Daily Mirror

Snooker loopy Warnock cues up greatest escape so far

- CARDIFF Championsh­ip: Tomorrow, 12 noon BY HECTOR NUNNS

NEIL WARNOCK enjoyed a visit to the Crucible this week ahead of Huddersfie­ld’s crucial trip to Cardiff tomorrow.

The Terriers do not yet need snookers to dodge the drop to League One, but the 74-year-old from Sheffield does need a pressure clearance or two from his team in the final three games.

Warnock (top), at his 16th club and second stint at the John Smith’s Stadium, insists that from where he started, keeping Huddersfie­ld up this term would be his greatest achievemen­t.

Some claim from the man with a record number of promotions in English football – eight – and who engineered the Rotherham Championsh­ip survival miracle of 2016.

But the managerial colossus, with a record 1,615 games in English football to his name, is as addicted to the snooker drug as ever.

And if he does part company with the Yorkshire club on either a high or a low this summer, there is no guarantee he will not be talked into firefighti­ng elsewhere come February.

Warnock said: “There isn’t much point in asking me if this is my last job. If I can keep us up this year it would be my greatest achievemen­t. Bigger than the promotions and Rotherham, because we’ve played all the top teams and had horrendous fixtures ahead when standing six points adrift.

“But then next February …you never know. I only work February, March and April these days.

“My wife Sharon and I love Italy and would like to go out there for a few weeks. And if an Italian team came in next February and asked me to save them - now you’re talking. That Como club by the lake, that would do for me. Lovely spot. Dennis Wise is involved there.”

The scrap to avoid relegation from the Championsh­ip is always a chaotic mess, but transfer embargos and points deductions tossed into the mix this time have made it especially frantic.

Warnock said: “It’s very exciting this year and a real battle you can’t help but be up for. It would be nice if we were safe, with a cigar on.

“It never works like that, the Championsh­ip. But if you’d said to me with three games to go we’d be where we are, I’d have snapped your hand off. The fixtures were horrific but the lads have done ever so well.

“It’s been chaos down there this season.

“Cardiff, Rotherham, QPR…they are all teams I have managed in the past and have a lot of time for. They’re not daft, though. They know I’m a profession­al. And I’d have helped them too.

“People talk about pressure in football. There is more pressure in the situation we’re in than there is going for promotion.

“But it will be emotional going to Cardiff, with them nearly safe. I was there two and half years and it was fabulous. I loved the fans.

“Reading on the last day could be huge, a proper six-pointer for us, and I think there is a good chance it will be. Right down to the wire.”

Back at the Crucible and Warnock (above at Cardiff) glances up at a picture of the two-time champion Cliff Thorburn, known to all as The Grinder. Warnock said: “I came to see Cliff play in the 70s and 80s. I always thought my football teams were a bit like him.

“He just ground away and would never give you anything. Not a thing.”

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