I think any judgement will be based on our position relative to the club in 18th.
It's probably unlikely that the bottom 5 sides will all put a run together capable of making the board jittery enough, assuming our 'form' was to continue to deteriorate simultaneously over the next 3 or 4 games. We have a horrible home run against the big sides to come.
The issue as I see it is that Silva has shown little or nothing to make people give him the benefit of the doubt, other than rely on "we can't sack him because of X/Y/Z" excuses that are in all honesty, nothing other than a sad indictment of the state of the club today, and nothing that reflect positively on Silva.
I do think he is in danger territory and rightly so. This is Premier League football, and like it or not, a slump this long which will soon approximate a third of the league season, with generally abysmal performances, and two embarrassing early cup exits, is going to see him under scrutiny. That's what he signed up for. His reputation is on the line here, and if there is some X Factor about him, he needs to show it urgently.
My gut feeling now, and as a fan of 40 years, is that there isn't going to be some miraculous upturn at the end of this. He will leave, it's just a case of when. The wheels look to have come off and we have to adapt, yet again.
It probably means in all likelihood that we'll stumble through the next few weeks and months. The question then is, do they give him a budget for the summer or has all confidence in him evaporated. Who else might be available, and more importantly willing, other than results between now and May, will probably swing a decision one way or another.
If he goes, then given the state we're in, its either an interim appointment on an 18 month contract, and/or someone that Brands is familiar with and confident that could stabilise us. There is no silver bullet, and I have thought for some time, that it may take at least 2, if not 3, sound managerial appointments in succession, over a decade, to turn us around. We have to acknowledge how far we have fallen and adapt a horses for courses approach, whilst at the same time avoiding another demoralising Allardyce type appointment. It would be sheer madness to appoint another flavour of the month candidate who knows nothing of what he would be walking into.
Another fine mess.