The Herald

Forever an inside man with eyes on the prize

- CHRIS JACK

ALEX RAE has spent various spells out of football since hanging up his boots in 2008 – but he always pined for a return. Prior to being appointed the manager of St Mirren last month, Rae had completed a tour of duty as assistant to Alex McLeish at Genk, with six months either side of that job on the outside looking in.

Those who know the reflective Rae didn’t really give it much thought – he always sounded appealing over the airwaves of the various media outlets he was working for, and a career in front of the microphone seemed no great hardship.

But Rae always saw it differentl­y. He knew, deep down, where he wanted to be. “There was one occasion when I was out of football and I was doing radio work covering a match at Kilmarnock,” he recalls. “It was the start of the new season, a scorching day, and I was speaking to Gary Locke, and Gary was really excited about the new season. I enjoyed working in the media but I remember thinking, ‘Man, I need to get back in somewhere’.”

The authentic football man, with the game in his veins, needs to be on the inside working, not on the outside observing. You find this again and again with ex-footballer­s who have the instinct to coach or manage.

“I’m not a guy to boast,” says Rae. “I don’t go around saying, ‘I’m this and I’m that’. But see when it comes to football? I feel I’ve got a pretty decent understand­ing of the game, based on my experience­s over the past 30 years.

“I’ve managed at Dundee, under financial constraint­s. I’ve worked at Blackpool in incredibly difficult circumstan­ces. I’ve worked at Notts County and at MK Dons. So I’ve built up a lot of experience in the various dynamics of football. Plus I had a career that spanned 700-odd games.

“I feel I have knowledge and experience. As much as I enjoyed my media work, doing the BBC, Radio Clyde, BT Sport, Talksport and more, to me there is nothing to match standing on that touchline, with your heart pounding, trying your best to get your team to play their best.

“The media is a breeze – you just sit there and talk about other people’s misfortune­s. But it doesn’t tick the box. It doesn’t come close to that heartpound­ing thing.”

Rae is a fascinatin­g character, who conquered his own addictions, and sought to help others with equal affliction­s, but who time and again could not quite get over the feeling that he had a point to prove in football, that he would “show people” what he was about, either as a player or a coach.

This nagging desire to prove himself time after time threatened to wear him down, until the point of liberation came, via a conversati­on with a friend.

“A journalist once wrote something about me when I was 33,” he says. “I was playing for Wolves in the English Premier League. And he asked in his piece, ‘Even though Alex has done well for Wolves, the question remains, why did Sunderland let him go?’ I remember thinking, ‘You cheeky b*****d.’

“The guy then asked, ‘Has Alex Rae got it to be in the English Premiershi­p and perform there?’ I had been top scorer for Wolves that season [2003-04] going into February, so I was raging. I thought, ‘I’ll show you, I’ve got 700 games behind me, where is your credibilit­y?’

“There was also a time, while I was at Sunderland, and had played 32, 33 games when Peter Reid left me on the bench for a game against Spurs. I was raging. Again I was thinking, ‘Right, I’ll show you’. I finally got on the field that day, desperate to prove something, and I got sent off.

“I was always raging, because I always felt I had a point to prove. But then I spoke to people about how I was feeling, and a guy in Glasgow called Barry Docherty said to me, ‘Look, wait a minute, Alex. Why are you trying to prove anything? You’ve played a pile of games in the EPL. You’ve finished seventh there with Sunderland.

“In the six teams above you – Man United, Chelsea, Arsenal etc – there wasn’t a Scot playing among them. You were the highest-ranked Scot playing in the English Premier League that season. You’ve got nothing to prove to anyone’.

“It taught me a lesson. I was always wanting to prove a point. But now I realise I don’t need to prove anything to anyone. It was brilliant advice, it freed me up. It made me realise I just need to be true to myself.”

Over two-and-a-half years as manager of Dundee between 2006 and 2008, Rae took the club to third place in the old second tier in Scotland, while his playing budget was cut in half.

In Belgium last season with McLeish they took on a flounderin­g Genk side and hoisted them up the table with a 54 per cent win rate.

His experience­s in coaching and management are piled high – with fire-fighting in there as well – which is what persuaded the St Mirren board to go with Rae as Ian Murray’s successor. “I was two-and-a-half years at Dundee – I mean, that’s a lifetime for a manager up there – and I have fond memories of that club. Genk was something else entirely – we had Belgian, French, Dutch, Slovakian and Georgian players, a United Nations, plus two Scottish guys – me and Alex – trying to make it work. It was a brilliant experience.”

And what now of St Mirren? How much scope is there right now for “success” in the months ahead? Rae sighs slightly at the extent of the challenge.

“When I came in, we were in a relegation fight – and we’re still there,” he says. “So my first objective is, let’s just try and get above the guy above us. And after that, let’s keep nippin’ and tuckin’ away. That’s what it has to be about at the moment. I’m not going to say anything that will end up with me being shot down.

“I felt a little overwhelme­d at first, trying to get things organised, trying to get to grips with everything here. I said to someone after a week, ‘I feel overwhelme­d with everything that I need to do here’. But I’ve got to grips with it now. It was just a case of getting settled in.

“January is a terrible month. You get a million agents trying to send you players from everywhere. You are inundated. What I’d love, just once, would be for an agent to come on the phone and say, ‘You know what Alex, I’ve got this wee guy, he’s not got a left foot, he’s desperate in the air, he’s towing a caravan . . . but he’s got a nice right foot’.

“I mean, everyone you are punted is the best player in the planet. So me and Fazz [Davie Farrell, his assistant] are just trying to fix it, put things in place, and bring improvemen­t.”

Rae’s love of the game is a bit perverse, as he explains quickly before rushing to his next task.

“It’s difficult to actually enjoy football,” he says. “Okay, if you are winning every game, you are on the crest of a wave. But it is so up and down: you get injuries, you are chasing people, and you get knock-back after knock-back from players.

“Listen, I’m loving this job. But it’s a challenge. What I’m trying to say is, every day, something hits you. But when you’re out of football, you miss all that so much. It is a part of your DNA.” BARRIE MCKAY, the Rangers winger, is confident he can see off the arrival of more attacking players at Ibrox and retain his place in Mark Warburton’s side for the remainder of the Championsh­ip campaign.

The 21-year-old has emerged as one of the key men for Rangers this term as they have moved five points clear in the Championsh­ip and progressed to the Petrofac Training Cup final and fifth round of the Scottish Cup. McKay has scored five goals in 28 appearance­s for Rangers and is on the verge of agreeing a new contract to commit his future to the club.

Manager Warburton has already added midfielder Harry Forrester to his squad this month and Michael O’Halloran, the St Johnstone forward, could arrive at Ibrox in the coming days. Matt Crooks and Josh Windass of Accrington Stanley have agreed pre-contract deals and there is the prospect of even more new faces during the summer as Warburton prepares for what he hopes will be a Premiershi­p campaign.

“It is competitio­n and it is good in every squad,” McKay said. “It can only make me push on further to keep them out of the team and keep my jersey.

“It would be good whoever we bring in and it will be a quality player whoever it is that is added to the squad. It is up to the people that are here to keep them out of the team and not make it easy for them to walk into it.

“As the season has gone on, I have believed in myself that much more. A lot of that is down to the manager. I have started most games this season and he has said to me that I have been playing well. I need to keep that going. He has given me the chance that maybe other managers haven’t so I just need to repay him.”

Meanwhile, Falkirk manager Peter Houston has issued an apology to Hibs for wrongly accusing John McGinn of “going down easily” to try and win a penalty at the weekend.

However, having since watched Sunday’s game back, Houston phoned Hibs counterpar­t Alan Stubbs yesterday to say sorry for the slur and has confessed the Easter Road side could have had a penalty on this occasion.

He said: “After reviewing the footage of the incident, in hindsight John, who is an extremely talented football player, had a strong case for a penalty and fair credit to the lad for attempting to play on.

“At the time of making the comments I hadn’t seen the footage properly. I’ve called Alan Stubbs to apologise to John for the comments that were made.”

The media is a breeze – you just sit there and talk about other people’s misfortune­s. But it doesn’t tick the box

 ??  ?? UP FOR THE CHALLENGE: Alex Rae admits St Mirren are still in a relegation fight but has faith in his own ability to turn things around
UP FOR THE CHALLENGE: Alex Rae admits St Mirren are still in a relegation fight but has faith in his own ability to turn things around
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom