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| | | 28/11/2024 Frank Lampard gets back in the game |
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| | BEING FRANK | Congratulations to Frank Lampard, who has defied the odds to be named the new manager of Coventry City. In an age when people are losing their collective minds over the quality of English managers and the supposed opportunities they are failing to be presented with in the wake of Thomas Tuchel’s appointment of the national side, it’s good to know that Lampard is keeping the quota up towards the bottom of the Championship. “Frank cut his teeth [there] and knows what is needed in this league to be successful,” roared Coventry’s owner and chief suit, Doug King. “His experiences thereafter at Chelsea and Everton will ensure he brings to our talented squad clear understanding of exactly what is needed to succeed at the very top level that we as a club are striving to reach.” Which is a longwinded way of suggesting that Lampard might be able to dial up his pals at Chelsea and get a few loan signings in January. Just imagine what Omari Kellyman – the £19m summer signing yet to play a minute of first-team football for Chelsea – or £17.2m Brazilian Deivid Washington could do against the likes of Portsmouth, Hull and Cardiff. At least that trick worked at Derby County in 2018-19, Lampard’s only Championship experience, when England internationals Ashley Cole, Mason Mount and Fikayo Tomori were added to a squad that also contained other senior internationals in Harry Wilson and Tom Huddlestone. Lampard’s brave Rams finished sixth, before losing to Aston Villa in the playoff final. That’s not to slate the job that Lampard did at Derby (win rate 42.7%). It was his first gig in management, and although he had some of the best players in the Championship and a wave of goodwill based upon his outstanding playing career that had no bearing on his ability as a manager, he did get within 90 minutes of the Premier League. But Lampard’s “success” was six seasons ago, a lifetime in football. Since then, he has brought a multitude of mediocrity to Chelsea, Everton and Chelsea again on an interim basis, with his last job (outside of a TV studio) at Stamford Bridge (played 11, won one, lost eight) coming a full 18 months ago. Another manager with a much more recent history of success (two promotions, losing the Championship playoff final in 2022-23 on penalties, nearly dumping out Manchester United in last season’s FA Cup semi) is Mark Robins, who was both named as one of Coventry’s “greatest ever managers” and booted through a door marked “Do One” by Sky Blue suits earlier this month. A legend of the club after his seven-year reign, Robins even accepted an honorary doctorate from Coventry University last week for bringing joy, pride, success back to a city and supporters back to the stadium. Hull City – who sacked Tim Walter on Wednesday – or Plymouth Argyle, thumped 6-1 by Norwich and struggling under the stewardship of another legendary former player who had a brief managerial stint at Pride Park, might now be interested in Robins or anyone else who “knows what is needed in this league to be successful”. |
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LIVE ON BIG WEBSITE | Join Will Unwin from 8pm GMT for hot Bigger Vase minute-by-minute coverage of Manchester United 3-0 Bodø/Glimt, while Luke McLaughlin will be on deck for Tottenham 2-2 Roma at the same time. |
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QUOTE OF THE DAY | | It is nice for him, his family and us but also for the academy. Not only him … Caoimhín and Curtis were outstanding. To have three academy players doing so well is a big compliment for [it]” – Arne Slot waxes lyrical about Liverpool trio Conor Bradley, Caoimhín Kelleher and Curtis Jones after they managed to get one over on Real Madrid in Bigger Cup. | | Conor Bradley denying Kylian Mbappé in style. Photograph: Justin Setterfield/Getty Images |
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FOOTBALL DAILY LETTERS | | I thought surely that Richard Moyse Fenning’s long letter o’ the day-winning description of Spursiness (yesterday’s Football Daily letters) should have fallen on a day that is prizeless – what a gag that would have been” – Ian Potter. | | Re: former Manchester City player Mikheil Kavelashvili trying to be elected as president of Georgia (yesterday’s News, Bits and Bobs, full email edition). There is a precedent” – John McEniff. | | I hope Wayne Rooney (yesterday’s Quote of the Day) has been polishing up his CV, though it may take a massive amount of polishing” – JJ Zucal. | |
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BIGGER CUP CORNER | Aston Villa have got the funk on after a controversial late call denied them the only goal at home to Juve. “English referees would not interpret that as a foul but in Europe the interpretation is different,” sighed Unai Emery. “They have to be working to get the same decision when actions like that happen.” | | Morgan Rogers’ goal is disallowed. Photograph: Andrew Boyers/Action Images/Reuters | Celtic are closing in on the playoffs, salvaging a 1-1 draw against Club Brugge after a howler of an own goal from Cameron Carter-Vickers. And PSV are too, courtesy of a preposterous comeback from 2-0 down after 87 minutes against Shakhtar Donetsk to win 3-2 in Eindhoven. “When we scored the winner it was a madhouse, everyone jumping on each other, our bench erupting, as well as our fans,” whooped defender Ryan Flamingo. “For that to happen in a [Bigger Cup] match is as good as it gets.” | | Ricardo Pepi’s winner sparks Scenes™. Photograph: Piroschka van de Wouw/Reuters |
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NEWS, BITS AND BOBS | Perhaps after watching him beat the Foxes twice during a four-game interim spell in charge of Manchester United, Leicester City are leaning towards appointing Ruud van Nistelrooy as their new boss. Perhaps after watching what the hell is going on in his absence, Rodri wants to try and make his return for Manchester City this season. “In terms of my mentality it’s going to be positive for me to not give up the season,” he cheered. Perhaps after taking in an initial week or so of training sessions, Ruben Amorim senses what Marcus Rashford needs in order to rediscover his form. “He has to be the first one to really want it,” tooted Amorim. “Then, he will have the help of all the staff and fans. He has to be Marcus – he is a Manchester United boy.” Perhaps because they thought there was no future in his underperforming team, Hull City have fired manager Tim Walter. Definitely because they’re fed up at being taken advantage of, Manchester United, Everton, Liverpool and Manchester City fans will hold joint protests against rising ticket prices at their games on Sunday. And also definitely because of b@nter, Southampton have posted a photo of St Mary’s on social media abomination TwiXer captioned “football under the lights”. Portsmouth’s game at home to Millwall was called off at the last minute after a power failure in the area. | | A dark night at Fratton Park. Photograph: Jason Brown/ProSports/Shutterstock |
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MEMORY LANE | A fresh-faced Frank Lampard Jr – we can’t remember exactly how long after he dropped the suffix – in action for West Ham against Manchester United in their goalless Premiership stalemate of August 1998 at Upton Park. | | Photograph: Gary M Prior/Allsport |
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