The Guardian (USA)

Sol Campbell looks the part on losing managerial debut for Macclesfie­ld

- Louise Taylor at St James' Park

Sol Campbell’s deep interest in interior design is said to incorporat­e a penchant for symmetry, so it seemed thoroughly appropriat­e the former England centrehalf began his managerial career where his playing days ended.

St James’ Park witnessed his final, half-fit hurrahs and more than seven years on it staged his debut in the technical area as Macclesfie­ld took Newcastle’s Under-21s to a penalty shootout in round two of the Checkatrad­e Trophy. With the score 1-1 after 90 minutes, League Two’s bottom side lost 5-3 on penalties.

“We played extremely well in patches,” said an animated Campbell who, as an 18-year-old, made his full debut here for Tottenham. “There’s lots of good positives. We’ve got a fight on our hands but I’m enjoying it and the guys are responding. They just need to start seeing the pictures earlier. And, no it’s not a culture shock for me. I get it.”

Although Campbell made only eight appearance­s for Newcastle during an injury-hit, retirement-prefacing, £35,000-a-week 2010-11 campaign his wife, the designer Fiona Barratt, is from the city and until recently the couple owned a country pile in Northumber­land.

Such personal history probably made the 44-year-old’s latest return to Tyneside feel something of a homecoming and he certainly looked at ease on the touchline.

Before kick-off he spent time standing, statuesque, on the sidelines gazing at the imposing, near-empty terraces as a lone photograph­er snapped away.

After seven years of forlorn football job hunting – even if he applied for only 15 posts – it must have felt a special moment. Campbell was finally making a belated, eagerly awaited, managerial bow, albeit in front of a crowd of 1,126.

His appointmen­t has been met by a mix of optimism, scepticism and sheer curiosity. In expanding the small band of BAME – black, Asian, minority ethnic – managers working in England’s profession­al game to eight, he offers hope to other non-white coaches but he is not your typical role model.

If many BAME coaches have clearly been overlooked unfairly, it is Campbell’s slightly left-field personalit­y rather than his skin colour that has arguably most hindered his progress.

Set against the 73 England caps and Spurs and Arsenal glory days was the slightly wacky notion of becoming London’s Conservati­ve mayor and his claim to being “one of the greatest minds in football”.

Some coaching acquaintan­ces took fright at his enthusiasm for discussing the subtleties of paint shades and highend decor rather than concentrat­ing purely on shadow play and swift transition­s but surely everyone needs a hinterland?

Having defied near-freezing temperatur­es with a standard issue, navy blue, hooded, SC-embossed anorak he initially chewed a pen contemplat­ively, as the 6ft 5in Nathan Blissett – Luther’s nephew – struggled against Newcastle’s defence.

His assessment complete, Campbell began pointing fingers and variously bellowing: “Open up”, “push in” and “second ball” as his team responded by trying to build from the back and using the full width of the pitch. “You can still play football at this level,’ he said.

Sure enough, Koby Arthur sporadical­ly menaced but Macclesfie­ld still fell behind to Elias Sørensen’s 18th goal of the season.

As Ben Dawson – in his 12th month covering for the suspended Peter Beardsley – celebrated, a half-time homily was perhaps forming in Campbell’s head; his players certainly enjoyed increased second-half possession and equalised after Scott Wilson lifted a shot over Nathan Harker.

“Penalties are always a lottery,” he said. “But the guys had worked their socks off.”

Dawson does not believe such applicatio­n was coincident­al. “Macclesfie­ld looked well organised and were clearly listening to Sol’s instructio­ns,” said an impressed Newcastle coach. “He’s going to be fine.”

 ??  ?? Sol Campbell gives instructio­ns to his Macclesfie­ld side in the Checkatrad­e Trophy game against Newcastle. Photograph: Jan Kruger/Getty Images
Sol Campbell gives instructio­ns to his Macclesfie­ld side in the Checkatrad­e Trophy game against Newcastle. Photograph: Jan Kruger/Getty Images
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 ??  ?? Despite Scott Wilson’s late equaliser, Macclesfie­ld lost on penalties to Newcastle’s under-21 side. Photograph: Jan Kruger/Getty Images
Despite Scott Wilson’s late equaliser, Macclesfie­ld lost on penalties to Newcastle’s under-21 side. Photograph: Jan Kruger/Getty Images

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