Former Leeds United boss Howard Wilkinson believes the current uncertainty regarding the clubâs off-the-field future will put off many prospective managerial candidates from taking over. Managerless United are in a state of flux on and off the pitch, with the club just five points clear of the Championship relegation zone after a fourth successive defeat at the weekend and the motives of owners GFH Capital remaining unclear. A host of names have been linked with the vacant United post following the departure of Neil Warnock eight days â with Brian McDermott and Owen Coyle thought to be among the leading candidates. Click here to register and have your say on the Leeds United stories and issues that matter to you But double-title winning ex-Elland Road chief and League Managers Association chairman Wilkinson, 69, feels any future boss will require serious reassurances and clarity regarding Unitedâs long-term plans from the clubâs hierarchy before committing to the club. Offering his take on the managerial situation at United, Wilkinson told the Yorkshire Evening Post: âAll you can say is that is very, very difficult at the moment for any manager to contemplate. âAny manager taking the job, as far as I can see, would not know who he is going to be working for. âAnd that matters enormously. That is the most important relationship within the football club. âThe important line of communication in the football club is between the decision-maker or makers and the manager. âIf thereâs uncertainty about first of all the people in that line or the way that line works, you are going to have a problem.â And the man affectionately known as âSergeant Wilkoâ by the fans during his time at Elland Road, added: âIn old-fashioned military terms, itâs like having a general in the field or the trenches not knowing whose orders he is supposed to be following and sometimes, not being able to talk to anybody to see whether there is an order or not. âInstability at the top of any organisation is not good news. âIt does not matter if it is business, or the church or government. âIf you get instability at the top, you have got a problem. Wilkoâs warning to Leeds United owners âThe uncertainty just spreads down a chain and it affects peopleâs mindset and their performances in any business.â Wells said Howard, still a hero to many of us. I suggest GFH take note of what he has to say and stop listening to gobshites like Lorimer, Harvey and Warnock