Monthly Archives: May 2013

Agger commits to Liverpool amidst renewed Barcelona interest

The Denmark international intends to see out the remaining three years on his Anfield deal but insists the club need to strengthen to achieve more consistent results

Daniel Agger insists he is happy at Liverpool and intends to fulfil the remainder of his contract, despite admitting to being a little flattered by renewed interest from Barcelona.

The 28-year-old has been earmarked by the La Liga leaders as a possible replacement for outbound club captain Carles Puyol according to reports, but the Dane has reiterated he’s happy with Anfield life.

“I’m happy here,” Agger told the Telegraph. “I still have three years left on my contract and I intend to fulfil them. There are always rumours. Who’s creating them? I don’t know.

“It’s not a bad thing to be linked with big clubs, but you have to take 70 per cent off whatever you hear and then there’s the reality.”

Agger has been the mainstay in the Liverpool defence this season, swapping centre-back pairings with Martin Skrtel and Jamie Carragher throughout the campaign.

And although happy on Merseyside, the Denmark captain hopes manager Brendan Rodgers will add some more quality to his side to improve consistency and their seventh place finish in the Premier League.

“I think we have played some really good football this season, but we haven’t been consistent enough,” he added. “We have to admit that.

“Seventh in the league is far from where we want to be. We need to change something.

“It’s difficult to say how much strengthening the squad needs. But we need to get some more quality in to help us move forward. What we need next season is consistency.”

Agger, who will miss the final two games of the season to have treatment on a lingering back problem, doesn’t think it will be a challenge to attract high calibre talent to Anfield.

“I don’t think that will be a problem,” he insisted. “Liverpool is such a big club worldwide. I think, and I hope, most players worldwide would want to join this club.”

From riling Rafa to wasting Wenger – how Sir Alex Ferguson saw off a succession of rivals

The Scot has called time on his 26-year Old Trafford reign, and there is not a Premier League manager who can say they have surpassed the most successful boss in English football

COMMENT
By Sam Lee

“It wasn’t a rant!” argue the Liverpool fans and various Rafa Benitez apologists. “He was making some good points”, “he was trying to divide the Manchester United camp,” they’ll add. Whatever they say, Benitez looked a fool and Sir Alex Ferguson won in the end. He usually did.

Sir Alex and Arsene Wenger now talk amicably both in public and in private. The two discussed the Robin van Persie transfer over the phone last summer, and have been on good terms for years. It was not always that way, but that was when Wenger was a threat.

The United manager, who will step down at the end of this season after almost 27 years in charge, has chewed up and spat out as many managers as he has packets of Wrigley’s.

Wenger and Liverpool-version Benitez were seen to long ago, the former ushered into battles just to finish in the top four, the latter into semi-retirement.

For United fans it is a shame Sir Alex cannot go on forever, for neutrals it is a pity he won’t be around next season to lock horns with Roberto Mancini and Jose Mourinho, who Goal exclusively revealed will rejoin Chelsea over the summer.

Both Chelsea and Manchester City have threatened dominance in recent years, but every time Sir Alex has warded them off. Mancini has spent this season pleading for his job – he may only keep it by virtue of United becoming weaker without the Scot – while Mourinho left Stamford Bridge under a cloud in 2007, with United in the midst of a run of three successive titles.

Benitez was the man swept aside for the third of those league crowns. Liverpool had run United close for much of the 2008-09 season and were genuine contenders. These were scary times for United fans. But whatever his supporters say, Rafa’s rant backfired spectacularly. Sir Alex had got under his skin, United quickly went top of the table thanks to a breathtaking run of form, and the 18th league title was wrapped up.

Wenger was a worthy sparring partner when Arsenal used to go toe-to-toe with United on the pitch. When Sir Alex suggested he had the best side in England, Wenger replied “Everybody thinks they have the prettiest wife at home.” It was a classic line in the heat of a fierce rivalry, probably the best of the Premier League era.

But the fire died out and so did the rivalry between the managers. Arsenal are seen as a harmless club in United’s eyes these days; the Gunners have won once in the last 12 meetings and their manager is – sorry, was, (that will take some getting used to) – no longer on Sir Alex’s radar.

The Frenchman’s blinking green dot first came into sight around 1998, shortly after Newcastle and Kevin Keegan had been consigned to the list of also-rans.

During a tense run-in to the 1995-96 season – Newcastle were 12 points clear at one stage – the Scot suggested that teams might try harder against the Red Devils than against the Magpies. Keegan was furious.

“When you do that with footballers like he said about Leeds, and when you do things like that about a man like Stuart Pearce…” he raged on live television.

“I’ve kept really quiet but I’ll tell you something, he went down in my estimations when he said that. We have not resorted to that. You can tell him now, we’re still fighting for this title and he’s got to go to Middlesbrough and get something.

“And I’ll tell you, honestly, I will love it if we beat them. Love it.

“But it really has got to me. I’ve voiced it live, not in front of the press or anywhere. I’m not even going to the press conference. But the battle is still on and Man United have not won this yet.”

Needless to say, Sir Alex had the last laugh.

And he often did. Including caretakers, there have been 18 Chelsea managers, 18 City managers and 10 Liverpool managers in the 26 years Ferguson has ruled Old Trafford. None can say they have bested him.

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Following in the footsteps of giants – the challenge of succeeding Sir Alex Ferguson

No manager has been as successful as Manchester United’s retiring supremo – which, history suggests, will make living with his legacy that much tougher for his successor

COMMENT
By Graham Lister

So often in football, a manager leaves his post clutching a P45, sacked by an impatient or frustrated board for not delivering success. In such circumstances, the bar is set relatively low for the new man coming in to replace him: simply do better than the underachieving predecessor. But when the outgoing manager has been successful, the task for whoever follows him is more complicated.

And when the outgoing man has been as ridiculously successful as Sir Alex Ferguson, able to point not only to a haul of 38 trophies in 26 years, but also to the transformation of a provincial club into a global brand – an internationally-powerful football institution whose appeal steadily multiplies, generating unprecedented turnover and raising sky-high expectations among the faithful – then the challenge facing his successor is beyond daunting.

Ominously too, although nobody in English football has previously had to follow in the footsteps of such a serial over-achiever as Sir Alex, history shows that top managers can cast in their wake shadows long enough to sap the confidence, thwart the ambitions and trigger the inhibitions of the men who come next, however well-qualified and motivated those men may be.

David Moyes is expected to be confirmed as Manchester United’s choice to succeed Sir Alex. Favoured by his outgoing compatriot, Moyes is widely admired for his work and longevity at Everton, and is thought likely to bring the required stability and long-term thinking to Old Trafford as well as an emphasis on nurturing youth, buying wisely and encouraging attacking football. He will need all those attributes and more to ensure the relentless accumulation of silverware at Old Trafford does not falter.

He will also need the force of character and self-belief not to be cowed by the legacy Sir Alex bequeaths him.

Older United fans will remember with a chill how the succession was mishandled when Sir Matt Busby relinquished team affairs and moved upstairs in 1969. One of his erstwhile ‘Babes’, Wilf McGuinness, who was only 31 at the time, found it impossible to move out of Busby’s shadow. McGuinness lasted only 18 months before United felt compelled to relieve him of his onerous duties and recall Busby to the hot-seat. And when the legendary Scot – whose record of five league championships, two FA Cups and one European Cup in 23 years only Ferguson has eclipsed – stepped aside again, the previously successful Frank O’Farrell was unable to impose himself on United, whose post-Busby decline merely accelerated.

Relegation and a return to the top-flight as Second Division champions followed under Tommy Docherty, whose 1977 FA Cup win, along with those of Ron Atkinson in 1983 and 1985, were the summit of United’s achievement between the managerial reigns of Sir Matt and Sir Alex.

Some 30 miles westbound along the M62 at Anfield, Bill Shankly had arguably assumed Busby’s mantle as the most popular manager in football during 15 years with Liverpool that thrust the Reds from Second Division obscurity into the trophy-winning limelight. He did so with a winning mixture of tactical acumen, granite toughness and biting wit and was so much the embodiment of his club that when he dropped the bombshell of his retirement in the summer of 1974 people wondered whether Liverpool could ever be the same. In one sense they weren’t; and to this day Shanks remains revered on the Kop and on Merseyside generally.

But he had prepared for his succession well from the famous Anfield boot room, and his unassuming lieutenant Bob Paisley stepped up to the plate without breaking stride and proceeded to compile a record of success that outshone even Shankly’s. In fact Liverpool’s dominance continued through two subsequent internal appointments in Joe Fagan and Kenny Dalglish, though the habitual title triumphs dried up after 1990.

Despite the success of Paisley, however, the shadow of Shankly posed Liverpool an unfortunate problem. Shankly quickly realised he’d retired too soon and tried to maintain his involvement with the club. He would turn up for the team’s training sessions at Melwood, only reluctantly giving that up when he felt his presence was resented. And relations between himself and Liverpool grew strained to the extent that he said he felt more welcome at Everton and Manchester United than at the club he had helped build. But as far as Liverpool were concerned, they felt they had to move on; Shankly was a great figure, but an overpowering one, and it was Paisley’s team now.

A mere week before Shankly’s resignation, Don Revie had left Leeds United to become England manager. Revie had lifted Leeds from the depths of Division Two to the pinnacle of English football, with major successes at home and in Europe. Before him, the Yorkshire club had won no honours and were going nowhere. Under him they became the most feared team in the land, though respect was given only grudgingly because of the perceived ruthlessness of their professionalism. Revie’s Leeds were good enough to have won twice as many trophies as they did, but often stumbled at the final hurdle when the manager’s own insecurities seemed to transmit to his players.  

Nevertheless, ‘The Don’ was indeed the head of the family at Elland Road, and his departure left a void that the club have never filled. A succession of managers – Brian Clough, Jimmy Armfield, Jock Stein, Jimmy Adamson, Allan Clarke, Eddie Gray, Billy Bremner – tried and failed to emulate Revie’s success before Howard Wilkinson led them to promotion and then the last pre-Premier League title. That, and a brief, exciting spell under David O’Leary proved to be islands in a sea of post-Revie disappointment for Leeds fans, who still pine nostalgically for the Revie era.

That summer of 1974 also saw the resignation of another of the game’s iconic managers – Bill Nicholson at Tottenham. His Double-winning Spurs side of 1960-61 is rightly remembered as one of English football’s best, and he also brought two further FA Cups, the European Cup Winners’ Cup, Uefa Cup and two League Cups to White Hart Lane. He set the benchmark for success at Tottenham, and 18 managers since have been unable to match his achievements. Only Keith Burkinshaw (two FA Cups and the UEFA Cup) has come close.

The rise to prominence of Tottenham’s north London rivals Arsenal dates from their appointment of Herbert Chapman as manager in 1925. The visionary Chapman steered them to their first honours and literally put them on the map – of the London Underground. His premature death in 1934 did not halt Arsenal’s dominance in the 1930s as director George Allison took over, though he entrusted team affairs largely to former players Tom Whittaker and Joe Shaw. The trophies continued to accumulate, including after the war when Whittaker became manager in his own right.

But after Whittaker’s death in 1956, managers like Jack Crayston, George Swindin and Billy Wright all struggled to restore the Gunners to their former glories, with Chapman and his achievements now seen as a millstone around their necks and those of their players. It was inescapable too: the imposing bust of Chapman in Highbury’s famed marble entrance hall was a daily reminder to Arsenal managers of what was expected.

Billy Wright’s own boss during his playing days at Wolverhampton Wanderers was Stan Cullis, a forthright, hard-as-nails character who had taken over at Molineux in 1948 and became the youngest manager to win the FA Cup a year later, aged 31. He then led Wolves to three League titles and missed out on a hat-trick of championships only by a single point in 1960, winning the FA Cup again as compensation. When Wolves beat the multi-talented Hungarian side Honved in a prestigious floodlit friendly in 1954, Cullis’s claim that his team were now “champions of the world” helped hasten the birth of the European Cup.

But results later dipped and Wolves sacked Cullis in 1964. Nearly 50 years later they have come nowhere near replicating the success he’d brought them. Their current plight – two successive relegations – merely underlines the length of the shadow under which sacked Dean Saunders and 19 other Wolves managers since Cullis have toiled.

It’s been a similar story at Nottingham Forest since Brian Clough retired in 1993. That golden era in their history – Clough delivered their only League title, four League Cups and two European Cups – has proved impossible to emulate for the 14 men who’ve tried.

Interestingly, most of these iconic managerial figures have been enshrined by their clubs for posterity beyond the record books – in steel, concrete, bronze and tarmac. There are the Shankly Gates and a statue at Anfield, the Revie Stand and statue at Elland Road, Bill Nicholson Way and a bust at White Hart Lane, the famous bust and a new statue of Herbert Chapman at the Emirates Stadium, the Stan Cullis Stand at Molineux and the Brian Clough Stand at the City Ground, as well as a Clough statue in the centre of Nottingham and the renaming of the A52 between Nottingham & Derby as Brian Clough Way.

Then at the Theatre of Dreams there is Sir Matt Busby Way and a statue, as well of course as the Sir Alex Ferguson Stand and another statue. If David Moyes gets the job, he (and those who come after him as Manchester United managers) need only look dead ahead from the Old Trafford dugout to be reminded of his predecessor’s legacy and the standards he set.

Every trophy Sir Alex won may have been for the greater glory of United, but it also made the challenge that bit tougher for his successor. Because following in the footsteps of giants can be a thankless task…