WALES win and get their first opening round three point haul in the Euro Qualifiers for 12-years and we call for the manager to be sacked?

It sounds like a joke about how fickle the Premier League generation of fan is, but I have a degree of sympathy for those who were dismayed at the Wales display in Andorra.

Yes the artificial pitch was a total travesty and a complete disgrace for international football, but Wales still made beating a team of amateurs that Newport County would beat nine times out of ten look very difficult.

Flair players like George and Jonathan Williams and a midfielder with an eye for goal in Joe Ledley sat on the bench yet Wales selected five defenders which was two more than necessary. If natural defenders Chris Gunter and Neil Taylor are playing as wing backs almost exclusively in the Andorran half, why are they playing?

However, unfortunately for those who want a new national team coach and I'm only now aware that the #Colemanout hashtag on Twitter is a 'thing' this isn't like the Scottish referendum. We the people won't decide if it is yay or nay on Coleman to stay.

There is no way on earth the Football Association of Wales are going to remove their manager following a win - all praise the genius Gareth Bale - and having stuck by Coleman and therefore indicated they felt he was the right man at the start of the campaign, nor should they.

However, you would hope Coleman has something different planned for vital home clashes with Cyprus and Bosnia in October.

If Wales draw with Bosnia that'll be no bad thing if they can do what Bosnia couldn't and beat Cyprus. They'd be flying on seven points, in dreamland on nine.

This is the campaign where it is literally easier to qualify than ever before with the European Championships expanding from 16 to 24 teams and five or six wins and you'll be there.

Coleman will preside over those games in October and they'll define his tenure as Wales manager.

If Wales take four points or more they are well on the road to Euro 2016 ahead of tough trips to Belgium and Israel. But if they don't, Coleman probably won't head to Brussels or Tel Aviv.