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Dalglish: "Hodgson faces a battle to take Reds back to where they belong"


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Posted

The Mirror

15/09/10

 

Hodgson faces a battle to take Reds back to where they belong

By Kenny Dalglish

 

It was right for everybody that Rafa Benitez left – for him and for Liverpool ­Football Club.

 

There just comes a stage in every manager’s career when the board says, ‘You’ve been good for the club but we feel it would be best if you go.’

 

Sometimes it works the same way for a manager – ‘I’ve done my time. There’s no animosity but it’s time to have a go somewhere else.’

 

When it was clear Rafa was going, Christian Purslow asked me to get involved in the selection process for the next manager.

 

“I’ll help in any way I possibly can,” I told Christian. They drew up a list, asked me to come and meet the candidates and then let them decide who the manager should be.

 

In mid-June, I had to let them know my real views. I wanted the job. I couldn’t miss the opportunity.

 

One day, I was in a meeting with Christian and the chairman, Martin Broughton, and I formally put my name forward.

 

“We don’t want you, Kenny,” came the reply from Christian and the chairman. Fine. That’s their ­prerogative. They explained they had different plans for me, a position with greater longevity.

 

“We want you for a role at the club that would be for longer than the tenure of the manager,” the board told me. The job focused on player ­development. It wasn’t management, though.

 

Martin Broughton made that ­abundantly clear. People have asked me whether I was disappointed, and of course I was. I passionately wanted the job. But I would have been more disappointed if I hadn’t put my name forward. I love Liverpool so deeply I felt almost an obligation to apply.

 

This was about helping Liverpool more than reviving my management career. If another club came in and asked me to be their manager, I honestly don’t know how I’d react.

 

Liverpool’s my home. There was no self-glory attached to my application. I did feel I had unfinished business with the job, though, since my previous tenure was aborted in 1991.

 

But I was enjoying myself with the Academy, going in, helping the kids and attending matches at Anfield.

 

I usually find it difficult to promote myself. That’s not my nature.

 

Liverpool were experiencing hard times and I wanted to help.

 

If I hadn’t expressed an interest, people might have thought, ‘Well, if Kenny Dalglish doesn’t want to help, there must be big ­problems at Liverpool.’

 

When the news of my application emerged, the Liverpool punters were more favourable than not. That was reassuring.

 

Maybe I didn’t make the wisest decision in the world in going for it.

 

By expressing my ambition for the job, the board might think that complicated life for Roy Hodgson. They needn’t have feared. I fully respect Roy, a man I’ve known for a long, long time, ever since he was in Sweden, at Halmstads and Malmo, and he visited Melwood with Bobby Houghton. We struck up a friendship.

 

Roy’s a very honourable and decent person, and very experienced in football. He has his beliefs in how the team should be set up, but when he arrived at Liverpool, he will have known that he had to make one or two adjustments to his system, because the individuals are different at Liverpool.

 

No manager can just impose their style. It’s all right having a system but players dictate how it is played.

 

When Roy came in, I knew ­Liverpool would be committed and well ­organised. He’s the type of guy players enjoy working for.

 

He’s very honest in the way he handles players, and he speaks very well. He’ll get a great deal of respect from the players as well as the fans.

 

Roy must know he has walked into a world of uncertainty at Anfield, and until Liverpool are sold, the situation won’t settle down.

 

Even then, people always feel ­uncertain when they have a new employer. What decisions will the new buyer make? Will he keep people? Will he want his own men in? Roy understands the situation.

 

At his press conference, he was asked how he would cope when a new owner arrives.

 

His answer was very good: “I’m the same as everybody else. If I’m getting results, I’ve got a better chance of keeping my job.”

 

Roy knows I’ll help him in any way I canhim I I can. ­Liverpool Football Club are much more important than I am, or Roy Hodgson, ­Christian Purslow or Martin Broughton.

 

I’ve put aside any resentment I felt about not being considered for the manager’s job.

 

I’m focusing on the bigger picture, which is Liverpool Football Club. Roy has no problem with me being here.

 

I have never undermined a manager. When I was given the Liverpool manager’s job in 1985, I had the best guy ever as my ally to consult.

 

Bob Paisley wasn’t a threat. He was 100 per cent on my side, and I knew that.

 

I’ll be the same for Roy if he wants it. What matters is Liverpool fighting their way back up to where they belong.

 

Liverpool will always be special in my eyes but they must take care.

 

They are in danger of missing out on the support of a young generation, who’ve been brought up watching the Premier League on Sky.

 

They want success. Unless ­Liverpool are winning trophies and keeping hold of quality players, such as Steven Gerrard and Fernando Torres, the club will struggle to pull in that generation of support.

 

At the moment, the kids go to Anfield because of their dads and the players. That’s the attraction.

 

But that can’t last forever. Liverpool have to win some silverware or lose a generation.

 

Whatever happens, the club can always count on my support.

 

http://www.mirrorfootball.co.uk/news/Kenny-Dalglish-in-his-own-words-Hodgson-faces-a-battle-to-take-Reds-back-to-where-they-belong-Liverpool-legend-reveals-all-in-his-new-autobiography-serialised-on-MirrorFootball-article579573.html

Posted

Always nice to hear from Kenny.

 

Amazing how Internet forums are driving the media releases from the club these days. This is almost a direct reply to the criticisms of the way that RH has been setting up the team - "don't worry, he'll change it as he gets to know the players."

 

Just the same thing happened when RH was criticised for playing 442 at Citeh. "He only did that because of Mascherano - he wanted to play 4231 really."

 

It's really shallow stuff. The club shouldn't be sending out semi-official answers to this stuff.

Posted

don't think it's a great situation. a liverpool great, still harbouring ambitions to manage the club, sitting above the incumbent.

 

Not from Roy's point of view, but its nice to know if the wheels really did come off that we have a man ready and waiting to take over. I'd hope that if (god forbid) Roy did a Blackburn on us, that the board would act switly and get Kenny straight in. No interviewing, no fannying, a simple battle field appointment.

Posted

Not from Roy's point of view, but its nice to know if the wheels really did come off that we have a man ready and waiting to take over. I'd hope that if (god forbid) Roy did a Blackburn on us, that the board would act switly and get Kenny straight in. No interviewing, no fannying, a simple battle field appointment.

why would they appoint him at that time when they didn't want him in the summer? that would be absurd even for our farce of a club.

Posted

why would they appoint him at that time when they didn't want him in the summer? that would be absurd even for our farce of a club.

 

because roy hodgson wasn't a crisis appointment.

Posted

He didn't spend much time in that article outlining why Rafa thought it was the right decision for everyone.

 

"There just comes a stage in every manager’s career when the board says...."

Posted

because roy hodgson wasn't a crisis appointment.

but kenny would be if roy f***s up hugely? there's no logic to this. we needed the ship steadying and the fans placating in the summer, dalglish was overlooked. so we're waiting until people are committing suicide and we're in a relegation dogfight before appointing him?

Posted

Always nice to hear from Kenny.

 

Amazing how Internet forums are driving the media releases from the club these days. This is almost a direct reply to the criticisms of the way that RH has been setting up the team - "don't worry, he'll change it as he gets to know the players."

 

Just the same thing happened when RH was criticised for playing 442 at Citeh. "He only did that because of Mascherano - he wanted to play 4231 really."

 

It's really shallow stuff. The club shouldn't be sending out semi-official answers to this stuff.

 

Pretty much my feeling on that article, with the caveat of an olive branch if Roy wants any additional help.

Posted

'Roy knows I’ll help him in any way I can'.

 

still got your boots kenny?

I half read this all as - 'he's trying to play the way he has elsewhere - I wish he'd ask for advice or help'

 

Like many of us, Kenny likes the man - like many of us - I don't feel he thinks he's the right man for the job.

Posted

but kenny would be if roy f***s up hugely? there's no logic to this. we needed the ship steadying and the fans placating in the summer, dalglish was overlooked. so we're waiting until people are committing suicide and we're in a relegation dogfight before appointing him?

 

If anything it probably should have been the other way around.

 

Give Kenny the job to begin with and if, worst case scenario, it really doesn't work and we end up really at the wrong end of the table, we could have brought Roy in then.

Posted

I half read this all as - 'he's trying to play the way he has elsewhere - I wish he'd ask for advice or help'

 

Like many of us, Kenny likes the man - like many of us - I don't feel he thinks he's the right man for the job.

 

Yep. This was my take too. I was high on coffee and a set of long LONG legs opposite me on the train this morning, mind.

Posted

Yep. This was my take too. I was high on coffee and a set of long LONG legs opposite me on the train this morning, mind.

That is a distraction I have appreciated once in a while...start the day with an inner smile (and a semi).

Posted (edited)

There are a few of these on the mirror website. Todays one on Rafa is interesting. It seems to suggest he thinks Rafa walked

Edited by johngibo YPC
Posted

"I fully respect Roy, a man I’ve known for a long, long time, ever since he was in Sweden, at Halmstads and Malmo, and he visited Melwood with Bobby Houghton. We struck up a friendship.

 

Roy’s a very honourable and decent person, and very experienced in football. He has his beliefs in how the team should be set up, but when he arrived at Liverpool, he will have known that he had to make one or two adjustments to his system, because the individuals are different at Liverpool.

 

No manager can just impose their style. It’s all right having a system but players dictate how it is played.

 

When Roy came in, I knew ­Liverpool would be committed and well ­organised. He’s the type of guy players enjoy working for.

 

He’s very honest in the way he handles players, and he speaks very well. He’ll get a great deal of respect from the players as well as the fans"

 

 

Except the know-it-all kno*heads on here of course.

Posted

He didn't spend much time in that article outlining why Rafa thought it was the right decision for everyone.

 

"There just comes a stage in every manager’s career when the board says...."

And our Board consists of.....................

Posted

 

Except the know-it-all kno*heads on here of course.

 

Init! It's absolutely shocking that people arent happy after struggling against West Brom, getting walloped by a mediocre Man City and barely creating a chance against Birmingham. We should be buzzing!

Posted

Kenny was always canny & is so again.

 

I read that as a sideswipe at those two f*****s - Purslow & Broughton - as much as it is about anything else.

 

He knows all Liverpool fans are 100% (110% in Sky punditry terms) behind him, so this will do neither of them any good

Posted

Init! It's absolutely shocking that people arent happy after struggling against West Brom, getting walloped by a mediocre Man City and barely creating a chance against Birmingham. We should be buzzing!

 

Quod Erat Demonstrandum.

Posted

He didn't spend much time in that article outlining why Rafa thought it was the right decision for everyone.

 

"There just comes a stage in every manager's career when the board says...."

 

One sentence from each angle in the article posted.

Posted

Init! It's absolutely shocking that people arent happy after struggling against West Brom, getting walloped by a mediocre Man City and barely creating a chance against Birmingham. We should be buzzing!

 

I've not stopped dancing yet. I've bought all the shirts for me and boy now too.

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