New Straits Times

Watford’s ‘Mr Fixit’ always on call

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LONDON: It should have been a welcome day off for Lorenzo Libutti and a chance to spend some time with his wife shortly before the birth of their second child.

But then Premier League club Watford appointed Spaniard Javi Gracia as their new manager — their tenth since 2012 — and Libutti was back at the club’s Colney training ground, just north of London, to help the new boss and his backroom staff settle in.

“It was supposed to be my day off,” Libutti told in an interview at Colney just days after becoming a father for the second time.

“My wife was not very happy but we came here and met the manager, his new staff, and organised everything for the first week.”

As Watford’s team administra­tion manager, it is easier to list what Libutti’s job does not entail than what it does.

“I started as the player liaison three years ago,” the 27-year-old Italian explained. “I used to work at the stadium (Vicarage Road) doing business developmen­t. I was there for two or three months.

“The role was selling sponsorshi­p but then came player liaison and they were looking for someone who spoke Spanish, Italian and English.

“I decided to apply and I’ve been at the training ground for three years now. The role of player liaison is helping the players as the first point of contact, for example when a new player or manager and their staff arrive. Helping them feel welcome and with their everyday life — houses, accommodat­ion.

“Then the job got broader, slowly, I started to be more responsibl­e for helping the manager organise training for the next day, notifying the players of the times they need to report etc etc.”

Highly-paid players who have had a cossetted life in profession­al football can be a little naive about the outside world, sometimes leading to strange requests.

“There was one that was actually very funny — my first baby was two months old so the hours you can sleep, you try to sleep. I received a phone call from a player, I’m not going to say who. It was the internatio­nal break and he was going to play for his national side in South America.

“It was 3:00 in the morning. I was a bit worried, why is he calling at this time? And he said: ‘Lorenzo, one question, how do I get from Terminal Three to Terminal Four at Heathrow?’ — at 3:00 in the morning! I said, ‘listen, I’ll call you back in a couple of minutes; and I Googled the bus route in Heathrow.”

He added: “It’s not always like this. But many of them since 15 or 16, they get used to a life that’s not for the majority of people.

“They live a life where everything is given to them, they expect almost everything.”

Libutti’s initial task when he meets a new player can be to help them find a house, but the most tricky aspect of his job often involves making sure they are eligible to play in England.

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