Muttley
Dean Austin
Not sure I’ve seen this posted anywhere today so apologies if I’ve missed it, but Harry Redknapp has done an interview in The Times where he talks about Levy and Lewis trying to tell him that Robbie Keane was rubbish, and that he should ask Rafa Van Der Vaart who he wants to play upfront with.
It’s something I think has been under discussed, but I know there was a lot of player power in the club, certainly through Harry, Sherwood, AVB. Poch was such a strong figure and created such good alignment that we didn’t really feel it until the end of his reign. And then the players clearly didn’t want to keep going under Jose and Conte’s demands, while never giving Nuno a chance.
But my point is actually, after Conte, was there a concerted effort to reduce player power? I remember there being a feeling at the time of ‘it hasn’t worked under Jose and Conte, who the players have no excuse but to fall in behind the next guy, otherwise it’s truly on them’. And so was there almost an effort to sever ties between the boardroom and the changing room so that the club could try and take more of a long term view on these matters rather than be swayed by the general feeling of the squad on a particular day?
And then my actual point is, did the club arrive at that point of view, but far too late, and actually incorrectly? Eg the moment we stop really caring about what the players think, we end up keeping Frank way too long on the hope that he is turning it around, but never really listen to the players who at the canaries in the coal mine of being able to see the manager is truly not up to it and forcing them to turn in some of the literal worst attacking performances ever?
Because the Harry example is ridiculous for its own reasons. But not having the judgement to understand that while you don’t want players to have all the power, they’re still an important constituency that you would ideally want alignment from. And if we ended up getting that wrong as a club too, it’s another example of a decision that almost makes sense in theory but because it’s people that just don’t get football, the judgement is way off, and it’s costing us massively.
Unfortunately, Robbie was pretty poor in his second stint at Spurs. He left as a 28 year old with almost a one in two scoring record. He returned as a 29 year old and went to 1 in 4. So I can imagine that conversation happening about a 30 or 31 year old Robbie and it was quite logical. Robbie ended up at Hammers and Celtic on loan as his next chapter. It's also worth remembering that Harry was green himself at the level he had stepped up to. I was never convinced he could be really objective about players at the highest level.
That being said, the day Levy starts offering opinions on player ability is a sad one. I had a friend who worked on the Olympic Project who chatted with Levy in that capacity. Something he said in the side conversations about Defoe was incredibly wrong and misguided. Levy was made to look quite daft about him based on what happened next in his career.
So I absolutely see your point about player power being a pendulum. Let them get too overstated and you have a problem. Don't listen to them and you have and equal and opposite issue. I would say though that isn't our problem. We allow players to be passive aggressive. They nod their heads, act all agreeable and then do their own thing. It must drive managers to distraction. It's the passive aggression in the club culture that needs fixing.