Sunday People

Long playing record is right for nice guy Barry

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WHEN Gareth Barry knocks Ryan Giggs off top spot on the list of all-time Premier League appearance­s, you can bet there’ll be plenty of knockers.

“Giggs played all his games for Manchester United, making it a greater achievemen­t,” they’ll tell you.

And they’ll be speaking absolute cobblers.

Gareth (right, with Stan) has held his own for two decades in a league that does not carry passengers – and certainly not for 630-plus games.

Shy

That’s a special breed of player and I’ll be so proud of my old mate if he can get those five games under his belt that will take him past Giggs’s mark of 632.

What Giggs achieved was incredible.

But, despite what the naysayers will claim, Aston Villa were competitiv­e in the Premier League and playing in Europe when Gareth was there.

Manchester City were spending big money, yet he was still integral to everything they were doing. And, at Everton, he has been a big, experience­d leader in a dressing room with plenty of youngsters.

It’s hard to believe we’re talking here about the young lad with whom I shared a dressing room at Villa 20-odd years ago.

My memories are of Gaz being a little shy around the place back then and you did wonder whether or not he would survive in the shark tank that is a football dressing room.

There are always plenty of senior players jockeying for position and you have to be quite politicall­y savvy and thick-skinned, as well as a talented player, to have any kind of longevity. You have to be able to deal with all sorts of characters – managers, coaches. But he got his head down, let his talent do the talking and managed to do it with the same sort of ruthless profession­alism you’d get with a Giggs, Paul Scholes, the Nevilles or David Beckham. He is one of those guys you very rarely notice, but he’s always there. And he has always turned up for internatio­nals when selected at all the age groups and in the seniors. He is a really nice lad, completely unaffected by the trappings that came with football and he has a lovely family as well. I went up and saw him at Finch Farm last season and he breezed in with the same deferentia­l air that I remember, but with the cache and experience of being a senior internatio­nal footballer. The accolade couldn’t go to a nicer guy and the fact I can call him a mate thrills me. What will be interestin­g to see when Gareth eventu- ally retires from the game is what path he will take next. I DON’T want to see videos of Romelu Lukaku lounging poolside in LA. Andy Cole, Dwight Yorke, Ruud van Nistelrooy and Ole Gunnar Solskjaer never needed anything like that. Lukaku needs to steer clear of the rap or grime scenes, the diamonds, get his head down and develop into a 38-game-aseason performer. My message to him is: ‘Don’t be something you’re not, kid’.

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