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Town Bosses Were Never In Same Room
Town Bosses Were Never In Same Room
Tuesday, 7th Oct 2014 16:35

Former Town boss Roy Keane reveals that he, owner Marcus Evans and chief executive Simon Clegg never held a meeting together during his 20 months at the club in his latest autobiography The Second Half, which is already in some shops despite being officially published on Thursday.

Keane devotes a chapter to his time with the Blues and gives his view on most of the controversies during his time at Portman Road.

His nemesis Mick McCarthy is mentioned infrequently, he recounts the pair meeting up for a chat at a hotel and Keane saying he was for the Saipan affair - "I'm not sure I had anything to apologise for" - prior to Sunderland playing Wolves.

He opens his chapter on his time at Portman Road with the surprise revelation that the three men running Town were never in the same room at the same time, something which only occurred to him after he’d moved on.

“There was the occasional video link-up to the owner but the three of us never met,” he says in the book, which he wrote with Booker Prize winner Roddy Doyle.

“I never once said, ‘Can the three of us get together, to see about getting some players in?’. There was never that trust - never. You need to see people’s eyes.”

Keane says he didn’t feel too sorry for Jim Magilton while negotiating to take over at Town while the Northern Irishman was still manager, having fallen out with him when Tommy Miller’s proposed loan move back to the Blues from Sunderland broke down.

He says he didn’t get the same thrill as he did when he took over at the Stadium of Light: “I didn’t feel the excitement I’d felt going up to Sunderland. I’m not sure why not. I feel bad even admitting that.”

The 43-year-old believes he ought to have brought in more of his own staff immediately in addition to first-team coach Tony Loughlan.

“Chris Kiwomya was there, and Bryan Klug, and Steve McCall was the chief scout. They’d all played for Ipswich. It had the feel of a family club that didn’t need breaking up. But that was exactly what it needed.”

He feels winning his first two games at the end of 2009/10 season was ultimately a bad thing, had Town lost at Cardiff in his first match he might have seen the task that lay ahead as a “rebuilding job”.


The pre-season camp with the army at Colchester “didn’t create the bond or spirit” which was intended and a lot of the players ended up with blisters just as the season started.

Admitting that he went over the top with the players after defeats - “ranting and raving” - during the run of 15 league games without a win the following season, he adds: “I think I lacked a bit of patience with myself at Ipswich. I suppose I thought I could relive my Sunderland experience. But I couldn’t get the momentum.”

Keane says he and his family never really settled while in Suffolk, they moved three times, and he had no chemistry with Clegg, although believes this was more to do with their different social backgrounds rather than the chief executive’s lack of footballing credentials.

However, he did find Clegg inexperienced in football matters and more there for Evans than himself: “I think he was all about being answerable to Marcus, not helping the manager. Everything was hard work.”

Keane wanted to add to the “quiet” squad he had inherited and targeted Tamas Priskin, who he believed was worth £400,000 and “couldn’t believe it” when he heard Town paid £1,750,000 for the Hungarian, not having had any involvement in that side of the transfer process. He also felt the club overpaid for Carlos Edwards and Grant Leadbitter, who he thought were worth half the £4 million the club paid Sunderland for the duo.

The Corkman says he “liked the look of Jordan Rhodes”, adding: “I still get criticised for selling Jordan, and I have to accept that. But it was also a club decision. We sold him to Huddersfield, down a division, for [an initial] £350,000, and he started scoring loads of goals.

“I think I was the one who suggested a sell-on clause, and thank God we had it because they sold him to Blackburn for £8 million. The mistake myself and the staff made with Jordan was, we discussed what he couldn’t do rather than what he could do.”

Looking back, he says Lee Martin wasn't good enough for the Championship and he was too hard on Damien Delaney and Colin Healy, perhaps because they were from Cork and he knew them.

Overall, regarding his additions, he admits: “My recruitment wasn’t good enough. I’ve no excuses.”

He says he “almost physically attacked” Pablo Couñago after the striker - who Keane found “dead lazy” - had said ‘How are we going to win anything with you as the manager?’ having been criticised by his manager following a poor display in a friendly against Spurs.

Keane, however, liked Connor Wickham even though he got “kicked out of his digs” for leaving a mobile charger plugged in with no phone connected.

Perhaps surprisingly, he also had time for the club’s supporters - “Fans were decent to me” - and felt not joining the squad for the end of season walk round the pitch was a mistake.

He says Shaun Derry wanted to sign after meeting with him but no deal was offered by club: “I rang Simon [Clegg]. ‘What’s happening with Shaun? He wants to sign. It’s only a one-year deal’. He said, ‘No, we’re not going ahead with it.’ The warning signs were there.”

There were similar stories with Lee Carsley and Kevin Kilbane and Keane was annoyed that the club didn’t call the latter to tell him the deal wasn’t happening.

Regarding his bust-up with his skipper Jon Walters he felt the striker went about getting his move to Stoke in the wrong way.

He says Walters had heard that the Potters were after him but Keane was unaware of any interest but that the player didn’t believe him, leading to a confrontation: “There was effing and blinding, a bit of shoving.”

Keane admits that saying Walters wouldn’t play for the club again was a mistake and that the matter could have been handled better. The two have now made up with the frontman part of the Martin O’Neill and Keane’s Ireland squad.

The former Manchester United skipper says he didn't know Jon Stead was talking to Blackpool and then Bristol City about a move in the summer of 2010 and wanted Marton Fulop to join on loan rather than be bought for Sunderland for £750,000.

Keane, who says he still gets on with owner Evans, they spoke recently when Town were at Birmingham, also writes about coach Gary Ablett’s death from non-Hodgkin lymphoma - “It was shocking” - and he and the staff visiting the former Liverpool defender in hospital in Cambridge and then Manchester.

As for his January 2011 sacking, Keane says he wasn’t expecting it: “I was really hurt by it, not far from distraught.”

Overall, he believes he and the club were never a good fit: “I couldn’t feel it - the chemistry. Me and the club. I get annoyed now, thinking that. I should have been able to accept it: I was there to do a job.”

He adds: “I don’t think I’m a bad manager, but at Ipswich I managed badly. But all the people I’ve admired - they’ve all had bad spells. So I probably learnt more at Ipswich than I did at Sunderland.”

The Second Half is published by Weidenfeld and Nicolson and officially goes on sale on Thursday. It can be ordered from Amazon here.


Photo: Action Images



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big_gaz67 added 06:58 - Oct 8
-5? Anybody who doesn't think Pablo was lazy needs to book an appointment with Specsavers!
4

GiveusaWave added 08:23 - Oct 8
We need to hear Clegg's side of the story before we can form a full picture of what happened.

If Clegg did pay 4 times more for Priskin than Keane believed he was worth. If Clegg paid 2 times too much for both Edwards and Leadbitter. If it was Clegg's ultimate decision to sell Jordan Rhodes (against Keane's advice as he says in the book that he wanted to keep him). If Clegg bought Fulop rather than brought him in on-loan. Then Clegg has a lot to answer for.

If it's not true, I am sure Clegg will tell his side of the story soon. Either that or it's the truth and he decides to stay silent.

Don't get me wrong, Keane was an abysmal manager and a horrible person. But if Clegg was actually doing these things then the club was in an even worse mess than we ever believed it to be.

Given the run of the results and his relationship with players and staff, how could he have been surprised at his sacking? Leeds would have got rid of him within 3 weeks!

Great comment by Counago btw.
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Mariner1974 added 09:24 - Oct 8
If he was at the club now he'd be arguing with Gerken, Murph, Chambers, Skuse and Wordsworth that he had a better beard than them. it was just never going to work
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BrettenhamBlue added 09:28 - Oct 8
The reason he never signed Jason Savage....speaks volumes of Keane and the way he runs things

http://www.walesonline.co.uk/sport/football/football-news/roy-keane-claims-didnt
0

commuterblue added 09:37 - Oct 8
Actually Rhodes was playing well then. He scored against Colchester from a one on one, looking more confident than even Darren Bent. Even Keane said at the time he didn't doubt he would score. That was pre-season.

But he wanted Priskin, and Counago refused to be moved on, so he needed to offload a striker. If only it had been a loan....

3

commuterblue added 09:41 - Oct 8
The reason Keane has two jobs and punditry is that he has had one failure, and Jewel is older and has three.

Oh, that and he won the Champions League, and had the Man United wage structure broken for him.

Others may disagree, but Paul Jewell was far better (much less worse) in my eyes than Roy Keane.
2

Carrotblue added 09:43 - Oct 8
anyone who ever told Pablo was lazy gets my vote
0

naa added 09:54 - Oct 8
grumpyoldman: yes the book did say that. So obviously it must be true!

Why on earth didn't he tell Clegg what he thought the players were worth?

Why did Rhodes state that it was all Keane's fault?

Maybe Keane is telling the story the way he liked to make himself look a little better (or at least less to blame).

He bought badly, he managed badly, his ideas about clearing out the Ipswich legends says it all. Even the club realised he made a mistake with Klug (one of the most highly respected youth coaches around) and got him back again.

The reason he wanted a clear out is because he gets on with about 1 in a 1000 people and so he needs those around him all the time because everyone else thinks what we do - that he's a nasty, nasty person with a huge ego.
-1

adriantindall added 09:58 - Oct 8
Customers who bought this item also bought 'KP: The Autobiography'
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bingboast added 10:50 - Oct 8
If RK had spent a whole chapter of his book slagging of ITFC, blaming fans etc etc, I could have understood the abuse fans give him, but he is being honest admitting his part in the failures & stating "I managed badly" it was the"wrong club for me to have taken on". At least he has the guts to admit his mistakes, I wonder how many "fans" on here would have the same honesty?
4

naa added 11:01 - Oct 8
bingboast: if you read what he's actually written it's mostly putting a little sentence like 'I managed badly' and then following it with a huge list of why it wasn't his fault.

For example, he mentions we overpaid for Priskin (no kidding!) but fails to mention that he failed horribly when he was still Keane's target. The price we paid was irrelevant to his success.

Some of the stuff is a joke, like how he should have cleared out the entire backroom because presumably there was a culture of failure at the club. Yet actually before his arrival we had been pretty much constant play-off contenders (barring two years when we had to rebuild after losing our best players in one go). It's only since he came and went that we've actually needed rebuilding.
0

LWNR2013 added 11:27 - Oct 8
How wrong I was! Instead of euphoria it was like having dysentery for 20 months+.

The nightmare is now over, thank f***.
0

LWNR2013 added 11:34 - Oct 8
Counago was lazy, but exciting, talented and loved by most.
0

naa added 11:59 - Oct 8
Who the hell gave my last post a negative? It was pretty much stating facts.
0

tractorintheloft added 12:27 - Oct 8
The Pablo v Kuqi scab is being picked at once more. I loved watching Pablo play because you knew he could create something in a flash, twist or dive but agree with comments made that he wouldn't get in a MM side. If Keane had tried to hit him he would have hit the deck before any contact was made.

As for Keane, we as supporters wanted Magic out and a BIG NAME in. We all thought it was the right thing at the right time. Be careful what you wish for when being all romantic about playing the "Ipswich way" and wanting MM out or to be more creative.
0

78ShadesOfBlue added 12:27 - Oct 8
Excuses, excuses, lies, excuses, lies, excuses....You were diabolical Keane. Good riddance!!
1

Pabloisgod84 added 12:44 - Oct 8
pablo pablo pablo
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
-1

JWM added 12:54 - Oct 8
Ulitmately you have to blame Evans and his cabal of advisors for bringing Keane here in the first place! It was obvious to anyone with a brain cell that Keane and Ipswich just dont go together. Town will always be a 'family' and 'friendly' club which marks us apart from many other clubs. Keane came with a huge reputation but also came with a lot of baggage and scores to settle. It was doomed to disaster from the start!

All Evans wanted was a 'name' or 'box office' as he so eloquently put it in a newspaper interview shortly after Keane's appointment. What a way to run a football club! Thank god we are over the nightmare period of Keane & Jewell and we now have a proper manager here who knows what he's doing. A stark contrast from the 2 fools we had before.

I find it very ironic that it just had to be McCarthy of all people to come in and sort out the mess that Keane left behind. It reminds me very much of 2002 and Keane's appalling behaviour towards Mick at the World Cup! I bet deep down Keane is really peed off that Mick of all people has come in here and is rebuilding this club back to a glorious future.
0

JewellintheTown added 13:29 - Oct 8
I'm surprised no one has picked up on Clegg & Evans not being in the same room at the same time with Keane.
Hmmmm, Suspicious.
Are Evans/ Clegg the same person, and Evans is a Bruce Wayne esque superhero & Clegg the dopey alter ego?
I've heard Evans wears his pants on the outside of his trousers too.
0

itfchorry added 15:14 - Oct 8
Clegg Out - ( of room ) !
0

chorltonskylineblue added 17:41 - Oct 8
If you want to get inside the mind of Roy Keane then don't bother with his latest pot boiler. Just read Triggs, the Autobiography of Roy Keane's Dog. Tells you all you need to know. Very funny too. You're welcome.
0

LondonBlue99 added 20:01 - Oct 8
At the time of RK at the club I was only young and was only starting to get get into football, but I can see now this guy is off his rocker, excuse after excuse after excuse. You ruined the club, rightfully so if Pablo was lazy because he certainly didn't want to play for you. And for Clegg he is a nasty piece of work, who I believe has all sorts of secrets. After leaving the Olympic committee to go to ipswich , that's odd. I believe RK and Clegg had an inside deal because at this I am fed up of the sh*t that has come out of their mouths.

But we had MM now, a brighter future ahead, long live you true blues.
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