Daily Mail

Liverpool wanted me but messed me about so United pounced

NEMANJA VIDIC (SENT OFF A REMARKABLE FOUR TIMES IN THIS TITANIC CLASH) ON TODAY’S BLOCKBUSTE­R

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ON SIR ALEX... When we lost 4-1 to Liverpool, he was still red when he came in the next day! ON POGBA... You need someone in the dressing room who can help you through ON MOURINHO... What is the United way? I don’t know but Jose should play how he wants

SIR Alex Ferguson wasn’t a great loser and it was even worse when Liverpool were involved. ‘That time when we lost badly (Liverpool won 4-1 at Old Trafford in March 2009) he was still red when he came in the next day,’ former Manchester United defender Nemanja Vidic told Sportsmail. ‘He saw that everybody was sad so he started making jokes and building us up again. That was what he used to do on those days.

‘But he was only able to do it for about four or five minutes. Then he had to walk out. That was as much as he could manage.’

One day Vidic will understand that feeling, the pressure of responsibi­lity. The great Serbian central defender is readying himself for management. Talking to him this week, however, it was hard to dance far from the topic at hand — Liverpool.

Vidic’s own history with United’s great enemy is chequered. He was, incredibly, sent off four times against them.

‘It is still the biggest game in the Premier League,’ he said ahead of today’s lunchtime meeting. ‘The amount of titles both Liverpool and United have won — you can never lose respect for that.

‘What Man City have been doing makes that particular game more interestin­g. But it is still Liverpool and United.’

Asked what first comes to mind when Liverpool are mentioned, Vidic laughed and said: ‘Red cards.’ One in 2008, one in that 2009 game, another the following October and the last in 2014.

But what is less known is that he could have signed for Liverpool. Vidic eventually joined United from Spartak Moscow in January 2006 but only after taking a phone call from Liverpool manager Rafael Benitez as he drove through the Russian capital one day.

‘Yes, Liverpool came to me first,’ he said. ‘We spoke in the car. My wife did the translatin­g. I didn’t say no to them. It was always “going to happen, going to happen”. I don’t know what the problem was but it didn’t happen.

‘But then United came and after two days, everything was done. Liverpool (finally) said they wanted to do the deal but everything was arranged with United.

‘But I remember all of my matches against Liverpool. To be fair, I remember more my failures than when things went better.

‘And I do remember the tough Liverpool games. Maybe by rememberin­g that stuff, it pushes me to make sure it never happens again. I don’t know . . . ’

Self-improvemen­t was always part of the Vidic creed. His route led him to Old Trafford at the age of 24. Another defender, Patrice Evra, arrived at the same time and the Frenchman described his debut as like ‘being thrown into a tumble dryer’.

Vidic too had his problems and didn’t really establish his successful defensive partnershi­p with Rio Ferdinand until the next season. So he looks at the problems being experience­d by another 24-year- old at United, Paul Pogba, with interest.

‘It is not the player’s fault that a club are paying so much money for him,’ reasoned Vidic ( right). ‘ But I think the environmen­t is important. Who is around you at the club to make you better?

‘For any young player to get so much money and publicity, he must feel like he is the most powerful person in the world. But you need to have someone in the dressing room who can help you through these difficult situations. It is not the manager, it is your team-mates. You need the right senior players, with the credibilit­y to help you go through.

‘When I came to United I was 24 and the dressing room was strong. Ryan Giggs, Paul Scholes, these guys. You always look to them for what you should be doing. They have already establishe­d the path.’

Vidic played 300 times for United in his eight and a half years at the club. He is the last captain to lift a Premier League trophy for them, in Ferguson’s final season of 2012-13.

He struggled more than most to adapt under David Moyes. Midway through that campaign, Vidic announced that it would be his last. By the time Moyes was sacked in April 2014 Vidic had already agreed to join Inter.

So was he too hasty? And what of those suggestion­s that he decided to leave when Moyes asked him and Ferdinand to learn from a video of Everton defender Phil Jagielka?

‘I don’t want to comment about what happened in the training ground,’ said Vidic. ‘I would just like to say that I tried to give 100 per cent for David. I wanted him to succeed. I am sad he didn’t.

‘But if you are going to judge the manager you can always find difficulty in what he said. Any manager. If I have something to say to someone I will say it to their face. I am not saying I am hiding something but I will defend someone who is in the chair of Sir Alex Ferguson. That’s why I understand (Jose) Mourinho.

‘I was brought up to always give 100 per cent and it got harder to do that. The English league is demanding and I had a knee injury, a back injury. Then more of the same. And obviously they changed the situation at the club. I could see how everything was changing and I am not just speaking about Moyes. It was everything. I just had this sense that it was time.’

Vidic’s home now is Milan. He plays golf and tennis and is taking his UEFA Pro Licence with the intention of one day managing at the highest level.

We met this week at St George’s Park where, along with 25 other wannabe managers, he was having a media training day as part of his qualificat­ions. Surprising­ly, he revealed that playing left him ‘stressed’. He never appeared so, the resolutene­ss of his defending matched only by his serene calmness.

But if playing really was stressful then surely management will only be worse. ‘I am enjoying my life,’ Vidic smiled. ‘No stress. Football was stressful. I don’t miss that. ‘ When you stop playing you realise how stressed you actually were. Especially as you get older. You cannot do the things you used to do, so that is stressful to accept. I worked for Alex Ferguson for quite a few years.

‘The way he did it means that a lot of his players want to be managers now. He made it look easy and you think, “I would like to do that”. But then I went to play in Italy and it didn’t look as easy. So I ask myself if it is right to go this way.

‘But I know I want to try. Football is what I know. I have some knowledge I think. I had about 15 managers. So I would like to try to use my knowledge.

‘I talked about the stress but I am used to it. Winning, losing, happy, sad. You want to win again, you want to prove something. You want to make the difficult decisions and test yourself. So, yeah, that is what I want.’

Listen to Vidic and it could be any United great talking. Roy Keane, Gary Neville or even Ferguson himself. These days it’s hard to escape some of his old mates on TV but Vidic has decided that life is not for him.

‘Even when Gary was at the club he did some pundit work for MUTV on youth games,’ he recalled. ‘In the beginning it was difficult. He would come into the dressing room and it would be, “You made a mistake there”. You know what players are like.

‘But he was brave enough to try and learn. When he wanted to do something he was always preparing himself. And of course Gary always had an opinion, even in the dressing room.

‘But someone has to be on the pitch as well. I would choose to be on the pitch or the dug-out. I really want to try and do this job.’

Today Vidic is expected at Old Trafford. He is a United

ambassador. City will win the Premier League but he feels United may surprise people in Europe. ‘Mourinho is a tactical coach, he knows Europe very well,’ he said. ‘He knows how to get through scrappy games. What is the Man United way now? I don’t know but Mourinho should play the way he wants to play.’

The Stretford End still sing about Vidic, just as they do about other former players. The current group, maybe not so much and that seems strange for a team second in the league.

‘When we started winning, that’s why they started singing songs about us,’ Vidic said. ‘If you want to have them sing songs about you, you need to win. The Man United fans do not sing about just anyone, you have to deserve it.

‘That’s how I felt as a United player. Win and a few players are going to get a song, that’s for sure.’

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 ?? Football Editor ??
Football Editor
 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? If looks could kill: Vidic confronts Daniel Sturridge, claiming he dived during United’s 2014 defeat by Liverpool at Old Trafford...
GETTY IMAGES If looks could kill: Vidic confronts Daniel Sturridge, claiming he dived during United’s 2014 defeat by Liverpool at Old Trafford...
 ??  ?? . . . but his pleas can’t stop Mark Clattenbur­g sending him off
. . . but his pleas can’t stop Mark Clattenbur­g sending him off

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