FWA Q&A: Charlie Wyett

The Sun’s Charlie Wyett on making sausages…being Pretty…and appearing in EastEnders (sort of)

Your first ever newspaper?
Wisbech Standard in Cambridgeshire.

Have you ever worked in a profession other than journalism?
No. Joined the profession after completing A levels in 1989. Used to work in my family’s butchers shop as a teenager, spending Saturday mornings making sausages but only ever wanted to be a sports writer.

What was your finest achievement playing football?
Scoring with an excellent 25-yard lob for the Norfolk College of Arts and Technology. Unfortunately, the goalkeeper was my team-mate.

Most memorable match covered?
Have been extremely lucky to cover some cracking games and a recent one which stands out was Arsenal beating Barcelona 2-1 at home last season.

The one moment in football you would put on a DVD?
Michael Thomas scoring at Liverpool in the final minute to clinch the title for Arsenal in 1989. Despite being a neutral, remember jumping off my sofa in delight.

Best stadium?
I have a soft spot for Villa Park but my favourite ground is San Siro in Milan.

…and the worst?
A few dodgy ones in the Eastern Counties League and also Southern League. Also, the Dell at Southampton and Colchester’s Layer Road were not great. As a supporter, the away end at Millmoor (Rotherham) was particularly unpleasant. A total dump, in fact.

Your best ever scoop?
Still looking for that one.

Your personal new-tech disaster?
Accidentally spell-checking my surname on a match report. Just as my report was heading towards the News International system, I noticed that it read: From Charlie Pretty at Carrow Road. Bit of a contradiction! Thankfully, I stopped it from reaching our sport queue by pulling out all the wires from my laptop.

Biggest mistake?
Have made one or two. . .

Have you ever been mistaken for anyone else?
For some bizarre reason, it does sometimes happen. Am getting John Bishop at the moment. Also Howard Donald from Take That and the actor Willem Dafoe (drunk blokes have pointed at me and shouted Green Goblin). Also Frank Spencer. My Sun colleague Andy Dillon says I look like Dean Gaffney from EastEnders – and he is certainly not being complimentary.

Most media friendly manager?
Harry Redknapp, David Moyes and Alan Pardew are all good. Arsene Wenger used to be. . .

Best ever player?
Thierry Henry in the Barclays Premier League – Lionel Messi is now up there with Maradona on the world stage.

Best ever teams (club and international)?
Brazil team in 1982 World Cup were amazing. Barcelona side of the last few seasons is the best club team.

Best pre-match grub?
Chelsea is excellent. As for a restaurant for fans, Delia’s at Norwich is not bad – as you would expect.

Best meal had on your travels?
Ristorante Europa 92 in Modena. Near Ferrari’s Maranello base, it is northern Italian food at its very best. And not that expensive.

…and the worst?
‘Beef bowl’ at Tokyo airport. Truly shocking. And I am not sure it was beef I was actually eating.

Best hotel stayed in?
Always loved staying at the Hotel Elysee when covering the U.S Open in New York. Would recommend it to anyone looking for a hotel in Manhattan.

…and the worst?
A disgusting one-star guest house in Hong Kong. The nearest restaurant was a McDonald’s but the menu was obviously not in English. I pointed at the board and after getting a funny look from the server, I was handed my food. A Happy Meal with a soft toy.

Favourite football writer?
I know it’s a cop-out but have a few.

Favourite radio/TV commentator?
Clive Tyldesley.

If you could introduce one change to improve PR between football clubs and football writers what would it be?
A closer working relationship between journalists and players.

One sporting event outside football you would love to experience?
Olympics men’s 1500m final

Last book read?
The Rum Diary

Favourite current TV programme?
Homeland on Channel 4

Your most prized football memorabilia?
Always give stuff away.

Advice to any would-be football writer?
Work hard and don’t expect to be covering Barclays Premier League games within two years.

My Week: John Ley

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH’S JOHN LEY on stats…Stinking Bishop…and speaking at the House of Commons

Monday, March 12
Wake up with a start. It’s going to be a busy old week and I don’t feel if I’m as prepared as I should be. The last 10 months have been strange; since switching from my role as a football writer on The Daily Telegraph after 24 years, I am still adapting to life as ‘Production Editor’ – that’s a sub in real money – and it still feels strange, knowing that I don’t start work until 4pm.

It would be nice to think I could have a lie-in, but my daughter leaves for college at 9am and if I don’t get up, even for just 20 minutes for a cup of tea and a chat, I won’t see her again that day. Katie, my daughter, is 18 and has Down’s syndrome and diabetes. She is also very special and is doing well at Harlow College, where she attends a special needs class. Her taxi arrives and, within a nano-second the dog has one of my walking boots in her mouth, throwing it into the air with like a canine juggler. Set off with the dog, Bella, and my wife (she’s called Linda to avoid confusion) along the River Lee, throw a ball for the dog a few times then return via the paper shop. Need the papers to update my stats books. Buy my paper and the Sun – they are good on stats which I like to nick – then return for coffee at home.

Normally my Monday routine is simple; spend a couple of hours getting my stats books up to date and start preparing the weekend’s previews for the paper and Telegraph Sport’s website. But I have other pressing matters to attend to.

A month ago I received a call out of the blue from the Royal Statistical Society, asking if I would give a short talk at – wait for it – the House of Commons. I know, I know. I thought she’d got the wrong number as well. But as the lady, Debra Hurcomb, explained, the RSS is a charity leading a campaign called getstats. It’s focused on building confidence with numbers, data and statistics and is currently attempting to focus on “strengthening the understanding, know-how and confidence of groups of people who influence the public such as parliamentarians and their staff.”

They want me to speak at Portcullis House, where MPs have their offices. I’m on tomorrow and haven’t prepared a word. Panic time. I devote my morning to thinking about what I am going to say. The stats can wait.

After a bit of work on some ideas, I change and leave for the office. We’re in Victoria, very handy as my main-line train goes to Tottenham Hale on the Victoria Line. I walk across the concourse and realise it’s happened; a train has just arrived from the south coast and around 200 people, all heading for the underground, are sprinting towards me. This is like swimming against a human, maniacal tide. I’ve worked out a tactic, of sorts; head for the wall, past the Wasabi noodle bar and Mexican food outlet. Then creep past the 24 hour drop-in medical centre – I may need you soon – and, with a bit of luck I’ll make it to the Telegraph without having my knee-caps taken out.

Resist temptation to pop in to the International Cheese Centre and buy my favourite Stinking Bishop. I love it, but the underground doesn’t and last time I bought some the entire carriage was looking accusingly at probable farters with halitosis and BO.

My first job is to sub a lovely piece by Jeff Randall, well known on Sky but also a Telegraph man who has written about what the Cheltenham Festival means to him. This time he has a part-share in a horse – “my share is half a nostril” – and I enjoy subbing it. Sub Henry Winter on David Moyes, and Alan Smith’s predications on the title race. He reckons United will beat City to the title by one point.

All stories also have to go online, but you have to be careful to adhere to embargoes. When journalists get stories they often agree that they must go only in the paper, or at least appear online no earlier than 11pm.

News that one of our bright young things, Jonathan Liew, has won Young Sports Writer of the Year filters through while sports news man Paul Kelso has scooped the Sports News Reporter of the Year. Great for the paper, but when these awards come around I always think there should be a category for Stats Man of the Year….

Delight in seeing Arsenal come from behind for the fourth time in succession. Note that former Telegraph colleague and fellow FWA Committee Member Chris Davies has tweeted that it’s a Barclays Premier League record. Tell the desk, take a short break then return to sub the quotes piece from the Emirates. Get away about 20 minutes after midnight, get home an hour later and make my bed around 2.45am, worrying about tomorrow.

Tuesday, March 13
I’m off today, so I can concentrate on the talk. It’s only for 10-15 minutes but it’s surprising how much one can say in such a short space of time. Let Linda walk the dog while I concentrate on putting some thoughts down. Spend a couple more hours on it, then try it out on myself. It lasts about 12 minutes, which is spot on. I decide to walk away from it for an hour.

Also waiting for a man to repair our oven. Got the old ‘between 12 and four’ promise, so any hopes of leaving the house wrecked. I told them it was the fan; he turns up, says it’s the fan – and he doesn’t have the part. Reckons he did have one – but used it on an earlier repair. So we’ll be a third week without the main oven. Ring insurers and make official complaint.

Get dressed and head off to Westminster. I had been warned to expect a wait, but I am amazed to see the queues of people trying to get in to Portcullis House. So while I’m waiting I consider the size of the place. Did you know it cost £235 million, the world’s most expensive office block?

After 20 minutes, I have a face scan, go through an X-Ray machine and have my bag searched. I put on a security tag and find the Macmillan room, home to the seminar. As I walk around the first floor veranda, I look down on MPs talking in plush coffee shops. On the walls are some terrific paintings of great figures. The one that draws me is a marvellous image of Tony Benn. Not my politics, but I’m a great admirer of him as a man, and the painting does him proud.

On arrival, I’m offered a quick tour and shown the room, next door where the Murdoch Enquiry took place last year. I’m also told there’s a row going on about the £150,000 paid for some decorative fig trees which dominate the inside of the building. Good to see my taxes being used wisely.

Back to the room and I meet Rob Mastrodomenico who, despite the name, is a lad from Swindon with a wonderful Wiltshire burr. “I’m part of Paolo’s red and white army.” Rob’s more than that; after studying at Reading Uni, where he received a BSc in Maths and Statistics, followed by an MSc and PhD in Statistics, he joined a company that produces sports stats and data. Then he set up his own company, Global Sports Statistics, and is doing well.

I meet a few people from RSS and then I am introduced to a charming man, Lord David Lipsey, a former chairman of the Fabian Society and journalist. He is also the chairman of the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Statistics and announces me as ‘StatManJon’, my Twitter name.

It’s the first day of Cheltenham so he warns that he intends to invoke a little-known Commons by-law that anybody mentioning any results will be marched to the Tower and hanged.

Start the talk my saying how brave they are to invite a Daily Telegraph journalist to Westminster and proceed to explain why I think stats are important, how they once won me four flights to Australia and how I was responsible for earning charity £10,000 by telling the Barclays Premier League they were close to the 10,000th goal. Their sponsors, Barclays, responded by giving ten grand to the scorer’s chosen charity; Les Ferdinand scored the goal, for Spurs, and two cancer charities benefitted.

I finish by telling them I will be putting in expenses. Seems to go OK. Rob is next, and far more detailed with a slide show to put over his points about betting. Lord Lipsey had to leave half way through my talk, to vote on the health and social care bill, but did return – and offered an interesting tip on how to win at greyhound racing. I’m keeping that one to myself. Around 40-50 were there and, afterwards engaged myself, Rob and David Walker, a director of the getstats campaign, in a Q&A. Enjoyed that bit.

Afterwards we mingle and enjoy very nice hospitality courtesy the House of Commons with their own wine and marvellous canapés, interrupted only by the occasional sounding of the Division bell.

Rob and I find a pub showing the second half of Liverpool v Everton.

Wednesday, March 14
Receive a nice email from Debra, describing my talk as ‘excellent’….and a form for expenses! Do a few stats, send some emails to prospective FWA members as part of my role as FWA Membership Secretary, then start looking into some stats on behalf of the League Managers Association, who I also help out.

I also do a little bit of research ahead of another talk; tomorrow I am going to Harlow College to give a speech to some wannabe journalists.

Set off for work and at Victoria I’m confronted by dozens of policeman, awaiting the arrival of the Gatwick Express and Napoli fans ahead of the Chelsea game. One copper is bigger than a house, at least 7ft, with size 20 feet and carrying a machine gun. I bet he’s good at his job. Decide buying Stinking Bishop to avoid antagonising PC Goliath.

Note that Randall’s horse, Vendor, comes in third at Cheltenham.

Sub several bits, including an Olympics story, another on boxing and a delightful piece by Oliver Brown, on Rory McIlroy. Later, Chelsea stage a remarkable fight back against Napoli and I am given a piece about the five things we learned at Stamford Bridge.

Thursday, March 15
Although I didn’t get to bed until 2.30am, I am up at eight. In the shower I listen to 5 live and hear an old buddy Ian McGarry talk about Chelsea. Makes me realise I still miss the old gang, that body of reprobates known as football writers.

I have to be at Harlow College by 10am to address 12 youngsters, between the ages of 19 and 23, on journalism generally and subbing in particular. An old mate, Neil Silver, runs the course and it’s the second time I’ve been there. People like Piers Morgan, who attended the NCTJ (National Council for the Training of Journalists) course with Neil, Richard Madeley and Jeremy Clarkson took the diploma.

Neil is vastly experienced from his days at PA, The People, Express and Sunday Mirror amongst others, and has successfully reinvented himself as a lecturer. I speak about the importance of embracing digital media, and the response is good, as it was before. Myself and Neil share stories of having to use typewriters, of having to put ‘blacks’ – carbon paper – between sheets so we had multiple copies of our copy. We trigger the type of look directed at Klaatu in The Day The Earth Stood Still as he emerged from his space ship.

After that shock, a couple of lads ask for a contact number so they can speak to me in the future.

The College, part of Anglia Ruskin University, has a nice feel to it. The facilities are outstanding, and you have the impression these youngsters are receiving the best training possible. After all, the NCTJ course at Harlow is the oldest of its kind in the country. Will happily return to speak to the next batch.

Go home via a florists to order Mother’s Day flowers for my mum, now 80 and going strong, then grab half an hour’s kip before going back to work. The smell of the cheese is almost luring me, but I resist again.

Lots to sub, but do get half an hour to continue preparing my stats for the Saturday paper and online. Sub the Man City report, from the ultimately failed attempt to move on in the Europa League, among other stories.

Go back, sub some more then leave. Arrive home at 1.15am and to bed at 2am (impossible to go straight to sleep, mind won’t switch off).

Friday, March 16
I am up at 8am because I have to go in early to write the team-news and stats page. Do a few Tweets on some stats about the weekend’s games. I’m chasing 12,000 followers.

On the way, I wonder what the average time is between stations. I know it’s 22 minutes between Tottenham Hale and Victoria, and count nine stops so – and this is why my life can be so, so sad – I work out that, on average, it’s two minutes, 27 seconds a stop.

The cheese can wait; stats to do. But horrified that the canteen has run out of sausages, my traditional Friday morning breakfast. Go for Plan B – bacon – and set to work on the stats.

I have to work out probable line-ups with shirt numbers, list injuries and players awaiting tests, the refs and their season’s figures, kick-off times, betting odds, TV times and a stat for each game. I also arrange for the guys covering the games to write 75 words with a prediction.

All this is set up for the paper and is also posted online and I get the chance to add a photo as well. I also have to plan ahead to next midweek; the website wants previews of the Tuesday and Wednesday games.

My favourite stat of the weekend is the one about Man Utd, who need four wins from their last five away games for 14 away victories, an all-time club record.

With subbing numbers down, I agree to do a bit of subbing too, and get away about seven and to a roast dinner – a rarity when you work lates.

Saturday, March 17
Take daughter to buy a Mother’s Day present, start writing this diary, then leave for work. On Saturdays I tend to start at 2.30pm as The Sunday Telegraph deadline is earlier.

Give in to temptation and visit Cheese centre. No Stinking Bishop in sight. One could suggest it’s divine intervention.

Sub the match report from Wigan, along with other pieces including 1,000 words from Henry W. He really is prolific. All is going well on the desk until news comes in that Bolton’s Fabrice Muamba has collapsed at WHL. My brother calls me to check I’ve heard, and it’s a horrible feeling.

The pages are redrawn to accommodate the shock news. I was down to do the match report, but instead it’s changed into a news story. Jon Liew has written it and reacted quickly to events. He comes in on his way home and looks visibly shaken by what he has witnessed. The press box at Spurs is just behind the visitor’s dug out and adjacent to the tunnel, so as the drama unfolded, the journo’s would have been on top of it.

Big stories like this, however sad they maybe, produce a buzz in newspaper offices. You have to react, and be considerate as well. Important no stories have defeats described as disasters. This is real life, not a game.

As I leave, I walk past England and Irish rugby fans at Victoria, and arrive home about 10.45, with traditional Saturday night doner kebab in hand. Watch the news for updates on Muamba and notice he’s in the same hospital that saved my dad’s life around 17 years ago.

I Tweet that fact – and the fact that, at 87, he’s still going strong – and it is retweeted quite a lot.

Try to write a bit more of this diary but it’s 1.25am, I’m too tired to write any more. Go to bed.

Sunday, March 18
Wake up around eight. Muamba is still fighting.

Ask my daughter to make breakfast for mum as it is Mother’s Day and then we all go for a lovely walk with the dog, along the old Ermine Street Roman road, and into Hoddesdon Park Wood.

Back home we have lunch then leave for work. I should have been off this weekend, but a colleague has been invited to a two-day ‘stag’ weekend, so I’m covering.

Decide to drive half way. Big mistake. There’s been an accident in Cheshunt and a drive that should take me 25 minutes, takes nearly an hour. At Tottenham Hale I find the car park full. Going from bad to worse. Drive to Blackhorse Road, take tube in and arrive 10 minutes late.

Lots to sub, including match reports from Fulham, where Swansea were rampant, Newcastle, who weren’t but still beat Norwich to stay sixth, and Chelsea, with Torres realising that he can score. In addition, there’s a rugby piece on Ben Youngs, but, later on I have two pieces on Muamba, including an emotional plea from his fiancée to keep praying for Fabrice.

I am given four pages to proof read, and leave about 10.45. It’s been a long week. As I leave I’m passed by Liverpool fans on their way back from beating Stoke at Anfield. Get off the train at Tottenham Hale….and as it leaves, remember I’m parked at Blackhorse Road. D’oh.

Driving home and it’s 11.40pm and, outside the Roman Urn pub in Cheshunt, my eyes are drawn to a dwarf wearing an Iron Maiden T shirt and a hat in the shape of a pint of the Black Stuff. He is swaggering ever so slightly, but with a smile the width of the Liffey. A bizarre end to a bizarre week.

Phil Shaw Chooses His Top 20 Quotes From the 20 Years of the Barclays Premier League.

“If Bergkamp thinks he’s gonna set the world alight he can forget it.” (Sorry Lord Sugar – you’re fired)

1. Interviewer: What would you be if you weren’t a footballer? Crouch: A virgin.
England striker PETER CROUCH reveals what Ruud Gullit meant by ‘sexy football’.

2. For Tony Adams to admit he’s an alcoholic took an awful lot of bottle.
Arsenal colleague IAN WRIGHT passes the audition for the BBC pundits’ panel.

3. I write like a two-year-old and I can’t spell. I can’t work a computer. I don’t even know what an email is. I’ve never sent a fax or a text message. I’m the most disorganised person in the world. I can’t even fill in the team-sheet.
In the High Court HARRY REDKNAPP rehearses his application for the England job.

4. I just yelled: ‘Off you go Cantona, it’s an early shower for you’.
Crystal Palace fan MATTHEW SIMMONS on the innocent exhortation that provoked Eric Cantona’s ‘kung-fu’ attack on him.

5. If a footballer presents himself as a family man then goes and has sex with a prostitute, should he gag her?
5Live’s NICKY CAMPBELL brings a whole new meaning to gagging order.

6. It’s a huge honour to wear No 7 at Liverpool. I think about the legends: Dalglish, Keegan and that Australian guy.
Uruguay striker LUIS SUAREZ, upholder of Anfield’s great traditions.

7. Vinnie [Jones] admits he threw a piece of toast at Gary Lineker. What he didn’t say was that it was still in the toaster.
The late TONY BANKS MP, Chelsea born, bread and buttered.

8. I was with David the fateful night he first saw the Spice Girls on telly and said: ‘See that girl who can’t dance or sing? I’m going to marry her’.
Beckham’s best man GARY NEVILLE on how two became one.

9. Carra doesn’t like me to fist him before games, so I give him a high-five instead.
Liverpool’s Spanish keeper PEPE REINA fumbles his idioms on Soccer AM.

10. I am not out of a bottle. I am a special one.
New Chelsea manager JOSE MOURINHO launches a thousand headlines.

11. We threw everything at them — the kitchen sink, golf clubs, emptied the garage. It wasn’t enough but at least my garage is tidy now.
The Bristolian burr of IAN HOLLOWAY, where logic and loopiness collide.

12. I think the fact that Alex Ferguson rested Howard Webb had a lot to do with the result.
After ‘the 6-1’, NOEL GALLAGHER savours definitely maybe the modern-day Man City’s greatest day.

13. If Bergkamp thinks he’s gonna set the world alight he can forget it. When the fog, ice and cold arrive, he won’t want to know.
Double Dutch by Spurs chairman ALAN SUGAR on Arsenal’s new foreign wastrel.

14. I’d only look as fast as Ryan Giggs if you stuck me in the 1958 FA Cup final.
Manchester City winger RICK HOLDEN hoping 1993’s new kid on the block will soon burn out.

15. If people come to your window and talk to your wife every night, you can’t accept it without asking what’s happening.
Arsenal manager ARSENE WENGER waxes philosophical on Chelsea’s courting of Ashley Cole, 2005.

16. I left out a couple of my foreigners the other week and they started talking foreign. I knew they were saying: ‘Blah, blah, blah, le bastard manager, f****** useless bastard’.
He can’t write, text or email but HARRY REDKNAPP understands ‘foreign’ at Portsmouth.

17. I call it squeaky-bum time.
The title race tightens and SIR ALEX FERGUSON books his place for posterity in the Oxford English Dictionary.

18. Alan Shearer is boring. We call him Mary Poppins.
Secretly taped Newcastle director FREDDY SHEPHERD anticipates public opinion by a decade.

19. A lovely chip by Van Nistelrooy. That was what I would call a dinky-do.
Venerable summariser JIMMY ARMFIELD shows the technical expertise that comes from having played the game.

20. What I said to them at half-time would be unprintable on radio.
Mullet loyalist GERRY FRANCIS redefines the term ‘mixed media’.

Two collections of football wit and wisdom compiled by Phil Shaw are currently available: The Book of Football Quotations and Tell Him He’s Pele…And Get Him Back On: The Funniest Football Quotes Ever (both published by Ebury Press).

FWA Q&A: Rob Shepherd

ROB SHEPHERD on working at Harrods…being Quentin Tarantino for an hour…and a flower in his toilet pan

Your first ever newspaper?
After working as a messenger/copy boy for Hayters I joined the Weekly News/Sunday Post in their Fleet Street office; I returned to Hayters as a reporter, then joined my first national -Today – when it launched in 1986.

Have you ever worked in a profession other than journalism?
Brief stint in a Hackney warehouse; summer job in Way In Living menswear department at Harrods. Started ‘proper’ job as a trainee manager for Nationwide building society…quit after two weeks.

What was your finest achievement playing football?
Playing at South East Counties level for West Ham…and sticking a winning goal past Jan Tomeszewski in a media match in Katowice. Over zealously I celebrated by kissing him on the cheek and saying that’s for 1973 Clown. Big Jan ,by then well into his Fifties, took it very well.

Most memorable match covered?
England v West Germany 1990 World Cup semi -final in Turin.

The one moment in football you would put on a DVD?
Paul Gascoigne chipping a ball down the nozzle of a tuba from 20 yards in the warm-up before an England B international in Iceland much to the wrath of the brass band musician; plus the goal Gazza scored a few days earlier In Switzerland when he beat (I swear) seven players en route.

Best stadium?
Nou Camp.

…and the worst?
Has to be Plough Lane but in its way it was fun to work there.

Your best ever scoop?
Breaking the news Terry Venables would quit as England manager whatever outcome of Euro 96 because FA refused to sanction a new contract. Crazy.

Your personal new-tech disaster?
Where do we start! Having somehow wiped the interview from the cassette tape I then lost a feature length Ossie Ardiles piece into the ether THREE times while attempting to send from my brand new but very temperamental Tandy 200 (the machine that replaced the portable typewriter). That tops a long list. I ended up ad libbing to copy.

Biggest mistake?
Not always heeding good advice.

Have you ever been mistaken for anyone else?
Frequently: Morrisey, Quentin Tarantino (at a poolside bar in Antigua….and I strung the guy along for an hour), James May (once), Jeremy Clarkson (often), Brian Woolnough (far too often!), Bert Millichip (by a limo driver in Las Vegas), Eric Joyce MP (the other day) and Desperate Dan (even by my two sons).

Most media friendly manager?
Graham Taylor.

Best ever player?
Maradona.

Best ever teams (club and international)?
Club: Dynamo Tbilisi (of early Eighties) & current Barcelona side : Brazil 1970

Best pre-match grub?
Arsenal.

Best meal had on your travels?
A restaurant in Turin called Urbani (several times).

…and the worst?
Anywhere in Albania…although my local café in West Wickham run be three Albanian chaps is fantastic.

Best hotel stayed in?
Forte Villa Sardinia for Italia 90 : Violinists at breakfast; wine and fruit delivered to the bungalow room in after noon….even a fresh flower everyday in the toilet pan …the complex was so good that the day after the draw with Holland some England players came to join US for a libation.

…and the worst?
Hotel Tirana, Albania (1989) / Britannia Manchester (during early Nineties).

Favourite football writer?
Brian Glanville / Martin Samuel.

Favourite radio/TV commentator?
Brian Moore / Peter Lorenzo.

If you could introduce one change to improve PR between football clubs and football writers what would it be?
Get rid of PR robots and bring back press officers.

One sporting event outside football you would love to experience?
Australia v England Ashes Test tour Down Under.

Last book read?
Currently reading Greavsie (Jimmy Greaves’ autobiography) and Kitchen Confidential (Anthony Bourdain).

Favourite current TV programme?
Call the Midwife (just finished); Upstairs Downstairs.

Your most prized football memorabilia?
West Ham silk scarf with names of the 1975 FA Cup-winning team (the last all-English side to do so): Day, McDowell, T.Taylor, Lock, Lampard, Holland, Bonds, Brooking, Paddon, A. Taylor Jennings. Sub: Gould (I didn’t need to look that up either!).

What advice would you give any would-be football writer?
Go into television.

Rob Shepherd reports matches for the Sunday Times

FWA Interview: Messi El Magnifico

Graham Turner on the player who has made football writers exhaust every superlative

It is one of the more remarkable statistics of the season – a couple of weeks ago Lionel Messi and Pepe were both suspended for one game after collecting five yellow cards.

The Barcelona beauty and the Bernabeu beast – could there be two more contrasting players? Messi, who is doing his best to prove the impossible can be done and Pepe, the snarling face of the Special One’s Real Madrid.

The Argentina international’s indiscretions were two handballs, two dissents and a mis-timed tackle. No need to detail Pepe’s cautions.

UEFA media officer Graham Turner has lived near Barcelona for 37 years. Between 1984 and 1987 he worked closely with Terry Venables as his translator and has seen Messi rise from initial obscurity to world star, a player whose shirt has caused friction between opponents all eager for the prize jersey.

Turner said: “The first time I saw him was in the Joan Gamper tournament pre-season. He’d come through the second team at lightning speed, being promoted beyond his age. We were all waiting to see what he could do and we weren’t disappointed. He made a tremendous impact.”

Football is littered with tales of kids who promise to be world-beaters only to lose their way. Turner said: “There were high hopes for Bojan who is now with Roma. He won underage titles with Spain and broke through to the Barcelona first-team but never pushed on and isn’t playing regularly for Roma, either. He’s a classic example of someone you expected to prosper but couldn’t quite make it.”

There were no such problems with Messi who, at 24, has made it with honours even though he is still three or four years off his peak. Of all his qualities Turner most admires the modesty of a player whose ego is in direct proportion to his breathtaking talent. “He’s very humble which makes him so popular. He’s quiet to the point of being timid. He loves the game with a passion and while some youngsters thrust into the limelight are sidetracked, there was never any chance of that with Messi.

“When he was younger every time he was tackled he hit the deck but he’s added to his physical stature and is now like a rubber ball, he just bounces around. He is obsessed with the ball, you knock him over and he just gets on with it. If you think by knocking him over that’s the end of it you are mistaken. Messi is not one for retaliation which is one of his great virtues. He can even play one-two’s off an opponent’s legs.”

Just as Paul Scholes always preferred to let his football do his talking Messi is uneasy with the inevitable media duties. “He’s not a natural because he’s so shy,” said Turner. “He’s not comfortable in the press spotlight and doesn’t really enjoy it but he’s learning. He has come to terms with the fact when you are such a big name it’s part of the job though he doesn’t have a media image as such. He just wants to do his job, enjoy his football and get back into the dressing-room. “

Messi’s modesty makes him popular with his team-mates who appreciate his team ethic. Turner said: “He gets on with everyone. When he first came into the team Ronaldinho took him under his wing and taught him a lot of things. The others realise how important he is to the team.”

The only criticism of Messi is that unlike Pele and Diego Maradona he has not yet made a big impact at a World Cup. On the other hand Maradona never won a European Cup medal. Turner said: “Comparing players from different eras is difficult. Messi is obviously helped by having wonderful passers of the ball like Xavi, Andres Iniesta and Dani Alves supplying him.

“At UEFA we have regular meeting with Europe’s top coaches and they believe the standard in the Champions League is higher than that of international football, just as the European Championship is better than the World Cup. The Champions League is where you stand up and get counted these days.”

Barcelona, who trail Real by 10 points, are unlikely to retain their Spanish crown but when the sides meet again in another clasico next month Messi will be doing his best to ensure that Barca’s recent domination over the rivals in head-to-heads continues.

Turner believes the current series should be upgraded to superclasico. He said: “They are the two most outstanding clubs in Europe at the moment. In Messi and Ronaldo they have the two best players and goalscorers. It’s quite a good battle to have on your doorstep. The Guardiola v Mourinho clasicos are a different dimension. They have produced games everyone wants to watch though whether we have enjoyed everything that has gone on is another matter. It’s a riveting spectacle, the tension is incredible. If you love football you have to love these types of games.”

FWA: Q&A: Daniel Taylor

Daniel Taylor, chief football writer of the Guardian, on The Hairdryer…scoring for Manchester City…and staying in a brothel  

Your first ever newspaper?
Newark Advertiser. As Jasper Carrott said during his night at the Palace Theatre: ‘The only town in the world that’s an anagram of . . .’

Have you ever worked in a profession other than journalism?
No.

Most memorable match covered?
Getting a visa for Iran v Republic of Ireland was a great trip in 2001. There were 120,000 people in the national stadium in Tehran, a male-only crowd, and it was noisy and sinister. Ireland qualified for the World Cup that night and flying back to Dublin with the team was a long, boozy flight. The pilot actually started tilting the plane at one point to get the players to sit down and stop the party. Put it this way, if it had been a holidaymakers’ flight from Benidorm, there would have been half a dozen police vans waiting on the runway.

The one moment in football you would put on a DVD?
The Hairdryer. Unless you’ve seen it close up, you can’t explain what it’s really like. But no one has ever got Sir Alex Ferguson losing it – properly losing it – on film.

Best stadium?
Barcelona. All the modern new-built stadia tend to look the same these days – big, sweeping, shiny, Ikea-style bowls. Camp Nou’s got soul. Every game there feels like an occasion.

…and the worst?
Maine Road. I liked the stadium, atmosphere etc . . . it was just that midnight walk back to your car, with a laptop bag over your shoulder. A personal count of one carjacking, two smashed passenger windows and several hundred pounds handed over to car ‘minders’ in the years pre-Eastlands.

What was your finest achievement playing football?
I have none. However, in an England-versus-Wales media game at Ninian Park a few years ago I was put through on goal, one on one against a 47-year-old Neville Southall, and for some reason tried to chip him. He plucked it out of the air with a look of utter contempt. I can still remember Gordon Hill, who was on my side, screaming “For f***’s sake, you’ve got to put your foot through that, son.”

Your best ever scoop?
As the man who broke the Bebe to Manchester United story, I’d like to think I have made a lasting contribution to football news. Otherwise, Ronaldo to Real Madrid was a nice one to get, not least because of United’s denials.

Your personal new-tech disaster?
I’ve always somehow managed to get my copy over but Rangers last season, with the wireless dying after five minutes and no phone lines, was as close as it comes. Sitting at my hotel bar at midnight, that was also the night I texted something deeply uncomplimentary about Scottish football, purely because of my wifi gripes, then realised I had tweeted it by accident.

Biggest mistake?
I’d like to think the copytakers were to blame but, freelancing in pre-Guardian days, my match report of a Manchester City game for the Sun began with the words ‘Daniel Taylor scored a last-minute winner . . .’ Clearly, it should have been Gareth Taylor. Though I’d argue that we had a similar first touch.

Have you ever been mistaken for anyone else?
There’s a guy on Twitter who sends me messages sometimes reminiscing about our old days together at school. I haven’t got the heart to tell him he’s mixed me up with someone else. If he’s reading this: sorry.

Most media friendly manager?
Martin O’Neill was great with me when I was covering Leicester City in my first football job but, really, when you hear the older journalists talking about what it used to be like in the 60s and 70s, it’s a very different type of ‘media-friendly’ these days. More like ‘media-tolerant.’

Best ever player?
Maradona.

Best ever teams (club and international)?
The current Barcelona side probably edge it from that great Real Madrid team of Zidane, Ronaldo, Figo, Raul etc. The Brazil side of 1982 was a schoolboy Panini-collector’s dream.

Best pre-match grub?
Manchester City. A Sunday roast, a glass of red wine. Maybe could do with improving the cake selection but can’t complain too much when they also give you a bag of pick ‘n’ mix to take up to the press box. Second place is close between Arsenal and Chelsea.

Worst meal had on your travels?
At least 80 per cent of work meals in this job are delivered in plastic containers from service stations on the hoof. On that basis, I can safely say avoid the prawn sandwiches from Darrington (A1 southbound). Left me with food poisoning for a week after one game at Middlesbrough.

. . . and the best meal?
Slightly different kind of seafood to be had at Lobster, on Santa Monica pier.

Best hotel stayed in?
Forget it’s name, but Baden-Baden for the 2006 World Cup, once you had got used to the nudists in the sauna.

…and the worst?
Gwangju, after South Korea had just knocked Spain out of the 2002 World Cup. The reception had a library of XXX videos. The lighting was ultra-violet throughout. There was a menu on my bed. It was, in short, a brothel.

Favourite football writer?
Tough question. Martin Samuel perhaps? James Lawton is an incredible writer, too, though I could name many others.

Favourite radio/TV commentator?
I don’t really have a favourite. In terms of punditry though, Graeme Souness and Gary Neville show how it should be done – i.e. opinion and insight, often using anecdotal evidence, rather than repeating what you see, Shearer-style.

If you could introduce one change to improve PR between football clubs and football writers what would it be?
1) Be truthful. See the above Ronaldo story. Or, to use one of many other examples, Liverpool’s recent attempts to cover up the Tevez-Carroll swap proposal. All journalists have been through it. Clubs say they want the truth out there but they don’t. They think nothing of being deceitful when it suits them.
2) Clubs should realise that putting up players for proper sit-down interviews can generate great copy and be mutually beneficial.

One sporting event outside football you would love to experience?
A Ryder Cup, in the States, with an away win.

Last book read?
‘Torres: El Niño’ by Luca Caioli

Favourite current TV programme?
Curb Your Enthusiasm

Your most prized football memorabilia?
I collect way too much stuff – programmes and ticket stubs mainly – but the most prized is probably a framed 1979 European Cup winner’s shirt, signed by the match-winner Trevor Francis.

What advice would you give any would-be football writer? Be prepared for lots of people who don’t work in the industry and don’t therefore know the intricacies, mechanics, politics, briefings, relationships etc telling you via Twitter where you’re going wrong.

My Week: Ian Danter

talkSPORT’s IAN DANTER on Ballcrack…being Gary Lineker…and writing songs

Monday March 5
There’ll probably be protests about this before I’ve even typed a full sentence – I can hear it now. ‘Why oh why oh why is a mere broadcast journalist being asked to submit pieces for the Football Writers’ Association? Blokes like him just waffle on about bad refereeing decisions and occasionally stop to tell you what Wickes have on offer in the tungsten tip screw aisle – he doesn’t actually write anything does he? etc etc blah blah…”

OK, so there’s probably not such outrage, actually – these are just the ramblings of a fragile broadcasting ego after all. One who gets absolute dogs abuse on Twitter just for innocently announcing the attendance at a game as though it’s some Machiavellian plot to destabilise a club. But I’m sure we’ve all been there.

Anyway…Mondays are usually the quiet day of the week for me, work-wise, but I was asked by the talkSPORT office to attend the press conference at Birmingham City’s Wast Hills training ground ahead of tomorrow’s Chelsea replay – and an obvious line of questioning to take with Chris Hughton given the AVB heave-ho last night.

John Curtis of PA is always there early at these sorts of things – a man given to breaking into song at almost any moment apropos nothing. My mere mention of the passing of guitarist Ronnie Montrose the previous day sent him into a full on Freddie Mercury impression of all things. Utterly bonkers.

Chris Hughton is always friendly, approachable and affable – an interviewer’s delight in most respects. You’re never going to get a Di Canio-esque meltdown or a Warnock-esque moanfest off him (or Freddie Mercury for that matter) – just the facts typically. So it’s not really a journalistic ‘challenge’ in that way. He made his displeasure known at the AVB P45, but not in such a way that you’d call it provocative or edgy – simply level-headed and uncomplicated…you sense his players get exactly that too, and thrive on it.

Mick McCarthy was always a challenge – in a good way. He seemed more playful in a post-match situation when they’d lost rather than won or drawn. I’ll really miss his pressers. Not as much as Wolves will miss his drive and authority in these next few weeks. That was a clanger of Oliver Postgate proportions from Steve Morgan in my opinion. (one for the over 40’s there)

Tuesday March 6
An early start to trek into Birmingham City Centre to collect some audio leads I need to record a voiceover piece back at my little home studio. It’s for use on a YouTube topical football comedy skit called “Ballcrack” (delightful) which is made for a well-known Irish bookmaking firm that pays out on title winners before the clocks go back. Yes, them.

It’s a chance for me to indulge in a few silly impressions of some of soccer’s luminaries, which I’ve done with varying degrees of success over the years to the delight of most I’ve encountered in the press box. My Trevor Francis and Graham Taylor have come in for special praise, and I’ve even made a David O’Leary voice raise a smile – there’s a rarity.

Job suitably done to a script written for me rather than by me – see, I still haven’t written anything yet, my dear writers – I then head off to a local school at the behest of my father-in-law (who teaches there) to give a talk to some vaguely interested 6th form pupils about the machinations of radio station marketing and promotion to our mostly male audience on talkSPORT. No one falls asleep, picks their nose or resorts to wearily asking who my favourite player is. Boom.

Not long after leaving the school (without having my head shoved down a toilet bowl, as was usually the case 30 years ago), I’m asked to come on the talkSPORT Hawksbee & Jacobs show to preview the B’ham/Chelsea Cup replay – Paul Hawksbee is a fine presenter and an incredibly sharp wit, so it’s always a delight to contribute to his shows. He delights in me telling him that our East Mids reporter Geoff Peters was approached at Stoke last weekend and asked for an autograph by a fan believing him to be Alvin Martin – a schoolboy error, as Geoff doesn’t possess that ‘regular trip to Spain’ tan that Alvin does.

The press room at St Andrew’s is packed to the rafters a few hours later as the somewhat low budget catering serves up an admittedly decent-looking Chicken Sagwalla curry with rice and naan. I listen out intently for somebody to snort the ‘you get more than this at the Bridge’ mantra… which doesn’t materialise. Hot food at Birmingham City is a relatively modern phenomenon for the media – and up until the season before last, such hot dishes as Cottage Pie were served up onto the flimsiest paper plates. The press room chairs have a small retractable table attached to the arm, but these sit at a sight angle to the horizontal, making eating such offerings a bit of a struggle. Especially when gravy is involved. It’s a balancing act up there with keeping a Malteser on a slab of marble.

The big hitters from the nationals are there for the AVB/RDM/KGB angle of Nouveau Chelsea, and the London Blues look a tad nervous in the first 45, only for a quick 2-goal salvo just prior to the hour to see them past Championship Birmingham and into the FA Cup’s last 8. Fernando Torres wins a penalty not long after the 2nd goal, and the Chelsea fans at the Gil Merrick End scream for him to take the resulting kick – only for the 20,000 Bluenoses in the other 3 stands to scream even louder in agreement. “We Want Torres!” the Bluenoses cry. He resists, Mata duly takes the responsibility…and misses.

Other chant of the night from the CFC faithful “He sacks when he wants, he sacks when he waaaaaaants, Roman Abramovic, he sacks when he wants”

I speak to RDM afterwards who admits he’s already ‘very tired’ after the events of the last 48 hours, but insists he’s focused on 4th place as a priority, while defeated Chris Hughton says that a new 13-game season “effectively starts now” as Birmingham refocus on their Championship run-in. It’s easy for me to say it and sound biased, but Hughton is Manager of the Year for me – 47 players in & out of the club last summer and he is challenging at the right end of the table having barely spent a brass farthing. He deserves far more credit than he’s getting.

Another call from talkSPORT as I head wearily home after 11pm via Tesco. The overnight show wants to pre-record an interview with my post-match thoughts, which again I’m happy to do. The station is heading inexorably for round the clock sports content in its programming and the listening figures bear that philosophy out since the 10pm-1am slot was changed from current affairs to sport.

Tesco is blissfully quiet at stupid o’clock.

Oh, and Alan Green was quite nice to me earlier on. There, I said it.

Wednesday March 7
I’m pretending to be Gary Lineker this morning. No, I’m not hamming it up over a pack of Smoky Bacon and nor am I spectacularly dissing Piers Morgan in less than 140 characters. Instead I’m voicing a corporate presentation as him for a DHL logistics division that have written a script likening their staff to a football team, with formations and everything.

I give it my best shot (as Gary did) and send off the audio. These sorts of job are very sporadic and not to be relied upon as a regular source of income. I could be writing about next week instead of this and make no mention of voiceover work. It really is that changeable.

Away from football, I read with interest that the Live Music Bill will be given Royal Ascent and be on the statute books by the Autumn – it’s a Bill which effectively allows small pubs clubs and community centres to put on live music without the need for a Local Authority licence, and also means fewer restrictions on amplified music in pubs. The pub/club trade needs this and gigging musicians need this too. As a passionate muso of moderate ability, I’m so happy that you will soon have more musical options on a Saturday night rather than letting X Factor or Strictly rot your very inner core from within.

Watching Messi with his legs a positive blur once again as Leverkusen play the part of the hapless Belgians from It’s A Knockout. Lionel must be the only man who can eat a Fruit Pastille without chewing it. He is quite simply not of this earth.

I’ve gone all Alan Partridge and booked a Travelodge for Sat night that is equidistant between London & Norwich – looking forward to dismantling my Corby trouser press and encountering racist kitchen sellers. Perhaps.

Thursday March 8
A day off from football to all intents and purposes – I usually help my wife run her Thursday afternoon Mother and Toddler playgroup at the local church hall, where the decibel level regularly gives Lemmy and the boys a severe run for their money.

That tinnitus-inducing session is swiftly followed by my step-daughter Lily (aged 6) heading for ballet lessons after school, then her twin brother Archie needs to be at his Tae Kwon Do lesson around the same time as she starts Girls Brigade. Mental.

Once they’re both shepherded back home and take an eternity to go to bed, I relent and watch Bilbao surprise Manchester United, but surprise me not one jot. Bielsa’s 3-3-1-3 formation with Chile at the World Cup was a clear sign of his willingness to rip up the tactical rule book, and how he went for the jugular and exposed United time and again.

As long as punters (and some pundits) continue to stick their heads in the sand and dismiss any possible notion that the game is developing on the continent and overseas (a trait that has endured since we invented the game, as detailed in Jonathan Wilson’s excellent “Inverting The Pyramid” book) we shall continue to look inhibited and one dimensional in our club football by contrast. Always 2 steps behind.

And don’t blame the Europa League format – the mechanic of a tournament is a total irrelevance. The apparent disinterest in how the game develops around us is the problem. It was ever thus.

Friday March 9
Ok, so I may not be a football writer in the exact sense, but I am a songwriter. Music is my other enormous passion alongside football and has been since a very early age courtesy of my dear old Dad who was an amazing piano player and a massive inspiration for me to learn an instrument. It was his and Mum’s tough luck that I settled on the drums at the age of 10.

To that end, I’m recording an album of my own original compositions at the moment, and today was a day to get loads done at Arkham Studios in Brum City Centre.

Before my entry into the media bubble back in the late 90’s, I had many a delusion of grandeur about being a rock star. You can thank KISS for that particular fruitless quest. However over the years of perpetual struggle while working in a music shop, along with occasional character-building gigs in front of 2 men a dog and a can of beans (the can got in free) I have become quite proficient on guitar, bass and keyboards as well as my first love, of course – drums.

And currently, I’m about half way through the recording process – I put down 15 drum tracks inside 2 days initially and the bass guitar followed suit in the next 2 sessions. As for today the vast majority of the guitars were completed, and I can now start to think about getting a good friend in to sing lead vocals. I’d sing them myself, but I’d like it to sell ideally.

I wonder if any football writers would do a quirky piece when the time comes about a sports radio presenter who’s releasing a rock album? Hmmm…

The evening was spent at St Andrew’s for a very special occasion – a dinner to induct more players into the Birmingham City Hall Of Fame, as organised by Dean Holtham and the Former Players Association.

It’s easy to deride a club that barely wins anything to have Hall Of Fame evenings for players who collected no medals whilst wearing the Royal Blue and White. But when big Roger Hynd, a 6’3” giant of a centre half from the 70’s found out that he had been inducted, he could barely give a speech, so overcome with emotion at what had been bestowed upon him by his peers from the club he loved. The man had been on the operating table 2 days ago, could only walk with a stick and wasn’t going to come at all, until Jimmy Calderwood stepped in to drive him all the way down from Scotland to be part of the night. He’ll treasure the fact that he made it, as we all did.

Robert Hopkins, another who wore his heart on his sleeve as a winger/striker in the 80’s was similarly choked as he collected his plaque. Now there’s 2 players whose names are not writ large in the pantheon of Association Football, but nevertheless 2 men whose love for their club is so apparent, so unconditional, that a simple award or induction can bring them to tears. This sort of outpouring of unity and recognition won’t just happen at Birmingham City dinners, but at dozens of similarly under-achieving clubs who still rightly cling to those stars who gave them joy and hope if not a trophy.

It was a privilege to be there.

Line of the night came from Jasper Carrott who was there to present the awards to the inductees, who also included Kevan Broadhurst, Malcolm Page, Joe Gallagher, Alex Govan & Garry Pendrey. Jasper simply said as he began his speech “Oh, er Alex McLeish sends his apologies (boos and hisses from crowd)…yes he’s in hospital apparently – he’s got a bad side! (HUGE cheer and uproarious laughter).”

Saturday March 10
My 18-hour day of the week, typically.

More often than not, due to the need to be at talkSPORT Towers to host my evening show every Saturday, I’m usually given the early kick-off to report on first, provided it’s geographically friendly to the studios in Southwark. Today, it’s my 1st visit of the season to the Ricoh to watch Coventry & Birmingham battle out a fairly dour 1-1 draw.

I’m there in good time to be first in the press room breakfast queue with my old boss Tom Ross from BRMB Sport, the man who gave me my big break in radio back in 1997, and is never going to let me forget it. Ever :o)

I’m accused of many things as a Birmingham fan who gets to report on his team ‘on many occasions’ as Trevor Francis would put it. On one hand I’m lambasted for supposedly being soft on bad Blues performances or conversely heaping praise where it isn’t justified. I leaned pretty early on that you can’t win by trying to pander to those who seek to attack your every word and aren’t happy unless they’re miserable. And I’ve always called the games as I see them anyway, so nothing has changed in my approach.

It is possible to be fair and even handed when delivering your reports on air to Adrian on days like this – that is not to say that you don’t let a ‘fucking hell’ go out under your breath when Gary McSheffrey (for example) scores a goal against your boys before you’re on air. That’s called being a football fan – but it doesn’t mean that you can’t see the goal from a Coventry fan’s perspective (Baker’s neat run & cross; McSheffrey’s accurately placed looping header) as well as a Birmingham one (not enough pressure on the cross; possession squandered all to easily in own half) and a neutral one that the listeners also need to hear (goal against general run of play; game needed a goal as there’d been only 1 shot on target before that 70th minute moment)

No time to collate post match audio as the M6/M1 is calling to take me down to talkSPORT to start my prep work for a 9pm start on air. I don’t have a huge production team behind me to produce 3 hours of live radio, but what I lack in quantity I more than make up for in quality. Dan, my talkSPORT producer is as enthusiastic as he is diligent and structures the show with a fine toothcomb so that all debating points on the day’s games are covered in depth. Izzy, the assistant producer, puts together a comprehensive stat pack of results/form/tables/lineups for both myself and my co-host (in this case the wonderful Alvin Martin) as well as booking guests to come on the phone for a natter. I wouldn’t change them for the world.

I also have a top roster of co-hosts that we’ve used since the Football First show moved from its former home on Sunday evenings – Alvin tonight, but it could just as easily be Ray Houghton, Marc Bircham, Stewart Robson, Nicky Summerbee, Jason Euell…Alvin, though, was my first talkSPORT radio ‘wife’ as it were and he’s still consistently erudite and honest with his opinions without ever straying into safe platitudes or clichés. He leaves that sort of bollocks to me.

Most Barclays Premier League managers are in no way interested in talking on air at 9 on a Saturday night, but Championship, L1 & L2 bosses (and players) are usually very forthcoming – Dave Jones joins us to discuss how Sheffield Weds feels “a lot like Villa” in terms of its setup and aura and Gary Johnson makes the point that the phrase ‘never go back’ hasn’t bothered him one bit at Yeovil.

The show is my baby and I’m very protective of its structure and role within the station’s output. You’re always asking yourself afterwards if you could have done it any better, and that for me has to be healthy, as you know you’ll be striving for perfection every time. I was taught very early on in my radio career that the 2 worst words you can use (aside from the obvious) are ‘err’ and ‘umm’ – you listen out for how many radio presenters in speech and music formats say ‘em – it’s frightening.

To be fair, the show is that much fun, it usually flies by and before I know it, the M11 becomes my route to head for my Partridge-esque accommodation for the night – there’s no trouser press, no unintelligible Geordie maintenance staff and no sign of Driving Miss Daisy (or Bangkok Chick Boys) on my television. There is however on small soap tablet which may or may not be able to withstand one aggressive all-over body scrub. Watch this space. Sleep.

Sunday March 11
Well the soap survived the vigorous attack I gave it (no more details required surely) but the Little Chef next door wasn’t taken in by my big plate scam. Oh well.

Drive to Norwich with Thetford Forest bathed in the most glorious spring sunshine – feels like end-of-season weather, really. Whether it’s end of season for Wigan at the bottom of the table will become more apparent by 6pm tonight.

As it turns out Wigan’s woes are shown up in the ensuing 90 minutes – wasteful from great positions all too often. Norwich ‘keeper John Ruddy wins the Man of the Match award but to me he wasn’t tested to his fullest extent, although Shaun Maloney, a forgotten man from his Aston Villa & Celtic days, makes a very telling cameo appearance from the bench to set up Wigan’s equaliser.

Martin Tyler makes a point of coming over to say hello after full time as reporters gather by the tunnel to interview the managers. He always seems so at ease with things and I should imagine a night out in his company would be gently riotous entertainment for his ‘on the road’ stories alone – the fact that he has the time to acknowledge someone who isn’t fit to touch the hem of his garment is quite humbling.

And so to the drive back home – I’d forgotten how interminably dull the A47 was – my in car DAB system steadfastly refuses to work and my enjoyment of talkSPORT’s rugby show is thus severely hampered by medium wave wow and flutter. Still, upon checking Twitter as I finally arrive back in Solihull 3 ½ hours later, I see Iwan Roberts mentioning that we’d met up at Carrow Road and that I ‘always talk sense’

Bless him. Just looking back over these 3000-odd words, though, I think ‘always waffle sense’ might be more appropriate. But then I’m fragile like that.

My Week: Sergei Kerzhakov

The FWA continues its world tour…from the sunshine of Buenos Aires last week we travel to shivering Moscow

Sergei Kerzhakov, a Moscow-based freelance football writer, on how to draw 1-1 yet lose 3-0…how Muscovites deal with bad weather…and an anonymous Arshavin

MONDAY FEBRUARY 27
After Roman Pavlyuchenko, Andrei Arshavin became the second North Londoner to return home. While Pavlyuchenko signed for Lokomotiv Moscow from Spurs for £8 million, Arshavin is on loan to his first club, Zenit St Petersburg, until the end of the season though the Russian champions are paying a fee of £1 million and the player’s wages. That should help Arsenal’s finances even more.

Arshavin may find himself in familiar territory – the subs’ bench. Zenit coach Luciano Spalletti has made it clear Arshavin, captain when he was there before his move to Arsenal, is not guaranteed a place but the injury to Portuguese playmaker Danny will help his chances. Spalletti’s tactics are “one for all, all for one” where the whole team attacks and the whole team defends. The latter has not always been Arshavin’s strength but this is a deal that benefits all parties though Arsenal fans will have to find someone else to boo. Sorry Theo.

In Russia we have a league of two halves. The league traditionally went from March to November. This will be altered ahead of the 2012/13 season, with the league running autumn to spring. The transitional season of the competition began in early 2011 and will continue until the summer of 2012. After the 16 Premier League teams had played each other twice over the course of 2011, they were split into two groups of eight (Chris Samba’s new club, Anzi Makhachkala just sneaked in the top eight, no doubt a major consideration in his move) and the teams will play other teams in their groups two more times for a total of 44 games. The two groups will be contested in the coming months, with the top eight clubs playing for the title and European places.

There is more but I’ll stop there. I think Einstein may be needed to work it all out.

TUESDAY FEBRUARY 28
Tomorrow Russia play Denmark in Copenhagen, so another popular player in England, Niklas Bendtner, will be opposing Arshavin. In fact, Bendtner left a note for his former Arsenal team-mate in his hotel – “Hey mate, look forward to see you.” It was printed in some Russian newspapers, maybe a slow news day.

It is a meeting of two of Europe’s in-form sides. Denmark have seven wins and two draws in their last nine games, Russia are also unbeaten in nine with five wins and four draws. The friendly comes at what is effectively the end of our pre-season. Anoraks will be delighted to know this is the first meeting of the two countries, the last time they played 20 years ago we were the CIS.

The pitch, or lawn as it is literally translated from Russian, at the Parkstadion is changed three times a year because of pop concerts and motorcycle events.

While England have, in Joe Hart, as good a goalkeeper in the world as any country, Dick Advocaat’s top two keepers, Vyacheslav Malafeev and Igor Akinfeev, are injured. Anzi’s Vladimir Gabulov is likely to play against Denmark. Thomas Sorensen of Stoke wins his 100th cap; Euro 2012 will be his fifth major finals with the Danes.

WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 29

It is minus four degrees here today and while an inch of snow can paralyse England, in Moscow life goes on as usual in far more adverse conditions. From the early hours of the morning an army of snegoborochnaya mashina – snowploughs – start to clear the roads and pavements. Around 55,000 city council workers can be on snow-duty, not using hi-tech equipment, just spades and brushes.

The secret is: we prepare. Okay, we know every winter will be harsh, that from November to March it will be cold. Very cold. There may be many aspects of life where England leads the way but when it comes to the weather we are streets – perhaps literally – ahead.

Most Muscovites do not have to worry about heavy central heating bills, the local council pays them. They control the radiators which are on 24/7 so while it may be cold outside, indoors can be like saunas.

I watched the match from Copenhagen with some friends and Russia were impressive in winning 2-0 in the Parkenstadion where the roof was closed. Arshavin scored the second goal, his first for the national team in two and a half years though Sorensen should have saved it.

The result and display pleased captain Arshavin who said: “I think the fans and experts will be happy with the team’s movement and pressing. In general, a win over such an educated team, a participant of European finals, is prestigious.”

Russians are certainly in a better mood football-wise than the English tonight.

THURSDAY MARCH 1
Yuri Zhirkov, the former Chelsea player who is now with Anzi, has been in court. His former agent Victor Halapurdin claims he is owed more than £2 million by Zhirkov from his transfer to Chelsea from CSKA in 2009. This is interesting. Clubs, for reasons few can understand, normally pay the agent’s fee, in this case 11 per cent of the transfer fee which is a nice way to earn a lot of money. Quite why Halapurdin would [allegedly] be owed money by Zhirkov for the move I have no idea, maybe we shall find out in time.

FRIDAY MARCH 2
In their preview to the new season which starts tomorrow the Moscow Times said that “Anzhi Makhachkala, last year’s biggest spender among Russian football squads, didn’t make any top-level acquisitions during the recent transfer campaign, apart from hiring coach Guus Hiddink.” That would have gone down well with Chris Samba who cost the Dagestani club £10 million.

Another former UK-based player, ex-Arsenal midfielder Alexander Hleb joined Krylya while Everton midfielder Diniyar Bilyaletdinov signed for Spartak Moscow.

Champions Zenit and runners-up CSKA, who meet in Moscow, are again expected to be the main contenders in the new-look league set-up. Last year the teams drew 1-1 but the Russian Football Federation awarded Zenit a technical 3-0 defeat. Zenit coach Spaletti had not included a home-bred player – a Russian citizen – aged under 21. It was not the first time Zenit had broken the rules. They had previously escaped a 3-0 technical defeat after fielding one foreign player too many during a game against Lokomotiv. However, on this occasion it was deemed the referee was at fault. Refs are blamed for many things but…

SATURDAY MARCH 3
Andrey Arshavin’s first game for Zenit on loan against CSKA lasted 55 anonymous minutes. CSKA goalkeeper Sergei Revyakin will certainly not forget his debut. He was beaten by Alexander Kerzhakov after only 18 seconds with Kerzhakov scoring again with a second-half volley before CSKA hit back to draw 2-2. Revyakin was thrown in the deep end because CSKA’s two senior goalkeepers were unavailable. He won praise for an outstanding display, not bad for a 16-year-old. Yes, 16. The result left Zenit six points ahead of CSKA in what amounts to a double-season.

Roman Pavlyuchenko lasted a little longer than Arshavin as Lokomotiv beat Kuban 2-0 – 62 minutes but it was a mostly invisible return to the Russian Premier League.

SUNDAY MARCH 4
To the surprise of nobody, Roman Abramovich has sacked another Chelsea manager. People in England know little about Abramovich because of his public silence and it is the same here. We have been following his court case with Boris Berezovsky with interest but best not to say what the public perception of the Chelsea owner is, which may give you a clue.

Book Reviews

By CHRISTOPHER DAVIES

The Football Writers’ Association Books Panel are in the processing of finalising their short list of football books of the year for 2011. While reading some outstanding books published last year is hugely enjoyable, it is fair to assume there will be heated debate when it comes to selecting the top six. The standard, as always, is high.

There are books you would probably overlook in normal circumstances but which can prove to be hidden gems. From 2010 there was Scouting For Moyes by Les Padfield, a hilarious account of his days as a scout. Any book with the line: “One of the advantages of being female is that there is less chance of dropping your mobile phone down the lavatory” can’t be all bad.

Padfield was once sent to rule the rule over an Egyptian player called Mohamed only to discover seven players of that name were playing. Having written up his reports on Team Mohamed he was told sorry, it wasn’t Mohamed it was Ahmed. Thankfully there were only five Ahmeds in the squad.

Books by Barclays Premier League superstars will inevitably sell well though reading a book about a player whose name rings only the faintest of bells can prove to be more entertaining than a big hitter’s. A case in point is The Smell Of Football by Mick Rathbone, a self-confessed no-nonsense defender with Birmingham City, Blackburn Rovers, Preston North End and Halifax Town between 1975 and 1995.

Football writers are aware that the one thing that is guaranteed to bring retribution from a player is the match ratings. Rathbone became paranoid, and that’s putting it mildly, at the ratings in the Sunday People. “There was a table,” he writes. “It described what each mark meant. Ten was ‘out of this world,’ and five, the lowest mark, meant ‘poor performance.’

“During that time [with Birmingham] I must have held the record for consecutive fives. What I wouldn’t have given for a six. There was no escaping the stigma of a five. It meant even people who never went to the game knew you were ****.

“I used to lie awake the night following a match waiting for the newspaper to arrive – the footsteps on the gravel, the bark of the dog and the thump of the letterbox. Please be a six. Just this once. I did two good passes.

“I would nervously pick up the newspaper and flick through the sports pages until I found our report and sure enough, week-in, week-out it was, as expected ‘Rathbone: 5’. At least once I had got my five I could go to bed and try to get a few hours’ sleep.

“Once I got up at about 3am and drove to New Street Station to meet the early morning train up from London. I purchased the paper from the railway platform and flicked through the pages in the murky pre-dawn light and there it was – 5.

“For a short period I stopped buying the paper. Simple enough? Afraid not. Some ******* would always still go out of his way to let me know I got a five.”

Probably the most different book I’ve read recently is Got, Not Got by Derek Hammond and Gary Silke. It is an exhaustively researched collection of football programmes, stickers, badges and memorabilia, a coffee table book you can dip in and out of at any time. Some of the advertisements from old programmes are classics – “Bovril – hot favourite for the cup!” Or culinary advice to players: “Full English – eat up your fried bread now, it’s full of energy.” Eat your heart out Arsene Wenger.

32 Programmes by Dave Roberts is a book all football fans can relate to. He had collected 1,134 match-day programmes in 44 years but when he and his wife decided to move to the United States she said – well, ordered – that only 32 could be taken. How Roberts went about selecting the 32 that would fit into a Tupperware container is fascinating and heart-warming.

Two of Fleet Street’s finest, Joe Lovejoy and Ian Ridley, have written comprehensive bookson the first 20 years of the Premier League. Lovejoy’s contains some in-depth interviews with Rick Parry, Teddy Sheringham and Ryan Giggs while Ridley goes behind the scenes of clubs like Blackpool and Portsmouth. His chapter Pompey Chimes is topical and explains the reasons begin the famous club’s present problems.

Paul Merson’s autobiography, How Not To Be A Professional Footballer, is a brutally honest account of his life and career. Of his addictions cocaine and gambling were the worst and most expensive and while there are moments of hilarity Merson does not seek to glamorise his excesses. It is amazing that he managed to play through his habits before finally seeing Arsenal managing director Ken Friar.

“I’m struggling here,” Merson told him. “I need help. I owe thousands and thousands of pounds in gambling debts. I’m in serious trouble.” There was more: “I’m also addicted to drugs. Cocaine.”

Now a regular member of Sky Sports’ Soccer Saturday team, Merson has put his devils behind him though reading his confessions it was a close call whether he would survive.

Paul Lake’s I’m Not Really Here tells of how he recovered from severe depression caused by enforced retirement, the death of his father and the breakdown of his marriage. Now an Ambassador for Manchester City in the Community, Lake’s story is beautifully written and takes us behind the good, bad and ugly of what professional football occasionally has to offer.

Ronald Reng’s biography of Robert Enke, A Life Too Short, is powerful and painful reading. Enke, the Germany goalkeeper, took his life two years ago and Reng details his friend’s downfall and his ultimately losing battle against the demons of depression.

The Smell Of Football by Mick Rathbone (Vision Sports Publishing); Got, Not Got by Derek Hammon and Gary Silke (Pitch Publishing); 32 Programmes by Dave Roberts (Bantam
Books); Glory, Goals & Gr££d by Joe Lovejoy (Mainstream Publishing); There’s A Golden Sky – Ian Ridley (Bloomsbury); How Not To Be A Professional Footballer by Paul Merson
(HarperSport); I’m Not Really Here by Paul Lake (Century); A Life Too Short by Robert Reng (Yellow Jersey Press); Scouting For Moyes by Les Padfield (SportsBooks Ltd).

FWA Q&A: Brian Scovell

Former Daily Mail sports writer BRIAN SCOVELL on the Wembley bung bag…being sick at Brighton…and mistaken for Bobby Charlton

Your first ever newspaper?
The defunct Isle of Wight Mercury. My mother wanted me to be a banker – ugh! – but when I spent two years in hospitals after a German bombing raid I read the work of Tom Phillips, the chief sports writer of the Daily Herald, and I vowed I would be another Phillips. I started writing pieces about matches broadcast from a portable radio in the childrens’ ward and when I returned home, I was a regular at Ventnor FC and wrote reports. My mother found one and took it to the editor and said: “My son is a better football writer than your man.” I’d just had a letter published the week before on dogs fouling pavements which upset a lot of angry dog owners but impressed Roy Wearing, the editor. He signed me up and paid me 40p for every report on the second team. I was 14.

Have you ever worked in a profession other than journalism?

I had to leave school at 15 and despite my football cuttings, there was no opening in the four newspapers in the IOW so I spent two years in the Licence Department of the IOW Council. It worked to my advantage because I had to shout out the names of those who were collecting their road fund licences and talk things through with them and it cured my early shyness.

What was your finest achievement playing football?
Actually getting out there to play with a right leg that only bent by five degrees. I ran the Daily Sketch and Daily Mail teams for almost 30 years and I played my farewell game against the Arsenal staff at Highbury on my 50th birthday (I was then a goalkeeper). We lost 6-2. But the highlight was when Bert Head, who managed Crystal Palace at the time, said “if you had two good legs you could been a pro” after he saw me scoring a hat trick in 12 minutes in a game at the National Recreation Centre. I think he was joking.

Most memorable match covered?
So many but England 4,West Germany 2 at Wembley in 1966 has so many happy memories for me. The Sketch signed Billy Liddell to put his name to a column – to everyone’s astonishment but Bob Findlay, the sports editor, was a fellow Scot – and they gave him two tickets in the main stand. Billy didn’t want the other ticket so my wife Audrey took it and we’d just had our honeymoon on an air cruise around the Greek islands. She was my inspiration and still is after she died from cancer on Christmas Day 2000.

The one moment in football you would put on a DVD?
Again, thousands but this one could have been the tackle by Vinnie Jones to end the career of Gary Stevens at White Hart Lane. Because the press box is so ridiculously low few of us saw it but it should be shown at every FA disciplinary meeting to highlight how not to tackle. I still see players diving in like human missiles, both feet up and screaming “I got the ball.” They should get a brain.

Best stadium?
I’ve been lucky to be able to help a lot of clubs about press facilities on behalf of the FWA and last month I visited The Emirates for the first time. So it’s my number one. I had to sit in the front row and hardly saw any of the play in that astonishing 5-2 demolition of Spurs. Some nasty people kept standing up and shouting abuse and the clubs, the PFA, the FA and others all need to bring in regulations to curb this abhorrence. Take their season tickets away after the first warning.

…and the worst?

In terms of watching a game, it was Carrick Rangers v Southampton in a ECWC Cup tie in 1976. We were shown to a small boxlike room suspended above a corner flag facing the sun and an official said: “This is the press box.” I said: “But you can’t see anything. We’ll be blinded by the sun.” He said: “That’s the idea. The team are so bad we don’t want to see them being thrashed.”


Your ever best scoop?

It was England v Cameroon in 1991 at Wembley. The Cameron players were still fuming about not being been paid in the 1990 World Cup and I was told that the game wouldn’t go ahead until their match fees of £2,000 a man were paid, in cash, on arrival at Wembley. The banks were closed and the FA had to ask a Thomas Cook manager to cash a cheque which he did. David Barber, the FA archivist, took the bung bag to Wembley with a police escort and the Cameroon coach left at 6 pm, well behind schedule. It arrived only 45 minutes from the kick-off. My deep throat filled me in with all the details and the rest of the newspapers were left stranded. Next morning, the players flew off at 7.45am and it was impossible to interview any of them. It was the closest to a Wembley match being called off for not providing bungs. The moral is to have a reporter following the visiting team. You can get better stories from the opposition than England.


Your personal new-tech disaster?

Luckily I retired from the Daily Mail when new-tech took over but my greatest cock-up concerned an AC Milan v Spurs match at San Siro. The noise was so deafening that every time I phoned over ad libbed pieces, I couldn’t hear the copy telephonist at the other end so I ploughed on. Near the end I managed to get through to someone on the Mail sports desk and he said: “Your copy has gone to the wrong newspaper. The Express have just passed it on to us.”

Biggest mistake?
I was down for a Brighton match on a freezing day at Withdean and on the morning I felt groggy. I should have stayed in bed but I staggered up to the open air press box and just before the start, I suddenly vomited all over Tony Millard, the radio commentator and his mate sitting below. It was acutely embarrassing but very funny. The St. John’s Ambulance helped me down to the side of the pitch and took me to the portakabin behind the goal, masquerading as a treatment room. By this time the game was in progress and as I lay on a treatment table, I heard lots of gasps: Charlie Oatway, the Brighton captain, had broken a leg. The medics left me and spent the next 20 minutes treating Charlie behind the curtain. A doctor arrived to speak to me and I said: “I don’t think I’ll be sick again.” As I said it, I threw up again, just missing him. “You’ve had a viral infection,” he said. At least I came off better than poor Charlie.

Have you ever been mistaken for anyone else?
On an England trip in Budapest a flunkey held the door open and said: “Good afternoon Bobby.” He meant Bobby Charlton. We both had a Ralph Coates hair style at the time.

Most media friendly manager?
They start from Walter Winterbottom right up Harry Redknapp but it would be very unfair to pick out one.

Best ever player?
The Best – George Best.

Best ever teams (club and international)?
The Spurs side under Bill Nicholson in the early Sixties. And Brazil when Pele was king.

Best pre-match grub?
Norwich. I love Delia’s concoctions.

Best meal had on your travels?
It was on a barge in Besancon in France on the day Eric Cantona played against an England U21 side. The bill was £50 a head and that was a long time ago. As one of the very few teetotallers I think I might have subsidised some of the others.

Best hotel stayed in?
The Oberoi in Mumbai.

…and the worst?
A toss up between one in Magdeburg and one in Tbilisi, the names of which I erased on the spot.

Favourite football writer?
David Lacey of The Guardian.

Favourite radio/TV commentator
Bryon Butler

If you could introduce one change to improve PR between football clubs and football writers what would it be?
I put an idea to the Football League called Operation Goodwill some years ago which wouldn’t have cost any money. If they welcomed us in the proper manner they would find us more sympathetic to their needs. I said they should say each day “what story are we giving to the press today?” – not keep stories out. It would require being honest and I’m afraid that is a rare commodity in our game. Chairmen who should face media questions hide away. Some of them don’t even live here. The Football League didn’t even reply yet most of their clubs are almost bust.

One sporting event outside football you would love to experience?
Luckily I’ve been at many of the most eventful cricket matches in the past 50 years and I’ve had a terrific double life. I’m probably the only person who has reported both major sports.

Last book read?
I’m trying to read six books at the same time. I’m on the FWA Books Panel and we select the Best Football Book in the Sports Books Awards. But a book I have re-read to freshen up my anecdotes (like in this piece) is “Thank You Hermann Goering – The Life of a Sports Writer” which I can recommend. If Hermann hadn’t ordered that Luftwaffe raid in 1944 I would have worked in a bank, picking up huge bonuses.

Favourite current TV programme?
Question Time.

Your most prized football memorabilia?
A framed picture of Audrey and Bill Nicholson holding the UEFA Cup.For

What advice would you give any would-be football writer?
I speak at a lot of universities and I say to the students – most of whom don’t seem to read newspapers – be determined, be enthusiastic, be cheeky, cancel your Facebook, give up Twitter and get out to meet people who will help their careers. Look outwards, not inwards. And give up the booze. It’s a rough, tough world out there and they need to make every sacrifice to make the grade. Not many will succeed.

Thank You Hermann Goering – The Life of a Sports Writer is written by Brian Scovell (Amberley Publishing). Brian is a former chairman of the FWA and is a member of the national committee.