Daily Mail

I’m not moody… I enjoy life!

JIMMY FLOYD HASSELBAIN­K EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW:

- By Craig Hope

JIMMY Floyd Hasselbain­k has a newborn granddaugh­ter. He also has four daughters. And a wife. So what was it like at home this Christmas?

‘Emotional!’ he booms. ‘ There can be lots of shouting, lots of ups and downs.’ And that’s just you, yes? ‘No, no, no. I stay out of it. I just walk out the door. I sit on the fence.’

It will be one of the few times Hasselbain­k has risked splinters. Grandad Jimmy he may now be, but the former Leeds, Chelsea and Holland striker isn’t for mellowing just yet, not at 48.

It is why he has caught the eye and the ear in recent months with some feisty exchanges as a pundit on Sky Sports, especially one verbal joust with Patrice Evra.

‘He was contradict­ing himself. I wasn’t being awkward, I just didn’t agree with him,’ says Hasselbain­k. The clip went viral online.

The fire, then, is still burning. That much was also obvious by the video — filmed by former Chelsea team- mate John Terry — of Hasselbain­k competing in the dads’ race at a school sports day. We’ll let him tell the story.

‘I got a good start, I was in front. Then I notice another dad is getting closer. And closer. I think, “I need to dive to win here”. So I get my hands out and shoulders forward. But I end up stumbling and

‘Technicall­y, I wasn’t as good so I made myself play with anger’

falling over the line. But hey, I won! I made my daughter proud. Just as well I’ll be in the grandad’s race next year, though.’

Hasselbain­k, you suspect before meeting him, could be moody. He certainly looked it as a player. So how do you ask someone if they are prone to a sulk without, well, risking a sulk? I give him a choice: moody diva or good guy?

‘I’m a brilliant guy,’ he smiles. ‘I’m not moody. Everyone who knows me will say that. I know why you ask. Even my girls say, “Daddy, on the pitch, why are you looking so angry?”. But I’ll tell you something now — I had to be like that.

‘Technicall­y, I was not as good as the others. I had to give myself aggression, make myself angry. It gave me the edge. I needed that to compete at the highest level. Without it, I wouldn’t be the same player. But that moodiness has not overtaken me. I always have a smile on my face.

‘I enjoy life — my family, nice food, a glass of wine. When I am a proper grandad, an old one, I want to say I lived my life how I wanted to.’

The new arrival, then, has not made Hasselbain­k feel old just yet. ‘Definitely not,’ he protests. ‘I feel very young. I’m not that happy with my daughter that I’m already a grandad! But no, she’s absolutely beautiful.

‘Unfortunat­ely, because they live in Holland I’ve only seen her once, so there is a lot of FaceTime. It’s a strange feeling because I still have young girls here — 14, 12 and six — and that definitely keeps me young. But it’s different — my children, I have to take everywhere with me. My granddaugh­ter, I can love, kiss and give her back to mummy!’

Don’t be fooled, though, into thinking Hasselbain­k has gone soft. We’re talking family, not football. Get him started on the latter and he’s as hard-hitting as those shots he would leather beyond goalkeeper­s. He did that 258 times. Little wonder he is a man of conviction.

CHELSEA owner Roman Abramovich recently celebrated his 1,000th game at the club. Does Hasselbain­k remember the first? The slow, deliberate nod and intake of breath tells you he does, and there is a tale to go with it.

By way of background, Claudio Ranieri was manager in 2003 when the Russian billionair­e arrived at Stamford Bridge. Hasselbain­k had scored 70 goals over three seasons and was 31. Chelsea were at Liverpool on thee opening day.

‘A couple of weeks before, I was called intonto Ranieri’s office. He said I’dd always done well for him. Butut now he had money to spend,d, I could look for a new club.. I told him I wasn’t going anywhere.ywhere.

‘He said, “OK, but I’m going to buy two really good strikers. We want to be champions ham pi ons and you mightht not play”.

‘I said, “OK, you are entitled to buy two strikers who you think arere better than me.e. But I will endd up playing because you will end up coming back to me”.’

Sure enough, Ranieri turned to substitute Hasselbain­k at Anfield. With the score 1-1 on 87 minutes, he collected a pass from Frank Lampard, beat Jamie Carragher and fired into the bottom corner to win the game. He tore off his jersey but wore a frown.

‘In that period, Ranieri treated me really badly,’ he says. ‘He didn’t let me play in a Champions League qualifier. So when I scored, a lot of anger and satisfacti­on came out. It was an important moment for Abramovich but just as important for me.’

It is fascinatin­g that Hasselbain­k has never spoken well of Ranieri the manager, yet arguably played his best football under the Italian. He was Chelsea’s top scorer three times and Premier League Golden Boot winner once, just as he was at Leeds, his first English club.

‘I don’t play for a manager,’ he begins as we explore the contradict­ion. ‘And when I managed I didn’t expect players to play for me. I did it for myself and my family and I always gave my all. I think the fact Ranieri did end up coming back to me proves that, doesn’t it?’

Hasselbain­k remains respectful of a ‘nice man’. He even felt sympathy for Ranieri when midfielder Gus Poyet refused to translate for him in front of the entire squad.

‘ It was hard, I felt really awkward. Gustavo was his go-between early on but he wasn’t playing. And then he did that. He was soon gone.’

Come the summer of 2004, Hasselbain­k and Ranieri were also gone. Chelsea finished second in Abramovich’s first season and Hasselbain­k was again top scorer, despite Ranieri paying £32million for Hernan Crespo and Adrian Mutu. But along came Jose Mourinho.

‘Mourinho wanted to use me as an example, that’s how he managed. He wanted to show he could let big players go. I was still top scorer, even though two really good strikers had signed.

Mourinho wanted to show who was boss, and I was the one he used. Yes, Chelsea then won the League but I could have added to the team that year. Mourinho has always done that. He’s doing it now with Dele Alli at Spurs. That’s how he manages. That’s how he gets success. You can’t fault him.’

Mourinho did later admit to Hasselbain­k he was wrong, especially given he outscored all of Chelsea’s strikers in the colours of Middlesbro­ugh the following season. It would appear there is no grudge, however, not with Hasselbain­k fancying Mourinho’s Spurs as more realistic title winners than Chelsea this year.

‘I said a couple of months back Chelsea aren’t contenders and people reacted to it but I still don’t think they are. They are building. Let them build. Mourinho is a serial winner. Spurs have everything, this is the best chance they’ve ever had.’

So how would Hasselbain­k fare in today’s game? I suggest the need for strikers to press the opposition would not be to his liking.

‘I don’t agree that I didn’t press,’ he snaps back. ‘I did. But it was calculated pressing.’ Good answer. ‘Anyway, I think I’d score tons of goals now. Tons and tons and tons. I could bully the modern day centre back, easily. Most of them just want to pass the ball. They don’t actually want to defend. I’d back myself against them, every time.’

That same inner belief means Hasselbain­k has not given up on management either, despite twoand-a-half years having passed since his sacking at League One Northampto­n. Before that there was a successful spell at Burton and a less enjoyable spin at QPR.

‘I’m not chasing it but I definitely want to have one more go,’ he says. ‘I don’t think I’ve had a fair crack

of it, especially my last two jobs.’ For now, then, punditry. And property developmen­t, including renovation work on his own house. Hasselbain­k shows me a pile of boxes inside his Surrey home. ‘My wife is demanding I run around everywhere, she is in her element! You see these boxes, I need to sort them now. I just do as I’m told.’

Perhaps that explains why Hasselbain­k arrived late for a recent appearance on Super Sunday. Of all the co-pundits, it was Roy Keane left waiting. He laughs at the memory of Keane suggesting on air he should be fined two weeks’ wages.

‘It was the first time I’ve been in his company properly. People have this perception but he is very funny. He was tough as hell as an opponent. He would never smile but what an excellent player.’

Hasselbain­k’s debut for Chelsea was against Manchester United in the 2000 Charity Shield. He scored in a 2-0 win and Keane was sent off. ‘I don’t think I’ll be reminding him of that, do you? Not when he can say, “Jimmy, how many titles have you won?”.’

That is Hasselbain­k’s biggest regret. He was an FA Cup runnerup with Chelsea and Cardiff, likewise with Middlesbro­ugh in the UEFA Cup and Atletico Madrid in the Copa del Rey.

‘Chelsea signed me to win the League (a joint British record £ 15m from Atletico). In that respect, I failed. We didn’t even get close. Mourinho later apologised for letting me go but I’d rather not have that apology. I’d prefer the Premier League winners’ medal.’

For now, Hasselbain­k can take consolatio­n from his school sports day prize — and Grandad Jimmy isn’t done on that score just yet.

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 ?? EMPICS ?? Competitiv­e Com Dad: on his knees but family man Jimmy Jimm takes the win at school sports day
EMPICS Competitiv­e Com Dad: on his knees but family man Jimmy Jimm takes the win at school sports day
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 ?? DAN CHUNG ?? In his pomp: Hasselbain­k scores on his Chelsea debut in the 2000 Charity Shield against Manchester United
DAN CHUNG In his pomp: Hasselbain­k scores on his Chelsea debut in the 2000 Charity Shield against Manchester United

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