• You may have to login or register before you can post and view our exclusive members only forums.
    To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.

Clarke

Status
Not open for further replies.
I worry this mightn't be the best job for Steve. He could easily end up in a relegation dogfight with West Brom, which would be a tough test for a new manager.
 
It'll be a hell of a melancholic place if West Brom don't start well. Poor old Steve looks down and depressed at the best of times.
 
I wonder if he would have taken the job even if Kenny was still here , i suspect he might so i guess we would have been looking for a number 2 this summer anyway .
 
NEW Albion boss Steve Clarke has promised to bring the best of Bobby Robson and Jose Mourinho with him to The Hawthorns.

The 48-year-old Scot, who replaced Roy Hodgson as head coach, says the Baggies will reap the benefit of the ‘full spectrum’ of managers he has worked for during his 30-year professional career.

Clarke played under three managers at St Mirren: Rikki McFarlane, Alex Miller and Alex Smith.

He then turned out for a further six during a successful 11-year playing stint at Chelsea, from John Hollins, who signed him in February 1987, through to Bobby Campbell, Ian Porterfield, David Webb, Glenn Hoddle, Ruud Gullit and finally Gianluca Vialli.

But it was after he hung up his boots and went into coaching that his thoughts really began to be shaped by his superiors.

“I had a long career as a player, working under some good managers – the full spectrum of managers, from my first boss at St Mirren to when I finished playing,” Clarke said.

“As a player you learn from the good ones, and you learn just as much from the bad ones.”

Clarke’s first coaching post came at Newcastle when he became Gullit’s assistant manager in 1998.

“Since I became a coach I’ve worked with some great people,” said Clarke. “I joined Newcastle to work with Ruud Gullit. That didn’t work out but the good side of it is that I got a year working with Sir Bobby Robson, who taught me a lot in that year. It was a great learning experience.”

Clarke moved back to Chelsea to work in their academy and in 2004 was appointed as Mourinho’s assistant, which heralded a glorious period in the club’s history, with two Premier League titles in 2005 and 2006.

“If you take Jose for what he did for me and Chelsea Football Club, at the time, then he was the best,” said Clarke. “I didn’t know him when he appointed me. We met in pre-season, had a chat and he asked if I wanted to work with the first team.

“I thought it was a trick question – of course I wanted to work with the first team – and from there we developed a great relationship. He was good, he was open and always looking for opinions and ideas. It was certainly a very enjoyable time.”
 
New West Brom manager and former Liverpool first-team coach Steve Clarke says he was disappointed that Kenny Dalglish was sacked as the Reds manager. "I was disappointed for Kenny because that is his club and for him to leave in that way was not very nice for him, so I felt a little bit for Kenny," he said. "But if you don't achieve the standards or the levels of the people who run the club want you to achieve, you have to pay the price."
 
Hammond organ. And yes, The Doors had some of the best uses of one of the time; Light my fire and Break on through being the standouts.

That Doors organ sound wasn't actually a Hammond.

It was a Vox Continental.

l.jpg
 
It was strange to see him trying to smile during his press conference today. The poor bloke just isn't used to smiling. He's naturally glum. I wonder who his assistant is going to be. He needs a bubbly character as well as someone with a bit of nous.
 
It was strange to see him trying to smile during his press conference today. The poor bloke just isn't used to smiling. He's naturally glum. I wonder who his assistant is going to be. He needs a bubbly character as well as someone with a bit of nous.

*prays for Sammy lee*
 
STEVE CLARKE last night revealed his burning desire to boss Scotland.

Clarke has worked under legendary gaffers like Jose Mourinho, Sir Bobby Robson and Kenny Dalglish.

The ex-Scotland stopper has finally landed his first job as a No1 at West Brom.

But the fiercely-ambitious manager is already eyeing another position — at Hampden.

Clarke revealed: “If I am ultimately successful maybe I would be the next manager of my national team.

“I would love that at some stage. I think that is the ultimate honour, to be manager of your own country.

“That would be an ambition at some stage in the future.”

Clarke landed the Hawthorns hotseat after Roy Hodgson became England boss before Euro 2012.

At 48, the former St Mirren star believes he’s served his coaching apprenticeship.

And he can’t wait to start working with a squad which includes Scotland aces James Morrison and Graham Dorrans.

He said: “Now is the time to do it. I’ve done scouting and I’ve been a youth-team coach, assistant manager and first-team coach. The logical next step was a No1 job where the buck stops with me. The motivation is to be the guy who the spotlight is on, the one who has to shoulder the pressure.

“It is important to push yourself as much as you can.

“I have done the apprenticeship to be a manager at the top level.

“There is more to life than cruising and being sat in the comfort zone.”

Clarke worked under Sir Bobby at Newcastle, Mourinho at Chelsea and Dalglish at Liverpool.

He’d always hoped to get the break on his own.

And he’s eager to get started with a Premier League opener against Liverpool in August.

Clarke said: “When I left Chelsea in 2008 it was with the ambition to become a manager or head coach.

“I could have remained at Chelsea for as long as I wanted. But I decided to get out of the comfort zone.

“To be honest, I thought this position could have happened sooner. Circumstances dictated that it didn’t.

“Losing my job at Liverpool this summer was disappointing but this feels to be the right appointment.

“To be facing Liverpool in the first game of the season at The Hawthorns will be fantastic.

“It’s going to be good. I always take good memories from everywhere I’ve been.

“But I’m thinking already that would be a great one to win. That’s what I am after.”

Clarke, who won six caps for Scotland, will utilise tips from pals such as Mourinho.

And he’s going to lean on the Real Madrid gaffer to lend him Bernabeu fringe stars.

He said: “I got a text off Jose congratulating me and saying it’s about time.

“But we don’t speak every week. I’d be a liar to say we did.

“I know if I ever needed him I could pick up the phone and ask for advice.

“There’s a friendship and it would be nice if he can lend me some of his players!

“Working with Kenny Dalglish — coming from Scotland — was great as he was absolutely revered.

“I learned a lot of old-style management and just watched how he worked.”
 
Rodgers needs to get on the phone to Jose pronto. We don't want Clarke getting in ahead of us for any decent loanees from Real.
 
Rodgers needs to get on the phone to Jose pronto. We don't want Clarke getting in ahead of us for any decent loanees from Real.
Sahin and Granero are probably the ones Real will actually be looking to loan though. And if we get Sigurdsson, I doubt we'll go for either given they play the same position.

And I'm disregarding count's prophecy completely.
 
How ironic - replacing Hodgson is another manager who sees his club as a stepping stone to managing his country.
 
Ironic indeed. WBA got a manager who is more experienced and higher in recommendation from Jose but one whom we discard.
 
NEW head coach Steve Clarke believes his training ground style will be a hit with the Albion squad.

Clarke is getting ready for the July return of a group of players challenged with the task of maintaining the club’s Premier League progress.

But Clarke, in his first posting as a manager, has no fears about how he will get on with a squad which has delivered 11th and 10th-place finishes in the top flight under predecessor Roy Hodgson.

He said: “I’ll be open to the players. I’ve worked for a long time as an assistant coach and I know that if you go and give players a cuddle at the right time, that is part of the job now.

“I think the players will enjoy working with me. I’ve got a good way of working on the training field.

“They should enjoy coming to work and, if they do, then you’re half-way there.”

But he won’t be a soft touch either, although he added: “Nowadays the players are all millionaires so you have to handle them in a different way.

“It’s a case of being strong and being able to put across your opinion. They won’t like it or enjoy it but they will accept it.”
 
He is the man who has stood alongside some of football's most famous managers and developed a reputation as one of the best assistants in the business: loyal, discreet, a sophisticated coach and an astute handler of dressing rooms full of superstar players. Today, for only the second time in a 30-year football career, it will be Steve Clarke who is picking the team.

The new West Bromwich Albion head coach – to give him his full title – was a caretaker manager for one game at Newcastle United in 1999 but otherwise this is a managerial debut for the man who has been No 2 to the likes of Jose Mourinho, Kenny Dalglish, Gianfranco Zola and Ruud Gullit. He has always hoped the chance to be boss would come sooner but now that it is here, he is more than ready.

One of the ironies about Clarke's career as the man in the background – that has followed a distinguished playing career at St Mirren and Chelsea – is that it has landed him with an unwarranted reputation for, he jokes, being "dour". "When you get to know me I am all right, you know?" he says. "I'm personable and agreeable! I can have my moments like everyone else. As a manager or head coach it is really important for me to be myself."

The offer from Dan Ashworth, West Brom's director of football, and chairman Jeremy Peace to be the man in charge was a long time coming. Clarke had hoped to make the step up when he left Chelsea in 2008 after four years as an assistant at the club. Luiz Felipe Scolari had brought in his own staff and sidelined Clarke although there are no hard feelings on that score. He has seen enough in his time just at Chelsea to know how quickly things can change.

In the end, he joined West Ham United as assistant to Zola in September 2008 to take himself, he says, "out the comfort zone" at a club at which, unlike Chelsea, he did not have the benefit of having been a player. Clarke is seventh on Chelsea's all-time appearances and a favourite among the fans. He was talked into staying another season at West Ham and then in June 2010 was sacked, with Zola, despite the team having avoided relegation.

Contemplating his first league game in charge of West Brom at the club's training ground yesterday, the memories of leaving Liverpool were still fresh. He spent a tumultuous 18 months alongside Dalglish, until it was brought to an end in May when the owners Fenway Sports Group sacked the manager. In Clarke's case, his time at Liverpool was abruptly terminated a couple of weeks later, with "a call from the girl in Human Resources".

Originally, Clarke had been offered the Liverpool assistant's job by Damien Comolli in January last year. After seven months out of the game, he considered it a "no-brainer": "Initially it was sold to me as a short-term deal, January to May. There was no talk of 'if you do well, you get an extension'. Kenny and I attacked the job with great enthusiasm and gusto. It picked up and we finished the season really well.

"I don't need to tell you the size of Kenny Dalglish in relation to Liverpool Football Club. The owners were put in a situation where they felt obliged that the only way to continue was to give Kenny the job full-time which included a full-time contract for me.

"I was happy to sign it. My wife and I had a lovely flat in the city. I was enjoying the job and working with a really good bunch of players. We reached two cup finals. That was a good season. Some highs along the way getting to those finals. It was a big low to lose the FA Cup final, a massive high to win the first trophy [the League Cup] in six years and then the disappointment of the league campaign.

"The league campaign is a strange one to put your finger on. We played so well in so many games and didn't get results. Which is a failing in ourselves. I'm not saying we were unlucky because ultimately in the league you finish where you deserve to finish. There were some crucial turning points. Just after we won the League Cup we played Arsenal in the league [on 3 March]. It was a massive game.

"If we had won we were in touching distance of the top four and would have put ourselves back in contention. We played really well and lost 2-1 to a last-minute Robin Van Persie goal. From that moment the disappointment of the group was too much to overcome and the players realised they weren't going to bridge that gap to the top four.

"There were so many good teams ahead of them and I put that down as the defining moment when the league campaign faltered and from then we didn't pick up many points. It was a decision [to sack Dalglish] that the owners decided to make. They put a lot of money into the club.

"It was a big decision to get rid of Kenny because he has got legendary status in the city. I was at the game at FC Gomel and five or six times they sung the name Dalglish and that, I think, is just to let him know that they still love him and they don't hold any grudges for last season.

"The owner decided to make the change, that's just the way football has become. Kenny said to me, 'Don't you go, you might get a chance to work with the new manager'. Briefly I spoke to Brendan [Rodgers] because he was linked with the job and he said 'Don't do anything silly because you never know'. Out of nowhere I got a phone-call from the girl from HR and they said 'We are going to let you go'."

In defence of Ian Ayre, the club's managing director, Clarke says Ayre later told him he had tried and failed to get hold of Clarke during the day in question. "He wanted me to know that day so he got someone to call me and tell me. You take it on the chin."

As for the other big episode of the season? "I don't want to go on too much on the Luis Suarez incident," Clarke says. "It had an influence on the season at Liverpool and possibly the owners' decision to make changes but it would be wrong to say it was Kenny's fault. I don't think he was given enough protection by the club. The club should have someone a little bit more experienced in that line, and those matters. I'm sure if everybody could go back to the beginning of that episode the whole thing would be handled completely differently."

A thoughtful man, who weighs his words carefully, Clarke, 48, is yet another Scot who has graduated to management. In his case he began his working life by completing a four -year apprenticeship as an instrument technician at what is now Glaxo in Irvine, in his native Ayrshire, and it gave him a valuable grounding in dealing with different characters.

He has specialised as a coach and under Dalglish at Liverpool and Avram Grant at Chelsea he was responsible for taking training. Under Mourinho, who liked to coach himself, he would be put in charge of part of the group during sessions and encouraged to put his own ideas into the drills prescribed by Mourinho. At West Brom he does "90 per cent" of the coaching but also tries to pass responsibility to his assistants Keith Downing and Kevin Keen.

As usual, West Brom have done their transfer business in good time and without fuss. Claudio Yacob, 25, a former Argentine international signed from Racing Club, could well make his league debut today. Markus Rosenburg, 29, a Swedish striker signed from Werder Bremen, and Romelu Lukaku, on loan from Chelsea, may have to wait a bit longer. Ben Foster, on loan from Birmingham City last season, has made the move permanent, which Clarke said was his priority when he took over.

Another triumph has been holding on to the likes of Youssouf Mulumbu and Peter Odemwingie. Jonas Olsson has only one year left on his contract and his departure has been a possibility but, with two weeks of the transfer window left, Clarke says he is "as confident as I can be" that the Swedish centre-half will stay.

Roy Hodgson set the bar high with a 10th-place finish last season and 11th the year before, both achieved with 47 points. This season will not be easy, Clarke has no doubt about that, especially when newly-promoted Southampton can spend £12m on Gaston Ramirez. But he has great belief in his players and West Brom's successful approach to staying in the division on a realistic budget.

"I want to be in charge of a good team and one that plays football to excite the public. If it was only fantasy football everyone would play like Barcelona but it's a results-driven industry. I'm responsible for West Bromwich Albion and making sure they retain Premier League status. Along the way I would like to have some games where the crowd go away and are genuinely excited by the way the team has played."

He has exchanged texts with Mourinho over the summer, mainly discussing potential signings and their suitability for the Premier League, but after a lifetime in the game, Clarke does not need advice about how to run a football club.

"Managers like Jose have such a profile in the media, the questions will always be about my time working with him. Hopefully in a few years time they are talking about Steve Clarke, the manager or the head coach. As long as they talk about what I have achieved and what I have done that would be great."

"You might be a little surprised but I get my relaxation by fly-fishing. I like to get out on a boat on a reservoir – the larger the better – and catch a few trout. It used to be golf but then I found it wasn't so relaxing. It's a four-mile walk and sometimes you hit shots you didn't want to hit."
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top Bottom