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Discussion in 'Hull City' started by Gone For A Walk, Sep 16, 2021.

  1. Ernie Shackleton

    Ernie Shackleton Well-Known Member

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    Bleedin' Hell. What's the poor lass done to deserve that?










    Only joking. It's brilliant.





    As indeed is she.
     
    #5381
  2. TIGERSCAVE

    TIGERSCAVE Well-Known Member

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    Lets hope the team can give her something to smile even bigger than she does...
     
    #5382
  3. Chazz Rheinhold

    Chazz Rheinhold Well-Known Member

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    In praise of Roy Hodgson as he celebrates his 76th birthday
    Hodgson’s energy and effectiveness in the short-term world of football management is more impressive every year
    Richard Foster
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    Roy Hodgson celebrates his 76th birthday on Wednesday but any festivities are likely to be short-lived. His focus will very much be on preparations for Crystal Palace’s opening fixture at Bramall Lane on Saturday afternoon.

    When Hodgson takes charge of his 1,242nd match at the weekend, he will extend his record as the oldest Premier League manager over another former England boss. Sir Bobby Robson was in his 72nd year for his last game as Newcastle manager in August 2004. If Hodgson is still in his job by the end of the season, he will be almost six years older than his nearest challenger.


    Robson was instrumental in guiding Hodgson through the early stage of his career. “Roy joined the Surrey coaches association,” says Alan Smith, another former Palace manager. “This group consisted mostly of coaches who were not top players, but who had a teaching background [Hodgson worked at a couple of schools in south London]. At the time there was a negative attitude towards anyone entering coaching who had not played the game at the highest level.” Robson was more open-minded, encouraging coaches who had not been elite players to spend some him with him at Ipswich observing his methods – an initiative that Robson funded himself.

    Hodgson and Robson are two of the five managers who have taken charge of Premier League teams in their seventies. Sir Alex Ferguson was 71 when he presided over his last match in 2013, a memorable 5-5 draw against West Bromat the Hawthorns. The Huddersfield manager, Neil Warnock, was also 71 when he led Cardiff to victory in their final match of the 2018-19 season at Old Trafford. And Claudio Ranieri was appointed by Watford in the same month as he turned 70. After a characteristically brief spell of just three months at the club, he was replaced by Hodgson himself in January 2022.

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    Crystal Palace fans show their appreciation of Roy Hodgson in 2018. Photograph: Matthew Childs/Action Images/Reuters
    In a career that has spanned six decades, spread across six different countries as a club manager – plus four roles in charge of national teams – his longevity is matched by his cosmopolitanism. Hodgson speaks several languages – Swedish, Italian, French and German. The most travelled of his Premier League peers is Ange Postecoglou who, prior to starting at Tottenham, managed clubs in four different countries – Australia, Greece, Japan and Scotland, as well as being manager of the Australia national team. In contrast Mikel Arteta, Steve Cooper, Sean Dyche, Eddie Howe and Rob Edwards have never managed outside the UK.

    Hodgson started his managerial career outside his own country. Only a few other Premier League managers have gone overseas for their first job: Mauricio Pochettino began his managerial career in Spain, having retired as a player at the Spanish club. Arteta took his first job at Arsenal having worked with Manchester City under Pep Guardiola, and Andoni Iraola, another Spanish manager, began in Cyprus at Larnaca.

    “Going abroad was Roy’s best option,” Smith says. “Domestically, it would have been more difficult to find a role as there were limited openings in the English game for those without a playing pedigree.” Hodgson’s first managerial role came through an old school friend, Bobby Houghton, who was born within three months of Hodgson in 1947. They attended John Ruskin school in Croydon together but their managerial careers intertwined in southern Sweden rather than south London.

    Houghton left England in 1974 to take over as Malmö manager. He enjoyed considerable success in his six-year spell, even reaching the European Cup final in 1979. His side lost 1-0 to Brian Clough’s Nottingham Forest but it remains the only time a Swedish club has reached the final of Europe’s elite competition.

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    Roy Hodgson celebrates after winning the Swedish title with Malmö in 1986. Photograph: Torbjorn Andersson/XP/Scanpix/Alamy
    A few years into his stint at Malmö, Houghton recommended Hodgson to another Swedish club, Halmstad, and his fellow Croydonian followed in his footsteps, spending a dozen years in Sweden with four different clubs. In the late 1980s Hodgson built on the foundations laid by Houghton at Malmö, establishing them as the pre-eminent club in Sweden, winning five Allsvenskan titles and two domestic cups during his five years in charge.

    Graham Potter, another Englishman who made his name as a manager in Sweden, says Houghton and Hodgson are still held in the highest esteem there. Potter moved to Östersund in 2011 – just as Hodgson was joining West Brom, the 15th club in his career – and he soon realised the legacy Hodgson had left in Sweden. “It wasn’t until I got over there that I understood,” Potter said. “I followed Roy’s career from where he went in Sweden. He’s an experienced football guy. You won’t get many more experienced in world football than Roy Hodgson in terms of his variety of experience. In Sweden, he’s a legend.”

    David Moyes is the second oldest manager in the Premier League, despite being 16 years younger than Hodgson. When Moyes began his playing career at the Icelandic club IBV, Hodgson was already a couple of years into his first job at Halmstad and was on the verge of winning the Swedish championship for the second time, having won the title for the first time in the club’s history in his debut season. Indeed, when Hodsgon took the reins at Halmstad in 1976, half of the Premier League managers were not even born.

    Vincent Kompany is the youngest manager in the league and, at 37, he is less than half Hodgson’s age. When the Belgian started as a youth player at Anderlecht in 2003, Hodgson was in his 14th managerial role as boss of the United Arab Emirates national team.

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    Hodgson celebrates with his players after Halmstad win the Swedish league in 1976. Photograph: Inge Hallberg Kod/Scanpix Sweden/TT News Agency/Alamy
    The longest time Hodgson has spent out of the game was the 15 months between leaving the England job after Euro 2016 and returning to his boyhood club Crystal Palace in September 2017 following Frank de Boer’s disastrous spell. Having unofficially retired several times, he will be back in the dugout this weekend for his 41st season as a club manager.

    His longevity is all the more remarkable given the ruthless short-termism of football management. Why does he keep doing it? “He is in love with coaching,” says Smith. “He’s a disciple of coaching. He doesn’t get sidetracked and, unlike so many others, he doesn’t get involved in areas outside of coaching.” As he celebrates his 76th birthday, Hodgson will be where he is happiest: among the familiar surroundings of bibs and cones. Long may he continue.
     
    #5383
  4. John Ex Aberdeen now E.R.

    John Ex Aberdeen now E.R. Well-Known Member

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    This is how football should be played.

     
    #5384
  5. Ernie Shackleton

    Ernie Shackleton Well-Known Member

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    Not tall enough.
     
    #5385
  6. tigerscanada

    tigerscanada Well-Known Member

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    . Nick Barmby can tumble with the best of them. :emoticon-0148-yes:

     
    #5386
    Last edited: Aug 11, 2023
  7. tigerscanada

    tigerscanada Well-Known Member

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    #5387
  8. rovertiger

    rovertiger Well-Known Member

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    Too cute. :biggrin:
     
    #5388
  9. Help!

    Help! Well-Known Member

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  10. rovertiger

    rovertiger Well-Known Member

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  11. TIGERSCAVE

    TIGERSCAVE Well-Known Member

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    Halland 2 goals 36 minutes... now he has had a year to get his eye in, I feel sorry for some defences in the Premiership this season..
     
    #5391
    Last edited: Aug 11, 2023
  12. SW3 Chelsea Tiger

    SW3 Chelsea Tiger Well-Known Member

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    first game doesn’t count according to some on here…..
     
    #5392
  13. John Ex Aberdeen now E.R.

    John Ex Aberdeen now E.R. Well-Known Member

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    Interesting stat, Hull City are still the only club to beat the titleholders in the EPL on the first game of the next season when we beat Leicester, after Man City beat Burnley last night.
     
    #5393
  14. TIGERSCAVE

    TIGERSCAVE Well-Known Member

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    Gus Hamer has left Coventry for Sheffield United...
     
    #5394
  15. Obadiah

    Obadiah Well-Known Member

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    I thought we shared that honour with Spurs after they beat Manchester City a couple of seasons back.
     
    #5395
  16. Muffinthegoat

    Muffinthegoat Well-Known Member

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    I thought it was that we were the only promoted club to beat the reigning champions in the first game of the season.
     
    #5396
  17. originallambrettaman

    originallambrettaman Mod Moderator
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    It is.
     
    #5397
  18. Ernie Shackleton

    Ernie Shackleton Well-Known Member

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    How often has the situation happened though?
     
    #5398
  19. AlRawdah

    AlRawdah Well-Known Member

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    Once.
     
    #5399
  20. spesupersydera

    spesupersydera Well-Known Member

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    Ex City player, John Bostock, just equalised for Notts County (his 15th club) - can't believe he's only 31
     
    #5400

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