Pages: [1]   Go Down
Print
Author Topic: Capello learned from Swindon  (Read 2688 times)
Zurich Red

Offline Offline

Posts: 302





Ignore
« on: Sunday, December 16, 2007, 11:40:52 »

Article in the Sunday Telegraph...

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/12/16/ncapello116.xml

Maybe someone should tell him that while he is picking up a £6m salary, we may be going out of existance?
Logged
Spud

« Reply #1 on: Sunday, December 16, 2007, 11:43:48 »

That's ace.  Cool
Logged
ghanimah

Offline Offline

Posts: 3639





Ignore
« Reply #2 on: Sunday, December 16, 2007, 11:45:00 »

Our team yesterday could also learn from that
Logged

"We perform the duties of freemen; we must have the privileges of freemen ..."
Panda Paws

Offline Offline

Posts: 2170

Arse




Ignore
« Reply #3 on: Sunday, December 16, 2007, 12:13:27 »

The page has a comments system - I suggest we all get in there and post about what's going on. Maybe the Telegraph will sit up and take notice and cover the story.
Logged
Peter Venkman
We don't need no stinking badges.

Offline Offline

Posts: 59551


Things can only get better



« Reply #4 on: Sunday, December 16, 2007, 12:32:04 »

Web site not there for me, link not working, what is the ghist of what it say?
Logged

Only a fool does not know when to hold his tongue.
jayohaitchenn
Wielder of the BANHAMMER

Offline Offline

Posts: 12544




« Reply #5 on: Sunday, December 16, 2007, 12:34:23 »

same for me
Logged
Reg Smeeton
Walking Encyclopaedia

Offline Offline

Posts: 34913





Ignore
« Reply #6 on: Sunday, December 16, 2007, 12:36:16 »

Do you think the ST journo read my bit here

   Posted: Thu Dec 13, 2007 5:52 pm    Post subject:     Reply with quote Edit/Delete this post
I recall Don Fabio, playing for Roma at the CG when we beat them 4-0. Undoubtedly this made a profound impact on him.....
Logged
Zurich Red

Offline Offline

Posts: 302





Ignore
« Reply #7 on: Sunday, December 16, 2007, 13:16:19 »

Here's the full article...



He is England's new £40 million man; the manager who is expected to lead the country to World Cup glory by restoring discipline and passion to our overpaid and pampered national football squad.

Now it can be revealed that Fabio Capello's footballing philosophy was forged nearly 40 years ago when the new England manager and his team-mates were humbled on the pitch by lowly Swindon Town.
    
Thrashed 4-0 by the then second division club, Capello's Roma side were handed the sort of lesson in English grit and determination that Capello will strive to recreate in the national side.

Swindon players from that evening have taken credit for giving the England manager a demonstration of teamwork that he has never forgotten.

"We played for one another, always covering for each other," said Peter Downsborough, the goalkeeper, now 64. "Today's England players don't seem to have that team spirit, even though they are all brilliant players.

"If Capello can introduce that team spirit to the England squad, as he has with other clubs he's managed, they might achieve great things."

The game was the final of the long-forgotten Anglo-Italian League Cup Winners' Cup, played in September 1969, with Swindon qualifying after their defeat of Arsenal in the League Cup.

Capello's team, one of the biggest names in Italian football, had travelled to Swindon after a narrow 2-1 victory in the first leg.

The comprehensive drubbing saw Swindon displaying the kind of discipline, concentration and finishing now so lacking in England's "golden generation".

Roma's manager at the time, Helenio "The Wizard" Herrera, who had already twice won the European Champions Cup, observed later: "My team were punished for moments of distraction… We had plenty of opportunities, but Swindon showed us how to shoot."

Paid just a fraction of the current Beckham-era players, the Swindon team that beat AS Roma have since been forgotten by all but the club's most loyal fans.

Mr Downsborough, who is now a school caretaker in Halifax, West Yorkshire, clearly remembers Capello displaying the leadership skills for which he would later become renowned.

"He stood out. He was quite tall and a good ball player," he said. "Roma were always well organised and Capello seemed to be at the heart of their organisation, which is how teams like AC Milan and Real Madrid played when he became their manager."

Following their triumph, Swindon celebrated with a meal at the town's Goddard Arms Hotel, to which Capello and the rest of the Italian players were invited. No bonuses and Bentleys in those days, just a simple steak and a pint down the local.

"In our day players would cut each other's throats to play for England," said Arthur Horsfield, who scored a hat-trick on the night. "Today there's too many of them who don't live in the real world, with their fancy cars, houses and watches that cost the earth."

Swindon's stars of '69 may regret the appointment of an Italian as England manager, but they agree that if anyone can turn our underachieving players into winners, it's Capello.

After all, they taught him how.
Logged
Summerof69

Offline Offline

Posts: 8598





Ignore
« Reply #8 on: Sunday, December 16, 2007, 13:40:26 »

Peter Downsborough and Arthur Horsfield....Legends...End of.
Logged

BAZINGA !!

Join the Red Army Fund and donate at www.redarmyfund.co.uk

Join the Football Supporters Federation for FREE at www.fsf.org.uk/join.php
STFC_Gazzza

« Reply #9 on: Sunday, December 16, 2007, 14:24:02 »

Thats fucking ace!
Logged
strooood
As black as Patrick from EastEnders who is officially the blackest man on the planet.

Offline Offline

Posts: 3231




Ignore
« Reply #10 on: Sunday, December 16, 2007, 14:38:54 »

quality article :thumbs:
Logged

officially blacker than the night.
Pages: [1]   Go Up
Print
Jump to: