The Scotsman

Don’t call me old-school says veteran boss Smith

- By IAIN COLLIN

Alex Smith will set a new record as Scottish football’s oldest-ever modern-day manager this weekend – but insists to call him “oldschool” would be an insult.

The veteran former St Mirren and Aberdeen boss is just three months short of his 78th birthday, but has been placed in charge of Falkirk in the wake of Peter Houston’s departure.

He outstrips the likes of Sir Alex Ferguson, Craig Brown and the late Sir Bobby Robson, who all worked into their 70s, and will come up just short of matching the legendary former Rangers boss Bill Struth, who retired aged 79.

Smith, who had a pacemaker fitted after a heart scare in 2014 but returned quickly to his role as the Bairns’ technical director, is adamant he remains willing and able to do all he can to turn around fortunes at the club following a winless start to the league campaign.

“I think it probably is some kind of record,” he said when asked about returning to management at his advanced years. “It’s certainly unusual.

“But it’s about how you are and how you feel about the game. I’ve been in football all my life and I thrive on it every single day.

“Because of the type of job I have I can keep myself reasonably fit and sharp. I’m up for the job, okay. You’ve always got something to prove, and I would want to prove I can manage this club at this stage in my life.”

Smith balks at any suggestion he cannot relate to modern-day footballer­s just because his own career began all the way back in the 1950s.

“I look at that as an insult,” he added. “I don’t like people calling me old-school. To survive in football – or any industry – you’ve got to move with the times.”

 ??  ?? 0 Alex Smith: ‘Up for the job’
0 Alex Smith: ‘Up for the job’

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