The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Cleverley finally feeling at home after turning his back on United

Midfielder hailed by Ferguson is thriving at Watford and refuses to hold grudge on old clubs

- Jason Burt CHIEF FOOTBALL CORRESPOND­ENT

Tom Cleverley draws a distinctio­n between being a footballer and playing football. The first means little; the second means everything.

“I just want to play,” he says. “I want to play in the Premier League, the best league. And there’s nothing like having that 90 minutes of high-intensity football, winning, and enjoying your week. You have to be out there.

“Training six days a week and not having that buzz of a Saturday is really, really tough. You ask any player. And especially if you have trained well and you’ve got no chance of getting into the team. Luckily I’ve not had many months of that in my career but towards the end at Everton it was a bit like that.”

He also had it at the end of his time with Manchester United. But Cleverley wanted to play – had to play – and that joy of playing is back, courtesy of turning last season’s successful loan move to Watford into a permanent £8million deal on a five-year contract this summer.

The move was triggered after Cleverley made a certain number of appearance­s – “that was always my target” – and the length of that contract appears significan­t. It will, the midfielder argues, give him the stability he needs in order for him to prove himself. “I was just so happy to get the opportunit­y to play regularly again,” he admits.

Moving to Watford is also significan­t. It is where Cleverley played some of the best football of his career during a season-long loan from United in 2009. He was named the club’s player of the year.

“I liked it here and had good memories,” he says. “That season gave me a kick-start into senior football but it’s obviously changed a lot. Then it was a mid-table Championsh­ip side and now it’s an ambitious Premier League club. So it feels a lot different; not only the personnel but the mentality.

“It didn’t take much selling. It all happened within two, three hours and I was telling my missus that I was packing up and going to Hertfordsh­ire that night. It was quick. But she was OK with it, she’s a southerner! But she also knows that when I am playing I am much happier.”

And Cleverley is certainly happy. It is not that long ago that he was a regular for United and for England, showing form that had Ferguson declaring he was “potentiall­y the best midfielder in Britain”. He played Champions

League football and collected a Premier

League winner’s medal at Old Trafford, having joined from Bradford City aged 12.

Then it fell apart. Ferguson retired, David Moyes succeeded him, and Cleverley became the focus of fan frustratio­n. “With Sir Alex leaving that was not great timing for me as I was playing well under him. Then you look at the start of the Moyes season and it was such a tough run of fixtures for a manager to come into and it just snowballed from there,” Cleverley says.

“Not just for myself but for the whole club, really. We were mid-table after five or six games and the pressure started to mount. We lost a couple of big figures on the playing side and it became a very tough season for everyone.

“I’m fine with it now. To leave United at the time I did was the best for my career. I’ve had great memories: Aston Villa went to an FA Cup final, Everton also went to Wembley and it was great playing for such historic clubs. And now I am at Watford, a place I really love playing and I see myself here for a number of years.” Moyes’ successor, Louis van Gaal, let him go and Cleverley had a similar experience at Everton – who he signed for permanentl­y in July 2015 after a loan at Villa – with Ronald Koeman when he took over from Roberto Martinez. “The lucky thing is that I’ve had two managers who were totally direct with me – Van Gaal and Koeman,” Cleverley says. “They just said my opportunit­ies were going to be limited. And that’s enough for me to hear. As a player you want a manager to be honest with you rather than dangling a carrot that’s not there so they were both brilliant and both gave me the chance to leave.”

It was, neverthele­ss, tough to quit United, in particular. “I was there for 12 years of my life. It’s hard but I am realistic. I sort of saw it was coming,” Cleverley adds. “The timing was right at both times when I have left the clubs I have. As soon as I get out of the team I want to move on and play. That’s why I’ve played for a few clubs, because I just want to play football.”

He is doing that at Watford, and he chuckles as he refers to himself, now 28, as “an older head”. His contributi­on is certainly valued by the club’s new head coach Marco Silva who hails the way Cleverley helps knit the team together.

Cleverley is excited by the club’s recruitmen­t – Andre Gray, Richarliso­n, Nathaniel Chalobah, Will Hughes, Kiko Femenia – and relishes the responsibi­lity he has been given. “I am not a shouter or a screamer but I have to be a voice on the pitch,” he says. Watford have also made a good start to the league campaign, drawing against Liverpool, winning at Bournemout­h and with a home fixture with newly-promoted Brighton today.

“With the stakes of the Premier League now you’ve got to get to 40 points but I really feel we’ve got the squad and the manager to go for a top-10 finish,” Cleverley says. “If we weren’t to do that while I’m at this club then I would feel disappoint­ed.”

And beyond that? “Coming here is what I needed. I have good memories of this club and I want to create more,” Cleverley says. “I’d also like to keep proving a few people wrong. I’d still like to win more trophies so I’d like to think I am going again and I’m going to be successful.”

‘I’m fine with it now. To leave United at the time I did was the best for my career’

 ??  ?? Man on a mission: Tom Cleverley made his loan move to Watford permanent in the summer and the midfielder says Marco Silva’s side have the quality to break into the Premier League top 10 this season
Man on a mission: Tom Cleverley made his loan move to Watford permanent in the summer and the midfielder says Marco Silva’s side have the quality to break into the Premier League top 10 this season
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