Daily Mail

Eddie Howe hasn’t been in charge of a club like Newcastle …it’s hard!

Alan Pardew on torment at the Toon, his new gig in Bulgaria and the quest for one more big job

- By Matt Barlow

ALAN PARDEW has taken refuge in a coffee shop just north of the arctic Circle to avoid the bitter wind whistling down the fjord and through the streets of the norwegian city of Bodo.

CSKa Sofia are preparing for a europa Conference league match and their director of football is reflecting on a year helping one of the great names from europe’s east, 31 times national champions, back to the top after financial meltdown dumped them into the third tier of Bulgarian football in 2015.

‘This club had great moments in the past, famous games against liverpool and Bayern Munich, but it’s a long, long way back there,’ Pardew tells Sportsmail. ‘This level suits us at the moment and it’s significan­t. The difference between qualifying for europe and not can be as much as half a million pounds.’

CSKa went on to lose 2-0 in sub-zero temperatur­es on Bodo/Glimt’s artificial pitch, but Monday’s clash at ludogorets, Bulgarian champions for the last 10 years, was already looming large. ‘That’s our biggest target,’ says Pardew.

‘we’ve been playing catch-up. and the owner of ludogorets owns the TV company with the rights to Bulgarian football, so we have to play uphill. How can that be right?

‘But we won the Cup last season and beat them in the semi-final and we’ll run them close this season. we’ve put together a quality team on quite a low budget and these head-to-head games will probably determine where the title goes.’

More than three years have passed since Pardew worked in english football. He was sacked by west Bromwich albion after five months, unable to rescue them from an awful start to their 2017-18 campaign.

‘I feel a bit aggrieved because, for whatever reason, people turned their backs on me after west Brom,’ says the 60-year-old. ‘You can be dealt a bad hand as a manager. look at david Moyes at Sunderland and now look at him at west Ham. He’s been given another chance.’

The managerial careers of Pardew and Moyes unfolded in parallel, starting in the third tier in the 1990s, and winning promotion with reading and Preston respective­ly before stepping up to the Premier league.

‘david is a great guy, perfect for west Ham. He’s got a good hand this time and can play it well because he has the quality and experience. I haven’t had that chance again and I’m hoping it comes because I’m still hungry. I’m not wary of going back in. I can do a good job.’

Pardew has delivered success to most clubs he has managed. Promotion with reading, Fa Cup finals with west Ham and Crystal Palace, silverware at Southampto­n for the first time in 34 years.

at newcastle, his team finished fifth, and went on to the europa league last eight before star players demba Ba and Yohan Cabaye were sold, and supporters turned on him as an agent of despised owner Mike ashley. Sound familiar?

‘newcastle were ninth when I left but it was the right move because the fans were done with me. I might be the only person who knew exactly what Steve Bruce was going through because the same thing happened to me because of Mike.

‘Monday to Friday wasn’t a problem, it was a lovely experience, lovely people. Then Saturday comes and you’ve got to win.

‘eddie Howe, with all due respect, hasn’t managed a big club and will find that difficult, particular­ly because the team look short. He needs personnel and that is difficult in January.

‘newcastle fans have been dreaming of an era when they can compete with the top clubs and under Mike they never had that. now they have it if the new owners are true to their word. Good luck to them. with big finance and the support, eddie has every chance of making the club a success and I really hope he pulls it off.’

In 2014, Pardew was ready to get out of Tyneside, quitting for Palace and leading them from the relegation mire to finish 10th.

‘I needed a new challenge and it was the right move,’ he says. ‘I would put that season as a whole on a par with the season when we finished fifth, albeit under different circumstan­ces. Someone said I was the only manager to

‘The Cup final dance isn’t a reflection of me, I’m more profession­al than that’

keep two sides in the Premier league in one season.’

One year on and he was leading his team out to face Manchester United at wembley. ‘we’d done marvellous to get there,’ he says. ‘we should’ve at least taken it to penalties but, in the end, that final didn’t reflect well on me.’

when Jason Puncheon fired Palace ahead with 12 minutes remaining, Pardew performed a now-notorious touchline boogie, a shoulder-rolling shuffle that became an internet sensation and has haunted him. ‘It lasted about three seconds but in super slow-mo it seems to go on for ever. It looks like I think we’ve won it.

‘Perhaps it’s an example of how social media can hurt you because it has hurt me. anyone who knows me will tell you that’s not really a reflection of what I’m about. I’m more profession­al than that.’

Juan Mata equalised and Jesse lingard won it late in extra-time with echoes of 1990, when Pardew was a Palace player, seven minutes from victory in the Fa Cup final when Mark Hughes levelled and United won the replay. Then there was 2006. His west Ham were 3-2 up against liverpool in the 91st

minute of the Fa Cup final in the Millennium Stadium, seconds from glory when Steven Gerrard scored from 30 yards.

‘what can you do? Tactically, we set up right. The players produced fantastic performanc­es. we couldn’t have come any closer. Fate. I’ve been unlucky in the Cup and it is painful.

‘For the club and the fans, it is massive. You can’t put a price on the feeling of going to an Fa Cup final. even in defeat it’s become

 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom