I guess it is fairly unfair to judge Ole badly after a bad results, as it is also overly optimistic to praise Ole after a win (like Chelsea the other day). The reason I back Ole is not because of short-term results or quick wins. I believe the man when he says he is in for the long-run. I am convinced that it is the only way forward for the club, build for the future, think ahead a few years. I has been sorely missing since Ferguson retired and we have to pay the consequences now. Of course, it is unfortunate that this coincides by our two rivals having the best time of the last two decades. However, we can and should only focus on ourselves.
What I like about Ole is how he is fielding young, talented teams. I have seen people here saying Ole has not been ruthless as the likes of Darman, Rojo etc are still hear. I have to disagree with that strongly, it is the job of Woodward and Matt Judge to ship the deadwood out. Ole is only responsible for the team and the management of the first team and by shutting Smalling, Jones, Rojo, Darmian, Sanchez and Lukaku out of the squad entirely and giving Matic and Young only a place on the bench, I think Ole has been as ruthless as he could be.
He has effectively told the older and less talented players that he doesn't fancy them over the long term. It is now up to Woody and co to actually sell them. The fact that Matic and Mata are on the bench instead of Gomes and, to a lesser extent, Garner is that you cannot have a bench full of kids. You need experience, especially if the first eleven is already quite young themselves.
I think Ole is doing an amazing job progressing this team towards the modern game, including pressing and building up from the back. I am not sure if he is the long-term solution but if he can, let's say, progress us further in a few years and then appoint a successor to elevate us to the next level I am completely fined with that. It is called succession planning and all successful teams do it. Liverpool first had Rodgers, on which Klopp could build upon. Man City had Pellegrini who is also an attacking manager, before Guardiola came in to take them to the next level too. Hell, even Chelsea has done this season.
I do not believe for a second Lampard had implemented their style of play completely on such short notice. They are reaping the benefits of having appointed a manager with broadly the same ideas as Sarri and by doing so, Lampard can benefit from the foundations laid by Sarri. For all its weaknesses, Chelsea were already able to play nicely in possession last year, to play in triangles and to move the ball up towards the final third with clear patterns. Lampard is just building further on that by implementing slight tweaks and introducing new players.
I just hope, and I am quietly confident, that Ole can do the same. No more expensive stars. No more short-term thinking. Create a club identity. With Moyes, no one knew what our tactics where other than crossing an awful lot. LVG was obsessed with possession and patient build-up play from the back. Mourinho successes him and is almost the polar opposite who hates possession and wants to counterattack. And now, Ole, has again almost polar ideas to Mourinho and want to combine pressing with fast attacks and possession oriented play. I believe that is the way forward, but it will take time as we have a unbalanced squad who have been subject of so many different tactics.
We have already made a lot of improvement, and a lot more improvements are still too be gained. But in the end, I am confident that Ole is taking us into the right direction and if we give him some time can transition us in a modern force. If he is the one to reap the benefits, or some other manager will built upon his work is actually irrelevant to me (and I think to some extent also to him, I think he is sincere when he says he just wants this club back at its best).
Give the good man some time and credit, he has a very difficult job at hands and in the end, we could have won easily against Wolves and CP if we would have gotten a bit more luck. In that case, the narrative would be a lot different, it is fine margins in football.