Autore Topic: Gary Neville - Red  (Letto 739 volte)

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Offline syrinx

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Gary Neville - Red
« : Venerdì 9 Settembre 2011, 17:06:36 »
Il buon Gary si è dato alla scrittura. Ecco quelche estratto preso dal Daily Mail.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-2030841/Gary-Neville-How-did-Manchester-United-beat-Arsene-Wengers-Arsenal-We-bullied-them.html

How did we beat Wenger's Arsenal? By bullying them!

Arsenal’s Invincibles were a truly brilliant football team but their attitude wound me up.

They acted as though the rest of the world was meant to sit back and admire their beautiful football. Sorry, count me out. Some of us had a mission to stop them by all legitimate means.

At Aston Villa last season Robert Pires did an interview and he was still banging on about how annoying I could be. He talked about me tripping him, insulting him, standing on his feet and being a general pain. ‘I thought more about having a row with Neville than playing football,’ Pires said. Music to my ears.

When Arsenal were in their pomp, I had him and Ashley Cole rampaging on the left flank and Thierry Henry doing those blistering runs from inside to out. It was like marking the Red Arrows.
 
Stopping Arsenal was a job that required a defender to reach for all the tricks. Especially on the afternoon in October 2004 when the Invincibles rode into Old Trafford, hoping to notch up their 50th League game unbeaten. We were under massive pressure. Arsenal had stolen the title back from us in 2003-04 with their incredible run, finishing 15 points ahead of us. We couldn’t bear another humiliation. The idea of Arsenal celebrating 50 Premier League matches unbeaten in our backyard was unthinkable. It was all set up for the match forever to be remembered as the Battle of the Buffet.

It’s the only match when I’ve ever been accused of brutalising an opponent. So let me first make it clear that in almost 20 years at United the manager never asked me to kick anyone. I’ve no idea if other managers have issued instructions to ‘take out’ a player but I can promise you that wasn’t our boss’s style. But did he tell us to get tight, put a foot in and let Arsenal know they were in for a battle? Of course, he did.

The manager’s belief was that too many opponents had stood off Arsenal. They had allowed them to play, to strut around. Technically they were as good as anything we’ve seen in England in my time. But there are all kinds of attributes that make up a football side and they didn’t like it when the contest became physical.

You could never say that of the 1998 Arsenal side. They were experienced and strong, both mentally and physically. They were tough. They didn’t have the touch of arrogance that would come in the Henry years when their attitude was ‘you can’t touch us, we’re French and we’re brilliant’.

We knew the Invincibles had all the skill in the world but they also had a soft centre. You always felt you had a chance against them because you could get about them, bully them.

‘If you let them play they’ll destroy you,’ the manager told us in his pre-match talk. ‘So you’d better be right up against them. It’s a football match. You’re allowed to tackle. And no other team tackles them so let’s make sure Mister Pires and Mister Henry know that today’s going to be hard. Today’s going to be different.’

That didn’t mean going over the top. It didn’t mean reckless two-footed challenges. Who wants to get sent off ? That would be self-destructive. But we knew a lot of them hated aerial challenges, so what did we do? Clattered them in the air at every opportunity.

My job was to nullify the threat of Antonio Reyes.

My thought process was simple: ‘He’s a great player, a pacy, tricky winger. If I stand off him and don’t tackle, he’ll run rings round me and make me look an idiot. He’s got more skill, he’s got more speed. I might have more stamina but that’s not going to be much good if he’s ripped me apart in the first 30 minutes.’

You are like a boxer trying to work out whether to jab and run or get in close. And while I could try to intercept, using my experience and positional abilities, I knew that above all I had to get tight, get physical. I had to makes Reyes lose his confidence.

If there were question-marks about him — justified by what turned out to be a short spell in England — they were over his temperament. It was my job to expose that weakness.

Some say I crossed the line. How? Reyes was subbed after 70 minutes and it wasn’t for his own protection. He didn’t have a mark on his leg. Yes, there was a time in the first half when he knocked the ball through my legs and, chasing back, I went through him and tripped him. It wasn’t pretty but it’s something any defender does dozens of times a season: you concede a foul high up the pitch rather than risk worse trouble around the penalty area.

People said we ganged up on Reyes but my brother Phil’s collision with him was a nothing tackle. He got there a bit late and pushed Reyes off the ball, which wasn’t hard to do.

I’m not going to deny an element of intimidation but only because Reyes wasn’t tough enough to take it. Cristiano Ronaldo would get that sort of treatment all the time, until defenders realised it didn’t put him off, it just made him more determined. That sort of courage is part of being a great player.

Reyes couldn’t handle the rough and tumble, which is why Wenger ended up selling him back to Spain. He had the skills but he fell short of being a top player because he couldn’t take a bit of stick.

Brilliantly talented as Arsenal were, there was a mental fragility about quite a few of their players. Still is, to be honest. Wenger is always liable to start complaining about a physical approach but it’s sour grapes because his skilful players have been outfought.

He described Darren Fletcher as an anti-footballer once, which couldn’t be more ridiculous. Physical toughness is part of the game and our boss has always known it.

At Old Trafford we couldn’t believe the naivety of people complaining about Stoke and Blackburn having a physical approach to the game. Anyone who talks like that is advertising a weakness.

We learned from our days in the youth team, where we had Nobby Stiles and Eric Harrison as our coaches, that the first lesson of football is that you compete.

How many defenders do you see rough up Giggsy? He’ll get kicked but he’ll never get physically dominated by a defender. Look at the way Giggsy went through Lee Bowyer at Birmingham last season after Bowyer had put in a bad tackle. It was a challenge that carried a message: ‘Don’t think we’re gonna get bullied.’ Every team can be outplayed but the idea of walking into the dressing room if you’ve been pushed around – well, that’s just unthinkable.

Strength isn’t enough on its own but there’s no doubt Arsenal have underestimated the importance of being able to compete physically.

Rough up the Invincibles and they’d act as though it was an affront. They believed — and this must have come from their manager — that their beautiful, intricate passing game deserved to be admired, not challenged. They had a superiority complex.

Henry would look at you as if to say, ‘How dare you try to to tackle me!’ United have never really tolerated prima donnas. You get kicked, you get up and get on with the match. Look at how Ronaldo cut out a lot of his histrionics — that’s because we told him to stop rolling on the floor. He benefited massively from the toughening-up process that came with playing in England.

In the end we beat Arsenal’s Invincibles 2–0, with a bit of help from a dubious penalty when Wazza [Wayne Rooney] went over Sol Campbell’s leg. But we deserved it because we’d thrown them off their game.

And the way they they reacted afterwards told you everything about their inability to see football as a battle of skill and courage.

They had become become bad losers and they threw a really big tantrum, when pizza was lobbed from the away changing room, with one slice landing on our manager and splattering his jacket with tomato and pepperoni.

Apparently it had all gone off in a hail of pizza and sausage rolls but I missed the fun as I had been out on the pitch celebrating.

When I got to the dressing room, a few of our lads were arming themselves and planning to launch a raid back. The manager quickly put an end to it.

It was all set up for a feisty return at Highbury four months later and the contest lived up to expectations. This time there was almost a fight before kick-off.

I’d been out for the warm-up and was heading back to the dressing room when I heard Patrick Vieira behind me running up the tunnel behind me. I don’t know if he’d been waiting for me but he wasn’t in the best of moods.

‘Neville, you won’t be kicking anybody out there today,’ he said.

‘What the f*** are you on about? You need to calm yourself down, pal. The game hasn’t even started yet.’

The next thing I knew he was coming at me, looming over me. A policeman stepped in to separate us. I went off to the dressing room where I was sat next to Roy.

‘F****** hell, Vieira’s wound up,’ I said. ‘He’s just come at me in the tunnel.’

This got Roy’s juices flowing. He couldn’t stand Vieira anyway. So when we got out into the tunnel ahead of the game and Vieira started on at me again, telling me who I was allowed to tackle, it all got very lively. A policeman tried to intervene again and when Roy saw what was happening, he was straight back down the tunnel into the thick of it. ‘You, Vieira, come and pick on me.’

That’s when Vieira squirted him with water out of his bottle and Roy got seriously angry. I know we are grown men and you’d shout at your kids if they behaved like that. But we were revved up before a massive game and we weren’t going to back down for anyone.

Roy started jabbing his finger at Vieira. By now the temperature in the tunnel was at boiling point. Wisely, Graham Poll and the other officials stepped in to stop things escalating. They pushed us back into line, ready to go out on to the pitch, but Roy was still giving Vieira stick.

He started laying into him about split loyalties, how he played for France even though he was always talking about his charity work back in Senegal.

Out we went on to the pitch and when Vieira walked down the line to shake my hand I made sure I looked him right in the eye. Playing for United had taught me not to be intimidated. And we weren’t going to be cowed by Arsenal, even when they raced into an early lead through Vieira — a goal that prompted Ashley Cole to run past me, screaming in my face. They were wound up beyond belief.

It made it all the more satisfying when we hammered them 4–2, even though Mikael Silvestre was sent off 20 minutes from the end. Defeat must have hurt them double. To be honest, I think they’d lost it even before the game. There’s a fine line between being wired up for a match and losing the plot. And Vieira had crossed it.

After 2005 we never feared Arsenal because we knew exactly what to expect. The manager’s approach to them was always the same: stop them, match them, then the football will come, and their heads will go.

It was exactly what happened in the European Cup semi-final. They are just too naive. And they won’t win trophies unless they wise up.

The crunch match for me was always Liverpool. That’s why I charged up and down the pitch celebrating every win over them. It’s why I kissed the United badge in front of them, like any true fan.

My passion would eventually cost me £5,000, when the FA fined me for celebrating a winning goal at Old Trafford. A month after that, we walked out at Anfield. I expected plenty of abuse but I hadn’t foreseen Harry Kewell, of all people, clattering into me almost straight from the kick-off.

Kewell was trying to get in with the Liverpool crowd who’d never warmed to him and he’d decided to get stuck in for the first time in his life.

‘F*** me, you’re a right hard-man now,’ I said, picking myself up off the floor. ‘Has someone given you a courage pill?’

Offline syrinx

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Re:Gary Neville - Red
« Risposta #1 : Venerdì 9 Settembre 2011, 17:10:11 »
Sir Alex is the man who can make or break you

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-2030848/Gary-Neville-Sir-Alex-Ferguson-man-make-break-you.html

I’ve heard it said that a manager can’t do anything once the players have crossed the white line. That’s b*******. Our boss, Sir Alex Ferguson, has a massive effect on the team whenever a match is on. You can feel him in your head. You’ll be thinking: ‘Christ, I’ve got to go and face him at half-time. I’d better start playing better or he might rip my skull out.’

He’s in control. He makes or breaks your career. He decides whether you get to enjoy your Chinese meal and glass of wine with your family after a match or you sit there in miserable silence.

It was at Anfield that I first saw what people call ‘the hairdryer’, although the players never referred to it as that.

‘You’re slipping!’ the boss shouted at Peter Schmeichel. ‘So are you,’ the big goalie replied, just in earshot. Everyone looked up, thinking: ‘Oh my God, here he comes.’ And sure enough, the boss ripped Peter’s head off.

Then there was the time in 1994 when we got thrashed by Barcelona at the Nou Camp. At half-time the boss ripped into Paul Ince. At one point Brian Kidd [Ferguson’s assistant] half-stood, ready to intervene, thinking it was about to go off.

When Ince finally left in 1995, plenty of people wondered what the boss was doing. After the disastrous conclusion to the previous campaign, he’d wielded the axe.

Incey was off to Inter Milan, Andrei Kanchelskis was next out but the big shock was Sparky [Mark Hughes]. I was in my car when I heard on the radio that he’d left for Chelsea. I was as stunned as any Stretford Ender.

The influence and intensity of the boss has never dimmed, even as he approaches 70. So it’s amazing to think he was planning to quit in 2002.

As we went into that season, we were counting down the days until his retirement. Then Jaap Stam was sold. The players were mystified.

All kinds of conspiracies swirled around because Jaap’s exit came on the back of his ‘controversial’ autobiography, although I’ve always believed the book was a minor factor, perhaps irrelevant.

I know the manager wasn’t thrilled about it and nor was I at being called a ‘busy c***’.

Jaap had called me that to my face many times and I know it was meant affectionately but it didn’t look quite so clever spread across the newspapers.

All that counted was that the manager had lost confidence in him. He thought Jaap had lost a bit of pace. Even if that was partly true, he remained an immense presence for us in defence. It was a strange decision, made more bizarre when Laurent Blanc, a class act but clearly past his best, arrived as Jaap’s replacement.

There aren’t many big decisions you can point to and say the manager called that one wrong. But when in February 2002 the boss revealed that he wouldn’t be retiring after all, we were all very happy deep down.

I say ‘all’ but Dwight Yorke’s face dropped because he was being left out and he could maybe start afresh under a new manager. The boss had barely left the room when Roy Keane piped up: ‘Well, that’s you f*****, Yorkie.’

The manager’s decision to stay was a massive boost but it came too late to save a domestic season that was full of inconsistencies. The upside was Ruud van Nistelrooy’s form. He was a proper goalscorer — and the only team-mate I’ve almost come to blows with.

We were playing at Middlesbrough and I hit a ball down the channel. Ruud threw up his arms in the air, as if to say ‘What am I meant to do with that?’ I ran forward. ‘Run after it, you lazy b******.’

After the game I was sitting in the corner taking my boots off when Ruud came flying towards me, swearing his head off. ‘Don’t f****** shout at me on the pitch!’ I tried to push him away. The lads jumped in and separated us. Things simmered overnight but we shook hands the next day.

He probably thought I was a hairy-arsed, English right-back while he was the heir to Van Basten. Chasing the channels wasn’t his strength and in some ways he was right.

We had been looking strong at the start of the following season but even in the most successful campaigns, there always seemed to be a game when it all went horribly wrong. That season it came at Maine Road in November. We lost 3–1, and the boss was steaming. You could see him looking around, ready to explode.

Then Ruud walked in with a City shirt slung over his shoulder. He’d been asked to swap on the way off and hadn’t thought anything of it.

But the manager did. ‘You don’t give those shirts away. Ever. If I see anyone giving a shirt away they won’t be playing for me again.’

In February we’d been knocked out of the FA Cup by Arsenal but it wasn’t the result which caused a massive stir.

In the dressing room, the manager blamed Becks for one of the goals. Becks disagreed, answered back and the manager erupted. He wheeled round, saw a boot lying on the floor and kicked it like he was blasting for goal.

He was facing Becks but there is no way he meant to kick the boot into his face. I’ve seen the boss in training; if he tried it a thousand times, he couldn’t do it again. But the boot hit Becks just above the eye, cutting him. He put his hand up and felt blood. So suddenly he was standing up, too, and raging.

For a second the gaffer was dumbstruck, which isn’t like him. I think he knew that hitting a player with a boot, even by accident, was a bit extreme. He apologised straight away: ‘David, I didn’t mean to kick the boot in your face.’

Becks wasn’t having any of it. A few of us had to keep them apart. The incident was all over the front pages. Change seemed inevitable.

We won back the Premier League trophy in 2003 but it was the end for Becks. It wasn’t the way he wanted to leave but he would get to play for arguably the only club in the world as big as United, Real Madrid, where he would be a huge star alongside Zinedine Zidane, Luis Figo and Roberto Carlos.

A natural changing of the guard was brewing again in 2005. But it was hard to see what might bring change about — until Roy Keane’s infamous ‘Play the Pundit’ programme at the end of October on the club’s own channel, MUTV.

A 4–1 hammering at Middlesbrough had left us trailing in the league to Chelsea. Roy was wound up because he felt the younger players were falling short. He’d see them on their PlayStations and he couldn’t get his head around it. The programme was pulled by the club. The story leaked out and the press were all over it.

The manager prides himself on keeping troubles behind closed doors. He called everyone to his office to clear the air. The place was crammed. We watched the tape and, as Roy would claim, parts of it had been blown out of all proportion.

The tape finished and the talking began, which is when things got really bad. It didn’t take long for the conversation to get very heated. I realised it was all over. Roy and the manager weren’t speaking to each other and it couldn’t go on like that.

As Roy prepared to make his comeback with me in the reserves, one of the backroom staff told him he wasn’t playing. He must have known the end was imminent. The next day Roy was gone.

It was in a Champions League match in 2007 when I had my most serious confrontation with the manager. We scored from a quick free-kick while Lille were assembling their wall. After protesting to the ref, they started walking off.

‘Come on, get on with the f****** game,’ I said to their captain, following him towards the side of the pitch. The next thing I knew the manager was charging down the touchline, shouting at me. ‘What are you doing? Get back on!’

As far as I was concerned, I’d been doing the sensible thing, trying to get everyone to get on with a game we were now leading. So I snapped back — ‘F*** off’ — and walked away.

Now, I’ve said ‘f*** off’ a million times to a lot of different people but never to the manager before. I knew I wasn’t going to get away with it. Afterwards I got a call to go and see the boss in his office. He was apoplectic. He blitzed me.

We were playing at Fulham at the weekend and he took me all the way down to London and didn’t even put me on the bench. Three days later he took me down to Reading and left me in the stands again. The trip was a total waste of time but the boss had asserted his authority. I wouldn’t be swearing at him again.

It will be a very sad day when the boss finally bows out. The next manager of Manchester United will have to be bold — and he’ll have to have balls.

In October 2010, Wayne Rooney stunned everyone by deciding he wanted out of Manchester United.

Then, before our Champions League game against Bursaspor, he put out a statement saying the club lacked ambition and the squad wasn’t good enough.

He’s a good lad, Wayne, not a troublemaker, so we were dumbfounded.

Next morning, I saw Wayne at the training ground. ‘What are you doing?’ I asked. ‘I’m staying,’ he said. ‘F*** off! Really? Well, if you are, you’re going to have to apologise.’

I don’t think he needed telling. Within 24 hours Wayne had called the players together and said sorry. He’d made a mistake and misread the situation.

Offline syrinx

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Re:Gary Neville - Red
« Risposta #2 : Venerdì 9 Settembre 2011, 17:11:15 »