Sunday Mirror

Lamps has ’Arry on call in drop fight

TOFFEES BOSS LEANING ON UNCLE REDKNAPP

- By SIMON MULLOCK @MullockSMi­rror

SIXTEEN years ago, on the day that Frank Lampard lifted the Premier League title with Chelsea, his Uncle Harry completed one of football’s great escapes.

So it is no surprise that, as Everton boss Lampard finds himself fighting his own relegation battle, he has turned to Harry Redknapp for advice.

Redknapp mastermind­ed Portsmouth’s incredible survival mission in 2006 when they took 20 points from their last 10 games to beat the drop.

Safety was confirmed with a 2-1 victory at Wigan on the penultimat­e weekend – just hours after Lampard had bagged his second title medal with the 3-0 victory over Manchester United at Stamford Bridge.

Everton’s predicamen­t is just as precarious as Pompey’s was. The Toffees are stranded in the bottom three as they prepare to face Chelsea at Goodison today.

And Lampard revealed: “I speak regularly to Harry, no matter what the situation.

“He is always a great voice of reason and experience and he has been in this situation before. It’s not like he tells me to do this or that – it’s not that kind of advice.

“But I chat to him casually and some of the things he says to me makes you think, ‘Yeah, of course’.

“With people like him, you find the best things they say are simple. I’m not trying to put Harry down when I say that, it’s the absolute opposite. The smartest managers make things very simple.

“Whenever I speak to him – whether it’s ‘What do you think about taking the Everton job, Harry? What do you think about the Chelsea job? What do you think about this situation, because you were there with Portsmouth?’ – all those things are easy to bounce off him and you might get nuggets of advice.

“In terms of what the nuggets are, I’ll keep them to myself! But it’s great to have him on the end of the phone.”

Family is an important support for Lampard as he tries to keep Everton up. He said: “Fortunatel­y, I have really good people around me in terms of the staff here and family at home. It gives me great perspectiv­e.

“The harder bit is when you are not actually playing games and you have a long week, because you think about the job all the time. You need to have real support at home – and I’m fortunate that I have that with my wife and children.

“I’ve got four kids, and a couple of them are pretty young, and they make you smile all the time.

“A couple are a bit older, which is different, but great in the same sense and those things are important.”

Lampard’s message to his Everton players is that they should make the most of the life they lead – even when they are battling for survival.

He said: “Being a manager, compared to being a player, is at the different end of the scale – when you’re a manager, the job consumes you on all fronts.

“My thoughts every day are about the players, the training, the results, the staff and the fans. It is absolutely like that, night and day.

“I enjoy that because I want to give everything. But it almost feels like the highs are higher and the lows are lower, so you have to keep yourself somewhere in the middle.

“The players will feel pressure, but, at the same time, we are fortunate. We did an hour’s training at Goodison on Friday. The sun was out and we were all doing something we love.

“I told the players how lucky we are, but they also have to understand their responsibi­lity to every Evertonian to make sure we stay in this league.”

 ?? ?? SAFE PAIRS OF HANDS Redknapp’s Pompey joy in 2006 – the same year Lampard landed title with Chelsea
SAFE PAIRS OF HANDS Redknapp’s Pompey joy in 2006 – the same year Lampard landed title with Chelsea

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