OK, I know it's a Chelsea player. But if we can put our allegiances aside for a moment, we can gain an insight into what our manager is like when he has the conviction to pick out a youngster. Interesting stuff. [video=youtube;ctWS52IA_JY]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ctWS52IA_JY[/video] http://www.independent.co.uk/sport/...k-lampard-did-turn-out-all-right-8803937.html Frank Lampard was reminded yesterday of that famous YouTube clip of him alongside Harry Redknapp, then West Ham manager, at a fansâ forum in 1996, when his uncle was being harangued by a supporter over allegations of favouritism toward âyoung Frankâ. Chubby of face and wearing a polo neck jumper Lampard, then just 17, looks mortified. Redknapp, however, entertains no doubts. Under fire from a supporter accusing him of favouring his nephew over youth-team players Matt Holland and Scott Canham, he replies: âIâm telling you now, he [Lampard] will go right to the very top. Right to the very top. âCos heâs got everything that is needed to be a top midfield player. His attitude is first-class. Heâs got strength, he can play, he can pass and he can score goals. I couldnât be more strong in how I feel about him.â Ninety-nine England caps later, via three Premier League titles, one Champions League triumph, one Europa League, four FA Cups, two League Cups and the all-time goalscoring record at Chelsea, it turns out that Redknapp was right after all. âIt was a difficult evening, at a âRollerbowlâ actually, near the training ground,â Lampard said. âIâll never forget it. I was surprised it popped up [on YouTube] when it did recently. It was a tough time for me. Some people forget that it was tough or they try to change history and say it wasnât like that. It was. âI had the nepotism one thrown at me regularly there and as a kid I found it quite hard to deal with. Certainly that day I did. I watched it back and not only my embarrassing curtains hairstyle and my chubby face, but the whole moment was brought back. It made me smile and it probably made someone duck their head somewhere in east London.â It will be 100 caps for Lampard should he play some part for England against Ukraine in their crunch World Cup qualifier tomorrow night. It is testament to his longevity that he will probably start the match, even amid competition from the likes of Michael Carrick and Tom Cleverley. Two more goals would take him to 32 in total and install him as Englandâs sixth-highest all-time goalscorer. There is a great deal at stake in Kiev but the milestone of 100 caps merits some reflection. He played his first game, aged 21, against Belgium on 10 October, 1999, in a team that included his cousin Jamie Redknapp and the then-Leicester City winger Steve Guppy. Apart from Lampard, only Kevin Phillips from the starting XI that day is still playing professionally. Lampard said: âThe game was tough and it was a real eye-opener. I didnât play [for England until February 2001] after that. âI remember Gareth Southgate having a few words with me in the dressing room, calming me down and wishing me luck and all that sort of stuff. Iâll never forget that. And now nearly at 100 caps, I try to do that with younger players. âIâd like to think people will remember me as a player who gave everything and was very proud to play for his country. Certainly that will be first and foremost for me. âThereâs obviously been ups and downs and we all understand that. Steven Gerrard said when he got to 100 that in terms of winning something weâve failed. But I donât think you should write off every England player of the last 50 years as a failure because weâve not won anything. Iâd like to be remembered as someone who gave everything. Iâm proud to have played for my country and that Iâve done pretty well at times.â He said that the period after the 2006 World Cup, in and out of the Steve McClaren side, were the worst times but a phone conversation with his father put him back on track. Frank senior still follows his son home and away with Chelsea and has been looking up the flights for Kiev since Lampard juniorâs 99th cap in the 4-0 win over Moldova on Friday night. Lampard always cites his father as his fiercest critic, and the driving force in his career, who would instruct his son to do sprint training in running spikes in the garden every night to improve his pace and stamina. âHe probably bullied me into it a bit in younger year; I didnât always like it at the time. But I canât thank him enough for it now,â Lampard recalled. âNowadays heâll still have a go at me for not tracking a runner! And then heâll ask me if I have been doing my sprints. I tell him, âIâm 35, for Godâs sake!â Iâm used to that. I just humour him!â Lampard will stay in football and one imagines that there will be jobs for the asking when he has finished. England, one day? âWe have not won anything for 50 years and they always say take the job when it can only get better!â he said. âI think at some day somebody is going to do that and that would be great. So the England job is something you always aspire to â it is the top job for an English manager, whoever that might be.â
A great little clip that goes a long way in backing Harry's judgement. I guess when you're that close day-in-day-out around footballers you develop an eye for spotting the differences between good players and very good players. Rio Ferdinand gets a mention too. Now I'm sure that a cynic could easily find another dozen more clips that see Harry waxing lyrical about a player who has since failed, but it's a good clip nonetheless. Interesting to observe the pints of lager, even on the top table. And the absence of adverts plastered all around whilst the cameras are rolling. How things have changed!
Liked that Frank Lampards both of them were great players The younger Frank has been in the top five midfield players in the world IMO It is no accident he turns up in positions his reading of the game as an English player is possibly the best that England has ever produced World class even now