If nothing else, the image of Hart standing alongside Victory's cannons and   carronades might help to affirm the Nelsonian leadership streak that most   believe he lacks. But there would, sadly, be another connotation: after six   games and six defeats with Hart at the helm, he is staring down the barrel   of a gun. Perversely, that gun is being wielded by Sulaiman al-Fahim, whose knowledge of   the game's vicissitudes is, by common consent, vastly less than that of his   manager. Three days ago, while Hart was busy drilling his team for a   700-mile round trip to play Carlisle in the Carling Cup, Fahim cropped up in   Valencia to promote a chess match between Garry Kasparov and Anatoly Karpov.  Related ArticlesSol Campbell: a tortured soulPremier League tablePremier League fixturesAl Fahim: Pompey can spend in JanSport on televisionHart has been summoned to meet Fahim at Fratton Park on Friday, ostensibly to   establish why there is no money for Portsmouth to spend in the January   transfer window, when Fahim had insisted that there would be. But the   none-too-hidden agenda is how long Hart has left. It is understood that   should his side succumb at Everton on Saturday lunchtime, he will not be   spared. For all TS Eliot's depictions of April as the cruellest month, it is October   that Premier League managers have greatest cause to dread. Why, Juande Ramos   had garnered more points for Tottenham at this stage last season than Hart   has for Portsmouth, and everybody knows what happened to him once October   came. The one dubious distinction that Hart shares with Ramos is that the pair have   led their clubs to their worst starts to a league campaign since the Titanic   sank. In this maritime city, it is an unsettling reality. Hart never asked for such brutal exposure. An unapologetically dour and   saturnine figure, the former Nottingham Forest manager loathes giving   interviews as much as his owner appears to relish it. They make the oddest of couples, and Hart is tellingly dismissive when asked   about today's meeting. Paul, do you fear anything? "What I have got to   fear? I know what I do day in, day out." But are you under pressure? "No.   From what?" Well, football owners in the past. "You're asking   me, I'm not an owner."Have there have been any discussions about how long you have to turn it   around? A shake of the head. Would it help if the situation was clarified? "What   are you asking for, a fourth vote of confidence in three weeks?" No,   but would a discussion help? "Not really, no."Hart's conversations with the press have become ever more staccato with each   fresh setback. To a point, such terseness is understandable. The team he   surveys have been taken apart to a scarcely precedented degree. Portsmouth are woefully under-resourced. The desperation that they showed in   the last 48 hours of August transfer business, bringing in players such as   Tommy Smith from Watford just to shore up the ranks, made Fratton Park look   like a clearance store, in keeping with the soulless retail park that   surrounds it. Hart cut a lonely figure as he strode out through the cars outside   Portsmouth's training ground. The car park, unusually, was full on Thursday,   save for one space. Word had it that it was being kept free for Sol   Campbell. Portsmouth's league results this seasonSat Aug 15 - Portsmouth 0 Fulham 1 Wed Aug 19 - Birmingham 1 Portsmouth 0 Sat Aug 22 - Arsenal 4 Portsmouth 1Sun Aug 30 - Portsmouth 0 Manchester City 1 Sat Sept 12 - Portsmouth 2 Bolton 3 Sat Sept 19 - Aston Villa 2 Portsmouth 0  
            Source: Telegraph