Daily Mail

At Liverpool we’d sing and dance if we won cups... at Real it was so flat

McMANAMAN ON LIFE WITH FINAL RIVALS

- by Dominic King

STEVE McManaman is searching for the right word to accurately describe a situation like no other.

It is 18 years to the day since the then spindly legged midfielder set the Stade de France alight, crowning a man- of-the-match performanc­e with the final goal in a 3-0 win over Valencia that secured Real Madrid their eighth European Cup. This, surely, demands a rich and vivid portrayal.

Not so. After some deliberati­on, in between sips of what will prove to be a symbolic pint of lager shandy, he provides a remarkable insight both into the emotions he experience­d in Paris and what life is like at the world’s biggest club. ‘It was strange,’ said McManaman. ‘It was really, really strange. I had won the League Cup (in 1995) and FA Cup (in 1992) with Liverpool — I remember being in the dressing room with everyone singing and dancing.

‘But that night in Paris? The first thing I remember was being pulled away from the celebratio­ns on the pitch to speak to ITV. When I got back to the dressing room, the players were singing and dancing but, unlike at Liverpool, I didn’t know any words.

‘I wanted to be in the middle but instead I was on the periphery. So I went outside and started listening to all my voicemails. Growler (Robbie Fowler) had left me one, mentioning my mum. It all got a bit poignant.’ It had been a year since he had left Liverpool but it was also a year since he had lost his beloved mother Irene.

He knew, there and then, that he needed a release and wanted to join up with his father David, but Madrid president Lorenzo Sanz had other ideas.

‘A banquet had been arranged somewhere in Paris with 1,000 people invited,’ said McManaman. ‘I knew my dad and his mates were going out around Paris, celebratin­g until 9am or 10am, but I got on this bus and was escorted to this building. It just turned into this evening meal.

‘You had to put your hand in the air to signal to a waiter if you wanted a beer and, 30 minutes later, he’d bring it over. It was just really flat.

‘The trophy was up on the stage and you could have your picture taken with it but it was all very civilised. It was exactly the same after Hampden in 2002. Very odd.’

The celebratio­ns might have been anti-climactic but there was nothing underwhelm­ing about McManaman’s time in Spain.

Here was one Englishman who excelled abroad, his four- year spell securing a glut of medals and a place in the pantheon of Madrid legends.

He immersed himself in Spanish culture but the irony is not lost on him that this wonderful adventure would not have happened if Gerard Houllier, Liverpool’s manager, had not been stubborn in the winter of 1998.

‘You never know what happens with the politics in football clubs,’ said McManaman. ‘But I thought I could have gone to Juventus. It was going to be for a nominal fee as I only had six months left on my contract, from what I can remember. It had got to the point where I had been taking Italian lessons.

‘But Gerard said no and was adamant. He wanted to keep me until the end of the season, to help the team. There were a lot of clubs in for me, all the right names as my football was good, but I just fancied Spain. When I heard Madrid, with that aura and that white kit, my head said, “Them! Them!”’

This Saturday, however, his head and heart will be saying ‘not them’. McManaman will be in the commentary box in Kiev’s Olympic Stadium as part of BT Sport’s team. He once had designs on coaching and managing — he is a part-time mentor at Liverpool’s academy — but, now 46, life in the media suits him.

And he has been captivated by Liverpool’s progress under Jurgen Klopp. ‘He is made for Liverpool,’ said McManaman. ‘The way he plays his football, his style. He is brilliant with the press.

‘He must be up the wall with all the demands, as most managers are, but he is very, very charismati­c and his interviews are great. He doesn’t b******t. If we play c**p, he says so.

‘And I think Liverpool fans admire his honesty. They know whether they are watching quality or rubbish. Right now, they are seeing quality. Of course they can win it. With that front three? Dear me.’

He is conscious, though, of the threat posed by Madrid. He knows better than anyone how this trophy is viewed as their personal property and McManaman explains that the man in the Real dugout — Zinedine Zidane, the best with whom he ever played — should not be underestim­ated.

‘People forget how good he was,’ said McManaman. ‘ There are always moments with good players. They are usually the moments in training, when you are messing around and something happens and you are like, “wow!” You’d see him drag a ball from the sky or do a trick and turn.

‘ You think to yourself, even when you are playing at the highest level, “He’s made that look like he’s just climbed out of bed”. You’d find yourself thinking, “that’s beautiful to watch”.

‘He hasn’t got the credit. If it was Jose Mourinho or Jurgen or Pep Guardiola doing what he’s done, we’d go through the roof.

‘Imagine winning the Champions League three times on the spin now? With all the finances in world football, it’s unbelievab­le. Galacticos? ‘That hasn’t happened since Zizou has been there. Yet he could go: trophy, trophy, trophy. That would be exceptiona­l.’ Watch Real Madrid v Liverpool in Saturday’s Champions League final on BT Sport 2 and BT Sport 4K UHD from 6pm. For more info visit: www.BT.com/sport.

‘Klopp is made for Anfield with the way his teams play’

 ??  ?? Party time: Liverpool after winning the 1995 League Cup with (from left) Phil Babb, Rob Jones, Steve McManaman, Jamie Redknapp, David James, Ian Rush, Mark Walters and John Scales
Party time: Liverpool after winning the 1995 League Cup with (from left) Phil Babb, Rob Jones, Steve McManaman, Jamie Redknapp, David James, Ian Rush, Mark Walters and John Scales
 ?? AP ?? Man of the match: McManaman in 2000
AP Man of the match: McManaman in 2000
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