SHEFFIELD WEDNESDAY have confirmed the appointment of Alan Irvine as their new manager just ten days after the Scot was controversially sacked by Coca-Cola Championship rivals Preston.
The 51-year-old, who has signed a three-and-a-halfyear contract, will take over at Hillsborough from Brian Laws, who parted company with the Owls on December 13. Academy coach Sean McAuley had been placed in temporary charge.
Irvine was sacked suddenly from his post as Preston manager after a little over two years in charge at Deepdale and just six months after guiding them to the play-offs.
Irvine said: ‘‘I’m delighted to take up the position of manager at Sheffield Wednesday.
It’s a club with great traditions and a brilliant outlook for the future.
‘‘While the league table shows us that there is a lot of hard work in front of us between now and the end of the current season, it’s a challenge I’m relishing and I believe the squad here at Hillsborough is more than capable of pulling away from the current situation at the bottom of the Championship.
‘‘Sheffield Wednesday has made excellent progress off the pitch in the past 12 months and it is now my job to make sure that progress is mirrored on the pitch.
‘‘I’m really looking forward to starting work with the players and I can’t wait to get out on the training pitch to start preparing for the vital matches we have coming up this month.’’ Preston lost out to Sheffield United in the playoff semi-finals in May, but failed to replicate the form they showed at the end of last season and, after a run of one win in ten league matches, Irvine was shown the door at Deepdale.
Wednesday, still saddled with debts of around £26m, face a relegation battle after a run of 11 league games without a win has seen them slide to second bottom in the table.
Laws departed soon after last month’s 3-0 defeat at Leicester, ending a three-year spell at the club. During that time he worked tirelessly on a limited budget to steer the club to Championship safety and Irvine will have to work under similar circumstances unless the Owls can attract major new investment.
The club appointed investment bank Inner Circle Sports last summer in a bid to find investors willing to inject £20m in return for control of the club. They remain confident of securing a deal.
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