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Harry Redknapp: I toughened Bale up and made him into a superstar

Dharmabum

Well-Known Member
Aug 16, 2003
8,274
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Oh yes, Harry is the man. Or at least he claim so ;)


EXCLUSIVE - Harry Redknapp's explosive book serialisation: I toughened Bale up and made him into a superstar... but if Ronaldo feels threatened by Gareth, Real Madrid could be a lonely place

  • I had to toughen Gareth up.. and stop him playing with his hair
  • If Ronaldo is threatened by him Madrid will be a very lonely place
By Harry Redknapp


PUBLISHED: 23:01 GMT, 7 October 2013 | UPDATED: 10:07 GMT, 8 October 2013

There is some right old rubbish talked about Gareth Bale’s time with me at Tottenham.

Was I ever going to sell Bale? No. Was I going to loan him? No. I’ve heard talk - everyone from Richard Keys to Alex McLeish - making it sound as if what happened to Bale’s career was a fluke and that I never fancied him.

Whatever faults I may have, I do know a player. Go right back to the first team I ever picked as Tottenham manager, against Arsenal on October 29, 2008, Bale was in it.

It’s true we had some work to do with him but he was one of the players I was most looking forward to working with when I went to Tottenham as manager. I really fancied my chances at getting the best out of him — he struck me as an exceptional talent: strong, quick, with a superb shot.


It upsets me that people believe I was ready to ditch him — although the story had been told so many times that maybe even Gareth thinks it is true. Alex McLeish says I was going to loan him to Birmingham City when he was their manager. Although I remember the conversation, it never got beyond the wait-and-see stage and would only have happened had I thought Bale couldn’t get enough matches with us.

Nottingham Forest wanted him on loan, too, with a view to a permanent transfer but I did not entertain that for a second. I would never sell Gareth. All he needed was to be toughened up to emerge as a star player.

We had to tease that combative streak out of him because, at that time, he was regarded as a left back and was up against Benoit Assou-Ekotto, one of the best in the Premier League. Gareth seemed too soft to be a defender so we decided to try him further forward.

He drove me mad in training. Technically, he was outstanding but he always seemed to be playing with his hair. It was never right. He’d be flicking the fringe or wiping it out of his eyes and I would be going quietly mad, just watching. ‘Gareth, leave your barnet alone! Gareth! Stop touching your hair!’

He was always getting a little knock in training, too. He’d go down then limp off and I always thought the physios made too much fuss of him.

It was the same pattern every morning: Gareth would tumble and stay there, and they’d all go running over. In the end I told them just to leave him alone.

‘Don’t worry,’ I said, ‘he’ll be fine in two minutes. If it is anything urgent we’ll soon know.’ That’s what they did and, as predicted, Gareth got up, got on with it and got better and better. With Gareth, it was all about building up his confidence. We shifted him to wide left and moved Luka Modric inside so they would link up. And we were beginning to hurt teams.


That Tottenham side had a nice balance and Gareth began showing the form we saw on the training ground. At the crucial closing stages of the season he scored the goals that proved to be the difference in victories over Arsenal and Chelsea.

Those matches set us up for a sprint to the finish line and in the end it came down to a match away at Manchester City on May 5, 2010. Whoever won was going to claim that last Champions League place.

I think that was one of my defining matches as a manager because of the way we played. I decided that it did not matter that we were the away team, this was a cup final, a one-off, and we were going to go for it, with an attacking team.

Without wishing to stereotype, maybe Roberto Mancini’s Italian nature got the better of him. Serie A teams often tend to be quite cautious and perhaps he did not feel comfortable taking the risk we did. We played like the home team.

I thought we could get at them — particularly down the flanks. Aaron Lennon was half fit but he came through for us that night and Bale was immense. Peter Crouch scored the winner. We were in the Champions League — and I knew that would be the time when Gareth would arrive on the world stage.

I predicted he would be our Cristiano Ronaldo. And that’s just what he was. I don’t think I have ever seen one player terrify a team so completely as Bale did Inter Milan.

I felt sorry for their Brazilian right back. It was embarrassing. By the end of it the fans were singing, ‘Taxi for Maicon,’ and I don’t think his career has ever recovered.

I had always felt there was more to Gareth than left back, or even left wing. Don’t get me wrong, if he wanted to be a left back he could be the best in the world, another Roberto Carlos.

Even if he had stayed in that role his whole career he would still be an extraordinary player. He can rip a team to pieces from deep or further forward on the left, but there is so much more to his game.

Gareth is a player capable of going free through the centre of the pitch, either as a forward or just floating and arriving anywhere he fancies.

I had talked with our coaches for a number of months about using Gareth this way because teams were crowding him out on the left flank, putting so much traffic in his way that it was just getting harder and harder.

At least through the middle he would have three options: left, right or dead straight. On the flank he was beginning to run out of pitch.

I remember the new plan coming together against Norwich City on December 27, 2011. He was magnificent, scoring twice as we won 2–0.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/fo...-Gareth-Bale-86m-superstar.html#ixzz2vUVXtBGy
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Unfortunately, Gareth’s switch then coincided with a few dicky results for us and a few people, looking for easy answers, put two and two together and ran out of fingers.

They would chant, ‘Gareth Bale — he plays on the left’ as if this little innovation through the middle was the cause of all our problems.

Of course, a year later when he was scoring for fun in that position in Andre Villas-Boas’s team, it was hailed as a genius move. The bottom line is that Gareth can play anywhere. I think Carlo Ancelotti, his coach at Real Madrid, will view him the same way as me — a free spirit, not tied to any one position.

His biggest test will be to step out of the shadow of Cristiano Ronaldo with confidence. That won’t be easy.

Ronaldo is a huge star at Madrid and will probably want to take nine out of 10 free-kicks - at least. Gareth will have to assert himself and that will require a strong mind.


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He has to think ‘I’m an £86million player’ and act like it, taking responsibility, claiming the ball when he fancies his chances. And yet at the same time he cannot dwell on his fee and what it means too much because that would put him under immense pressure. It is a tricky balancing act. He will have to be ready for the matches when he goes it alone, has a shot, misses and Ronaldo starts throwing his arms up in the air.

He cannot, at that point, go into his shell and become this timid little creature. But it is not natural for Gareth to behave in an assertive way. Don’t get me wrong, he knows he is good. The fee is crazy, amazing money, but he wouldn’t have fought so hard to get the deal done if he didn’t fancy his chances of living up to expectations in Madrid.

Yet, equally, Gareth is a quiet lad, who spends time with his girlfriend and family, and I’m not sure being in the same bracket as Ronaldo and Lionel Messi will suit him.


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I saw the photographs of him on his first day in Madrid, surrounded by relatives, and wondered how that young man will fare with a paparazzi camera being pushed into his face wherever he goes. His relationship with Ronaldo is the key to it all, because if the football is going well then all the added stresses are a minor irritation and nothing more.

If the football is a struggle the other aggravations appear 10 times worse. Not many major British players go abroad and those that do are as likely to fail as succeed.

If Ronaldo feels threatened by Gareth’s arrival, Madrid could be a lonely place so he will need to lean a lot on Ancelotti, who speaks good English, and Paul Clement, Carlo’s assistant, who is English.

Luka Modric is another old friend who could help him settle in.

Extracted from Always Managing: My Autobiography by Harry Redknapp with Martin Samuel, published by Ebury on October 10 at £20. © Harry Redknapp 2013. To order a copy for £15.99 (p&p free), call 0844 472 4157.


The one thing the club cannot provide for Gareth and Cristiano is a ball each — so they will need to work hard on that partnership because they are such similar players.

They are freaks, really.

They can both shoot, both are good headers of the ball, they can both make 50-yard runs and stand over six feet.

Madrid must guard against Gareth falling into the role of support act. He had a little trouble adjusting to the bigger environment of Tottenham after leaving Southampton and this is 10 times as great as that move.

If I have a worry it is that I remember the days when Gareth’s confidence was draining fast at Spurs and there were genuine fears he might not make it. He wasn’t the strongest of characters back then and he cannot be allowed to fall into that same negative state of mind.

If it doesn’t start like fireworks for him he will need Carlo to make sure he does not become isolated, left alone with his thoughts. He won’t like the attention a difficult start brings either. Gareth is a very private person and he won’t enjoy having every move scrutinised.

The positive is that Gareth has grown a lot since his earliest days at White Hart Lane. His performances improved but so did his attitude.

He wasn’t flash, or cocky — never the sort to be up the West End with a bottle of champagne — but he was more assured.

He has to take that maturity to Madrid, though, or it will be hard.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/fo...-Gareth-Bale-86m-superstar.html#ixzz2vUUpldip
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beats1

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Feb 22, 2010
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I hear the guys from Rule the Roost say that AVB last season turned him in to a superstar, if so I think you can easily make the argument that he would of never been a top player had it not been for Harry

I do think Harry had more of a effect on Bale than AVB but in the Harrys last season and AVB's 1st season it was less so of the management and more of Bale's brain connecting the dots and finding consistency!
 

nailsy

SC Supporter
Jul 24, 2005
30,536
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I'm happy to give Harry a lot of credit for Bales rise to the top but that headline makes him sound like a complete cock.
 

riggi

Well-Known Member
Jun 24, 2008
48,558
104,957
Still get people coming up to me at work saying 'see, should of stuck with harry'. Ye I don't care, move on.
 

beats1

Well-Known Member
Feb 22, 2010
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29,600
Ha find it hard seen as my best times with spurs were under him (oo err) but I usually stop them as they mention his name and tell em to move on. I have.
Just say life was much better when you was sucking on your mum's tits, doesn't mean you should still do it or bleed on about it
 

riggi

Well-Known Member
Jun 24, 2008
48,558
104,957
Just say life was much better when you was sucking on your mum's tits, doesn't mean you should still do it or bleed on about it

Ironically this bloke was talking to me about breast milk the other day...:cautious:
 

Tott66

Well-Known Member
Aug 31, 2012
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From what I recall Harry very nearly flogged bale maybe his memory has failed once again
 

Dharmabum

Well-Known Member
Aug 16, 2003
8,274
12,242
He says in the article that he was never going to sell him.

Several ITK (including Archi at SO) back then were saying that Harry in fact was ready to sell Bale. Remember how he used to claim, after Bale got a regular 1st team spot, that he'd one day become a top class left-back...
For that sake, he also said that Modric was better on the wing. And that Suarez...never mind.
 
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