FWA Q&A: Tony Banks

TONY BANKS of the Daily Express on mixing up the Laudrups…upsetting Harry of Romford Market…and drinking with Scottish oilmen in Qatar…

Your first ever job in journalism?
I worked on the Informer group of free newspapers in Surrey/Middlesex area. Started off doing match reports for nowt for them on Kingstonian in the Isthmian League. Wouldn’ t recommend working for nothing though.

Have you ever worked in a profession other than journalism?
Worked in a factory making pieces for petrol pumps, then one packing medicines for Unichem for delivery to chemists. Brilliant moment when we arrived for work and factory had burned down, someone had tried to go through the roof with an acetylene cutter to get to the secure hard drugs section. Marvellous.

Most memorable match?
1991 FA Cup semi-final Spurs v Arsenal.

The one moment in football you would put on a DVD?
Obviously, one of my goals for the infamous Kew Barges. There were only two so it wouldn’t be a long clip.

Best stadium?
Probably Craven Cottage – or rather the walk to it through Bishops Park on a sunny day after a pint or two in the Bricklayers.

…and the worst?
Really not a fan of San Siro. Cold and austere – and the wi-fi is a nightmare. And Selhurst Park. Always a traffic jam, always windy.

Your personal new-tech disaster?
At Millwall. They had just knocked Southampton out of the cup in a midweek replay. Rewrite written just on deadline. Push button, piece disappears. Can’t find it anywhere – do it again over phone off top of head, stream of consciousness. That original piece is out there still somewhere. If you find it, send it home please. You’ll know it – lumpy, dull intro.

Biggest mistake?
Blimey. Calling Brian Laudrup “Michael” in a press conference. Tons of them. Called Anna Kournikova “Steffi”. Bit frosty after that. Did a line once that while Arsene Wenger shops in Armani, Harry Redknapp (then Pompey) has to make do with Romford Market. He didn’t think that was funny.

Have you ever been mistaken for anyone else?
Albert Steptoe. By my mum.

Most media friendly manager?
Can’t really look past Harry – mind you, he can look past me. But a big fan of Alan Smith (ex-Palace).

Best ever player?
Lionel Messi.

Best ever teams (club and international)?
Brazil 1970 – though never actually saw them live. Barcelona 2009/10.

Best pre-match grub?
Arsenal is very good but Chelsea (got to keep in with Theresa) is top notch now. And sweets!

Best meal had on your travels?
Some lovely cookies in Amsterdam. They were nice.

…and the worst?
Moldova. With Spurs. Uefa Cup. Pre-match banquet. Had the ice-cream. Don’t ask. Some of us still scarred by the experience.

Best hotel stayed in?
Can’t remember the name but it was in Qatar. Amazing. But no bar – only place you could get a drink was in a room on 34th floor. Full of Scottish oilmen who had all, oddly, played for Queen of the South.

…and the worst?
Some place in Moldova a long time ago…..

Favourite football writer?
I’m a fan of the news getters – so Pat Sheehan, John Cross, Kevin Moseley, Shaun Custis.

Favourite radio/TV commentator?
Martin Tyler. And Brian Moore, of course.

If you could introduce one change to improve PR between football clubs and football writers what would it be?
Trust us a bit more. Relax. Mostly we are on your side.

One sporting event outside football you would love to experience?
I’m generally late for events, so probably not the 100 metres final. Done a few GP’s, but fancy Monaco.

Last book read?
Robert MacFarlane “Wild Ways.”

Favourite current TV programme?
Boringly, it’s probably Match of the Day.

Your most prized football memorabilia?
Got a sign from Bradford Park Avenue’s old ground. Meat pies 3d. Doesn’t actually say its from Park Avenue on it, but it is.

Advice to anyone coming into the football media world?
First, be persistent. Then work your nuts off and get numbers in your book. More the better.

GIROUD HAS A GRACE AND HUMILITY JOEY BARTON CAN ONLY PLAGIARISE

Montpellier make their debut in the Champions League on September 18 against Arsenal who bought the French club’s top scorer Olivier Giroud this summer. As LAURE JAMES reports, while the rugby-loving city is not a hotbed of football the France striker is a class act.

MONTPELLIER’S success is impossible to overestimate. Indeed, it cannot be justified in terms of figures. For once, established parallels between big budgets and silverware do not apply.

The club had never won the domestic title before, with a third-place finish in 1988 their previous best effort. Their average attendance is eighth highest in a league of 20 and their propensity to spend is even less favourable. They have only the 14th highest budget in the French League.

Millionaire (or richer) consortiums are a relatively new phenomenon in France but welcomed by LFP, the league’s governing body who long to see the country once again challenging at the top level, namely the Champions League.

What they had never bargained for was a small, provincial club devoid of any point to prove racing to the top of the division. And staying there. Suddenly Montpellier could cling to a real achievement: a league title, a place in the Champions League, a revenue stream, a star on their chest and a buoyant future.

Montpellier is not a football city. It never has been. Culturally aware, spiced with a greater number of theatre and concert venues per capita than anywhere else in France, the fastest-growing metropolis in the Languedoc region is also home to a young, liberally-minded well-educated population. So, given the magnitude of the rugby team, are Rene Girard’s men criminally under-supported because 98 per cent are egg chasers? No. From experience of the city’s magnificently varied make-up, a little more than half follow rugby while a third are either profiting from their art-house cinema membership or fiercely parading Moroccan flags in areas of deprivation. The rest may be heard, albeit louder than ever before, to be crying “allez, allez!” from Avenue de Heidelberg.

The next, already festering question is whether rising to become champions of France will also prove to be a kiss of death. Will the squad, following more exits of note than acquisitions during the transfer window, be cannon-fodder on the Champions League stage?

Losing top scorer Olivier Giroud, destined to emerge as a household name after signing a significant four-year deal with Arsenal, represents more than the sacrifice of 21 goals in a trophy-winning season. Erudite and charming, youthful and an epicurean, Giroud rebuffs football stereotypes and instead exemplifies the city of Montpellier’s popularity – and population. Crediting his father for developing both his superlative taste in wines and interest in buying up Pic St Loup vineyards, the striker embraces life’s finery. He illustrates why Joe Cole became a Francophile and achieves, with perfect grace and humility, what Joey Barton [on loan to Olympique Marseille] can only plagiarise.

We must also consider manager Rene Girard’s future. Is he likely to be prised away given the job he’s done? Or will he remain at the head of a club’s coaching pyramid which also boasts academy success and a strong scouting network which has the ability to spot a bargain?

Discussions on whether the future will bring minor disintegration rather than sustained prowess are unlikely to trouble Montpellier fans. The championship has brought with it a recognition, at least throughout Europe, upon which it is impossible to place a value. It feels like a distant acquaintance remembering your name. It sparks a sense of pride and validates your obsession, your adoration – not as if it were needed, of course.

Fanaticism, like true love, can wilt as quickly as it deepens or fold as inconspicuously as it cements. But it never really disappears. And now, from afar, my team are champions.

From LIFE’S A PITCH – The Passions Of The Press Box edited by Michael Calvin (Integr8 Books, £10.99). The book is dedicated to the memory of Danny Fulbrook, chief football writer of the Daily Star and a member of the FWA’s national committee. Laure James, who is based in Belfast, is tri-lingual, having both English and French heritage. She contributes regularly to the Daily Mail, Sky Sports and talkSPORT.

TV’s Original Panel was Loud, Brash, Insulting but Hugely Watchable

By the summer of 1970, Derek Dougan was among the highest profile footballers in Britain, scoring goals for Wolves and Northern Ireland and soon to be elected chairman of the PFA. As DAVID TOSSELL reveals, he was also about to become part of a revolution in televised football along with Malcolm Allison, Pat Crerand and Bob McNab:

IT WAS 1970 when ITV supposedly showed the way forward by presenting football analysis in the style of four blokes enjoying a pint at the local. The ‘World Cup panel’, which added studio-base vibrancy to a tournament already made unthinkingly exotic by colour television and the wonderful Brazilians, is acknowledged as having revolutionised television punditry. It is true to the extent that the panel format henceforward became the standard for televised football, but watching the presenting team on the latest Sky Sports Super Sunday bears little resemblance to the chaos over which Brian Moore attempted to preside in the summer of ’70. It was more Tiswas than Match of the Day.

The man responsible was John Bromley, then head of ITV sport, who asked Moore to stay at home, teaming him as usual with Jimmy Hill. What followed was an inspired piece of alchemy as Derek Dougan, Manchester City coach Malcolm Allison, Manchester United midfielder Pat Crerand and Arsenal and England full-back Bob McNab were thrown into the mix, wearing colours so bright and collars so wide that Moore looked like the John Alderton character, Hedges, trying to control his rowdy and fashion-conscious Class 5c in Please, Sir!. The result was a month of television that was loud, brash, often controversial, sometimes downright insulting and always hugely watchable. For the first time in the broadcasting of sports events, ITV’s figures regularly matched the BBC, which managed to look safe and staid even with Brian Clough as part of its team.

Allison, evolving into ‘Big Mal’, was the star, irreverent and dashing but with the mind of a brilliant coach to add substance to his style. Dougan played the role of his nemesis, sitting to his right, often choking on the fumes from Allison’s Cuban cigar, and mixing Irish charm and humour with a hard critical edge. Scotland international Crerand, in the manner of his play, was abrasive and energetic, while McNab offered the insight of a player who had been in the England squad until a few days earlier.

‘We need some people who can actually talk lucidly about football,’ had been the guiding principle of Bromley, who changed his mind about using his panellists individually and opted instead to throw them all on screen at once. ‘Crerand and Allison were the baddies,’ he added, ‘and the charming Dougan with the lovely McNab were the goodies. They became folk heroes in four weeks.’

Moore recalled that ‘they gave football punditry a fresh intoxicating sparkle’, while Dougan, looking back years later, said, ‘We were the first four people ever invited on television to actually speak about our sport. The chemistry was right and we used to spark off each other. Not once did we have a rehearsal. Malcolm was the only guy that I have ever worked with who could drink an excess of champagne and not slur his words.’

McNab remembers, ‘People had never seen anything like it although I am not sure we all realised it was ground-breaking at the time. Jimmy tried to control it, but Malcolm would take the piss out of him unmercifully. Actually, we all ended up taking the piss out each other. Without disrespect to Derek, he didn’t have the intellectual football ideas of Malcolm. We noticed that he would start repeating some of the stuff Malcolm said off-camera so sometimes Mal would set him up and say the opposite of what he thought. It was all great fun and we all had a lot of respect and affection for each other.’

McNab also remembers the group whiling away the afternoons at the Hendon Hall hotel before their evening broadcasts. ‘We used to play head tennis and nobody wanted to play on Derek’s team because all you had to do was hit it to his right foot and you would win the point.’

This group of articulate, stylishly dressed men were enthralling viewers who followed football every day of their lives and making the sport easily accessible to those whose interest barely extended to the FA Cup final, the one club game televised live each season. Fan letters and autograph hunters became an even bigger part of their lives. McNab even recalls the group eating in a restaurant one night and being joined by Michael Caine who wanted to ‘have a drink with the lads’.

In Sunshine or In Shadow: A Journey Through The Life of Derek Dougan by David Tossell, published by Pitch Publishing, is available as hardback or eBook at amazon.co.uk.

30th Northern Managers Awards Dinner 2012

30th NORTHERN MANAGERS AWARDS DINNER 2012 in conjunction with BARCLAYS
Sunday October 21st, Radisson Blu Edwardian Hotel
Peter Street, Manchester M2 5GP (formerly The Free Trade Hall)
Reception 6.45pm for 7.30pm. Dress code: LOUNGE SUITS

Master of Ceremonies: VINCE MILLER
Guest speaker: GRAHAM POLL (Former World Cup Referee).

Tickets: £60 (FWA members), £65 (Non members/guests)
Available on a first-come-first-served basis for either tables of 10/11, smaller groups or individuals. Cheques should be made payable to ‘FWA NORTH’ and forwarded to the Secretary ahead of the function.

If you want to stay over you need to contact us for more information.

Cheques and ticket applications to:
Richard Bott (secretary FWA North)
4 Brentwood Close, Smithy Bridge, Littleborough, Lancs. OL15 0ND.

This year there are NINE AWARD-WINNING MANAGERS, as follows:

1 ROBERTO MANCINI (Manchester City) Barclays PL Champions.

2 KENNY DALGLISH (Liverpool) Carling League Cup Winners

3 DAVE JONES (Sheffield Wednesday) npower Lge 1 runners-up

4 SIMON GRAYSON (Huddersfield Town) npower Lge 1 p/off winners

5 STEVE DAVIS (Crewe Alexandra) npower Lge 2 p/off winners

6 JOHN SHERIDAN (Chesterfield) Johnstones Paint Trophy winners

SPECIAL AWARDS:

7 GARY MILLS (York City) FA Carlsberg Trophy winners and Blue Square Bet Premier play-off winners.

8 MICKY MELLON (Fleetwood Town) Blue Square Conference champions).

9 BILLY IRWIN (Dunston UTS) FA Carlsberg Vase winners.

MENU:

Minted lamb neck croquettes with ratatouille vinaigrette micro salad.

(Vegetarian option: Mille fuille of parmesan crisp sunblush tomato and rocket pesto)
*******
Roasted vine tomato and sweet pepper soup
*******
Fillet of Cheshire beef with wasabi creamed potato, carrot and parsnip, baby onion tart.

(Vegetarian option: Roast vegetable and pesto cannelloni)
*******
Wild berry cheesecake with Grey Goose vodka

*******

Coffee and petit fours

FWA Q&A: Steve Anglesey

Daily Mirror columnist STEVE ANGLESEY on undercooking Spear of Destiny’s chips…an un-matey deputy sports editor…plus a loud argument, noisy sex and deep snoring

Your first ever job in journalism?
Book and film reviews for the posh Cheshire Life magazine, mid 1980s. Which naturally led to a job writing about American football in 1987.

Have you ever worked in a profession other than journalism?
As Jamie Jackson never tires of hearing, I worked as a chef in Manchester’s (in)famous Hacienda nightclub in the mid-1980s. I walked out one megabusy Saturday night when, after the manageress had left me alone for two hours so she could go dancing with her mates, she returned to tell me that Spear Of Destiny had complained their chips weren’t brown enough.

Most memorable match?
In person: Attempting to make sense of Man City 2-2 v Liverpool on the last day of 1995/96. Had to fill 12 pages on it overnight for the club magazine. As we’d just been relegated because of Alan Ball’s invisible radio and no players would speak, it wasn’t a best-seller.

In the office: Liverpool’s Miracle in Istanbul. “We’ll be in the pub for last orders,” we said at half-time. We weren’t.

The one moment in football you would put on a DVD?
“Aguerooooooooooo!” I own the DVD.

Best stadium?

Football: The Emirates/The Bernabeu. Other: The Linc in Philadelphia.

…and the worst?
Boundary Park on a cold night. Or on any night. Or day.

Your personal new-tech disaster?
One of my roles in my first proper job was to delete all the previous week’s copy on the servers. With one missed keystroke I managed to wipe out all of the current week’s paper, plus all the files for three magazines we were currently working on. None of it could be rescued.

Biggest mistake?
On my first shift at the News Of The World, circa 1988, I turned up sporting a No.1 cut and wearing a leather jacket and a T-shirt with a Vincent Van Gogh print on it. I had four pints during my break, came back and called the deputy sports editor “mate”. He replied: “It’s mister f*****g mate to you, son.” I didn’t do many shifts there.

Have you ever been mistaken for anyone else?
Elton John (I guess that’s why I support the Blues).

Most media friendly manager?
Owen Coyle/Ian Holloway

Best ever player?
For City: Trevor Francis. Everyone else: Maradona.

Best ever teams (club and international)?
Club: The City team in the 5-1 at White Hart Lane and the 6-1 at Old Trafford last season. International: Brazil 1982, the best fifth-place team ever.

Best pre-match grub?

Corned beef hash and mushy peas, Elland Road, circa 1995

Best meal had on your travels?
Just about anything in New Orleans on NFL trips. The last one was robin (the bird) gumbo.

…and the worst?

Mystery meat in “the best restaurant in Moscow” the night before the Steve McClaren disaster in 2007, washed down by a £16 bottle of lager in Abramovich’s bar afterwards.

Best hotel stayed in?
Essex House, New York or Ritz-Carlton, New Orleans.

…and the worst?

Nameless fleapit opposite Newcastle Station. Went on a dream job for FourFourTwo – watch the Tyne/Tees derby during NUFC’s relegation season under Shearer in Shearer’s Bar inside St James’. They beat Middlesbrough to give themselves a chance of staying up and whenever they scored it was like the opening scene of Fraggle Rock. By the final whistle, a handsome bloke in a replica No.9 shirt was simultaneously snogging one girl while groping, and being groped by, another blonde behind him, out of the first girl’s line of vision. Maybe it was the three of them in the next room who kept me up all night with a loud argument followed by noisy sex and then deep snoring.

Favourite football writer?

Current: Ollie Holt and Martin Samuel. All-time: Hugh McIlvanney.

Favourite radio/TV commentator?
Current: Martin Tyler and Mike Ingham. All-time: Brian Moore and Peter Jones.

If you could introduce one change to improve PR between football clubs and football writers what would it be?

Clubs should take a one-season gamble on improving trust between players and writers by opening the training ground dressing room once a week, NFL-style.

One sporting event outside football you would love to experience?
The Argentina Grand Prix, when/if revived.

Last book read?

Creole Belle by James Lee Burke. He’s been writing the same book for 25 years but it’s always the best book you’ve ever read.

Favourite current TV programme?
Treme, Parade’s End, Girls (starts next month on Sky Atlantic, unmissable)

Your most prized football memorabilia?

Replica Corgi-style model of City’s team bus on the 1956 parade with the FA Cup.

Advice to anyone coming into the football media world?
Don’t do a media course at college. Specialise and start a blog about a facet of sport you’re interested in. Use Twitter assiduously. Hassle a website/paper/mag you like, get in on work experience and make yourself part of the furniture. Find a mentor there – someone as good as Ian Stirrup, Alan Lees and Loz Hatton, Danny Kelly and Howard Johnson, Des Kelly and Dean Morse would be nice but you’d be lucky – then watch what they do and try to do the same. And look after your teeth.

Like walking into a football world of James Bond

The FWA goes behind the scenes at Opta who have made statistics into an art form…

By CHRISTOPHER DAVIES

DID you know Queens Park Rangers striker Bobby Zamora was a more consistent finisher than Lionel Messi or Ronaldo?

True, you can prove just about anything with statistics, but there is not a stat worth knowing that Opta cannot produce within seconds. Their offices, a corner kick from Waterloo Station, are an anorak’s dream, like walking into a football world of James Bond. If you could enlist the help of any of the Opta team for a football quiz night it would be like having Usain Bolt as a ringer in the 4x100m relay.

Football writers love Opta because when Robin van Persie scores his next goal, chances are we are soon informed that it is the fifth consecutive game in which he has scored against the opposition from outside the penalty area with his left foot.

Each Barclays Premier League and Champions League game is analysed by three technicians, one for each team plus a checker who can change any mistakes during a match. Every time the ball is touched, an expert – and having seem them operate that is not too strong a word – logs it. There are around 120 different categories of ball-movement, with strict guidelines about each and it takes between two to three months to train someone to “cover” a game for Opta.

For example, a chip-pass is when the ball goes over head height while for an interception a player has to actively move towards the ball and intercept the pass. If the ball just hits a player it is not classed as an interception. As assist is the pass leading up to the goal, but not if a player wins a penalty. It is a pedant’s heaven.

Television broadcasts to the Opta computers are on a screen which effectively has the markings of a pitch on it. As soon as, say, Frank Lampard, passes the ball the analyst will click on “Lampard” and “completed pass” or whichever category it falls in to.

To become an Opta analyst you need not only an excellent knowledge of football, you must also be a keyboard wizard. Andrew Baruffati, who has worked for Opta for nine years, said: “For an average game I would input between 800 to 1,100 details for a team, though it depends on the side. Barcelona would have a lot more than that but it is not necessarily more difficult. While you are putting in a lot more events and you are busier, I prefer doing them because they are all clean passes. Covering a game involving Stoke or Bolton, there are more long balls with ricochets and tackles which can be harder to analyse.”

The intensity of Opta’s analysis during a match is such that Baruffati said: “At times I’ll ask someone what the score is and they won’t know.”

To guarantee accuracy, if an analyst is unsure about a movement he will flag it up and the checker will replay the move to ensure it is correctly logged. Each analyst’s inputting is checked to see how many changes had to be made to determine whether extra training may be needed. Opta are as foolproof and accurate as is possible.

The company cover football on a global basis and for overseas matches an analyst is usually given the same team to cover to help familiarity.

AT THE flick of a switch any team’s or player’s performances can be viewed on screen. Matt Furniss, the UK editor, showed me that after two games Tottenham had hit the woodwork more times – three – that anyone else in the Barclays Premier League. Despite the popular belief, Manchester United do not win the most penalties – over the last three seasons Chelsea hold that honour.

“Whatever happens during a game, we can go back to our database and check if it’s happened before,” said Furniss. Trying to find a positive note for Liverpool after their 3-0 defeat at West Bromwich it was discovered their passing accuracy at the Hawthorns was their highest in 10 years.

Unsurprisingly the pass masters are Barcelona, their 1,046 passes against Levante in the Primera Liga in May 2011 a record. The last time Barca’s opponents out-passed the Catalans was four and a half years ago.

Rather than assists for a goal, Opta, who also cover cricket and rugby in England, prefer chances created as a better reflection of a player’s ability to lay on opportunities for team-mates; it is not his fault is they are missed. Individual honours for 2011/12 in this respect go to Real Madrid’s Mesut Ozil with 103 ahead of Lionel Messi on 92 while Xavi had 65. Michu, who looks the bargain buy of the summer for Swansea at £2 million from Real Vallecano, was not only Primera Liga’s leading scorer from midfield with 15 goals, he also created 64 chances, one fewer than Xavi, in 1,664 minutes.

Messi ended last season with 50 goals and 16 assists [for goals] in 37 Primera Liga games. “In any other period Ronaldo would be the greatest player in the world,” said Furniss. “He had a total of 46 goals and 12 assists in 38 matches.”

Of Messi’s goals, 44 were with his left foot, five with his right and one header. Ronaldo scored 33 with his right foot, six with his left and seven headers. Furniss said: “Over the past few years the most impressive player in this aspect is Zamora with almost an equal split between right, left and head. He is also one of only two people in the Barclays Premier League since 1998 to score a penalty with both feet, alongside Obafemi Martins”

Opta’s service is not used just by media outlets, many top clubs use their statistics as football moves more and more into the world of hi-tech. Furniss said: “If we were working for a club and they asked us for an analysis on their opponents, we could tell them how many goals they score from crosses, how many tackles they won in a certain area of the pitch…anything, really.”

The top clubs in England now have a dedicated team of analysts to pour through videos and Opta’s stats to point their scouts in the right direction. John Coulson, head of professional football, has collated details on around 6,000 players across Europe so if a club are looking for a particular type of player Opta’s stats can be a huge help in knowing who to watch.

Coulson said: “These people are there to support the coaches and managers. You wouldn’t expect a manager to have the time to go through videos and stats. Not just for scouting possible transfers, but also to show their own players details about their displays to help them improve even during a match. Clubs can take an Opta feed of the first-half and during the interval the details can help to improve a certain part of the performance, notably possession losses.”

Opta have a log of every penalty over the last nine years, illustrating which side the kicker placed the ball and which way the goalkeeper dived. “Both teams know what to expect now when a penalty is taken,” said Coulson.

IT IS for player recruitment that Opta are most focused on helping clubs. Tottenham had few doubts that Fulham’s Moussa Dembele was an excellent replacement for Luka Modric, but Opta’s details underline the Belgium international’s quality.

“We can see with things like ball recovery, duels won and key passes there has been a steady improvement over the past two years with Dembele,” said Coulson. On the other hand the dip in Nicola Anelka’s conversion rate between the ages of 27 and 31 dipped alarmingly so his departure from Chelsea caused little controversy.

Coulson’s database can be defined to help a club searching for a new player, for example a midfielder. Opta have 1,000 such players and that list can be redefined with aspects such as losing tackles or inaccurate passes and it will surprise few that Andrea Pirlo of Juventus came out top, the Italian followed by Spain’s Xabi Alonso of Real Madrid and Spain.

More fine tuning with passes only in the final third of the field with a minimum of 40 key passes which directly led to a shot on goal per game added still showed Pirlo leading the way from Xabi Alonso though Modric and Manchester City’s YaYa Toure were high on the list.

While these players are well known, Roberto Trashorras, an attacking midfielder with Rayo Vallecano, showed up well in terms of creativity.

You read it here first.

The mind games that saw Carlton Cole become a lion

Sports psychologist DAN ABRAHAMS explains how he helped the West Ham and England striker…

By CHRISTOPHER DAVIES

THE BRITISH seem to have an inbuilt aversion to psychology. If we have a bad tooth, we go a dentist. An ingrowing toenail can be cured by a chirpodist. A few visits to an osteopath and that bad back becomes history. Yet if we have a problem in our mind, whatever it may be, too often the misguided response is: “sort yourself out.” To see a psychologist or a counsellor still carries a certain stigma, despite the ignorance of such views.

Sir Alex Ferguson’s mind games are acceptable, even fun, but to see someone about your mindset is looked upon differently.

Yet in sport the difference between success and failure, winning and losing, can be minimal…inches, a split second or just the confidence to do whatever it takes to win, in England’s case converting penalties.

Football is one of of many sports that has seen the performance level of participants rise because of psychologists. Dan Abrahams is a former professional golfer who holds a First Class Honors degree in psychology and a Master’s Degree in sports psychology. He has worked with numerous footballers in England and while he cannot turn anyone into the next Lionel Messi, he can look back with professional pride at players he has helped, West Ham striker Carlton Cole one of the most high profile.

“I’m not blind to the obvious fact that physicality, technical ability and tactical understanding are the hallmarks of elite football,” said Abrahams. “To me football is not just a physical challenge – it is a game of mindset.”

A manager does not have the time to devote hours to helping an individual player off the training pitch, but in many respects Abrahams’ ideas and beliefs can be transferred to anybody in any job. It is about improving self-belief and confidence, thinking positively and banishing automatic negative thoughts (or ANTs as Abrahams calls them). Cole was a youth team player at Chelsea and looked set to make a big name for himself, but Claudio Ranieri, the Blues’ manager at the time, said: “I watched Carlton play for the reserves and I saw two animals in him. One was a rabbit and the other a lion. I want to see that lion come out in him more often.”

After unsuccessful loan spells with Charlton, Wolves and Aston Villa, he joined West Ham in 2006. In training Cole would run the show, but on match day the lion did not show up.

“There is no hiding place then,” said Abrahams. “On match day you have to get it right, especially at first-team level. Carlton started to question his abiligty and his future. He forgot the dozens of goals he had scored for the youth team, he didn’t listen to Ranieri’s praise. His only vision became one of him failing. His only voice became one of ‘I can’t.’ Negatives drowned positives and his performances suffered.”

Abrahams worked “religiously” with Cole on attempting to squash the striker’s negative thoughts. “Your brain is brilliant at focusing on problems as you play,” said Abrahams. “Make a blunder in front of goal and your brain will do its best to bring your thoughts back to this moment time and time again.”

So how do we stop the infestation of ANTs?

“Simple. Just see a STOP sign in your mind., You see a STOP sign like the one you see on the side of a road. Or perhaps just say STOP to yourself. Even scream it in your mind, you need something that you can consciously see or say to snap you back into the present moment and instantly stop the ANTs from spreading.

“Once Carlton had become accustomed to spotting and stopping these negatives, I wanted him to take ownership of his inner voice as he played. I knew if he did he would be able to utilise the skill and vision we all saw in him when he was in training mode.

“Carlton became an England international because he committed to the process of improvement. We worked hard together but he also learnt greatly from his managers Alan Curbishley and Gianfranco Zola plus coaches such as Glyn Snodin and Steve Clarke. Above all, Carlton was enormously proactive with his inner voice on the pitch. He refused to allow ANTs to settle and destroy his performance mindset, When he won his first cap for England he stood on the side of the pitch squashing ANTs as he readied himself to come on against the European Champions Spain. When he ran on to the pitch as a second-half substitute he did so with a clear,confident mind. He was ready to play with focus and freedom.”

*Taken from Soccer Tough – Simple Football Psychology Techniques To Improve Your Game by Dan Abrahams (Bennion Kearny, £12.99; http://www.danabrahams.com)

Vauxhall bring Home Nations managers together for World Cup preview

VAUXHALL MOTORS will create a piece of footballing history when they bring together the four Home Nations managers to preview the 2014 World Cup in Brazil.

Roy Hodgson (England), Michael O’Neill (Northern Ireland), Craig Levein (Scotland) and Chris Coleman (Wales) will join forces for a special Road to Brazil event in London hosted by Vauxhall, proud lead sponsors of all four Home Nations.

More than 100 media are expected to attend the event, at the Honourable Artillery Company HQ at Armoury House on Friday August 24th.

The four managers will take part in a panel discussion about the 2014 World Cup and answer questions from assembled media.

Duncan Aldred, Chairman and Managing Director of Vauxhall Motors, said; “The Road to Brazil event is a historic moment in our sponsorship of Home Nations football.

“We are incredibly proud to be the first organisation to be the lead partner of England, Scotland, Northern Ireland and Wales at the same time.

“This is a truly momentous occasion and offers a unique opportunity for the four managers to meet and give an insight and preview ahead of the 2014 World Cup.

“We are extremely grateful to all four of the governing bodies for helping to make such a special event possible.”

The World Cup qualification campaigns kick off next week with England in Group H alongside Moldova, Ukraine, San Marino, Poland and Montenegro.

Wales and Scotland are paired together in Group A and will face Belgium, Serbia, Macedonia and Croatia.

Whilst Northern Ireland find themselves in Group F against Russia, Luxembourg, Portugal, Azerbaijan and Israel.

As part of their fan engagement programme Vauxhall has been running a series of country specific competitions offering fans the chance to win tickets to every home game of the qualifying campaign and join their team on the Road to Brazil.

For more information on www.vauxhallfootball.co.uk

FWA Q&A: Lee Clayton

LEE CLAYTON, the Daily Mail head of sport, on a laptop swimming in Diet Coke…Bradley Wiggins’ sideburns…and trying to be Alvin Martin

Your first ever job in journalism?

I worked at The Sun 25 years ago, aged 16. One of my jobs was copytasting from the wires for the editor Kelvin Mackenzie. I had to learn fast. I worked with some excellent journalists, who taught me high standards and I was thrilled to be part of a team who expected to win every day. It was a good early lesson. In those days, The Sun was must-read. The first read. Nobody else could compete with it. I was a bit laid back, but they knocked it out of me.

Have you ever worked in a profession other than journalism?
I was an outdoor clerk (briefly) for a firm of solicitors in Chancery Lane. I was good at the outdoor bit, but I wasn’t a very good clerk.

Most memorable match?
Can I say three? Manchester United versus Bayern Munich in the Nou Camp. Ribbons on the trophy, intro and match report written…and then Teddy Sheringham and Ole Gunnar Solskjaer intervened. It was wonderful! England v Argentina in Marseille was another dramatic evening in the 1998 World Cup, but my favourite has to be England 4 Holland 1. I was Football Correspondent for the Daily Star and – along with Martin Samuel and Rob Shepherd – spent quite a lot of time following Terry Venables, the England coach, in the build-up to the match. Venables scouted the Dutch players obsessively (which mainly consisted of watching a lot of Ajax). I knew that stunning win wasn’t about one night’s good work, but months of preparation by Venables, studying the Dutch system and uncovering weaknesses. I learned a lot from watching, listening and talking to him. It was a privilege for a young journalist to be given such a football masterclass.

The one moment in football you would put on a DVD?
Ray Stewart’s penalty technique…and give it to every England player. Why are England so useless at penalties? When will they learn? Goalkeepers dived out of the way when Stewart hit the ball.

Best stadium?
Nou Camp. Made me think: “How lucky am I to be working here?” I like the charm of Villa Park and enjoyed the hostility of the Sukru Saracoglu Stadium, where Fenerbahce play. They turned out the floodlights before Manchester United came out, plunging the ground into darkness. No health and safety there. I have a season ticket at West Ham, but I don’t see too many wins there. Newcastle is the best ground I visited last season – when they were flying. Reminded me of how the whole city comes alive on match day.

…and the worst?
Sorry if this is a bit romantic, but there’s never a bad ground in which to watch football as a fan. I went to Soham Town last season to watch Charlton’s U18’s win 9-0. I love watching games live. I don’t have to work in football grounds now, so it improves all of them! No reason to moan about facilities, cramped press boxes and poison hot dogs.

Your personal new-tech disaster?
A laptop swimming in Diet Coke is never a good idea. Mine happened as David Batty missed his penalty in the shootout between England and Argentina [at France 98]. I knocked over the can. Paul Hayward put his arm around me and said: “Are you ok, mate…you’ve gone as white as a ghost.” I felt sick. My ‘running’ match report had just got through to the office to make the first edition. The rewrite had no chance.

Biggest mistake?
Not working hard enough at school.

Have you ever been mistaken for anyone else?
No. But I was recently told I have had the same sideburns at Bradley Wiggins. They’ve gone now. And I don’t have a bike, either.

Most media friendly manager?
Terry Venables, Alan Pardew, Harry Redknapp have to be up there. I also like Mark Hughes, but he’s not very media-friendly! We have had a few discussions about it – and we might have a few more. I like him, though. He’s good company, he was a great volleyer and he absolutely has to win.

Best ever player?
Zinedine Zidane was decent. Messi can play. But can they really share an answer with Alvin Martin? Should have won more caps for England. I loved watching him play as a kid and then as a young reporter. Tony Gale used to complain that I would always give Alvin higher marks in my match reports. He was right. Sorry, Tony. Alvin was the centre half I always wanted to be. Anyone who saw me play will confirm that never happened.

Best ever teams (club and international)?
Manchester United’s treble-winners. Watching and covering the football United played, with two wide players, pace and flair was a treat. I interviewed Eric Cantona on the pitch at Old Trafford once and he was huge. I really did enjoy his swagger. He made that Manchester United team and they made him. I was also invited to spend a little time with Sir Alex Ferguson, by Steve Curry. It was a treat talking football with him for a couple of hours. And Sir Alex Ferguson wasn’t bad, either. I can’t think of anyone better than the current Spain team.

Favourite football writer?
Alex Montgomery was my chief football writer on The Sun and he wrote match reports that were about the football. It was a pleasure to sit next to him in press boxes and listen to him dictating live reports to copytakers with his soft Scottish voice. He taught a young and very raw junior a lot on those nights. He also had a dignity and a presence that all football correspondents should have (and many do). I do think there are some brilliant writers around now. And they all work for the Daily Mail. Well, most of them do. I’m very lucky to have an amazing team, who can write with intelligence, insight and authority. There is an art to good match reporting on tight deadlines.

Favourite radio/TV commentator?
John Motson and Mike Ingham on football while Brendan Foster and Steve Cram called the Mo Farah 10,000 meters absolutely brilliantly. I grew up listening to radio commentaries on Radio Two and it’s the job I always wanted, but never got. Foster and Cram that night, in the Olympic Stadium, delivered a masterclass on BBC1. I do think radio commentary is much underrated. Five Live’s Olympic commentary was excellent too, such as Alan Green at the rowing.

If you could introduce one change to improve PR between football clubs and football writers what would it be?
Follow the example of Manchester City.

One sporting event outside football you would love to experience?
The Olympic 10,000m with a British winner in London. Although that can never happen, can it? In the meantime, I’ve got my eye on a Lions Tour to South Africa and a Ashes series in Australia. Probably for when somebody tells me I can’t do my job any more. I hope that doesn’t happen soon.

Last book read?
I’m obsessed with James Patterson. I’ve read something like 30 of his books. They’re not the most challenging, but they are fast and punchy and he brings his characters, like Alex Cross, to life. He’s the Dragon Slayer and very, very cool. I usually read crime novels. I don’t like autobiographies, but read them when I have to. Steven Gerrard’s book with Henry Winter was among the best.

Favourite current TV programme?
I don’t get to watch much TV. I liked the BBC drama Line Of Duty and I especially liked the line from the character played by Lennie James. “Son, if you are going to shoot the king, don’t miss.” And I like Luther, with the brilliant Idris Elba. I can’t miss Match Of The Day, but it needs an overhaul. Maybe I do watch quite a bit of TV. Sky Plus is the answer.

Your most prized football memorabilia?
I’ve kept most of my stories from The Sun, the Sunday Mirror, the Daily Star, the People and the Daily Mail. I’ve kept the good ones; it’s a small scrapbook.

Advice to anyone coming into the football media world?
Do it. It’s brilliant. If someone tells you no, don’t believe them. Find someone who believes in you and keep searching for that person. I’ve been very lucky. I found a lot of people who believed in me and they will all tell you that when I was told ‘no’, I wasn’t listening.

MEDIA SHOULD TAKE A MORE POSITIVE APPROACH TO FOOTBALLERS

FWA chairman Andy Dunn on how the press can benefit from the Olympic Games…

By CHRISTOPHER DAVIES

THE GOODWILL factor from the London 2012 Olympic Games that keeps a smile on British faces will have an inevitable knock-on effect as the 2012/13 season gets under way. Comparisons between the manner in which our gold medallists conducted them and the stereotyped image of footballers will be made, with the anti-football brigade penning columns along the lines of “why can’t these overpaid Premier League stars behave like Olympians?”

It was not just the public who were swept along on a wave of Olympic fever. The media, perhaps sensing the mood of the country, took a softly-softly approach when Bradley Wiggins was photographed smoking and drinking on holiday. Wiggins was “enjoying himself” but had an England player been caught indulging in either of the nocturnal habits of the gold medal winner in the road time trial he would have been “boozing” or setting a bad example. Philip Hindes’ admission that he deliberately crashed after a slow start by his team in the men’s team sprint was almost brushed under Fleet Street’s carpet.

Andy Dunn, the Sunday Mirror columnist who succeeds Steve Bates as chairman of the Football Writers’ Association, believes comparisons between Team GB and footballers have little credibility, but admitted the way the media covers football could benefit from some Olympic spirit.

Dunn said: “Any comparisons are disingenuous because the demands on athletes and footballers are so different. Apart from Andy Murray, Bradley Wiggins is probably the highest profile of our Olympic winners, but the media pressures on him or all of our gold medallists are nothing like footballers experience.

“With respect to them, it’s once every four years they are in such a spotlight so they embrace the attention. They received an excellent press and it’s nice to be liked, but because it is so relentless for footballers they have a different attitude.

“What I would like to happen is for footballers to realise how good it is to have positive publicity. Footballers may need to look at themselves and the way they come across, but perhaps the Olympics will also give the media a chance to see how we cover football.

“Footballers would claim the reason they are not as open or forthcoming as those in the Olympics is because if they make one slight error of judgment, saying something that could be taken in a different way, then it will be treated negatively. They will argue the media will always pick on one slightly controversial point among 10 positive ones.

“We should look at that. The media highlight diving or when managers behave badly and we cannot gloss over such issues and cover things up. In the Olympics, Philip Hindes fell off his cycle deliberately to gain an advantage on his way to winning a gold medal and got off very lightly because the Olympics was all about good news.

“Footballers could turn to us during the season when they have been accused of something and quite rightly point out that when Hindes was guilty of blatant gamesmanship the newspapers let him off with a shrug of the shoulders.

“Perhaps we can look at the way we cover football from how we covered the Olympics, maybe placing more emphasis on positives rather than negatives.”

While London 2012 was hailed as the best Olympics most could remember, Dunn said English football and football writing is enjoying a similar golden era.

“These are exciting times to be a football writer, never mind chairman of the Football Writers’ Association,” he said. “The Premier League has signed the biggest television deal in its history which shows, however you want to compare it with the Olympics, that its appeal is unbelievable.

“Our sports writers are in the country whose football has the biggest global appeal of any league. To be chairman of the organisation whose members are writing about one of the most successful sporting leagues in the world is fantastic.”

Similarly, the FWA have never been in such a strong position “for several reasons,” according to Dunn. “Our members have different platforms because apart from writing for their newspapers, they are writing across the social media. Some of our members have a Twitter following that equates to minor celebrities. They can be read by more people on Twitter than they are in print.

“Football writers have never had such a high profile. People want to read about the Barclays Premier League and all the great players who perform in it. We have the opportunity to do this not only for a domestic audience, but world-wide.

“The two main FWA events, the Footballer of the Year dinner before the FA Cup final and the January Gala Tribute Evening have gone from strength to strength.

“Barclays remain the most supportive of sponsors while the FWA are also represented on Twitter and, of course, by the revamped web site.

“There has been a gradual improvement in facilities for the media in the Premier League and Football League, though there is still much work to be done. It’s important that we are in on the ground floor when new stadiums are built. We worked closely with Arsenal on the Emirates stadium and the Football Association for Wembley and everyone would agree these press facilities are superb.”

Dunn hopes to see more FWA Live evenings next season after the success of the inaugural question-and-answer session in London last May which featured FWA representatives Dunn, Henry Winter, Shaun Custis, Paul McCarthy and Matt Lawton plus Gary Lineker and Adrian Bevington, the managing director of Club England.

“We are talking to people about three or four FWA Live evenings around the country,” said Dunn. “They would feature FWA members plus a couple of personalities from football with the audience asking questions. We were fortunate with the first one because it was the day Kenny Dalglish was sacked.”

*The memorial service for Dennis Signy, a former chairman of the Football Writers’ Association, will be held at St Bride’s Church, Fleet Street on September 13 (11:30) and afterwards at the Punch Tavern.