Man Utd defender Gary Neville retires

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  • mrgasman
    Banned
    • Jan 2010
    • 668

    #46
    Oh dear me what a piss poor showing of bitterness and delusion.... ~~~~ing Rob Jones lmao he didnt even have a ~~~~in football career pmsl. Retired at 27 with 8 caps ..Jones now runs a chain of nursery schools in Warrington.
    Nev would be proud reading this thread he often baited the scousers and he will be forever loved for it.

    For those who thought him unprofessional for his antics there was totally different side to the man when he applied himself to the game. The article below is worth a read very enlightening.

    On Thursday 3rd February 2011, @OliverKayTimes said:

    A 1,000-word tweet dedicated to Gary Neville, the great overachiever ...



    There was, it is fair to say, a lively response last night when, in tribute to Gary Neville, I called him "one of world football's great overachievers", adding "If that sounds like damning with faint praise, it really isn't."

    And it isn't. It's an enormous tribute to a guy who, as a good friend of his reminded me this morning, started out as a midfielder and realised in the company of Scholes, Beckham and others that he wasn't good enough to play there. He moved to centre-back and was told he wasn't tall enough to play there. He moved to right-back and found himself up against John O'Kane, who was quicker, stronger and, as he saw it, more gifted.

    I suggested last night that Glen Johnson and Micah Richards were "more gifted than Neville ever was, but Neville's attitude made him a far better player." That went down pretty well ... My point is that Johnson and Richards, like O'Kane, were born with the technical/physical gifts to play at the highest level and are falling short, i.e. underachieving. To my mind -- and his own -- Neville wasn't born with those gifts, so he had to work harder, in my view, than any other modern English footballer to achieve what he has done. To me, that constitutes overachievement.

    People cited Neville's world-class crossing as an example of what a STUPID C*** I must be. Sorry, but that too was the product of hard work. Watching Neville in the 90s, he was never anything like as good a crosser as he became. By his own admission, that is something that he had to develop later in his career because there was a trend towards more attacking right-backs. You might not believe this, but a link with Hatem Trabelsi (he who bombed at Man City) was what taught him he had to work relentlessly on his crossing. Over time, he became an extremely good crosser, but it was not because it was something at which he was gifted.

    Neville's gifts were his intelligence, his desire and his work ethic. They gave him the attitude to identify his limitations and work endlessly to improve in area he could. He couldn't make himself taller or quicker, so he worked on his stamina and his upper-body strength. He even, as Lee Sharpe said a little scoffingly in his autobiography, practised his throw-ins.

    Neville did not set out to be a top-class full-back. Who does? He felt that, because of his limitations, it was the only position in which he could try to carve out a career at United, the only club he ever wanted to play for. He could have stayed in central defence or in midfield, but not at United. And he certainly wouldn't have 85 caps -- it would have been far more but for injury -- as a midfielder (though I fancy he would have had more chance than most English players of developing the skils to play in the holding role that is now en vogue).

    There is an art to great defending, but to a large extent the required skills -- positioning, marking, tackling -- are either self-taught or coached. You might say it is the same of every position. I would disagree; Paul Scholes and Ryan Giggs were born with the technical ability and creative flair to excel in what they do.

    Those areas -- intelligence, positioning, marking, tackling -- are the ones in which Johnson and Richards remain hopeless, which is why I said (and many people ignored) that, despite their gifts, they are far inferior players to Neville. A more interesting case to monitor is Rafael. He has far more of the raw physical/technical materials than Neville. Time will tell whether he can be anything like as good a full-back.

    Is overachiever an insult? Did people think that, because we're talking about a team sport, I was calling him a useless player who won medals because he played in a brilliant team? That is not how he sees the term "overachiever". Nor is it how the word is seen by Frank Lampard, another who has worked phenomenally hard to elevate himself to the top echelons of the game.

    As Lampard put it when I interview him a few months ago, "When I was 15, I was decent, but I was a bit chubby. There were better players than me in West Ham***8217;s youth team. There was a boy, Michael Black, who played in my Sunday team. He was the bee***8217;s knees. He didn***8217;t quite kick on. There was Lee Hodges, who was at West Ham and is still a good friend of mine. He got injuries that halted his progress. But there are countless ones I could name just from my Sunday and school teams and I always felt that I had to find a way to be better than them."

    That could easily be Neville talking. In fact, in an interview with The Times over a decade ago, Neville said: "When I was 14, I was average among players. was just a sub for my county team, Greater Manchester. Nicky Butt, my brother, Phil, David Beckham, John O'Kane, Keith Gillespie and Ben Thornley were all playing for national teams. They were the stars. They were playing for their country at schoolboy level and I thought they were the bee's knees. I was nothing like that and I realised when I was 16 that if I did not give it my all, then I wouldn't have a chance."

    That is the point. Gillespie, Thornley and O'Kane underachieved in their careers. Nicky Butt and Phil Neville achieved. Giggs and Scholes became the world-class players they were always destined to be. Beckham? That's another debate entirely ...

    And Gary Neville? A fantastic overachiever. An average midfielder who became a too-small central defender who, over time, became a top-class full-back. Not through innate talent, but through the attitude, desire and hard work which, ultimately, made him a far more talented player than he could ever have imagined in his teens. That has been a common theme in the tributes from Sir Alex Ferguson, Steve Bruce, Arsene Wenger and many others. As well as that, it is how he regards himself.

    Congratulations, Gary Neville, on a great career. You were a world-class overachiever, an example to young footballers everywhere.
    A Legend against all odds

    Gary Neville
    Last edited by mrgasman; 4 February, 2011, 03:44.

    Comment

    • alker ranger
      DK Veteran
      • Dec 2008
      • 361

      #47
      Notice it's only the scousers that wont give credit were credit is due, thats because nev upset them by saying he hates scousers, he said that as a utd fan, i'm sure gerrard would say the same about us (as a pool fan). Wont be long before there're saying what a sh1te striker Torres was

      Comment

      • lfc4life
        Sports Nutter
        • Dec 2008
        • 3200

        #48
        Give credit were its due the guy did not need too act like a dick! Did he? And if you read my david beckham thread i GAVE former man utd player plenty of credit! CAUSE he will always be remember for the great sportsman he was .... END OF!
        IM SORRY but i will never have any sympathy for maggie thatcher .... the bitch

        I WOULD STILL LIKE TO SAY MY HEART AND RESPECT GOES OUT ALL BRITISH AND ALL ARMY TROOPS FIGHTING THE TERROR WHICH STILL BREEDS IN THE WORLD!! YOU HAVE AND ALWAYS WILL HAVE MY UTMOST RESPECT !

        YNWA!!!

        JUSTICE FOR THE '96"

        "People say football is a matter of life and death. I'm disappointed by that approach, I believe it is much more important than that - Bill Shankly" -
        YNWA

        Comment

        • mrgasman
          Banned
          • Jan 2010
          • 668

          #49
          Originally posted by lfc4life
          Give credit were its due the guy did not need too act like a dick! Did he? And if you read my david beckham thread i GAVE former man utd player plenty of credit! CAUSE he will always be remember for the great sportsman he was .... END OF!


          By this end the camera kisser will be due no credit when he retire's...................

          Do me a favor it's pure and simple bitterness and actually reflects the fact that he was a great player for Utd.

          Comment

          • boomer39
            DK Veteran
            • Dec 2008
            • 2818

            #50
            Originally posted by alker ranger
            Dont remember any of them playing in the prem league
            thats WHAT I MEAN!!!! football only started 19 years ago according to you lot....
            YNWA..

            Comment

            • boomer39
              DK Veteran
              • Dec 2008
              • 2818

              #51
              Originally posted by cunny
              He played for England as he was the best right back they had. The link up play with Beckham was there.

              In the later years of his career he faded and should have been sent off twice this season alone.

              Most Scousers hate hime for his celebration at Anfield when he ran the lengh of the pitch and celebrated a late winner infront of the HOME TEAM

              God thats a star on his own
              probably cos he couldn't get near a camera... would have broken the lens!!!!
              YNWA..

              Comment

              • boomer39
                DK Veteran
                • Dec 2008
                • 2818

                #52
                Originally posted by kyleb
                im sure he will tone it down when he gets on sky
                lose 2 cnuts and get 1 worse than them both... but sky are as thick as .... anyway.
                YNWA..

                Comment

                • boomer39
                  DK Veteran
                  • Dec 2008
                  • 2818

                  #53
                  Originally posted by kyleb
                  i never expected you to put that... honest. made his england debut in 1995 and sure jones was still knocking around for few years after that. he was welsh anyway
                  no mate his dad was....
                  YNWA..

                  Comment

                  • boomer39
                    DK Veteran
                    • Dec 2008
                    • 2818

                    #54
                    Originally posted by lfc4life
                    we must have had some right s hit right backs! Did not carragher play in that position for a while??? he was better and u know he was!
                    and marcus babbel!!! shame about him... oh and martin kelly.....
                    YNWA..

                    Comment

                    • boomer39
                      DK Veteran
                      • Dec 2008
                      • 2818

                      #55
                      Originally posted by alker ranger
                      Notice it's only the scousers that wont give credit were credit is due, thats because nev upset them by saying he hates scousers, he said that as a utd fan, i'm sure gerrard would say the same about us (as a pool fan). Wont be long before there're saying what a sh1te striker Torres was
                      no not a ----- striker. a ----- person. totally different meaning...
                      YNWA..

                      Comment

                      • boomer39
                        DK Veteran
                        • Dec 2008
                        • 2818

                        #56
                        Originally posted by mrgasman


                        By this end the camera kisser will be due no credit when he retire's...................

                        Do me a favor it's pure and simple bitterness and actually reflects the fact that he was a great player for Utd.
                        nothing to do with his playing,not a bad player, but played in an excellent team which helped him and his "sister"... its about his attitude... i'm sure most of our fans have a lot of respect for the likes of beckham, scholes and especially giggs. when these guys retire you will not see the same sort of reaction.... trust me...
                        one more thing tho', i think phil nevile has been better at woodison...
                        YNWA..

                        Comment

                        • mrgasman
                          Banned
                          • Jan 2010
                          • 668

                          #57
                          Originally posted by boomer39
                          nothing to do with his playing,not a bad player, but played in an excellent team which helped him and his "sister"... its about his attitude... i'm sure most of our fans have a lot of respect for the likes of beckham, scholes and especially giggs. when these guys retire you will not see the same sort of reaction.... trust me...
                          one more thing tho', i think phil nevile has been better at woodison...
                          lmao at all those post's you post clocker ..

                          I don't think anyone (Neville included) expects Liverpool fans to like him or even respect him as he was a true wind up merchant. The fact still remains that he was a first class right back who had to work harder than most as he lacked the natural skill for top level. His crossing became the focal point of his game and he perfected the attacking full back role by knowing when to get forward. He used brains and hard work rather than natural ability and skill and for that deserves credit probably more so than others.

                          Comment

                          • Bulld0g
                            V.I.P. Member
                            • Apr 2008
                            • 7158

                            #58
                            Originally posted by alker ranger
                            Notice it's only the scousers that wont give credit were credit is due, thats because nev upset them by saying he hates scousers, he said that as a utd fan, i'm sure gerrard would say the same about us (as a pool fan). Wont be long before there're saying what a sh1te striker Torres was
                            That's just it, you see, gerrard may well think it and probably does,but he has never said it, he's too professional to come out and embarrass himself and the club by saying it.

                            Just my opinion and it's got nothing to do with him being a manc, I honestly didn't rate him. On a plus side hes one of the last of a dying breed where loyalty is concerned.

                            THE TRUTH
                            The Hillsborough Independent Panel. 12/09/12

                            Today's report is black and white.The Liverpool fans were not the cause of the disaster.
                            The panel has quite simply found 'no evidence' in support of allegations of 'exceptional levels of drunkenness, ticketlessness or violence among Liverpool fans' and 'no evidence that fans had conspired to arrive late at the stadium' and 'no evidence that they stole from the dead and dying'.

                            Comment

                            • Bulld0g
                              V.I.P. Member
                              • Apr 2008
                              • 7158

                              #59
                              Originally posted by mrgasman
                              lmao at all those post's you post clocker ..

                              I don't think anyone (Neville included) expects Liverpool fans to like him or even respect him as he was a true wind up merchant. The fact still remains that he was a first class right back who had to work harder than most as he lacked the natural skill for top level. His crossing became the focal point of his game and he perfected the attacking full back role by knowing when to get forward. He used brains and hard work rather than natural ability and skill and for that deserves credit probably more so than others.
                              Probably puts in a nutshell when i say I don't know how he played for England

                              THE TRUTH
                              The Hillsborough Independent Panel. 12/09/12

                              Today's report is black and white.The Liverpool fans were not the cause of the disaster.
                              The panel has quite simply found 'no evidence' in support of allegations of 'exceptional levels of drunkenness, ticketlessness or violence among Liverpool fans' and 'no evidence that fans had conspired to arrive late at the stadium' and 'no evidence that they stole from the dead and dying'.

                              Comment

                              • koppit
                                DK Veteran
                                • Dec 2008
                                • 587

                                #60
                                to his credit he has worked hard to overcome his lack of natural talent.he has been a loyal servant to his club and country and most of the time stayed out of the limelight while doing it. these days he is a dying breed. its a pity that other so called pros cant follow that ethos but in the end and im sure one of you put me right, who else wanted him

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