Former Swansea City player Andy Legg has slammed the club's board for appointing manager Bob Bradley, after a 5-0 defeat on Saturday left the south Wales club bottom of the Premier League by two points.
Bradley became the first American to manage in the English top flight when he replaced Francesco Guidolin in October, but has won just one game out of seven in that time as pressure begins to mount early in his tenure.
A former Swansea City player has described Bob Bradley as the wrong appointment.
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Speaking toBBC Sport, Legg admitted:"Personally I thought it was a bad decision by the board.I thought they needed someone who knew the Premier League, knew what sort of players to bring in and Bob didn't.
"That's not his fault - he was given the job and any manager in the world would take a Premier League job.So I feel sorry for Bob, but I think it was the wrong decision.There's two ways they can go. They either stick with the manager and accept they've got a lot of work to do or they make the change because otherwise I can only see one way for Swansea."
The former Wales international - who played more than 200 games for both the Swans and bitter rivals Cardiff City - claimed that Wilfried Bony's sale in January 2015 was an early sign of the trouble his former club now find themselves in.
Via @WhoScored Swansea throwing everything at Spurs they have  pic.twitter.com/WxxbJpMEoj
"I've seen it coming from probably when they sold Bony," he said."They never replaced him and obviously [Wales captain] Ashley Williams has gone now they haven't replaced him either.
"It's okay selling your good players, but you've got to replace them and you've got to replace them with quality.Even if the 11 players on the pitch look organised and in formation it can be difficult to beat. But they are not difficult to beat, they're quite easy to beat."
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