Irish Sunday Mirror

If you don’t hurt...try harder!

MOX MEETS... PAUL ROBINSON

-

annoys me, but I can’t do anything about it. So you have to bite your lip – but I’d like to see it go back to the old way.”

There might be the odd fleck of grey now in the hair, but Robinson’s physique puts to shame many players 15 years his junior.

And he believes that the current balance between the status of players and managers has tipped too far in favour of those out on the pitch – who don’t always know better. Robinson said: “Graham Taylor was the one that I looked up to. Graham turned me into a profession­al footballer. And he did that by being ruthless with me.

“He was ruthless with me and the other young lads. Eight of us came through the academy with Graham at Watford.

“He put me in my place. He never, ever let anyone get above their station. No one. If he saw you were getting too comfortabl­e in the first team he would put you back in the reserves.

“It was a case of, ‘Have a little taste of that.’ He never spoke to me. He didn’t have to. I realised what it was that I had done.

“He would just leave you, Graham. He would let you stew. He would let you suffer.

“Then he would see you getting a little bit itchy. Then he would walk past you in the corridor with a smile on his face.

“The older profession­als knew what was going on.

“You would be wondering if he was going to say something to you. He wouldn’t. He would just leave you dangling.

“He would say, ‘Morning’ with a big smile on his face. And nothing else. You don’t get that now. Too many managers have gone soft.

“I worry about some of them. With player-power now, they get into these little groups and they think they are bigger than the club.

“They aren’t, of course, but with the money you have to ask whether it [being left out] hurts as much.”

Robinson’s heading into management himself, when he’s finished playing – whenever that is.

“I’m not putting a time on that,” he said, “I still like to play. I get frustrated. I will keep doing that until my legs say to me, ‘That’s it’.

“And I’d like to think I’ll be honest enough to know when that is.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? WIND YOUR NECK IN Veteran Paul Robinson says the late Graham Taylor (right) taught him discipline at Watford
WIND YOUR NECK IN Veteran Paul Robinson says the late Graham Taylor (right) taught him discipline at Watford
 ??  ?? GOLDEN YEAR Robinson loving 1999 Division One Play-off Final win with Watford
GOLDEN YEAR Robinson loving 1999 Division One Play-off Final win with Watford

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland