The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Allardyce gets the best out of his players

- Kevin Davies BOLTON STRIKER UNDER SAM ALLARDYCE FOR FOUR YEARS

I LAST saw Sam Allardyce at a birthday party in Marbella a few weeks ago. We talked football, how he kept Sunderland up, and then he went off to boogie with a group that included my wife Emma.

Sam’s dance moves were so energetic, they became an Internet hit. That’s him, work hard and enjoy life too.

It was my good fortune to spend four great years working with Sam at Bolton. His knack was getting the best from players like me, at a crossroads in their careers, and also World Cup winners such as Youri Djorkaeff. That’s why I believe he’ll be a hit with England.

He has the same qualities as Fabio Capello and Roy Hodgson but without their faults. His players will feel 10-feet tall every time they walk out for England, and he will stamp down on anyone who takes liberties, no matter how big the name. Everyone will be treated the same.

He changed my career with a chat in a hotel room in Austria during a Bolton pre-season tour in 2003. I was 26 and on trial, having struggled at Blackburn, Southampto­n and Millwall. Sam wanted to know where it had gone wrong for me. He was very candid but humorous with it. I left the room 20 minutes later knowing this was a manager I wanted to play for.

That approach worked for genuine world stars like Jay-Jay Okocha, Fernando Hierro, Ivan Campo and Djorkaeff as well. They had won the world’s biggest prizes but came to Bolton because of Sam’s ambition and drive.

They respected him and were given the Bolton Bible like the rest of us every season with a list of what — and what not — to do. Miss a public appearance and you would be fined two weeks’ wages. It might sound Draconian, but it wasn’t like that.

We all played to a plan laid down by Sam and there was a lot of fun and laughter in there as well.

If it was good enough for Okocha and Djorkaeff, it will be good enough for any England player. They seem to be a good bunch in any case, but Sam will not stand for any prima-donnas should it arise.

My only cap came under Capello. Everything was regimented, even down to synchronis­ed times to eat. It was organised and discipline­d but there was a lack of empathy between manager and players.

In contrast, Hodgson’s England appeared too relaxed. I took my coaching badges at St George’s Park and the squad was there. Roy was very calm, the players could have a round of golf when they liked. It was friendly, but to me lacked purpose and leadership.

Sam will have a firm plan like Capello, in which the players will know what to do.

But he will have that human side to give the players an arm round the shoulder or a little kick, depending on what they need.

If I needed building up, he would invite me in and show me a list of stats about my contributi­on. Once, he proved I was involved in 78 per cent of Bolton’s goals. I went out the next game and played very well.

Nearly all Sam’s former players love him. Campo, Stelios (Giannakopo­ulos) and Okocha still feel great affinity for Bolton even though they played for bigger clubs.

It is down to Sam, and everyone remembers his dance with Jay-Jay after staying up in our first Premier League season.

I think Sam has been planning for years for this job. He will have studied it closely and will have a good idea of what he needs to do.

At the next World Cup, you will not see an England team lacking passion, direction or courage, which has happened in the past. Every England fan was envious of what Wales and Iceland had at the Euros, but Sam can give that spirit to England.

At club level, he did due diligence on signings so they would fit into the dressing-room. It will be the same with England. He has a lot of contacts and he will find out what the players’ characters are like. If two players have a problem with each other — and I’m not saying that’s the case — he will know about it and fix it one way or another.

We had 19 different nationalit­ies at Bolton and the togetherne­ss was great. There is no reason it cannot be done with England.

Sam will not let England down. He will have a plan meticulous­ly worked out. The players will buy into it, I’m sure, and anyone who does not will not last long.

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