THE ARCHIVE
The strange case of...
Mike Walker | Mike Walker |
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For followers of the national team unconvinced by Steve McClaren, some comfort can be taken from the example of Mike Walker, a man who proved it is possible to go from England contender to managerial pariah in less than a year. Walker’s career path once seemed to be following that of Alf Ramsey: reaching the top after taking a small East Anglian club to unimagined heights. Eventually, he would more closely resemble Paulie Walnuts from The Sopranos: sharp-suited and well groomed, with a sideline in waste management. Younger readers will need reminding how and when this happened and, indeed, who exactly Mike Walker is. Absurd as it sounds now, he might have occupied the England coaching bench at Euro 96. Doubt it? Well, it is worth recalling the crisis of confidence in English football, at club and country level, as autumn promise turned to winter chill in 1993.
Within a month Manchester United, England’s only representatives, were dumped out of the European Cup and Graham Taylor showed in games against Holland and San Marino that it was impossible for him to lead a team to the World Cup. Amid hand-wringing in the media, a nation turned to a Norwich City team whose little-known and poorly paid manager had just masterminded a bold tactical triumph against Bayern Munich in the UEFA Cup. By becoming the first English side to win in the Olympic Stadium, Walker’s Norwich proved that home-grown coaches could succeed, playing in the right way, on an international stage. And so for a few golden weeks, the silver-haired, bronze-skinned Walker – who combined an obvious vanity with a neat line in self‑mocking humour – was consulted as an oracle and tipped to succeed Turnip Taylor. The two personality traits came together in one of Walker’s most memorable lines, that to earn a decent salary on his incentive-laden contract at Carrow Road – then still a fiefdom of, er, “shrewd” chairman Robert Chase – he’d need to win the League, FA Cup and Eurovision Song Contest every year. From WSC 245 July 2007 On the subject...
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