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PHIL THOMPSON ON HIS SOCCER SATURDAY SACKING

PHIL THOMPSON ON HIS SACKING FROM SOCCER SATURDAY, THE UNITED-LIVERPOOL CUP TIE AND HIS 100% RECORD AGAINST FERGIE!

- By Ian Herbert Deputy Chief Sports Writer @ianherbs

Even now, Phil Thompson cannot quite believe he was able, on multiple occasions, to remind George Best of how he got the better of him with his first touch of the ball as a profession­al player for Liverpool.

It was Old Trafford, April 1972, and an 18-year-old Thompson only got 10 minutes from Bill Shankly’s bench — enough time, as he remembers it, to show Best that he had quite a head on his shoulders.

‘He was moving towards me with the ball and I offered him to nutmeg me on the halfway line,’ Thompson tells Sportsmail.

‘He tried to slip the ball through but I closed my legs, the ball ricocheted off my skinny shins and off I went.’

The encounter would have been consigned to the mists of time and the recesses of Thompson’s memory had he not found himself working with Best for six years on Sky Sports’ Soccer Saturday, as the dynamic new broadcaste­r ripped up preconceiv­ed notions about programmin­g in the early 1990s.

‘I never got tired of talking about the nutmeg,’ he says. ‘The number of times he would say, “not that one again, Thommo! not that one!” I must have bored him silly about it. But he was just fascinatin­g. A fascinatin­g man. A wonderful guy. He just loved being with other football people.’

Some of the Soccer Saturday footage of those formative days bears out Thompson’s testimony. There’s an extremely youthful Jeff Stelling with Thompson, Clive Allen, Frank McLintock, and Rodney Marsh — generally the controvers­ialist of the group.

But Best is the captivatin­g one; confusing who’s scored and how, yet radiating a charm which makes for extraordin­ary television.

‘It’s my first day back Rodney, let me alone!’ Best tells Marsh during one supremely entertaini­ng piece of confusion as he describes a goal. ‘Get me a drink and shut up!’

It is no exaggerati­on to say that Thompson is still coming to terms with Sky’s announceme­nt that they would be replacing Matt Le Tissier, Charlie nicholas and him on the Soccer Saturday team. ‘It became a way of life, so taking that away…’ he says. ‘I miss it. Yes, I miss it. We were a band of brothers. But you do know that change has to happen.’

Thompson is insistent that this interview must not be conveyed as a story of bitterness on his part. He had been in discussion­s with Sky about being eased out of the programme for 18 months, he says. He is 66 now.

‘They wanted to do it sensitivel­y rather than one day you’re gone,’ he relates. ‘They said until we find somebody who is better, it might continue.’

It did until Sky’s head of football, Gary Hughes, called Thompson one morning last September and asked for the meeting that lunchtime at which Thompson would learn he was being axed. It sounds brutal, though the removal of the others surprised him more.

‘It was three parts of a midfield,’ he says. ‘The others could have continued.’ (Le Tissier was 51 and nicholas 58.)

‘I do think we bridged all the gaps because people grew up with us,’ Thompson reflects. ‘We did it for 16 years. even though people didn’t remember us as players, they knew us as Soccer Saturday. So it was part of their life.

‘It even became a cult thing. There was a Jeff Stelling university drinking game! (A shot of spirit every time Stelling said ‘doom and gloom’ and another when Chris Kamara screamed: ‘Unbelievab­le, Jeff’). The whole thing was a testimony to Jeff, who was the leader of the band and for me, the best Tv sports presenter.

‘It took on its own life. I think people could relate to us. I’m not saying everybody loved every one of us. You only had to go on social media to see that. But we knew what we were and that was the biggest thing. We didn’t want to be like Super Sunday, where they would analyse things to death. That was the great thing about Sky. They mixed things up. They created new programmes. They pushed the boundaries.’

none of what he describes could hold a candle to events which followed the phone call he received one day in 1998 from Peter Robinson, the Liverpool chief executive who had worked with Shankly and Bob Paisley.

Thompson was in a dressing room at the pitches in everton valley known as The Pits, trying to get back to fitness with the players who had formed Liverpool’s Masters five-a-side team.

Within hours he was at the home of club chairman David Moores, being told that the club wanted him back as Gerard Houllier’s assistant manager.

It was the old Ronnie Moran, drill sergeant role he was being asked to fill for Houllier. ‘I wasn’t daft enough to think it was just my wonderful coaching abilities,’ Thompson says. ‘It was to get stuck into the players, because a lot of the time the players were ruling the club. It was coming to the back end of the Spice Boys period and they needed somebody to stand up to the players.’

It meant he had a supporting role in one of the most challengin­g times Liverpool have known, as Houllier looked to change the entire way of life at Melwood — even bringing to an end the 40- minute five- and six- a- side games dating back to the 1960s.

In the six months when he subsequent­ly stood in for Houllier, from October 2001, as the Frenchman recovered from life- saving heart surgery, Thompson won two manager- of-the-month awards and Liverpool moved to second in the table. It was ‘vindicatio­n’, he feels, for the way his relationsh­ip with the club had ended when manager Graeme Souness sacked him as reserve-team manager in 1992. That had devastated him.

Thompson’s love of the manager he returned to work with is evident in his reflection­s on those times. ‘It was Gerard’s warmth and the trust he had in people which were the biggest things. He taught me so much.’

To have lost both him and Ray Clemence in the space of four weeks towards the end of last year was particular­ly brutal, because he and the goalkeeper had shared arguably Liverpool’s greatest years together.

Take your pick of the stories about Clemence: his legendary reluctance to play in goal during the five-a-sides, his supreme competitiv­eness, the sugar-throwing caper he started when Liverpool’s train got stuck for hours behind a broken-down engine on the way

‘Liverpool hired me to get stuck into the players, they were ruling the club’

home from the devastatin­g 1977 FA Cup final defeat by United. They all marked him out as the life and soul of that great team.

‘He was clever, too,’ Thompson reflects. ‘He was always one of the guys. When there was any contractua­l stuff, he was always helping people out. So he took care of everybody as well.

‘When we won the title against the Spurs team he was playing for, at Anfield in 1982, I remember running the length of the pitch and giving him a hug because our team then were his team.

‘He had been my help, eyes and ears for so many years. I wanted to say to him, “Thank you very much for that”.’

The Manchester United fixture — the standout tie of this weekend’s FA Cup fourth round — has always set Thompson’s pulse racing as much as any. He wasn’t surprised that Sunday’s Premier League clash between the sides was so drab. ‘There was a two-week close season and two-week preseason, which is no preparatio­n,’ h he says. ‘It’s created an unpreceden­ted situation where everything isw is impossible to predict, including who might win the League.’

Much could hinge on whether Joel Matip is fit to return in central defence as the teams meet again on Sunday. ‘Defence has not been the problem in itself, despite Virgil van Dijk’s absence,’ Thompson insists. ‘It’s more about decision-making 25 yards from goal, midfielder­s and forwards, too.’

United games delivered some of Thompson’s defining Liverpool moments — including the two wins over Sir Alex Ferguson’s side while he was standing in for Houllier in 2001-02.

It was the season Ferguson had initially decided would be his last and perhaps that was why, when they encountere­d each other in Anfield’s rabbit warren of corridors in November 2001, the Scot proposed they have a pre-match glass of wine together.

‘I had to decline,’ Thompson relates, grinning at the memory. ‘I had to be in with my players. There was something less intense about United that day. It felt different. It wasn’t the usual, “We’ve come here to do you in”.’

Michael Owen and John Arne Riise put Liverpool 2-0 up inside 40 minutes. They won 3-1.

A 100 per cent winning managerial record over Ferguson is certainly something to reminisce about, though nothing can remotely eclipse that sweet centre-circle encounter with George Best, nearly 50 years ago, on the hallowed turf of Old Trafford — or the laughs about it that followed in the Sky studio.

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 ?? KEVIN QUIGLEY/ ANDY HOOPER ?? Glory in red: Thompson with ‘brothers’ Merson and Nicholas (main), with Houllier after winning the 2001 UEFA Cup (above) and embracing Clemence (left) after beating Tottenham to secure the 1982 title
KEVIN QUIGLEY/ ANDY HOOPER Glory in red: Thompson with ‘brothers’ Merson and Nicholas (main), with Houllier after winning the 2001 UEFA Cup (above) and embracing Clemence (left) after beating Tottenham to secure the 1982 title
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