Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

I WAS PUNCHED... BY MY OWN MANAGER

Promotion-chasing Cobblers boss Brady recalls ‘tough journey’

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ROCHDALE NORTHAMPTO­N

League Two: 3pm

BY JOHN CROSS

NORTHAMPTO­N boss Jon Brady took some painful lessons into his managerial career.

Brady, 47, was determined not to make the same mistakes he saw at close hand during his playing days when he finally got a chance in management at the place he now calls home.

Aussie-born Brady was a journeyman winger, starting out at Brentford and eventually playing for 14 clubs, but he wanted to create the right “environmen­t” for his squad, which is now bearing fruit after a year in charge at the League Two promotion chasers.

Brady said: “Environmen­t and being happy is such a key thing. That’s what I try to create at my clubs where players want to train, they want to work hard and no one wants to leave.

“I had a tough journey. It didn’t work out at Brentford after a scholarshi­p. I went to Swansea for a year and a bit. But I wasn’t treated well. Bobby Smith, the manager, punched me at half-time during a reserve team friendly.

“I think he got frustrated with me, trying a trick, losing the ball, and that’s what happened. It was those times in the late ’80s, ’90s, which felt like the norm but I didn’t like it.

“There were times where, after a defeat, the manager would walk down the corridor, you’d say ‘good morning’ and they’d either grunt or just ignore you. No one wants to lose. You have to acknowledg­e people and treat them as human beings.

“Maybe things have gone full circle and I definitely didn’t realise at the time I would be a manager at this level. But I promised myself it doesn’t have to be like that.

“Now it would be a big thing, a manager hitting a player, but back then you couldn’t say anything because it would be a sign of weakness. I tried very hard but the environmen­ts weren’t great for a young guy who was a bit homesick but desperate not to give up.”

Brady went on to enjoy good times at non-league Hayes, with the likes of Jason Roberts, and then got promoted into the Football League with Rushden and Diamonds (in action, left).

He made Northampto­n his home after signing for Rushden in 1998 and would dearly love to get the Cobblers back into League One.

Brady could not stop relegation last season but added: “It’s my hometown club and I know a lot of people in Northampto­n. I played for Kettering and got promotion out of Conference North, got promotion out of the Southern League with Brackley and we had good FA Cup success.

“We won the Conference with Rushden, getting into the play-off final, nearly getting into League One, so I’ve got promotions with all those teams. And that would be a longer-term goal here at Northampto­n.”

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 ?? ?? GOOD HANDS Jon Brady is doing it his way at Northampto­n and his methods are producing the results
GOOD HANDS Jon Brady is doing it his way at Northampto­n and his methods are producing the results

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