THE ARCHIVE
Players
Return of the Mac | Return of the Mac |
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Upon returning to Britain from relatively brief spells at moderately successful foreign clubs, Paul Ince and John Collins were assumed to be better players, better people and an asset to any employer. Even Paul Gascoigne, whose time in Italy was mainly about injuries and semi-public urination, was thought to be better for the experience. Steve McManaman had four years as a popular and at times very important player for the world’s biggest club, with two championship medals, two Champions League medals and the experience of playing and training with the very best to show for it. He’s only 31, he’s dropped his wages by half and he’s free. Form an orderly queue, gentlemen, surely? Yet, after Manchester City won his signature ahead of another mid-table side, there were enough eyebrows raised for Kevin Keegan to feel the need to come out and defend signing him, like you would an unstable alcoholic or convicted match-fixer. Strange. So, after surviving several votes of no confidence from Florentino Pérez, McManaman has finally admitted defeat and agreed to leave the Bernabéu, to end a rollercoaster four years. He’d previously battled back from injury and loss of form to help Real win the Champions League (scoring in the final), only to find the new president did not want him. Then, those who had dubbed him “the postman” in tribute to his delivery abilities (and the Spanish aren’t keen on their postal service) were chanting his name after he resisted attempts to offload him to Middlesbrough, won his place back and helped Real to the 2001 title. Despite this personal victory, the writing was on the wall once Zidane arrived. There was a feeling McManaman was part of Real’s past, not their gleaming future of superstar imports and homegrown youngsters. Even so, he has experiences no other Premiership player can claim. So why the indifference? After already buying a whole midfield over the summer, Keegan would not have signed McManaman unless he thought him something special. It does not seem to be a view shared by many. There seems to be a selective media amnesia over McManaman’s time in Spain. His vital role in the first two seasons’ triumphs is forgotten. Instead, it’s all “he’s hardly played over the past couple of years”. True, since the arrival of Zidane he was not a frontline starter, but in 2001-02 he was usually first off the bench (as in that year’s Champions League final), while even last season he made more than 20 appearances. Not overworked, admittedly, but we are a long way from Rebrov country, let alone Bogarde-ville. From WSC 201 November 2003. What was happening this month On the subject...
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