Allardyce, the great survivor, reaches 1000 games
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[January 19, 2018]
By Neil Robinson
LONDON, Jan 19 (Reuters) - Survival is
what Sam Allardyce does best and when asked to explain the key to a
managerial career that reaches 1,000 games on Saturday, the
63-year-old Everton boss reached for the appropriate word by way of
explanation.
"Survival is the first thing on your mind and survival is about
understanding what's needed at that football club with the players
you have at your disposal," he told a news conference on Friday
ahead of his side's Premier League match against West Bromwich
Albion.
Whether that alone explains the unique status Allardyce has built in
the English game is open to doubt. Fireman Sam, as he has become
known after saving countless clubs from relegation, is a manager
sought after by chairmen but often bated by supporters for his
tactics.
At Goodison Park, he will become the 31st figure of the modern era
to reach the 1,000-game milestone, according to the League Managers
Association (LMA), and fourth currently managing in the Premier
League after Arsene Wenger, Rafa Benitez and Roy Hodgson.
But Allardyce stands alone in overseeing seven Premier League clubs
-- Bolton, Newcastle United, Blackburn Rovers, West Ham United,
Sunderland and Crystal Palace are the others -- as well as, briefly
and controversially, the England national team.
"I'm not the same person I was when I started. I've done many things
over the years to modify and adjust as a manager. To stay ahead of
the game has been one of my main priorities. Results are what keep
you in the job," he said.
Bizarrely, Allardyce received his managerial break via a phone call
from a Catholic priest in 1991. After a journeyman career as a
centrehalf, the then 36-year-old was contacted by Father Joe Young,
chairman of Irish club Limerick about becoming player-manager after
being released from Bury's coaching staff through lack of funds.
The new job included taking the begging bowl round tumble-down
terraces to raise money to play the players, a world away from the
20 million pound ($28 million) deal he struck this week to bring
Theo Walcott to Everton.
But through three decades, and 11 jobs, Allardyce has always moved
with the times.
"We want to not follow anybody else, we want to be at the forefront.
To experience so many different clubs with so many different coaches
has been amazing. I haven't worked since I left school. This is a
continuation of a lovely way to spend my time," he said on Friday.
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CRITICISM
If Allardyce's celebrations have been muted this week, they reflect
last week's disastrous 4-0 defeat in the league at Tottenham
Hotspur, a performance that reignited some criticism on Merseyside
about his appointment.
Even though Everton have risen up the table, Allardyce remains a
divisive figure, in his eyes unfairly branded as a long-ball
specialist best suited at working with limited players. In his
defence, he points out that he once signed the outrageously gifted
Jay Jay Okocha at Bolton and has been ahead of the game in
pioneering modern dietary and analytical techniques.
"A lot of stuff I've implemented has come from outside the game. We
could all go round football clubs and see what they do but there's
something out there, in some other sport, that can take you
forward," he said.
This week Everton players were each shown individual videos of their
performances against Spurs. "We can clip all the clips out and show
the players in the analysis room where and why they went wrong to
make sure that doesn't occur yet again," he added.
For all his obvious delight at being inducted in the LMA Hall of
Fame 1000 Club, Allardyce knows this year should have been very
different.
Had he not been caught in a newspaper sting in which he appeared to
encourage the breaking of FA rules on transfers, he might have been
preparing for a World Cup in Russia as England manager. Instead he
was sacked, a moment he describes as his darkest in football, and
forced back into league management.
Not everyone welcomed him back but few would argue that he is well
suited to the hurly burly environment.
($1 = 0.7194 pounds) (Reporting by Neil Robinson; Editing by
Christian Radnedge)
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