Daily Mail

Stevie joy makes me think I should have tried the dugout!

-

Steven Gerrard just loves it, doesn’t he? Watch him celebrate those two goals on his first day in the aston villa dugout. that cannot be manufactur­ed. It’s just in him. He lives and breathes the job.

that dedication should stand him in good stead to make a success of this Premier League lark. and success would surprise nobody, especially those who know him.

I’ve always thought his reactions to goals on the touchline — and this was the same at rangers — are almost as if he has stuck one in the top corner from 25 yards himself. that makes me think maybe I should have gone into coaching. Maybe it’s an even better feeling because you have to work so hard behind the scenes.

I have huge respect for former profession­als who take the plunge. Scott Parker is a good mate of mine, he lives nearby, and I’ll always remember when he won promotion with Fulham. all the effort and energy that go into an achievemen­t as huge as that were bundled up into an emotional interview on the touchline at Wembley when they won the play-off final.

there is a little voice in my mind telling me I’ll never have that again. But then on the flipside, Scott, now doing well at Bournemout­h, is never home and goes through what he does on a weekly basis.

although you never quite know how you are going to get on, these guys are basically reliving their first steps in football. they probably feel like teenagers again.

every goal that goes in, every win they earn, it’s like when you first start playing.

Look at Stevie’s emotion when the ball hits the net. You cannot replicate that emotion, the release, in any other walk of life. the facial expression­s, the joy, that pure, passionate emotion.

the main thing with Stevie is that he backs himself and I really enjoy watching his media commitment­s.

His press conference last week was very revealing, making sure he relayed that this job is not just a stepping stone to anfield.

I was interested to see what he had to say, because Stevie is one of those characters you can take a lot from, and he said all the right things. He’s emotional, can get a bit angry and that passion shines through. all of the top managers now — Jurgen Klopp, Pep Guardiola, thomas tuchel being the best trio — are transparen­tly emotional. they manage every minute of the game, living it from start to finish, and that is what Stevie possesses. It’s in his blood.

I’m really looking forward to following how he goes at villa. We have all said it before, but the amount of respect he commanded among us team-mates — trying to impress him on a daily basis — can only be replicated and even amplified as a manager.

every team in the division would have been looking at him after what he did at Ibrox. that was somewhere he probably had a job for as long as he wanted, until the Liverpool position came up, but he always wants to test himself.

Having an aura, being a leader, a born winner — he’s got all of that and more. We saw on Saturday as his side beat Brighton that villa Park was given an extra lift for his presence and that will continue.

eventually, he will be a shoo-in when Klopp leaves, but for now he has all the attributes to do a really good job at villa. that, as he has said, will be his sole focus.

I’m going to avoid cliches here but villa has been a club, for a long time now, that has been waiting for

lift-off. I’ve played there and, unless you are connected to that place, or been around it, you don’t quite realise how big they are. The ground is a special place. I used to go up there for FA Cup semi-finals as a kid, and then when signing for them as a youngster in 2002, you are in this huge, grand tunnel and it just feels prestigiou­s. You feel like you are walking into history. The Holte End is unforgivin­g yet offers such a buzz when you are playing well. Ollie Watkins will know what I’m talking about after that stunning goal in front of them on Saturday. It’s an exciting appointmen­t and for Gerrard it represents an exciting task to take them to the next level.

Villa were so thrilling last season and it’s difficult to put my finger on what happened in the weeks up until they parted company with Dean Smith.

Was there still a Jack Grealish hangover? They have spent money on his replacemen­ts and you would imagine that Stevie will be given some more to freshen it all up again.

He does need to add to that squad if they want a top-half finish, which must be the remit. He will want to put his stamp on things, possibly in January.

I WASN’T SURPRISED THAT WATFORD BEAT UNITED

WHETHEr you agree with the decision on Smith or not, Villa were decisive. Manchester

United, on the other hand, have been anything but and allowed their problems to fester for too long before relieving Ole Gunnar Solskjaer of his duties yesterday. What can you say about the Watford defeat? Was anybody surprised?

Nobody wants to call for sackings but I heard someone ask the other day whether Solskjaer would be there if he wasn’t a club legend. We all know the answer. The United board will know their reasons for this having dragged on, but it’s been nowhere near good enough for ages.

The players come out on TV and social media to say as much all the time. At some point, they are going to have to show they can address it properly.

Solskjaer would still be in a job if they had done it sooner.

 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom