Remembering the remarkable Liverpool manager Bob
Paisley, nice guy and winner
The
myth that he merely reaped what Shankly sowed does Paisley a great disservice
An article by Ian
Herbert published in The Independent, Tuesday,
12 November 2013
It
goes without saying that Bob Paisley would not have settled too well into the
Harvard Business School role which Sir Alex Ferguson began enjoying in the
months before retiring to such a fanfare.
Paisley
managed Liverpool to 19 trophies in nine years – a ratio of 2.1 per year,
against Ferguson’s 1.3 in four times that period – but he also found
communication with the world outside Anfield difficult. So excruciatingly
difficult, in fact, that when he was finally persuaded – against his will – to
take the job Bill Shankly vacated, he gathered together the four or five
newspaper journalists he trusted and told them: “I’m not good at this. I can’t
finish my sentences. You’ll have to finish them for me…” So, in a compact which
provides a beautiful twist on the way Ferguson used the press, they did just that
– agreeing between themselves on what Paisley meant when he spoke in that
high-strained dialect of Hetton-le-Hole, Co Durham, which those who knew him
still spontaneously break into when they remember him.
There
were no authorised autobiographies for Paisley, either. It was a full 16 years
after his departure from the Anfield dugout before the definitive biography Bob
Paisley: Manager of the Millennium was written by John Keith, one of that group
of journalists who interpreted his utterances. You won’t find the book
propelling Paisley into a posthumous Christmas ratings battle with Ferguson
because it is out of print.
And
that is why, at the end of a year in which we have celebrated Ferguson and
Shankly so richly, the telling insights into Paisley’s qualities and methods
provided by two new books on Liverpool are so welcome. His abilities are
delivered with excellent understatement in Simon Hughes’ Red Machine
(Mainstream, £15.99). Paisley’s capacity, for example, to intuit which players
were susceptible to injury while watching a match is related to Hughes by Bruce
Grobbelaar, one of 10 players from that era whose stories the book tells. “It
meant that during games he’d tell our wingers to take on their marker in a
certain way. ‘The right back has a sore left leg. Take him on the outside and
come in on the inside – you’ll kill him,’” Grobbelaar relates. “Nine times out
of 10 he was right. He was a genius. I loved the man so much.”
The
eccentricities and sheer incomprehensibility of the man – Craig Johnston remembers
Paisley calling him to say, “Eeer. eerp, it’s Bob Paisley, ere like y’naw… We’d
like to sign ye, like” – have contributed to history’s characterisation of him
as merely fortunate enough to reap what Shankly sowed. But that myth does
Paisley a great disservice. Shankly’s capacity to claim silverware for
Liverpool dried up entirely between 1966 and 1973 and Paisley’s promotion in
1974 brought something different, to have the trophy cabinet overflowing again.
That extraordinary ratio of over two trophies a season is his alone.
Keith
tells me the 1970 FA Cup quarter-final defeat to Second Division Watford helped
shape Paisley’s conviction that Shankly, who never fined a player, was too
loyal at times. Graeme Souness tells Jonathan Wilson in the journalist’s own
new book The Anatomy of Liverpool (Orion, £18.99) that Paisley’s avuncular
image obscured an individual “who ruled Anfield with a rod of iron. He was a
commanding man and few dared mess with him”.
Perhaps
that was shaped by his wartime experience which, compared with Ferguson’s Govan
legend, remains virtually unknown. Yesterday was as good a time as any to pause
for thought at Paisley’s four war years overseas, including service with the
Eighth Army at El Alamein, taking cover on the day a plane sprayed bullets over
his hideout. “When the plane had gone, Bob had his hands over his eyes saying,
‘I can’t see. I’m blind,” a comrade-in-arms related. He soon brushed off the
terror of his temporary affliction when he made it home. Wilson observes that,
as Shankly’s assistant, Paisley played a key part in determining Liverpool’s
style. His eye for a player was also manifest in signings like Alan Hansen,
Phil Neal, Kenny Dalglish and Souness.
In
these post-Ferguson days, when every football conversation turns to the
enormity of David Moyes’ inheritance, it is worth pausing to consider what
Paisley faced, early in the 1974-75 season, with Kevin Keegan suspended for two
months and Neal and Terry McDermott acclimatising. Many clubs have suffered
after successions like that: Leeds after Revie, Nottingham Forest after Clough,
Manchester United after Busby. Paisley didn’t flinch.
Though
it is hard to argue against Brian Clough as the foremost club manager of all
time, turning water into wine not once but twice, at Derby County and
Nottingham Forest, Paisley stands right behind him on the grounds of trophies
delivered with a team of his own creation. And though it has no relevance to
the question of relative greatness, he did it without unpleasantness, too. “He
had a smile as wide as Stockton High Street,” said Clough, alluding upon
Paisley’s death in 1996 to the Teesside town they both knew well. “He has
exorcised the silly myth that nice guys don’t win anything.” How shrewd was
that judgement. Paisley said in 1982: “Ranting and raving gets you nowhere in
football. If you want to be heard, speak quietly”. A message for these frenetic
times.
Cork
keeps it compelling when the action stops
The
biggest test comes on a slow news day in this media business, so hopefully Sky
Sports’ MD Barney Francis observed the efforts last week of Dominic Cork. The
former all-rounder was asked to deliver his opinions through not one, or two,
but three midnight rain delays as England’s Ashes warm-up game in Hobart
delivered no action for fully two and a half days.
Cork
still looks like a man who could cause a row in an empty room – always did –
but the talk that swept from topics as diverse as fast bowlers’ wrist positions
to Chris Tremlett’s likely inclusion for Perth was almost as compelling as the
mystery of what Cork’s problem with studio host Charles Colville actually is.
He doesn’t seem to like him.
“They’ll
be greased up and shirtless by 2am at this rate,” someone observed on Twitter.
We won’t be saying that about Botham and Gower when the cavalry arrives.
Frost:
That was the career that wasn’t...
Football’s
maximum wage had a lot to answer for but we can give thanks to it, at least,
for the road not taken by David Frost. It was in his last broadcast, for the
BBC Radio 4 Museum of Curiosities episode repeated on Sunday morning, that
Frost discussed how the cap on spending dissuaded him from accepting Nottingham
Forest’s offer of a playing contract in the late 1950s.
The
alternative pathway took him to Cambridge, the Footlights, Varsity, Granta,
Anglia Television, That was the Week that Was… and the rest is incredibly fine
history. Frost was four years younger than Brian Clough and the prospect of
those two crossing managerial swords in the East Midlands would have been
something, though. Mind games, they’d probably call it today.
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