What next for Hartlepool United following shock decision to sack manager Simon Grayson?
Hartlepool United are looking for their ninth permanent manager in three years, following Simon Grayson’s surprise dismissal on Sunday.
True, chairman and owner Raj Singh, who has made 13 permanent hires since buying the club in 2018, is not known for his patience with Pools managers. Only promotion-winning manager Dave Challinor has lasted more than a year in the post, while none of the last five men to sit in the Pools bench have survived more than 17 games, despite the fact that veteran Lennie Lawrence stood down on his own.
Even so, Pools made the “extremely difficult” decision to part ways with Grayson, who leaves having won four, drawn seven, and lost four of his 15 games in charge, with Saturday’s disappointing FA Cup fourth qualifying round draw with Northern Premier League Premier Division side Gainsborough Trinity serving as the final straw for Singh.
Even Darren Sarll, one of the most unpopular managers in the club’s recent history, was given the opportunity to oversee last year’s FA Cup replay before being fired.

It all started so well for Grayson, who scored 10 points out of the first 12 available this term after what appeared to be a particularly successful summer of recruitment.
Following periods in India, where he guided Bengaluru FC to the Indian Super League Final, and Nepal, where he won the league title with Lalitpur City, Grayson returned to Pools in June, his first management position in England since 2021.
At the time, it felt like he inherited a club in upheaval after a tumultuous conclusion to last season that saw Pools pushed close to the brink with Singh’s abrupt departure, the apparent breakdown of takeover discussions, and the unpopular owner’s subsequent return.
in the wake of a contested vote among season ticket holders.Even so, despite the impending exits of Mani Dieseruvwe, who scored 43 goals in 89 games at Victoria Park, and long-serving Joe Grey, Grayson talked about his new team’s chances of at least making the play-offs.
After all, he arrived with a reputation for winning promotions, having previously done so with Blackpool, his beloved Leeds, Huddersfield, and Preston. If there was any concern, it was that the latest of those promotions occurred in 2015.
Despite the multiple hurdles, the depleted team he inherited, the reputational harm the club had experienced, and the fact that Pools had fallen behind practically all of their National League competitors, Grayson appeared to have had a fairly successful summer of recruitment. Pools added 14 new players, strengthening the squad throughout and bringing in a number of players with National League experience.
Jay Benn, a member of the Solihull Moors team that made the play-offs in 2023/24, Cameron John, a regular in the York team that finished second last season, and Alex Reid, who scored 17 goals in 32 games for Wealdstone, all arrived with a proven track record in the National League.
When the new season began in August, most Pools fans would have believed that the group entering the new season was far stronger than the one that concluded the 2024/25 season.
Reid, who scored three goals in his first four Pools appearances but hasn’t scored in seven games since, and Johnson, who has had a rocky start to life back in the North East and has yet to open his account for his new club, have three goals in 26 games combined. Dieseruvwe, meanwhile, has 10 goals in his first 12 outings for National League leaders Dale. The statistics make for sobering reading.
Despite their impressive start – Pools won three and drew one of their first four games, maintaining four consecutive clean sheets – things haven’t gone as planned for most fans.
A lack of goals has been one of the club’s most well-documented concerns this season, prompting unavoidable comparisons between new signings Reid and Danny Johnson and Dieseruvwe, who departed to join for Rochdale after failing to agree a new contract at Victoria Park.
Reid, who scored three goals in his first four Pools appearances but hasn’t scored in seven games since, and Johnson, who has had a rocky start to life back in the North East and has yet to open his account for his new club, have three goals in 26 games combined. Dieseruvwe, meanwhile, has 10 goals in his first 12 outings for National League leaders Dale. The statistics make for sobering reading.
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