IN hindsight, Middlesbrough should have parted company with Neil Warnock in the summer. The self-styled footballing ‘Red Adair’ had done a superb firefighting job in his first two months in charge, keeping the Teessiders in the Championship when they were in grave danger of dropping into League One, and had held things together impressively in his first full season at the club, successfully keeping spirits high despite having to play pretty much an entire campaign in empty stadia.

By the start of the summer, however, it had become clear that when it came to the structure of command, and the overarching philosophies that would drive the recruitment process, Steve Gibson wanted to start doing things differently.

The data-driven recruitment team that had been assembled around chief executive Neil Bausor would be given greater influence, and would be tasked with searching for a specific type of player. Young, unpolished, potentially from overseas. The hidden gems that can make the difference when it comes to winning promotion, and perhaps even accrue a significant profit by the time they are sold on. The appointment of Kieran Scott as Boro’s first head of football, which was confirmed in August, was a key part of that transition to a new way of operating.

Was Warnock ever going to be the right man to help drive that change? It did not take long for the answer to arrive. From the moment the former Boro boss started grumbling about the club’s failure to sign James Collins ahead of Cardiff in the early weeks of the summer, gaping divisions behind the scenes were apparent.

Warnock, knowing he had one season in which to embellish his promotion-winning record, wanted to sign tried-and-tested Championship veterans. The recruitment team, travelling all around the world in an attempt to unearth bargains, wanted players who could benefit the club in the long term, rather than be a quick fix for a manager who was going to move on in 12 months’ time.

It was never going to work, but perhaps swayed by a sense of loyalty to a manager who had dug his club out of a considerable hole, Gibson tried to keep the peace and hold things together.

Warnock got some of what he wanted – Lee Peltier, Sol Bamba, Matt Crooks, Uche Ikpeazu – while the recruitment team were also permitted to make signings that they were primarily championing – James Lea-Siliki, Martin Payero, Andraz Sporar.

It was an uneasy truce, and it did not really last. Warnock made no attempt to hide his reservations about Lea-Siliki and Payero in particular, with some of his public barbs creating understandable tensions behind the scenes.

By the start of this month, things were coming to a head, with Warnock having delivered a list of targets he wanted Boro to pursue in January. You hardly need to be a rocket scientist to work out the kinds of names that were on that list.

With a change of manager at the end of the season viewed as an inevitability, there was even less of a desire to pack the squad with ‘Warnock-style signings’ in January. That was only going to cause further conflict, much of which would almost certainly have been played out in public, so alternative options were assessed. Quite quickly, Chris Wilder was identified as the preferred managerial replacement.

The problem was that other clubs – at least two of which are in the Championship with managers currently in situ – had come to the same conclusion. Boro had to act if they were going to get their number one man, hence the hurried and messy way in which things played out last weekend.

There is never an easy way to dismiss a 72-year-old, but whatever you think of his performance as Boro boss, Warnock, a loyal, principled and amiable man, deserved much better.

Privately, those in the upper echelons of the club hierarchy would surely concede that no one should have to learn of their imminent exit in the press, and then effectively be sacked on the morning of a game they are then asked to preside over.

Time moves on though, and Wilder pushed all the right buttons when he conducted his inaugural press address on Tuesday. He is here for the long term, but accepts that winning promotion is the immediate priority. He is respectful of Boro’s history, but wants to achieve new success.

Crucially, he is also walking in with his eyes wide open when it comes to recruitment and the new model that is now in place involving both Scott and Bausor.

There is a perception that Wilder fell out with the hierarchy at Sheffield United because he did not want to work with a director of football, but that is a red herring. Wilder grew disillusioned at Bramall Lane because he became caught up in a boardroom civil war that eventually ended in a High Court ruling that granted Prince Abdullah bin Mosaad bin Abudlaziz Al Saud ownership of the club.

That drained him and created an environment where he no longer felt his input into key footballing matters was being sufficiently respected or sought.

That will not be the case at Boro. Gibson wants to do things differently, but Wilder will still have the final say over recruitment. He just will not be able to deliver a list of targets and expect that all of them will be signed, or publicly dismiss the recommendations of the recruitment and scouting teams.

The hope is that after a summer of tension and two or three months of increasing strife, January will see the return of a sense of harmony behind the scenes.

Something had to change, and that, more than anything, is why Wilder finds himself slipping into the seat that Warnock has been forced to vacate.