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Our
latest interview is with former Skipper, Steve Palmer.
Steve left QPR last summer after three years with the
club that culminated in our promotion at Hillsborough.
He talks to us about his time at Loftus Road.
QPRnet.com:
When you were approached about coming to QPR we’d just
been relegated, were in administration, had seven
players on the books including our two best with long
term injuries and no goalkeeper. Why did it seem like a
good move?
SP:
A
number of reasons really I knew my time at Watford was
coming to an end so it was a new challenge for me. Also
I’d known Ian Holloway for a number of years and I knew
what he was about. Kenny Jackett was in the process of
coming to QPR as well and we’d worked together for six
years at Watford of course. Mostly though the status and
size of a club like QPR meant it was a great opportunity
for me, yes I knew about the financial problems the club
had but I had confidence that they would come through
the difficult times.
QPRnet.com:
How aware were you made of the clubs financial problems
at the time, did you go into it with your eyes open?
SP:
Well obviously QPR was in administration but I had a
feeling the stature of the club would see it through
those times, I just couldn’t see QPR going out of
business to be honest and the opportunity to be a part
of the rebuilding process was a big draw for me.
QPRnet.com:
You were obviously well aware of Kenny Jackett and Ian
Holloway as people then. They seemed like total
opposites in many ways but did they work well as a
twosome?
SP:
They
were different characters but they had a common ideal on
how to play football, they had the same ideas and the
same principles on how to play the game. Yes they had
very different personalities but in many ways that’s a
good thing for a manager and an assistant as you can
appeal to wider range of players.
QPRnet.com:
The first game you played in for Rangers was the
pre-season friendly with Celtic, how strange was that
lining up in a team that barely knew each other?
SP:
I
joined the Tuesday before that game and I got to know
the players that were there a little bit and Chris Day
joined that week as well so I knew him from Watford but
there were plenty of trialists in that game that I’d not
met before. It was all part of what was going at Rangers
during that time though, it was a difficult stage for
the club but hopefully it was a start of a rebuilding
process that’s still continuing.
QPRnet.com:
You were shortly named club captain, did you feel you
had a responsibility to guide the younger players
through a difficult time?
SP:
Very
much so, it was something I really enjoyed doing and it
was an honour to be given the armband. I tried to help
the younger players develop and I did my best to set an
example on the pitch because I can remember what it was
like to start making your way in football what with all
the pressures young players are under. Whether they
listened to me or not I don’t know but I certainly saw
that as part of my job.
QPRnet.com:
The fans were all hopeful of a quick return to Division
One but did you and the management always know it would
take time to stabilise the club again?
SP:
I
think when you’ve been around football for a while you
know what a squad is capable of achieving. In the three
years I was there we had a gradual progression season on
season, the first year we finished eight, then we made
the play off final and finally went up automatically
that third season. I fully understood the supporters
expectation because they weren’t used to being in that
division and wanted to go up as quickly as possible but
the rebuilding process we went through has put the club
in a much better state than it was so possibly it was
worth the wait in the long run.
QPRnet.com:
We had a respectable first season in Division Two,
finishing just outside the play offs. Did everyone feel
a run at promotion was a real possibility for the next
campaign?
SP:
Yes
definitely, the squad was added to over that summer and
it was always important we built on the previous season
and pushed on. It was a bit of a funny season, we
started well had a terrible run towards the end of the
year but came good in the end.
QPRnet.com:
The biggest blip that season came with the defeat by
Vauxhall Motors that must have knocked the confidence,
and the league form suffered for a bit after it, just
how did we get past that?
SP:
You
have meetings as players and with the management of
course and we were made aware of what we missed out by
losing to Vauxhall in term of the financial
implications. Football is such a fine line between
success and failure you know, during that time we
certainly weren’t playing as well as we could but there
were things that weren’t going for us and once we got a
couple of good results things started to turn round. We
weren’t massively better after we started winning games
though, like I say it’s just such a fine line.
We
all took responsibility for what happened of course and
eventually we managed to turn it round through a
combination of the players working hard, trying to
maintain confidence and getting a little bit of luck
along the way.
QPRnet.com:
We did make the play off final of course that year so
things did turn around in the end.
SP:
It
was amazing, when you think of the mood around the place
for that Vauxhall game then how it was for the Oldham
play off semi final and they were only a few months
apart. That evening at Loftus Road was the noisiest
domestic stadium I’ve ever been in and I’ll never forget
it. OK the play off final didn’t go for us but it was
still a great occasion and at least it saw the club
moving in the right direction.
QPRnet.com:
It must have been as heartbreaking for you as it was for
us?
SP:
Absolutely, I was lucky at Watford as we won the play
off final to go up to the Premier League and it’s a
fantastic experience to get promoted in that way. That
day at Cardiff was a great occasion but at the end of
the day we didn’t go up but it’s a testimony to the
squad and the management that we didn’t have a hangover
from it and went up automatically the following season.
QPRnet.com:
Did the squad use the defeat as a motivation for the
following season as something not to go through again?
SP:
That’s always something people say isn’t it, we were
disappointed with Cardiff of course but we all knew what
we had to the next season and that was get automatic
promotion, we didn’t need any extra motivation really.
QPRnet.com:
The end of that season was nail biting stuff but you
were stuck on the bench for the last three games, was
that a frustrating time for you?
SP:
It
was of course but that’s the life of a footballer, you
don’t like these things but you have to try and see the
bigger picture. As an individual football is all about
being in the team and there’s nothing wrong with being
disappointed when you’re not but what’s important is how
you deal with that disappointment. It was hard being
club captain and not being in the starting eleven but if
I look back now at what was achieved it fills me with
pride because I was still very much part of what was
going on.
QPRnet.com:
The game at Hillsborough will live long in the memory
for Rangers fans, what was it like as an occasion for
the players?
SP:
It was very nerve wracking and because I was on the
bench that made it much worse. When you’re playing you
are so involved in the game the nerves go away but being
sub made it doubly worse! I’ll never forget looking over
to my left from the dugout at the 8,000 QPR fans packed
in that end, it was amazing day.
QPRnet.com:
During your time at QPR many fans often questioned your
inclusion in midfield, were you aware of that and was
that preferred position or would you rather have been at
the back?
SP:
I’ve often found that at clubs and perhaps that’s
because of my style of play. I know how to win football
matches and I work as hard as I can and do whatever I
can do to help that happen, I’m not a fancy footballer I
just do my job. That’s not always the most aesthetically
pleasing style of play granted but I’d say I’m effective
without being flamboyant! I was aware of the criticism
at the time but you cope with it and learn to deal with
it, all I hope is that when people look back on my time
at QPR they’ll think I did a good job for the club
because that’s all I tried to do.
QPRnet.com:
When the time came to leave Loftus Road was it a case of
you wanting more regular football or were looking for a
coaching opportunity?
SP:
In the end I wasn’t actually offered anything by QPR so
it was the club that decided I should move on. I
understand the reasons behind it and there was an
element of disappointment from me of course but you have
to get on with it, that’s what happens in football.
I
had, and still do have a desire to keep playing and if I
had stayed then my opportunities with QPR would have
been limited in the Championship, I was offered a chance
to be a player coach at MK Dons and I’ve had a great
experience over the last year and learned a lot as well.
If you’re going to leave a club then perhaps after
winning promotion is the best time to go. I can look
back now over what we did with great pride and I look at
the website everyday to keep in touch with what’s going
on at Loftus Road because I had a great time there.
QPRnet.com:
You are a Cambridge graduate of course, was football
always your first choice career?
SP:
Definitely it was the only career I ever wanted, I was
brought up in Brighton and I had a lot of advice and
people encouraged me to stay in education as long as I
could. I was lucky enough to get into Cambridge and I’m
very glad I did but at underneath all that was the
desire to play football and again I was lucky to get a
chance at that.
QPRnet.com:
Did going to University and coming into the game later
hinder you in anyway?
SP:
I don’t know if it’s an advantage or not, there’s an
argument for both sides I guess but I got my chance at
twenty one and whilst I probably missed out on three or
four years in the game I had a great experience at
university and perhaps I played a bit longer because of
it.
QPRnet.com:
Iain Dowie once said "If you took twins, both of equal
footballing ability, and one had a degree, he would be a
better player. A degree helps you to analyse, be
logical, methodical, organised and it makes you more
worldly." Did your degree help you in that way?
SP:
Possibly, I can see what he’s saying but there’s a big
argument against it on the artistic side because a lot
of football isn’t logical it’s instinctive.
QPRnet.com:
You’re working as a player/coach at MK Dons, is
management something you’d like to move into in the
future?
SP:
I had a great experience last year, I worked with the
reserves from Christmas onwards but I have a playing
contract with the club so I’m not sure what’s going to
happen this season. As for management I don’t really
have any specific ambitions, I enjoy being involved in
the game and I like being at a football club but my
career ambition was to be a player and that’s happened
now. If an opportunity came along to be a manager I
would give it my best shot but I wont feel that I’ve
missed out if that doesn’t happen whereas I would have
felt like that if I missed out on playing.
I
know what football is like and I’ve no idea what’s going
to happen next week let alone next year. I’ve made
contingency plans over the last few years for a life
after playing, I’ve taken coaching qualifications so I’m
in a position to do that if an opportunity arises but
who knows what will happen.
QPRnet.com:
By the time you left QPR we had been promoted, had
progressed enormously on the pitch and stabilised off of
it, do you look back on your contribution with a great
sense of achievement?
SP:
Absolutely, having made a lot of friends along the way
as well. I’ve only good memories of QPR and I really
enjoy going back there on the few occasions I’ve been
able to get to games. I played in the Masters the other
week and that was great fun too and hopefully I can be
involved in that again next year. What can I say,
everything you said there sums it up, I loved my time at
QPR. |