Mark Hughes is clinging on to his job against the backdrop of civil war at Queens Park Rangers. The 49-year-old is facing a fight after Saturdayâs 3-1 home defeat by Southampton left them rooted at the foot of the Premier League table, without a win in 12 games. On Sunday night, the QPR chief had not been given any assurances from co-owner Tony Fernandes, who had been unwavering in his public support of Hughes. Come in, Harry: Mark Hughes is clinging onto his job at QPR after another match without a win Fernandes is not due in the UK ahead of the weekend clash against Manchester United, but Sportsmail understands Rangers staff have been put on red alert in case the tycoon makes an unscheduled arrival. Fernandes was upset at the manner of the loss to Southampton but is leaning towards giving Hughes more time, unless other directors can persuade him otherwise. It is believed key shareholder Ruben Gnanalingam will be in the country before the match against Sir Alex Fergusonâs side, while Hughes and Fernandes are expected to have talks this week. An unexpected arrival of Fernandes would surely spell the end for Hughes as a growing resignation descends on Loftus Road that the manager will be sacked before the visit to Old Trafford. The former Manchester City boss is dividing opinion at the club. Most shareholders and board members are said to have lost faith in his management. The same group wanted Hughes out after the 1-0 defeat at Arsenal on October 27 and are seriously questioning Fernandesâs decision to stand by his manager. Many believe the key reason behind his decision not to sack Hughes is a probable hefty pay-off. Sportsmail has also learned players have lost faith in Hughes, unimpressed with how he has addressed his sideâs sorry form. The potential appointment of Harry Redknapp is openly discussed. Representatives of the former Tottenham boss, as well as ex-Liverpool chief Rafa Benitez, have indicated their interest to QPR. Out of ideas: QPR's abject performance against Southampton shocked Tony Fernandes Speaking on Match of the Day, Redknapp refused to rule out becoming QPR boss: âMarkâs still in the position, heâs a top bloke and an excellent manager. âHe knows what heâs about and until thereâs a change, if there is one, then it would not be fair for me to discuss it.â But even supporters slated Hughes and some of his summer signings on Saturday, chanting: âYouâre only here for the money!â Hughes defiantly insists Fernandes and fellow co-owner Amit Bhatia would be wrong to sack him, but has sympathised with fans who criticised his players. âI can understand totally the frustration of the fans and theyâre well within their rights to say that but I can assure them thatâs not the case,â said Hughes. âEveryone is working really hard to turn this around. When you have a performance like Southampton, the fans are absolutely right to criticise, given where we are. âIn fairness, I was of the same view. But stability is absolutely what this club needs long-term, making wholesale changes again at this club would be the wrong decision. You would expect me to say that, but I honestly believe it.â To compound Hughesâs problems, striker Djibril Cisse was caught up in a Twitter row with a QPR fan who criticised the Frenchman. Cisse replied with the club address and postcode, tweeting: âCome to the training ground, weâll have a chat big man.â Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/fo...ark-Hughes-position-causes-civil-war-QPR.html
There has to be unrest. All this talk of support for MH (even before the saints game) has to be absolute bs. There are so many stakeholders on board, most couldn't give a flying f*** about MH, they can't be happy with what's happening. If it came down to a vote, I think he will go.