The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Be Prepared: Dundee United boss Micky Mellon’s guide for gaffers to the fraught and frightenin­g job of leading a football squad is out today.

- IAN ROACHE

Here is a question you never thought you would be asked. What do football managers, The Lion King and Robert Baden-Powell all have in common?

The answer is they should all “Be Prepared,” with Dundee United boss Micky Mellon’s book joining one of the hit musical’s songs and the founder of the Boy Scout movement in adopting that motto.

Mellon has co-authored The First 100 Days: Lessons In Leadership From The Football Bosses with head teacher Phil Denton and it is published today.

It is a comprehens­ive guide for gaffers to the fraught and frightenin­g job of being in charge of football players.

It is all for a worthy cause, too, with proceeds going to fight Motor Neurone Disease in the name of Mellon’s former team-mate Lenny Johnrose.

Asked to name the one, single piece of advice he thinks those sitting in the dugouts should take from the words written by, among others, Ole Gunnar Solskjaer, Sean Dyche, David Moyes, Sam Allardyce, Walter Smith and Joe Royle, Mellon was quick to reply.

He said: “Be prepared! “Doing this book, for two-and-a-half to three years, the same sort of things kept coming up. You get recurring themes and one of them was definitely: be prepared.

“You have to understand before you go into a club, get as much informatio­n as you can about the job you’re about to go into, ask the right questions and do your homework.

“The book is about the first 100 days and it is probably a nice period of time in management.

“However, when you go through that period, you should remember that all the time because in football every three days you’re good or you’re bad.

“Therefore, make sure you stay focused on that and try not let outside influences affect you.”

And the next crucial factor?

He added: “Relationsh­ips are massive. You must keep nurturing relationsh­ips, with supporters, with staff, your sporting director and your owner.

“Those are the real, big important things that kept coming up all the time.

“And it’s not just relationsh­ips with people.

“There are relationsh­ips with how the players feel about how you want to play, what the tactics are, what the philosophy of the club is, and what you want them as a team to know.

“They will have a relationsh­ip with that idea. They will either hate it or they’ll love it.”

For the most significan­t difference in management over the years, Mellon took to cyber space.

He said: “Social media is the biggest change.

“I came into management maybe at the start of social media.

“Now with social media, especially during this pandemic, which we speak about in the book, it is the fans’ opportunit­y to voice their opinions.

“That has really changed because that can gather momentum on any kind of subject.

“That is something that, as a manager, you have to be aware of but make sure you filter out the unnecessar­y stuff.

“You can learn from Twitter, too, so there are loads of positives as well but those are things that the modern manager has around them all the time.”

Working with Mr Denton has given Mellon perspectiv­e on the crossover between the chalkface and the football pitch.

He said: “As a manager, you are a teacher and you have to understand that you are trying to teach, lead and help young men be the best they can be.

“That comes from your experience­s and what you have learned yourself.

“Or if you don’t know something, go and find out about that. All of that is done for your players.

“You’re trying to protect them and give them lessons about mistakes you maybe made or why you are helping them to deal with what is necessary or what isn’t necessary.”

As for Mellon’s co-author, Mr Denton saw it all through a fan’s eyes as a keen supporter of Tranmere Rovers, one of Mellon’s former teams.

He said: “What summed it up was sitting at Manchester United’s training centre at Carrington waiting on Ole Gunnar Solskjaer coming down the stairs.

“I’m just a football fan who was writing a book, so I turned to Micky and said: ‘How has this happened?’.

“It was great to get the chance to speak to people and learn from their experience­s.

“There is so much to learn from these people who are scrutinise­d every day of the week, not just in football but in other walks of life as well.”

Mellon admitted there was one who got away when it came to interviewe­es and revealed: “Yeah, we tried to get Sir Alex Ferguson but he was too busy doing what we now know was his documentar­y. I was desperate to get him.

“In saying that, in compiling it was not just about the people we met to speak to about the book it was also managers we have competed against.

“I would then use their approaches to help with the job I am doing.

“For example, I learned from Pep Guardiola and I like his energy, his focus and his simplicity.

“We all listened to what he had to tell us and then took our own versions back to our own situations.

“The most important thing is to bring that back and put it into your own style of management. Be authentic and don’t try to copy.”

Oh, and be prepared. The First 100 Days: Lessons In Leadership From The Football Bosses is published by Reach Sport

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 ??  ?? LEARN FROM THE LEGENDS: United boss Micky Mellon, above, spoke to the likes of Ole Gunnar Solskjaer, left, for his new book charting the first 100 days in management and although he didn’t sit down with Sir Alex Ferguson, right, there is still so much to learn from the Manchester United maestro.
LEARN FROM THE LEGENDS: United boss Micky Mellon, above, spoke to the likes of Ole Gunnar Solskjaer, left, for his new book charting the first 100 days in management and although he didn’t sit down with Sir Alex Ferguson, right, there is still so much to learn from the Manchester United maestro.

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