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Our latest interview
is with one of Rangers' greatest ever goal scorers,
Brian Bedford. In six years at QPR he never failed to
score less than 20 goals a season and netted a total of
180 goals in 283 appearances. He returned to Rangers and
worked behind the scenes at Loftus Road until 1992 and
is now happily retired and living in Wales. Here's what
he had to say.
QPRnet.com:
You started your career with Reading and Southampton,
before moving onto Bournemouth. You had a good start
there scoring 32 in 75 games, what made the move to
Rangers interesting for you?
BB:
When I joined Bournemouth the old Arsenal
winger, Freddy Cox was the manager and he took us on
that great cup run in
1957 when we went out to Manchester United in the sixth
round. Things were good for me, the club was doing well
on the pitch and off it I was quite happy. I’d met and
married my wife in Bournemouth and I liked the town very
much but then they changed the manager and employed an
idiot called Don Welsh from Charlton. Let’s just say his
method of management wasn’t something I enjoyed so I
requested a transfer.
Alec Stock had seen me play for The
Cherries against his Leyton Orient side a few years
before he went to QPR, I think I impressed him and he
remembered me. So that summer when he heard I was
transfer listed he came in with a bid and I became one
of his first signings at Rangers. I went up to London to
meet him and ended up signing on the same day. He was a
really good talker Alec!
I cost QPR the princely sum of one
thousand pounds, the deal was seven hundred and fifty
pounds up front then two hundred and fifty more once I’d
played twenty odd games. I hope I justified the fee in
the long run.
QPRnet.com:
Alec Stock is a legend at Loftus Road, what was he like
as a man and a manager?
BB:
He wasn’t a great football technician; he wasn’t one of
those who could talk tactics all day. His big strength
was he was a great psychologist; he was very passionate
about the game and knew how to get the best out of his
players. He told me the day he signed me that I’d score
twenty goals a season for him and I did.
QPRnet.com:
You were obviously a striker but how would you describe
yourself as a player, is there a modern day comparison?
BB:
I was simply an out and out striker; probably the most
similar player to me right now is the boy Andy Johnson
at Crystal Palace.
Alec used to tell me not to get too involved in the
game, I was told to just lay it off, get in the penalty
area and score goals and that’s what I did. In those
days of course you had those old fashioned things called
wingers, strikers always want crosses and if I got a
good one I’d score. It’s a simple game really!
QPRnet.com:
You never failed to score less than 20 goals each season
for the six years you were at QPR and you barely missed
a game. How did you keep up that level of consistency?
BB:
I was lucky I suppose, playing upfront in those days
meant I took my fair share of kicks and knocks but I
think the longest I was ever out was for two weeks. I
remember cutting open both eyes one week and then
playing the next game, we weren’t softies back in those
days and we weren’t molly coddled like they are now.
I remember we were due to play Scunthorpe
United one week and I’d twisted my ankle in the week. I
had a fitness test before the game and I had to go to
Alec and says ‘sorry Alec I can’t play, I can’t even
kick a ball’ so he said he’d leave me out.
I turned up before the game and wished
the players good luck then settled in at the bar, I
ordered a beer and I was just raising it to my lips when
I heard Alec’s voice scream out “no don’t”! I turned
round and asked him what was wrong and he said ‘you’re
playing’. I couldn’t even kick a ball but he was short
of strikers so I had to put the beer down and get
changed. First tackle I got was on my ankle so I didn’t
have the best game!
QPRnet.com:
Do you think the game was significantly harder then than
it is now?
BB:
In some respects yes, tackles from behind were allowed
so centre halves were always coming through you. I think
players are probably fitter now and they’re much better
looked after than we were but they have to be.
I think the game is harder to play now
because defensive players are much better than they were
and the game has become much narrower. That said players
are much better technically now and I think that’s as a
result of being coached better. Coaches and managers now
have a much wider knowledge of the game than people ever
had when I was playing.
QPRnet.com:
Were there any centre backs around that you used to hate
going up against?
BB:
Oh Christ yes! There was a fella called Jim Steele, he
was made out of Scottish granite. I was taller than him
but he was really broad and barrel chested and he would
kick his Grandmother if she upset him. The first time I
played against him was for Southampton reserves, the
trainer at the time warned me to watch him but I was
only a young man and I thought I wasn’t scared of
anyone. The next thing I remember is lying flat out of
the touchline wondering what the hell had hit me. Jim
Steele, what a great name for a hard centre half.
QPRnet.com:
What games really stand out in your memory from that
era?
BB:
I remember when we scored nine against Tranmere, I think
that’s QPR’s record win actually, we were trying like
stink to get ten but it wouldn’t go in. The other games
that stood out for me personally were the ones when I
got four. I did that twice, once against Halifax
in 1961 and again the next season against Southend. Plus
another good one for me was a game against Bury up at
their place, we were a goal down with ten minutes to go
and we won 3-1 and I got them all.
QPRnet.com:
You played with QPR away from Loftus Road at the old
White City Stadium. What was it like playing there and
how did it compare to Loftus Road?
BB:
We suffered with the move to the White
City
because it really hurt our home record. The trouble is
the fans were so far away from the pitch compared to
Loftus Road and there just wasn’t the same kind of
atmosphere so I was pleased when we moved back to Loftus
Road.
QPRnet.com:
These days footballers are heroes and household names,
what was it like to be a 50’s/60’s player, what sort of
attention did you get?
BB:
The newspapers reported the games at the weekend the
same as they do now but they basically left you in
peace, they didn’t intrude into your life like they do
now. It was a good thing really because if half the
stories I could tell you about footballers back then
were published it’d turn your hair grey.
QPRnet.com:
You left QPR to join Scunthorpe in 1965, how did your
departure come about?
BB:
I didn’t particularly want to go but I was into my
thirties then so I was getting a bit long in the tooth I
suppose. The problem was Alec didn’t want to sell me to
anyone local, I think selling me to Scunthorpe was his
way of making sure that any criticism of letting me go
was minimized because I wasn’t playing locally. It was a
shame because I was settled in the area and it ruled out
joining clubs like Brentford, although I eventually
ended up at Griffin
Park anyway.
QPRnet.com:
You received a worldwide ban a little while after, can
you tell us what happened there?
BB:
I had one season at Scunthorpe, scored about twenty five
goals and did well. I was starting to do some coaching
courses and on one of the courses I made friends with
Phil Woosnam, who used to play for Aston Villa. He
eventually went out to America and became coach of the
Atlanta Chiefs. He found himself in need of a striker
but couldn’t get the two players he wanted and I was
third on his list. He made me an offer and I agreed to
go.
Before I left I rang up the FA to check
if there would be any issues with me signing for an
American club because at that stage they weren’t
affiliated to FIFA. I was told by the person at the FA
that it was fine and there would be no repercussions.
Like an idiot I didn’t get their name and went ahead and
made the move. I played for a season there, fulfilled my
contract then came home.
When I got back I had an offer from
Worcester who were in the Southern League at the time. I
went down and met them and agreed terms and was all set
to sign. Then they tried to register me with the FA and
were told they couldn’t because I was banned. I phoned
up to find out what was going on and I had indeed been
banned for playing in a non FIFA affiliated country. I
couldn’t sign for a football club or play professional
football at any level until the USA joined FIFA. In
total that took eighteen months out of my football life.
Once they did join I only had a season left in me.
QPRnet.com:
What did you do during those eighteen months?
BB:
Prior to going over to America I’d been working part
time at a sports club in Barnes, coaching football for
the Inner London Education Authority so when I came back
to England and found out I couldn’t play I started doing
that again. While I was working there I made friends
with the pro tennis coach, we got talking because I’d
become keen on tennis when I was over in the states and
it turned out that he needed an assistant, so I worked
as a coach with him for a time as well and became a
professional coach myself.
QPRnet.com:
You returned to QPR to work behind the scenes and stayed
until 1992, how did that come about?
BB:
After I finished up at Barnes I was living on a
teacher’s pension, I’d been out of work for a while.
Tony Ingham was on the board of directors at the time
and he made me an offer to become the clubs stadium
manager. I’d always considered Rangers to be my club so
I jumped at the chance and I loved working there. I
worked there for a good few years and then I got sacked
in 1992.
QPRnet.com:
I thought you were made redundant?
BB:
No I was sacked, that was that horrible b*st*rd Clive
Berlin who did that. He sacked me and I couldn’t get a
reasonable explanation as to why. I took them to an
industrial tribunal and we settled out of court and that
was the end of that. After that I decided to retire and
I moved back home to Wales back in 1996.
QPRnet.com:
When you see today’s highly paid players complaining
about this and that do you have any sympathy for them?
BB:
Not at all, I think they are all very well paid for
doing something they love, or at least something they
should love, and quite honestly most modern players’
attitudes disgust me. Players are so stupid now, I know
they haven’t got a private life but they’re well paid in
compensation and it’s only for a short period of their
life. They know full well that when they go to a club or
out and about there are people looking for them to slip
up but they keep falling for it time and time again.
Look at Lee Hughes, banged up for years and his career
is over, Jermaine Pennant has gone down now as well and
then there’s that idiot Prutton pushing referees around,
it's crazy.
They really need someone to guide them
but all they have is their agents. When I was around QPR
agents were just starting to come into the game and I
remember Jim Gregory sitting down with a player we
wanted to sign and he had this other fella with him. Jim
said to the player ‘who’s this’ and the player said it
was his agent so Jim said ‘tell him to f**k off’ and he
wouldn’t talk business until he’d gone. I don’t think
agents are good for football and I don’t think they’re
needed. If a player isn’t capable of negotiating his own
contract then he should do what we used to do and use
someone from his family.
I used to go up and see Cardiff when I
was growing up as a kid but I don’t like it there now,
there’s too much trouble so I don’t watch much live
football now I must admit. I loved my career and look
back on it with great fondness but I’m quite happy
playing my golf now, it’s a much more gentlemanly sport
than football is today! |