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Latest updates

  1. 'Beyond frustrating' - fans react to Struber sackingpublished at 15:49 GMT 27 March

    Gerhard Struber wearing a red Bristol City beanie hat and dark overcoat applauds supportersImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Gerhard Struber had 43 games in charge of Bristol City

    We asked for your views after Bristol City announced the sacking of boss Gerhard Struber with former England manager Roy Hodgson taking over at the Championship club until the end of the season.

    Hodgson returns to a club which he led for four months in 1982 in his first managerial job in English football.

    We had a large number of responses so, thanks for getting in touch and here is a selection of the views of Bristol City fans:

    Jess - Roy is a legend and no doubt fans will give him a warm welcome but it's really hard to see the positives in this, or understand the club's vision. What's the point in overhauling the set-up when we aren't investing in the squad? We do the same thing over and over again and expect different results - madness!

    Kris - Fans of other clubs often ask me why Bristol City have never made it to the Premier League as they seem equally perplexed as us City supporters. I think I have boiled it down to Steve Lansdown conservatism and poor managerial appointments. This is the first managerial appointment he's got right in a while in my opinion but reverted to type with this sacking after failing to back Struber with a sufficient squad to make it through the season. Beyond frustrating!

    Tom - Quite predictable really as very poor form for the past two months. Struber has to take some blame for that but the transfer window was a disaster in January and he deserves more time. I don't see the point in the Lansdowns carrying on, as it's one bad decision after another and you can't keep blaming managers. Surely it is time to let someone else have a go at board level and getting us to the next level.

    Matt - So frustrating to be owned by a local billionaire who shows little ambition for doing what's necessary on the playing side to get the club into the Premier League.

    Mark - It's not April Fools' Day yet is it?

    Roy Hodgson wearing a dark Crystal Palace coat with an eagle on it over a white shirt and spotted tieImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Roy Hodgson's last managerial job was with Crystal Palace in 2024

    Neville - As a Palace exile in Bristol I think it is a sensible appointment to take the team through to the end of the current season. Roy gets to work quick and in both of his spells at Palace the effect was immediate.

    Margaret - Bad mistake! The football has been great this season and it's not Struber's fault we sold our best players in the January transfer window. I like and respect Roy Hodgson but we should have stuck with Struber, he is a talented manager who knows how to motivate players. Shame on you Bristol City!

    Mark F - The fans need to get a grip. Lansdown has poured so much into this club and turned us from a League One side into a big Championship team. Yes we all want to go to the Premier League but these things can take time and impatience is no excuse for the fans to turn on an owner who has spent £300m of his own cash stabilising us as a solid team.

    Tony - Struber had to go, as the performances of late are nothing short of appalling. He lost the dressing room.

    Marc - Why appoint Roy Hodgson, when he is only likely to stay until the end of season when Bristol City can not go up or down? It seems a pointless appointment, because although I have respect for him it is very unlikely he will be manager for the 2026-2027 season at 78. We sold our best players to our rivals when Struber was there, he even said Bristol City do not invest enough.

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  2. City set for biggest overhaul in its modern historypublished at 13:11 GMT 27 March

    Richard Hoskin
    BBC Radio Bristol sports editor

    Roy Hodgson standing in the dugout during a match for Crystal Palace in 2024Image source, PA Media

    Gerhard Struber was generally popular amongst the fanbase.

    Not even charge for a season – he was a head coach not afraid to speak his mind, but results and performances have dipped since January.

    There is no doubt the January transfer window had a major impact – from losing Zak Vyner and Anis Mehmeti to new signings Delano Burgzorg and George Earthy not making an impression. But the team has also suffered terribly with injuries, especially in defence.

    Roy Hodgson has a link with Bristol City, having managed the club briefly in 1982 when it was on its knees.

    Whilst only a short-term appointment, returning to the dugout at the age of 78 will raise plenty of eyebrows both locally and nationally.

    Bristol City have already started a search for a new sporting director. A big job has just got a lot bigger for whoever is appointed.

    Today's news just increases the need for somebody to start work sooner rather than later.

    Supporters were already increasingly frustrated having not build on last season's top-six finish with owner Steve Lansdown the subject of critical chants at last weekend's defeat to West Brom.

    Now the football club is set for one of the biggest overhauls in its modern history – from a new head coach to the recruitment department, from a recently appointed chief executive to the academy.

    Times are changing at Ashton Gate.

  3. Hodgson replaces Struber - Can Bristol City fans make sense of it all?published at 11:54 GMT 27 March

    BBC have your say banner on a green background
    A downbeat looking Gerhard Struber on the touchline with his eyes closedImage source, Getty Images

    Bristol City have sacked head coach Gerhard Struber and named former England manager Roy Hodgson as his replacement until the end of the season.

    Struber was appointed in June 2025 and won 16 of his 43 games in charge but had lost four of his last five league games.

    Hodgson had a four-month spell in charge at Ashton Gate in 1982 which then led to an illustrious managerial career with the likes of Inter Milan, Liverpool, Crystal Palace, Switzerland and England.

    Bristol City fans can you make sense of this decision and is 78-year-old Hodgson the right choice to steer the ship for the remainder of the season?

    Send us your views and check back here later to read a selection of the replies.

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  4. 'Fans struggle to understand where City are going'published at 16:32 GMT 25 March

    David Pottier
    Fan writer

    BBC Sport's red Bristol City fan's voice banner with white writing and the Bristol City club badge
    Bristol City owner Steve Lansdown wears a grey coat with a red scarf while stood in the director's box at Ashton Gate during the Championship game with Preston North End on 4 January 2026Image source, Shutterstock
    Image caption,

    Steve Lansdown first became involved at Bristol City in 1996

    I walked into Ashton Gate for the very first time on 25 March 1967. It was my 11th birthday "treat".

    The opponents were Birmingham City and we won the game 3-1. So began my love affair with this football club which has now endured an incredible 59 years.

    Why City, not Rovers? I guess living in Nailsea, I was the right side of town and my father was a Bedminster boy, although he had no interest in football whatsoever.

    My teenage years were spent watching City slowly build - with a few dips along the way - a team that could reach the promised land of Division One.

    Manager Alan Dicks was afforded a timeline that would be unthinkable these days, although he came close to being sacked more than once.

    We finally made it by beating Portsmouth 1-0 on 20 April 1976. I was there that night almost 50 years ago and climbed over the back wall of the Grand Enclosure to be within touching distance of my heroes who were taking the adulation of fans as they emerged from the dressing room into the directors' box.

    I was there four months later at Highbury on one of those hot summer days we had in 1976, stood with thousands of City fans at the Clock End as Paul Cheesley's powerful header gave us a 1-0 victory over Arsenal.

    It was one of those rare days where expectations were exceeded.

    I consider myself very lucky to have experienced the following four seasons when we did OK at English football's top table.

    The fall was rapid and the circumstances leading to the Ashton Gate Eight saga are still in the memory.

    I was there that cold January day in 1982 as we travelled the short distance to Newport County to watch what would have been City's last game had those eight players not made the ultimate sacrifice of tearing up their contracts.

    Relegation to the fourth tier was inevitable and, for a couple of weeks in December 1982, City hit absolute rock bottom as they fell to 92nd in the Football League.

    The climb back up the league ladder was led by Terry Cooper who, in the midst of his time in charge, gave the club its first ever Wembley appearance in 1986 and victory against Bolton Wanderers.

    Joe Jordan finished off Terry's work as he led the team to the second tier in 1989-90, although it was a bittersweet success as we surrendered the title to Bristol Rovers.

    We'll never know how far Jordan could have taken the club had he not chosen to return north of the border and take the managerial hot seat at Hearts.

    His second spell at the club from 1994 to 1997 ended in failure as City bounced up and down between tiers two and three until Gary Johnson nearly achieved the impossible by reaching the Championship play-off final in 2008.

    Bolder investment in the squad in that season's January transfer window may well have secured automatic promotion but by then the club was owned/run by its current custodian Steve Lansdown.

    His cautious approach still prevails despite him investing more than £280m in funding losses while, in fairness, building a credible infrastructure.

    As City stumbled to defeat against a very poor West Bromwich Albion on Saturday, chants of "I don't care about Lansdown, he don't care about me" were clearly audible around Ashton Gate.

    This time it was not just coming from the Burberry-clad teenage set. Many fans, myself included, are currently at a very low ebb when it comes to understanding just where this club is going with the season effectively over in mid-March.

    With Championship football guaranteed for a 12th successive season, should we just be thankful for that and pander to those among the fanbase who warn we should be careful what we wish for when calling for a change of ownership to trigger a change of approach?

    More of the same is not enough in perpetuity which is where we seem to be heading.

    What is the point of having a new sporting director if that individual's plans are thwarted by no upturn in investment?

    Do we have to have a reset by getting relegated to League One and bouncing back?

    Hoping the stars align one year and we get lucky is not really a plan. I wouldn't mind betting our representative's name was first on the sheet at the EFL meeting where the new eight-team play-off format was approved.

    As I enter my 60th season of support, the club can be assured that I will be purchasing my season ticket but it will be interesting to see how many others will by the time we reach 15 August.

    You can hear more from David Pottier on the Forever Bristol City podcast, external.

  5. 'Bristol City at a crossroads - not a good one'published at 15:52 GMT 23 March

    Marc Webber
    BBC Final Score reporter

    Scott Twine covers his face with his shirt during Bristol City's defeat to West Bromwich AlbionImage source, Getty Images

    One of the many good things about the city of Bristol is that it is geographically at the crossroads of the West Country.

    It is fair to say Bristol City Football Club is also at a crossroads - but not a good one.

    The team was booed three times during their defeat by West Brom on Saturday, leading one fan on social media to describe it as the most toxic atmosphere they had seen in a decade at Ashton Gate.

    The bad feelings came from a mix of an awful performance against West Brom and rising resentment at the ownership of the club.

    A side charging into the Championship play-offs last season now finds itself in lower mid-table in 16th, with the same number of points (12) between both the relegation zone and the play-off places.

    But with five league games in a row without a win, the momentum encourages you to look downwards, as opposed to a return to the play-offs.

    Injuries have caused big problems for The Robins lately, and the international break may be the perfect time for a reset for Gerhard Struber's depleted squad.

    An incoming sporting director may be able to holistically reset the footballing philosophy.

    But the club also feels like it needs a cultural and mental reset if it is to deliver the dream of Premier League football to the biggest English city never to have experienced it.

  6. With a performance like that we are far away from the play-offs - Struberpublished at 18:56 GMT 21 March

    Media caption,

    Struber: "This can be absolutely not our standard"

    Bristol City manager Gerhard Struber admitted that his side are "far away from the play-offs" after their 1-0 defeat by struggling West Bromwich Albion at Ashton Gate on Saturday.

    Defender George Campbell scored the only goal in the first half as the Baggies posted an important win in their bid to avoid relegation - but for the Robins, it extended their own winless league run to five matches and saw them slip further out of top six contention.

    Struber, in his first season in charge of the club, conceded that the standards in his team's performance must improve in the remaining weeks of the season.

    When asked if his players have switched off, he told BBC Radio Bristol: "When you watch this game, the interpretation could go in that way. It's absolutely not my intention. The coaching staff are totally opposite.

    "We told the boys this week that things can change very quickly and we can be back in the mix again, but with a performance like that we are far away from the play-offs.

    "This can be absolutely not our standard, in all directions. I understand every fan, why they're angry or disappointed. That's not us and we have to change this immediately."

  7. Pick of the stats: Bristol City v West Bromwich Albionpublished at 10:59 GMT 19 March

    Side-by-side of Bristol City and West Bromwich Albion club badges

    West Bromwich Albion will look to capitalise on their rare win on the weekend by claiming a back-to-back victory when they visit Bristol City on Saturday (15:00 GMT).

    The Baggies took their first win of 2026 against a 10-man, promotion-chasing Hull City on the weekend to take them out of the relegation zone.

    The side are still only one point clear of the bottom three but with Bristol City low on confidence after a winless run of four league games (D1 L3), their big win could start an ascent away from danger.

    • Bristol City have won their last two league games against West Brom (both 2-1) and will be looking to do the league double over them for the first time since the 1905-06 campaign.

    • West Brom were beaten at Ashton Gate in this exact fixture last term (1-2) – they haven't lost there in back-to-back league campaigns since 1977-78 and 1978-79, when both were in the top-flight.

    • Winless in their last four (D1 L3), Bristol City could go five consecutive league games without a victory for the first time since between December 2023 and February 2024 (a run of six).

    • Only Sheffield Wednesday (0) have fewer Championship wins in 2026 than West Brom (1), although that lone victory did come last time out (3-0 v Hull). The last time they won consecutive league games was in their first two matches of the 2025-26 campaign (v Blackburn and Wrexham).

    • Scott Twine has been directly involved in 16 goals in the Championship this season (10 goals, six assists); the most by a Bristol City player since Nahki Wells in 2022-23 (17).

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  8. Struber would 'love' Vitek to stay beyond seasonpublished at 18:21 GMT 18 March

    Radek Vitek standing on the pitch during a matchImage source, Shutterstock

    Bristol City head coach Gerhard Struber said he would "love" to keep on-loan goalkeeper Radek Vitek beyond the end of this season.

    The 22-year-old joined on loan from Manchester United in the summer on a season-long loan and has gone on to establish himself as their first-choice keeper and one of their best and most consistent performers.

    Vitek has kept 10 clean sheets in 33 Championship appearances but Struber said the club have had to look at options to replace him, while also holding out hope of potentially re-signing him for 2026-27.

    "I would love that Radek stays here," Struber told BBC Radio Bristol.

    "On the same time we have to look really deep right now - now's the time we can search and be creative also for loanees or a permanent deal.

    "We have to be really open-minded and not close the door about maybe we could only loan - [it's a] very big motorway where we drive and search for a goalkeeper but hopefully, maybe, Radek will join us another year."

  9. 'Players clearly fully behind Struber'published at 09:11 GMT 18 March

    David Pottier
    Fan writer

    Bristol City fan's voice banner
    Bristol City celebrate Adam Randell's late equaliser at MiddlesbroughImage source, Shutterstock

    If Saturday's game at Middlesborough proved one thing it was that the players are fully behind Gerhard Struber with a battling performance which was worth the point they secured with Adam Randell's powerful stoppage-time header.

    The way the players celebrated that goal showed they are a bonded group, such were the expressions on their faces.

    It was by no means a perfect performance but, with a defence decimated through injury, which saw 5ft 8in Jason Knight play as a central defender, it could have been a lot worse had Radek Vitek not pulled off some fine saves and the Boro frontline not be strangely subdued for the second time in a week following their 1-0 defeat at the Riverside against Charlton.

    More off-the-pitch developments caught fans' attention this week. Hot on the heels of Charlie Boss being appointed as a hasty replacement for the departing chief executive Tom Rawcliffe last month, it was announced the club was commencing a search for the new executive role of sporting director.

    This new appointment will have both Brian Tinnion and Struber reporting in, and is further evidence of Steve Lansdown's commitment to conducting a strategic review of the club's structure.

    Considering Lansdown said in his now infamous radio interview at the end of January that the club's recruitment department was "second to none", this seems an incredible change of tack.

    Is this a subtle way of downgrading the level of responsibility carried by much-derided technical director Tinnion? Introducing a modern sporting director framework aligns closely with how football clubs increasingly prepare themselves for future investment scenarios.

    Clear reporting lines reduce reliance on individual ownership intuition and create continuity beyond leadership cycles. Institutionalising football decision-making enhances transparency, credibility and ultimately valuation confidence. In simple terms, it makes a club easier to understand, easier to run - and easier to sell.

    Former player Rob Newman has been touted as a possible contender on the strength of his recruitment experience with Manchester City and West Ham, but does he have the credentials to undertake a role with a broader remit? One person who could fit the bill is Gregg Broughton, currently sporting director at Chicago Fire, who previously held senior roles at Norwich and Blackburn, so he is best understood here as an example of the kind of modern external candidate City might look at, rather than someone with any known direct link to Ashton Gate.

    Broughton's background is in data-informed recruitment, long-term squad planning and strategic football alignment across departments, which is exactly the kind of profile clubs increasingly look for in these roles.

    Meanwhile, back on the field of play, City will be looking to end their season with a flourish, starting with Saturday's home game against relegation-threatened (who'd have thought that?) West Bromwich Albion.

    Struber will want to bring some level of respectability to City's home form this campaign, with no other word to describe it so far than 'underwhelming'.

    You can hear more from David Pottier on the Forever Bristol City podcast., external

  10. Do you want VAR in the Championship?published at 08:18 GMT 18 March

    BBC Sport's have your say banner
    The big screen at Wembley shows a message during the Championship play-off final in May 2025 between Sheffield United and Sunderland saying: "VAR checking goal, possible offside"Image source, Getty Images

    There have been plenty of contentious decisions in the 2025-26 Championship season so far.

    Offside goals given, perfectly good goals ruled out, red card offences missed, penalties not given, dubious spot-kicks awarded. You name it.

    With the video assistant referee (VAR) only used for the play-off final, the outcome of every second-tier game in the regular season can hinge on how on-field officials see incidents in real time.

    • Would you want VAR introduced for every league game in the Championship?

    • If so, why?

    • And if not, let us know your reasons.

    You can share your thoughts on VAR here or comment below, and we will publish a follow-up article soon with a selection of your responses.

  11. Bristol City begin search for sporting directorpublished at 17:11 GMT 16 March

    New Bristol City CEO Charlie BossImage source, Bristol City

    New Bristol City CEO Charlie Boss says the club plan to appoint a sporting director to help him guide the Robins to the Premier League.

    Former Jockey Club chief executive Boss took over the role last month following the departure of Tom Rawcliffe due to family commitments.

    In an open letter to fans, Boss thanked them for his "warm welcome" to the club and said he understood frustrations about the club's 'disappointing run of results.'

    City have slipped to a season-low of 14th in the Championship, nine points off the play-off spots off a run of one win in seven, and bowed out of the FA Cup in the fourth round at the hands of League One basement-boys Port Vale.

    Boss wrote:, external "The Lansdown family and the Board have asked me to get Bristol City ready to play football at the highest level. Everyone here has a job to do and that is to get us into the Premier League.

    "That means creating the conditions for the first team to succeed by attracting and retaining the best players, ensuring homegrown talent comes through our Academy, and inspiring fans across Bristol and the West Country.

    "To help me lead those preparations on a day-to-day basis, we have started the search for a sporting director to oversee coaching, recruitment, performance, medical and the academy.

    "This change in structure is an important first step towards engraining Premier League standards throughout the club."

    Boss revealed technical director Brian Tinnion and head coach Gerhard Struber will report into the new sporting director, "whose first priority will be to review every aspect of our football operations."

    Boss added to fans: "As we head into the final eight games of the regular season, I want to thank you for your support home and away, particularly given the daily financial pressures of this current economic climate.

    "We will work tirelessly to reward you for that loyalty."