Claudio Ranieri: Watford boss vows to fight on and calls for mentality shift after Norwich defeat

Claudio Ranieri has vowed to fight on as Watford manager following 3-0 home defeat to Norwich; Italian has overseen seven league defeats in eight games with Hornets replacing Norwich in the Premier League's bottom three

By Ben Grounds, @Ben_Islington

Watford boss Claudio Ranieri apologised to supporters after his side slipped to another defeat to Norwich on Friday

Claudio Ranieri has vowed to fight on as Watford manager and has called on his players to change their mentality following their 3-0 home defeat to Norwich on Friday.

Josh Sargent struck twice to lift the Canaries out of the relegation zone with victory over the 10-man Hornets at Vicarage Road, which piled more pressure on Ranieri.

The 21-year-old American had not found the net in the English top flight since his summer move from Werder Bremen until his improvised flick broke the deadlock in the 51st minute. Sargent then headed home from a well-weighted Milot Rashica cross for his and Norwich's second of the game, as the win saw the club climb out of the bottom three.

Emmanuel Dennis was shown a second yellow card soon after for a high foot on Max Aarons, to leave the Hornets to see out the final 12 minutes with 10 men. In added time, Norwich added a third to put the game beyond the hosts, when Juraj Kucka diverted a ball from Adam Idah past Daniel Bachmann and into his own net.

This video is only available on Skysports.com.
Open to watch

Ranieri was asked about his future following his side's second-half collapse, but the Italian says he is committed to turning around the club's fortunes.

Advertisement
Watford manager Claudio Ranieri says that his players need to start playing for the squad rather than themselves if they are to avoid relegation, following their 3-0 home defeat to relegation rivals Norwich on Friday night.

When asked if he would consider his position, Ranieri added: "I don't go away. I want to continue because I am a fighter. I've never given up in my career.

"I have to say sorry to the fans. I told the players to ignite the fire. The second half after the goal, we disappeared. Maybe we played better with 10 than 11.

Also See:

No wins, no clean sheets, no discipline - Watford struggles

Watford are without a win in nine games in all competitions (D1 L8), their longest run without a victory since December 2013 (10).

Norwich enjoyed their biggest margin of victory in a Premier League match since beating West Brom 4-0 in May 2013, and their biggest away from home in the division since September 1993, a 5-1 win at Everton.

Watford have now gone 30 Premier League games without a clean sheet (since a 3-0 win v Liverpool in February 2020), with only West Brom enduring a longer such run in the history of the competition (34 in 2011; Blackburn in 2012 and Wolves in 2012 both also on 30).

Since the start of 2016-17, only Arsenal (19) have picked up more Premier League red cards than Watford (18).

"Now we must pick up the players who have heart like (Tom) Cleverley and (Moussa) Sissoko. Only the players with the fight can help us survive. We have to change our mentality. We cannot carry on in this way. I want players who can play with passion and heart."

The game was temporarily halted in the 60th minute when a section of the floodlights went out. After an 11-minute delay while the lights flickered on briefly, referee Mike Dean allowed play to continue without the full lights.

The result ensures the Hornets remain without a win since their shock 4-1 triumph over Manchester United in November, but have only now slipped into the relegation zone for the first time this season.

I don't go away. I want to continue because I am a fighter. I've never given up in my career.
Watford manager Claudio Ranieri

The club, though, do not have a history of sticking with under-pressure managers and it could be a crucial week for Ranieri, who described the match beforehand as a "cup final".

"The players are playing for the club and for the fans," he added after Watford's wait for a first clean sheet of the season continued. "They have to play for the squad, not in an individual way, not in a selfish way.

Ranieri's struggles

The Italian has picked up an average of just 0.58 points per game in charge - almost half of Xisco Munoz's tally. His win percentage is 12 per cent lower while they concede more goals and have a higher expected goals against under Ranieri.

"I speak every day with the board in the right way and now we have to react.

"I don't know why [my players played selfishly]. I wanted to see the same squad spirit as we showed at Newcastle. Everyone wanted to find solutions alone. Norwich gave us a lesson. They played together, they fought together, and they won."

Norwich's Josh Sargent opened his Premier League account with a sublime flicked finish in their 3-0 win against relegation rivals Watford, but did the American mean it?

Will Watford twist again?

Sky Sports' Jamie Carragher:

"I fear for him. In everyone's eyes, Norwich are the whipping boys. We love Claudio Ranieri in the Premier League. He's been a massive character. I just think it might be difficult for him to be in charge for the next game, I really do.

"I certainly think they've got the best individuals in attack than the other teams at the bottom. But ultimately that won't keep you up on its own. Ranieri knows that, he's an experienced manager, it's just whether he gets the chance to pick another team.

"There's no doubt those discussions will be happening tonight at boardroom level with this club because that's what they notoriously do. Claudio got the job on the back of the way this club works.

Dean Smith insisted he initially thought Josh Sargent had sliced what proved to be a spectacular opener in his Norwich side's win at Watford

"They also face around five shots per game more than under their previous manager."

Sky Sports' Gary Neville:

"This is bad. Norwich are the team everyone thinks they are going to beat. Watford fans emptied the stadium at 3-0. The ones that were left booed. That is a bad, bad result on a Friday Night Football, live on television.

"What Jamie says about his fears for Claudio Ranieri is compounded by the fact we've got a two-week break. Ordinarily clubs wait for international breaks, for breaks, and they always plan for who their next manager is going to be.

"This club has a history of acting and you saw the look on the owner's face during the game. I think Claudio will have a different type of relationship with the family.

"I think he'll call them up and ask them 'what are you going to do with me?' I never want to see a manager sacked. I know sometimes you have to do it, but I hope they continue with him."

What's next?

Burnley host Watford at Turf Moor on Saturday February 5 at 6pm in their re-arranged fixture while Norwich visit Wolves at Molineux in the FA Cup fourth round on the same day at 3pm.

Win £250,000 with Super 6!

Another Saturday, another chance to win £250,000 with Super 6. Play for free, entries by 3pm.

Outbrain