was also languishing in the Championship, with no money and no ambition to get promoted again. I also thought let’s do it like Huddersfield again. We embarked on the same journey with Daniel, and I am proud that we had the same result in 2019: promotion to the Premier League.
“It was a special time with Daniel and David. Both gave clubs the opportunity to open up new markets for player transfers – and created a role model for many clubs in England.”