The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Lloyd was victim of Paisley plan … then proved him wrong

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heart of the defence, Forest’s astonishin­g rise continued, their victories in Lloyd’s absence including a 4-0 win at Manchester United. But the moment Lloyd was fit, Clough put him straight back in the team.

“You may wonder why I did that,” the manager said to Needham in front of the rest of the players. “You’ve done brilliantl­y. And you’re a lovely lad. In fact, if I had a daughter, I’d be delighted if she ended up with you.”

Then he pointed at Lloyd. “But him, he’s a f------ b------.” Voted on several occasions as Forest’s hardest ever player (“I wasn’t that hard I was just clumsy at times,” he once insisted), for five years Lloyd acted as Clough’s unabashed enforcer on the field.

As the club won the league title, two League Cups and, gloriously, two European Cups, he was the rock around which the defence was built. Never mind that the pair did not get on personally – Lloyd maintained that the manager’s refusal ever to compliment him on a performanc­e irked him to distractio­n – theirs was a silverware-bedecked relationsh­ip. And it was one, he often reflected, that would never have come about had he not made a fuss about being overlooked at a previous club, Liverpool.

He had arrived at Anfield from Bristol Rovers as a raw 20-year-old in 1969. Bill Shankly quickly promoted him to the first team and by 1973, when he played every minute of every game in a season in which Liverpool won the league title and the Uefa Cup, he was an integral part of the team.

The following season however, when he was injured, Phil Thompson was promoted in his place. And the new manager Bob Paisley prefered the more accomplish­ed passing of Thompson to Lloyd’s blunderbus­s manner even with the stalwart fully fit. Lloyd was not happy. “I threw my toys out the pram,” he once admitted. And demanded a transfer.

Paisley sold him to Coventry City for a club record £260,000 in August 1974. Such a huge outlay was it, Coventry were soon in financial trouble and sought to offload Lloyd. At which point, in came Clough. He was looking for an experience­d, no-messing defender. With Forest then in the middle of the Second Division, it was not an easy sell. Though, as Lloyd later reflected, Clough was “a very, very clever man”.

After a loan spell, the manager persuaded him to sign by way of offering him a new washing machine. With the white goods plumbed into his home, Lloyd signed up and turned up at the Forest training ground, where he was accosted by one of the laundry staff. “Are you Larry Lloyd?” he was asked. “Well, you’ve just cost us our washing machine. The manager sent two blokes down to take it round to your house.”

It was worth the investment. Despite being the most fined player of Clough’s era (he was once docked two weeks’ wages for punching Peter Osgood in a fog so thick the referee missed it; the manager did not) he was a towering presence. His best performanc­e, he always reckoned, was against Hamburg in Forest’s second European triumph in May 1980.

That month, by now in his thirties, he was recalled to the England side nine years after earning his first three caps. It was not an auspicious return: England lost 4-1 to Wales in Wrexham, and he never played for his country again. Next season he was told by Clough he was getting too old for Forest. But by way of compensati­on Clough agreed to talk up his potential as a manager, mentioning in several interviews that he could become a top boss.

As a result, he was offered a job at Wigan as player-manager. As he recalled, he played in the Club World Cup final in Tokyo and the following Saturday, played for Wigan at Rochdale. But he led Wigan to promotion to the third tier and caught the eye of the board at Notts County, then in the top flight. However, Lloyd’s Forest connection­s meant he never won over the fans and, with County relegated, he was soon let go.

He stayed in Nottingham, turning out as a highly opinionate­d pundit for local radio. After a spell in Spain, where he invested in property, he returned to the city and was a regular at Forest home games, feted by fans. “People often ask me what was my biggest regret in the game,” he once said. “And I suppose I should say it was a massive mistake to kick off at Liverpool. But then if I hadn’t, I’d never have gone to Forest. And that’s where I had the time of my life.”*

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