by JC » 28 Apr 2007 10:04
by Z-Head » 28 Apr 2007 10:14
by Lieutenant Pigeon » 28 Apr 2007 10:48
by Smoking Kills Dancing Doe » 28 Apr 2007 11:03
JC http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/main.jhtml?xml=/sport/2007/04/28/sfnjim28.xml
How he has taken his team to the very edge of European competition is one of the great mysteries of the season. It is clearly not by overt force of personality. Our household cannot be the only one in the country in which the junior members greet Coppell's every interview on Match of the Day with exaggerated yawns. Both facially and in his expressionless manner, he is a ringer for Colonel Gerd Weisler, the Stasi surveillance expert in the brilliant new film The Lives of Others, a man who appears not to have cracked a grin since the Berlin air lift.
Coppell is no Roy Keane, a manager whose presence alone produces results; you could miss him in an empty lift. He doesn't indulge in Neil Warnock-style touchline histrionics, preferring to deadpan in the technical area, his expression barely changing in acknowledgment of setback or success. Though an advocate of sports science, he does not believe, like Sam Allardyce, that everything can be distilled down to percentages. Nor, despite being one of the few graduates in the dug-out, does he put much store in bookishness. Aidy Boothroyd, at Watford, reads voraciously and borrows heavily from the strategic thinking of everyone from Chinese warlords to American presidents. Yet, despite his studiousness, Boothroyd was in charge of the sort of instant return from whence he came that was widely predicted for Coppell.
by Lieutenant Pigeon » 28 Apr 2007 11:33
by Jerry St Clair » 28 Apr 2007 12:05
by Henleyensian » 28 Apr 2007 12:20
Smoking Kills Dancing DoeJC http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/main.jhtml?xml=/sport/2007/04/28/sfnjim28.xml
How he has taken his team to the very edge of European competition is one of the great mysteries of the season. It is clearly not by overt force of personality. Our household cannot be the only one in the country in which the junior members greet Coppell's every interview on Match of the Day with exaggerated yawns. Both facially and in his expressionless manner, he is a ringer for Colonel Gerd Weisler, the Stasi surveillance expert in the brilliant new film The Lives of Others, a man who appears not to have cracked a grin since the Berlin air lift.
Coppell is no Roy Keane, a manager whose presence alone produces results; you could miss him in an empty lift. He doesn't indulge in Neil Warnock-style touchline histrionics, preferring to deadpan in the technical area, his expression barely changing in acknowledgment of setback or success. Though an advocate of sports science, he does not believe, like Sam Allardyce, that everything can be distilled down to percentages. Nor, despite being one of the few graduates in the dug-out, does he put much store in bookishness. Aidy Boothroyd, at Watford, reads voraciously and borrows heavily from the strategic thinking of everyone from Chinese warlords to American presidents. Yet, despite his studiousness, Boothroyd was in charge of the sort of instant return from whence he came that was widely predicted for Coppell.
People really do not understand Coppell, the way he speaks to the media is in no way a reflection of the guys personality, of course he's a big and strong character he just exudes it in a different way. I just hate comments like "Coppell is no Roy Keane, a manager whose presence alone produces results; you could miss him in an empty lift." What complete and utter bollox, the way the players react to Coppell he's clearly got a massive presence and his ability to use his presence to get the best out of his players is his strongest attribute imo.
by Forbury Lion » 28 Apr 2007 13:01
by Ian Royal » 28 Apr 2007 13:31
by Jerry St Clair » 28 Apr 2007 13:37
Ian Royal It does seem like Coppell is totally misunderstood by most. Which is good. It means no one else will take him away from us. The Man has earnt total legendary status along with Maurice Evans, Madjeski, Death, Friday et al.
by Ian Royal » 28 Apr 2007 13:42
Jerry St ClairIan Royal It does seem like Coppell is totally misunderstood by most. Which is good. It means no one else will take him away from us. The Man has earnt total legendary status along with Maurice Evans, Madjeski, Death, Friday et al.
So why is he STILL not reveered by the East Stand as much as even TB2?
Even in the dark days of 1999, the vast majority of the crowd would sing "Tommy Burns' Barmy Army".
It's still an effort to get more than a few hundred on their feet in praise of Sir Steve.
by Dirk Gently » 28 Apr 2007 14:29
by PieEater » 28 Apr 2007 14:31
Henleyensian .... and it gave us an inisght into his thinking in many ways.
by readingbedding » 28 Apr 2007 14:35
by Archie's penalty » 28 Apr 2007 15:01
by Coppelled Streets » 28 Apr 2007 17:13
by The 17 Bus » 28 Apr 2007 18:07
Coppelled Streets "Stand up, for Steve Coppell, stand up, for Steve Coppell............."
by nivek elyod » 28 Apr 2007 18:13
The Telegraph Coppell is no Roy Keane, a manager whose presence alone produces results
by Forest Gump » 28 Apr 2007 19:07
by Cripple Creek » 28 Apr 2007 19:50
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