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We were honoured when QPR
legend Alan McDonald agreed to an interview with us.
Following is the transcript of what amounted to a near
two hour conversation. We cannot thank Alan enough for
taking the time out of his weekend to do this and hope
you enjoy reading it as much as we enjoyed doing it.
QPRnet.com: Bring us up to
date on what you’ve been doing since you retired
AM: Well obviously I was at Swindon Town, where I
finished my career and moved onto the coaching staff, I
was coaching the reserves and when the club went into
administration the assistant manager was made redundant
so I ended up acting assistant manager, reserve team
manager, helping doing the kit, doing the boots!
The
club was in such bad financial trouble, they were losing
something like £26,000 a week so they made fifteen of
the staff redundant so we all had to muck in. My idea
was to leave Jimmy Quinn the manager as much time as
possible to concentrate running the first team, which
was virtually impossible because the financial
restrictions were astronomical.
Then
Jim got the sack and a couple of days later I left on
principle. It was actually at the QPR game, I took
charge of the team for the day because Jim was scouting,
it was there I found out that Colin Todd was at the
game, so I made a few enquires and found out that
Swindon had arranged for Colin Todd to join with his
whole backroom staff so that bought everything to a head
and I left a couple of days later.
From
there I took a year out because, to be honest with you,
I got totally disillusioned with coaching because of the
way things had turned out at Swindon, the way things had
been done. We felt we’d done the best we could for the
club, tried our best to slash the budget and tried to do
everything for the benefit of the club and basically we
felt we’d been stabbed in the back, so it made me very
cynical at the time.
Since then things have sort of looked up, the last
eighteen months I’ve been working with Roy Miller who is
the manager of the Northern Ireland under twenty one
team, I’ve been a coach with them. We’ve had nine or ten
qualifying games in the last eighteen months, which was
a brilliant experience for me. Also Sammy McIllroy who
is the Northern Ireland first team manager, his
assistant Jim Harvey has other commitments as he’s the
manager at Morecambe, I think it was four games that Jim
couldn’t get away for I’ve also been coach for the full
Northern Ireland team which has been brilliant.
Obviously I know most of the players but it was great
working with the full team because I played for them for
ten and a half years so it’s nice being back involved.
It suited me because it’s only part time, there’s
a friendly coming up in August where the under twenty
one team will play Cyprus which will be good experience
for them, we’ve got some good young players coming
through. Then the European Championships start, our
first game is in October which is Spain away, which is
going to be a difficult game but I’m not sure if I’m
going to be working with the under twenty ones or the
full international team because unfortunately the last
competitive game in Malta, Sammy McIllroy and Jim Harvey
both got sent off! Obviously Sammy will be there but he
can’t sit on the bench so I don’t know if they are going
to ask me to do that or not.
What
I’ve also been doing is working for the Press
Association as a football analyst, doing the live games,
I report all the match facts back to the controller,
live on the mobile then Sky Sports use all the
information. All the tackles, free kicks, corners, throw
ins you know? So I’ve been doing that about a year as
well. It’s brilliant because as I said it’s part time,
but it keeps me involved in football so in that respect
I’m still really involved in the game and to be honest
I’m involved in a capacity which suits me, the part time
jobs dove tail together which is great.
QPRnet.com: Are you still
in touch with anyone from your time at QPR?
AM: The odd times, when I was coaching we went back
to QPR for a few games, when Gerry was the manager,
infact at one stage I was speaking to Gerry about maybe
getting back but you know with the financial
restrictions on QPR were so desperate and it’s awful sad
to see, well it’s heartbreaking.
I’ve
had a couple of offers to go back and work part time in
the academy and the school of excellence but to be
honest with you I’m living in Swindon and I didn’t think
it was fair on my little boy Joshua, whose five, and my
wife if I was travelling up and down. I done it for two
years and it was too much I didn’t want to sort of split
the family up, we’ve lived here for three years and
Joshua’s settled so we’re going to stay here.
But
you know with the QPR thing I did speak to them, when
the managers job came up last time, I did speak to Nick
Blackburn about it, they gave it to Ian Holloway which
made sense at the time, although Ian’s had a difficult
job because the finances up there were in mess,
hopefully he can get that sorted out because it’s too
good a club to struggle.
QPRnet.com: It has been a
struggle, but Olly’s done remarkably well
AM: He has, and I sympathise with Ian wholeheartedly
because I know exactly what it’s like because the two
years I was on the coaching staff at Swindon there
wasn’t a day went by where you weren’t concerned about
money and unfortunately instead of being able to deal
with team matters, every single day there is some
financial situation arises that affects the manager or
the coaching staff, so instead of devoting your whole
time to football matters you have to deal with financial
problems. Players are knocking on the door saying “are
we getting paid this month?” I can understand it,
they’ve got families to support and mortgages to pay.
The
last thing you want to be doing as a coach or manager is
talking about day to day finances because you’re trying
to concentrate on other things. So I sympathise 110%
with Ian Holloway, I think he’s done a great job in very
very difficult circumstance. For me as an outsider
looking in, when you look back to the good old days when
we playing in the Premier League and things were going
great and we had a fabulous team it’s soul destroying
now to look at the club, it’s like a skeleton of the
club I knew. Some of the staff are still there and I
know them very well and I speak to them from time to
time, but it’s heartbreaking when you think back to the
things we achieved and the good times we had and you see
it now, it’s very difficult to take. It must be soul
destroying for the fans.
QPRnet.com: I think better
times are ahead now we’re out of administration.
AM: Well I hope so, it’s too good a club to
struggle, it’s a fabulous club. I spent seventeen and a
half years there you know and I wouldn’t have stayed
there had it been a bad club. I had a couple of bad
moments, with a couple of managers but overall, over the
seventeen and a half years I don’t think there’s very
much I would change if I had my time over again. I was
always very happy there and I was treated very well by
the fans and the staff. It still has a very special
place in my heart and it always will do, but you see it
now and it breaks your heart. It’s still the first
result I look for every Saturday is how QPR are going
on.
QPRnet.com: Did you see us
at all last year?
AM: Yes I did, I saw a couple of games. I saw a
great game when they played Reading, Reading beat them
one nil and that was a phenomenal atmosphere, there was
nineteen and half thousand people there and five
thousand QPR fans travelled down. That was going back to
the good old days when we used to get twenty thousand
people every week. I know it was at Reading which is a
great stadium, but Loftus Road is a great stadium. The
atmosphere was tremendous and it wasn’t a bad game but
it made me think of when the Man United's were coming
down and the Liverpool’s, the Tottenham’s, Arsenal’s and
the fans were going crazy and enjoying themselves.
Obviously it’s just down the road from QPR, but still it
was a fabulous travelling support.
QPRnet.com: Did any of our
current squad catch your eye?
AM: Well obviously I know Gavin Peacock still,
Richard Langley, I think Richard was sub that day and I
know Fraser from my Swindon days. They’ve done OK to be
honest, but Reading were a very strong team, one of the
better teams in the division to be honest with you. I
think to be honest, considering the budget, they’ve got
a half decent team they just had a couple of bad patches
otherwise they’d have been up in the play off’s.
QPRnet.com: Considering at
the start of the season they all barely knew it other,
it was almost a whole new squad, it’s quite remarkable
they gelled so well.
AM: Exactly, and Ian’s having to cut corners to get
people in on cut price wages, it virtually needed
shaking from top to bottom the whole club you know?
Hopefully if they can get themselves sorted out, get the
finances sorted out and get a few younger lads through.
I worked a couple of years ago with the likes of Brian
Fitzgerald and Wesley Daly who are coming through now.
They’ve always had a good youth policy at QPR. Obviously
if they can get the good young players coming through
they can either sell them and make money for the club or
keep them and build a good young side that in a couple
of years time can do well in the league.
QPRnet.com: Hopefully! OK
going back to your early days, how exactly did you end
up at QPR in the first place?
AM: Well I played for the Northern Ireland schoolboy
international team, we were European Champions, I think
it was 1978 or something like that. To be honest I had
more or less agreed to sign for Wolves but an old and
very dear friend of mine, Bill Smith who was the QPR
scout in Northern Ireland who got Ian Stewart as well,
the reason he was involved was he was very big friends
with Frank Sibley. Bill said to me “do you want to go to
QPR?” I said I wasn’t really fussed as I was going to
sign for Wolves. He said “look at it this way, it’s a
free holiday, QPR want to see you, go over have a
holiday for a week and do a bit of training and see
London”. I said OK, I’ll go over and train for a week
and have a free week in London! Then I was so impressed,
everyone was so nice and the club was so good to us you
know I changed my mind and agreed to sign for QPR.
It
wasn’t as if I was signing for a big club. When I signed
in 1979 Tommy Docherty was the manager and I think they
were second bottom in the league. The thing that
impressed me was it was a small club, it was friendly
and the people were nice and I thought I had a good
chance of making the grade. I’d been to Manchester
United twice on trial and they wanted to sign me, but I
thought it was too big a club. When I went there for the
weekend there was something like three hundred kids
there. So basically it was through Bill Smith that I
signed for QPR.
I
moved over in October 1979. I finished my last eight
months of school in London, which was a total nightmare
because of the home sickness. I missed my friends, my
family, I didn’t know anybody in London, the only people
I had around me were the club. I was meant to go to
school three and a half days a week, half the time I
never bothered I just wanted to go in training. I just
turned sixteen, I was living in digs, it was an awful
time. I think if I had it over again, that’s the only
thing I would have changed. I would have stayed at home,
finished school then come over. The way I look at it
though is it built my character, ‘cause I had to get on
with it, it was no good moaning. I was extremely
homesick but it made grow up very quickly, I was on my
own and you had to stand on your own two feet. Not long
after that Ian Stewart was there so the two of us sort
of stuck together and basically for the first two years
I struggled to settle down, but once I did it was fine.
QPRnet.com: So you nearly
signed for Wolves, then you made your debut against
them?
AM: That’s right yeh, that was strange the way
that happened. Bob Hazell got injured and I’d been
hoping to get in the team then all of a sudden in came
out of the blue. It was a fabulous day. Andy Gray from
Sky Sports was playing for Wolves and he bloody cracked
my rib that day! But we beat them four nil, I remember
Clive Allen scored a couple of cracking goals and John
Burridge, who was at QPR when I signed, was in goal for
Wolves! That was a tremendous day, because Wolves were a
good team in those days and it was a great result,
beating them four nil at Moulineaux.
QPRnet.com: So who did you
support as a boy?
AM: Well it was funny, I was never really a staunch
one team supporter, I flipped from team to team really.
Leeds, when they had that fabulous team I used to
support them and funnily enough I supported QPR for a
while when they had the brilliant team with Don Givens
and Gerry and stuff. So when ’76 came I went through a
period of supporting them. Then I went through a period
of supporting Man United, I still have a little
hankering for them, in Northern Ireland kids tend to
support one of two teams, Liverpool or Man United. I
never really had a set team, I supported whoever was
doing well.
QPRnet.com: So did you have
any idols, anyone who inspired you to be a footballer?
AM: That would be the local people, the likes of
George Best. Pat Jennings was always a massive hero of
mine, I was very fortunate to play six or seven
internationals with him. Then another guy from Northern
Ireland, Jimmy Nichol the full back at Man United, Jimmy
and his family used to live about three hundred miles
from my Mum and Dad. Jimmy was always a big hero, he
went to the same school as me, although he was about
eight years older he played football with my brothers.
Local people like that, particularly George Best though
he’s an absolute legend back home, he was an inspiration
you know. George played in my testimonial at QPR and I
played in his at Windsor Park which was an unbelievable
honour for me. To recognise your dreams like that as a
kid then have it happen is very special.
QPRnet.com: So a bit
further down your career now, the 1986 league cup final
(Alan laughs). What do you remember from that? What do
you think went wrong?
AM: Erm, I think we just froze on the day you know.
That was my first full season, we had a lot of
competition at centre back, we had the likes of Steve
Wicks who was a good player, Glen Roeder and Terry
Fenwick so for quite a bit of that season I was playing
right back. I enjoyed it, I mean I would have played
left wing to get a game!
We
had a phenomenal run through, we beat some cracking
teams, I think it was Nottingham Forest, Chelsea and
Liverpool in the semi final and to be fair Oxford beat
some great teams as well. I think to be honest we just
froze on the day, we never played at all. It’s probably
the disappointment I look back on, because I can
remember it like it was yesterday. The support was
phenomenal, it was a beautiful day the build up had been
tremendous. It was a crazy year for me, it was my first
full season as a regular and in that season I got in a
cup final for QPR and Northern Ireland qualified for the
World Cup in Mexico. For me, in the space of six months
I’d gone from being a reserve team player to playing in
the World Cup and a major final at Wembley. It was just
so disappointing.
I
can remember after the game we had a party booked
anyway. I can remember the feeling that night, I stayed
that night because I had to fly over in the morning as
we had a friendly in Belfast for Northern Ireland on the
Wednesday. I was just shocked, we never played at all,
we never got going, never got out of the traps. To be
totally honest Oxford were by far the better team, they
did deserve to win it you know. It was just so
disappointing we never got going whatsoever, we played
so well through the whole competition but when it came
to the final we might as well have stayed in the
dressing room it was so one sided, we never got out of
first gear at all. That’s the major regret and I’m sure
the other guys would say the same thing. We had some
fabulous players and we should have done better, we
played some fabulous football all the way through and
dominated teams and it comes to the one game that
matters and we bloody play like we’ve never played
together before.
QPRnet.com: OK something
more cheery then! What would you say was your proudest
moment at QPR?
AM: I think that was, I can remember being on the
pitch at the start of the game, you look around and one
ends Oxford and in the other end there must’ve been
forty thousand QPR supporters, you see the blue and
white at one end and I can remember that being
tremendous. That particular season would be the
highlight of my career as a footballer, I made my
international debut in October 1985 away to Romania and
we beat them, then we drew with England and qualified
for the 1986 world cup and within a couple of months I
was playing at Wembley then off to the World Cup. So
that particular six months were the proudest moments of
my career but one of the worse with the Wembley fiasco.
There were so many good points, I can remember beating
Manchester United four one on New Years Day and Dennis
Bailey got a hatrick and all of a sudden Dennis was a
national hero! Things like that and while Gerry was the
manager we finished 5th and 9th
and we had a very good team, a very very good team and
for QPR who were one of the smaller Premier League teams
at the time, for us to finish in the top half a dozen or
top ten was a fantastic achievement, for us that’s like
winning the league. That was probably the golden period
when Gerry was there, we had a fabulous team, a great
spirit a real good camaraderie around the club and I
think that showed where we finished in the league.
QPRnet.com: Loyalty isn’t
something you see in football much there days, you
stayed with QPR for seventeen years, was that because
you enjoyed being there, did you have offers to leave?
AM: Yeh there was a couple of times there was a
couple of rumours, at one stage very strongly there was
Tottenham, at one stage Man United were talked about and
Chelsea were talked about. To be honest with you I was
always happy, we got well paid you know and we had a
good team and it was a good club. I had a couple of
disagreements with a couple of managers, but you’re
going to get that no matter where you are. I had a
couple of bad times where I wasn’t playing so well but
at the end of the day I was always very happy there,
over the seventeen years, probably there was only a
period of one year in broken bits where I was a bit
disillusioned or unhappy. A month here, a month there.
There was one stage where I thought I maybe better
moving on, I’d had a run in with a certain manager and I
just thought maybe it’s time to go, but that sorted
itself out.
On
the whole I’d say the reason I didn’t leave is because I
was happy. The backroom people, some of them are still
there, were fabulous, QPR through and through and were
nice people. The club helped me through a difficult
period and in life, I think, you’ve always got to give
something back, so I thought I’m happy here, I’m playing
well, in the top division, it’s a good club and we’ve
got a good team. OK we sold players like David Seaman,
Paul Parker but you had to be realistic, QPR had to sell
players to survive and the players we were buying in
were good players.
QPRnet.com: We used to sell
someone for two million quid but use that money to buy
in three or four new players
AM: That’s right, everyone went crazy when we sold
Les Ferdinand for six million quid, but that was
brilliant business. QPR got Les for about twenty, twenty
five grand and sold him for six million. We got Paul
Parker for a couple of hundred thousand pounds and sold
Paul for a fortune, same with Dave Seaman, but we were
signing good players to replace them. So yes, I was
extremely happy, sometimes the grass isn’t greener on
the other side, it wasn’t a case of money, I could have
moved and got more but I was on decent money anyway and
we were doing well, the club was good, I could have gone
somewhere else, uprooted myself and ended up going
through a bad period and realising it was a mistake.
QPRnet.com: When you got
towards the end, when you left the club, was that your
choice?
AM: No
QPRnet.com: That’s the
impression we got, most fans were pretty disgusted as to
how you were treated.
AM: My wife Tanya was absolutely distraught, totally
gutted. It hit her more than it hit me. When I look back
now and I look back at all the facts and the things that
happened, sometimes you can’t see things and you don’t
discover things until later. I was very disappointed in
the way it was done, because I’d been speaking to
Stewart Houston who was the manager then and he’d signed
Steven Morrow from Arsenal to more or less replace me
and that was in the April before the transfer deadline,
I’d been playing really well that season and I think it
was only because John Spencer got signed, otherwise I’d
have won player of the year.
It
was obvious then, Stewart dropped me and I couldn’t
understand why so I spoke to him about it and said if
you feel I’m not good enough for you it’s probably
better to move on, which I didn’t want to do. I was
thirty three then and I’d always wanted to finish my
career at the club, I felt I had a good couple of years
left. It went past the transfer deadline and I’d been
speaking to him for about a month before but he wouldn’t
give me a straight answer, I kept saying look, what’s
happening. Do you want me to leave? You have haven’t
spoke to me about a new contract and my contracts up and
he said “well if we can get into the play off’s, I’ll
think about giving you a new contract” I said that’s no
good to me I need to know about my future, I’m an
experienced player, I’ve got a wife, she’s pregnant I
need to sort out what I’m going to be doing in the
future.
He
just dragged on and on and we got to deadline day so I
said, look Stewart what’s going on, do you want me to
leave be honest with me because if I’m going to leave I
can probably get myself a good club, a team that’s
pushing for the play off’s something like that, and he
just said “no I can’t let you go” and I stayed till the
end of the season.
Then
after the last game he spoke to all the players together
and had a meeting for what was happening next year, I
wasn’t invited, he called me into the office upstairs
and said they weren’t offering me a new contract and I
was being released. Looking back I was extremely
disappointed with the way it was done, I felt I deserved
more. Stewart had only been there eight months and there
was other people at the club who had been there a few
years and I felt they could’ve stuck up for me a bit
more. I felt that at least they could have been a bit
more upfront with me but I don’t hold grudges at the end
of the day I knew I was getting old but I felt I had
another two years left in me and I felt I could still
play at that level. I went and played at Swindon the
next year and we done really well, till the middle of
November we were top of the league.
It
was just the way it was done, I felt I’d shown the club
extreme loyalty, and they’d been very kind to me up till
that point, to be honest with you then I would’ve been
interested in doing even part time coaching or whatever
but it just never happened, it’s a shame. I’ve been back
loads of times and it’s fine but it was just that one of
those things that could have been handled better.
QPRnet.com: Well if it’s
any consolation you’ll be remembered long after Stewart
Houston is forgotten.
AM: Oh yeh! It was just the way the club was going
at the time. It was then that the club started going
downhill, not because they got rid of me I hasten to
add! That’s when the rot started to set in, personally
speaking, if I’m going to be totally honest with you,
the rot set in when they got rid of Ray Wilkins. He came
in during a difficult period, Gerry had left, everybody
was concerned about that ‘cause Gerry had been so
popular so they appointed Ray to appease the fans.
Ray
was a new manager and of course he made mistakes, we all
make mistakes, Ray is one of the nicest guys you’ll meet
in football, lovely man and he said himself there’s
things he would change but he was an inexperienced
manager, straight into a difficult period then of course
we got relegated from the Premier League. That was
difficult, then three games into the new season we were
top of the league we’d won two and drawn one and they
sack him!
I
must admit the disappointment of being relegated was one
of the lowest points of my life and we all went away in
the summer, had a good break, and we came back
pre-season and we had a real good chat in the training
ground with Frank Sibley and Ray Wilkins and all the
squad. I’d never seen a more determined bunch of lads,
we felt we’d let Ray down, we’d let the club down and we
hadn’t performed well that year in the Premier League.
So we had a really good chat, everybody worked so hard,
it’s the hardest I’d ever seen us work pre-season and we
were absolutely flying in pre-season and we started the
season brilliantly we went down and beat Portsmouth,
unfortunately Kevin Gallen got that injury, we’d beaten
Oxford at home and went up and drew with Wolves. So were
sitting with seven points out of nine from three games,
then they drop a bombshell that they’d sacked Ray. They
lads were so deflated after that, we’d all pulled
together in pre-season so we couldn’t understand why
they’d done it.
QPRnet.com: From what we’ve
heard Stewart Houston’s approach was slightly more,
shall we say, authoritarian?
AM: Without a doubt. That’s when the club was ruined
in my opinion. There was eight million pounds spent on
players which was poorly spent. The atmosphere at the
club was awful. The bitching started between the
players, which was never us because we had a fabulous
team spirit. Just the whole atmosphere at the club on
the playing side was dreadful. Of course during that
time I was having problems with Stewart on a personal
level because of my contract situation.
Within that period of time I left, we had Simon Barker
leave, Ian Holloway leaving. You had leaders leaving the
club. Leaders on the pitch leaving the club and there
was no one there. Well the events speak for themselves
what happened at the club. I have my views on it and
they’re very strong views but at the end the day I’m not
going to throw any mud at people, people make decisions
because they think they are doing the right thing but in
hindsight you’d say that’s when the rot started to set
in at the club and the club is still paying the price
now for that year.
QPRnet.com: Even for the
fans it felt like a huge weight had been lifted when
Houston and Rioch were sacked, then of course the next
appointment was another mistake
AM: Yeh well, there’s been a few. At the end of the
day if Chris, Chris Wright was honest he’d hold his
hands up and say things should have been done better.
The thing with Chris you got to remember is he was a
supporter it was the first experience he’d had of
running the football club so he was a very inexperienced
Chairman with an inexperienced manager when Ray was
there. When Ray got the sack, that was the start of the
downward spiral and if you look at the events and the
time scale, you look at and it doesn’t take a blind man
to see that was where it started to go wrong. That’s
gone, that’s past history. Hopefully now the club can
pull themselves round and get back to where they belong.
QPRnet.com: Things seem to
be heading in the right direction, we’re pretty
comfortable with Olly, we think he’s doing a great job.
AM: That’s it, it’s been a difficult couple of years
for the fans, the players, the staff everybody and
hopefully as you say there’s light at the end of the
tunnel and they can get themselves back playing where
they should be playing.
QPRnet.com: During your
career who would you say was the best defensive partner
you had at QPR?
AM: Erm, Terry Fenwick was a good player. The best
player I played with generally was Clive Wilson, I think
Clive as a full back was unbelievable. People talk about
when Les left that it took a lot from the team but I
personally think that when Clive went, you know there
was no talk of Clive going as far as we were concerned
it wasn’t an issue Clive was staying and it was a real
bolt out of the blue when he went to Tottenham. He was
superb Clive, such a gifted player, so skillful and a
fabulous guy as well. I played with some cracking
players though. Everyone goes on about Mark Dennis but
he was a brilliant defender, he was just a bit of a
nutcase!
We
had some great defenders over the years, Dave Seaman was
a fabulous goal keeper, Paul Parker was good, Danny
Maddix was a good man to man marker, Dave Bardsley good
full back, Darren Peacock done well and went onto
Newcastle, Steve Wicks was a good player. Glen Roeder,
Glen was my hero when I first got into the team, he was
a fabulous player. We had so many tremendous players I’m
spoilt for choice but over the years I played with
Clive, he was great. We had our rows and all that but he
was such a cool player, you’d expect him to hoof it into
the stand and all of a sudden do a little turn and he’d
be away with it.
QPRnet.com: You’ve had some
great battles over the years, who would you say you
enjoyed marking the most?
AM: Probably one of the biggest battles I ever had
was with Mark Hughes that was infamous. Mark was a
tremendous professional, he’s a quiet guy a bit like
myself, it’s different when you’re on the pitch but off
it I’m a quiet guy I like my privacy and Mark’s very
much like that. When you’re on the pitch, you’re on to
win and you give 110% and Mark was always a battling
player, very gifted, very strong, good goalscorer.
Obviously at times it got a bit, well it went beyond the
legal bounds from both of us but that’s the way the
games played and you do whatever you can to try to win
the game so it was always enjoyable because we always
had a bit of a ding dong!
When
we used to get the old derby’s with Chelsea I used to
have a good old game with Kerry Dixon, always looked
forward to them and I played against Kerry for Northern
Ireland against England, so they were always good games
and obviously they had the added spice of being a local
derby.
QPRnet.com: Yeh, you versus
Mark Hughes was always brilliant to watch!
AM: When you get two players who are committed to
winning you know at times it gets a bit dirty so you
give it out and the good thing with Mark was he’d give
it out and he’s take it and get on with. I tend to think
there was a lot of mutual respect for each other. What
you saw is what you got.
QPRnet.com: Who would you
say was the best manager you worked under?
AM: I think Gerry was tremendous, obviously his
record at QPR speaks for itself when you look at how we
done under him. Terry Venables was a very good manager,
when Terry came to the club we were struggling and he
transformed it within the space of three years they went
to the FA Cup final then got promotion to the first
division. They’d be the two best, I think Ray Wilkins
could’ve been a good manager if he’d been given the time
to do it, as say people had a lot of respect for Ray, I
certainly had the up most respect for him because he was
an honest fella. I think if he had been given the time,
he would have done it, the players were 110% behind him.
QPRnet.com: That’s half the
battle isn’t it?
AM: It is, you got to have the players respect, Ray
had that as a player and he’d gone someway to gaining it
as a manager, which you have to do. Given more time I
think he would have done a very good job at QPR.
Jim
Smith was good, I got on brilliantly with him. Jim’s of
the old school, Jim is a character there’s no two ways
about it, at times we’d have a laugh he’d just come out
with things, he’s a lovely bubbly guy. He wasn’t the
best coach in the world but he had a good coach with
him, he was a fantastic man manager though. The thing
with him was he just said it how he saw it. If he
thought you were absolute crap he would say you were
absolute crap! He wouldn’t go in around about way, he
would just come out and say it and I think people
respected him for it. There were times when the cups
when flying and he looked as if he was going to have a
heart attack, his head would go bright red if he was
fuming! He was a character Jim and there isn’t enough of
them left. I say those three or four were the best I
worked with at QPR.
QPRnet.com: What was Olly
like as a player? Did he give the impression he’d
succeed in management?
AM: Yeh, he always had that idea, I can remember
having a good chat with him when the approach had been
made by Bristol Rovers, he was travelling up and down
from Bristol for three hours every day to QPR and to do
that, I mean I travelled and hour and half each way to
Swindon and back and it killed me, I don’t know how Ian
did that from Bristol and back and put in the level of
performances he did.
He
was a fabulous professional, he would probably say
himself that he wasn’t one of the most gifted players in
the world but what you got from him was 100%, he would
work his backside off. I can remember coming back one
pre-season and Ian had spent the summer training at an
athletics club because he thought he wasn’t fit enough
and he was the fittest guy at the club!
We
used do runs in Richmond Park, about eight miles and
he’d win hands down. Tremendous professional,
unbelievable attitude and a lovely lad as well. You
always had the feeling he’d go into management, as I say
he got the offer to go to Bristol on a four year
contract to play and go into coaching as well, he
deliberated over it for while because it meant moving
down to the second division as well. As it turned out it
was the right move for him because he got into managing
early and he did a good job down there and now he’s at
QPR doing a good job there.
QPRnet.com: So what are you
looking to do now? Are you happy with the two part time
roles or do you want to get back into football full
time?
AM: I’m happy enough doing that, obviously we made
the decision that we’re going to stay in Wiltshire but
I’ve applied for a couple of jobs. I applied for the
Aldershot manager’s job when it came up and I got an
interview for that but Terry Brown who was the Hayes
manager got that. To be honest I’m not desperate to get
into full time football at the moment, if something came
up that appealed to me I would look at it and apply, but
I’m reasonably happy doing what I’m doing. We’ve got the
European Championships coming up for Northern Ireland,
that starts in October and that’ll be nine
internationals in the next eleven months so that will be
pretty time consuming.
Plus
I’ll be doing the press association to keep me involved
week to week. I’ll keep my ear to the ground if
something comes up then OK, but I don’t really want to
uproot my family now, I’m getting too old for that. I
guess it’s a bit selfish but I don’t want to be
travelling two hours here, two hours there. I had
nineteen years of football coming first in my life and
to be honest I want to enjoy my life where I’m home
weekends and things like that for the time being. As I
say Joshua’s five and I want to be enjoy being around
him and spending time with him, playing football in the
back garden I want to have that time at home but if
something came up that interested me I’d look at it.
QPRnet.com: That’s pretty
much all the questions, the last thing I’ll say then is
that on a recent poll on our site you were voted the
greatest ever centre back to play for Rangers.
AM: <laughs> They’re easily pleased aren’t they! A
couple of friends of mine are still season ticket
holders and one of them sent me a programme when they
done the greatest team of all time and I was in it.
That’s a great honour for me because when people say to
me what did you win, really when you look at my career
we never really won anything with QPR but for me when
ordinary people on the street say you’re the greatest
ever centre back or you’re in the best team ever, for me
that makes up for not having cups and medals and all
that. I probably was never one of the most gifted
players in the world but I give what I had and it’s nice
to be appreciated. I had some kids come up to me about
twelve years old and said “oh your Alan McDonald, my Dad
used to watch you and he says you were the best player
at QPR”. They’re twelve years old and they know me! So
it’s nice if you affect people’s lives and it’s a great
honour for me when they do these polls. It’s very
humbling because when you’re there you get paid and you
enjoy your job and for people to appreciate what you’ve
done is great, it’s great for me. |