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Our latest interview is
with former Rangers midfielder Marc Bircham. Birch talks
about his love for all things QPR, achieving his dream
of playing for Rangers, the highs and lows under Ian
Holloway and gives us his thoughts on today's "boutique"
Queens Park Rangers.
QPRnet:
Let’s go back to 2002; talk us through your move to QPR
because it must have been like a dream come true for
you?
MB:
It was, I never thought I’d say it but moving to QPR was
a really hard decision for me.
I
had an offer from a Premier League team and a couple
from the Championship on more money and I’d practically
agreed to sign for the Premier League side when Kenny
Jackett rang me up and asked if I’d be interested in
going to QPR.
I
went down and met him and Ian Holloway, he played on the
heartstrings of course, I had a meeting in his office
overlooking Loftus Road and I came away from there
really wanting to play for Rangers.
I
sat down with my family and said if I turn this down I
might never got the chance again. The only reason I
started playing football was to play for QPR and if I
didn’t do it would have been a massive disappointment.
My wife was right behind me so I made the decision.
The only concern I had was if it didn’t go well and the
fans didn’t like me it would have taken the gloss off
it. That was my big fear but in the long run it worked
out and I’m so glad I made the decision.
QPRnet:
Ian Holloway was the man who bought you to Loftus Road,
you must have an enormous amount of respect for him?
MB:
Definitely, his man management was second to none and he
really got the lads playing for him. I remember the
first year in the Championship and his job was under
threat, a few of us were carrying injuries and we went
out and won seven on the bounce for him. That showed how
much the lads enjoyed and respected him.
QPRnet:
He has a reputation as a bit of a joker and at times got
horrible stick from the Rangers crowd. Putting all the
joking aside is he still a proper football man at heart?
MB:
Yeh of course he is and tactically he won us plenty of
games as well, I remember one time we played Ipswich and
they’d always played a diamond formation, we went up
there and played like a 4-2-4 and won the game.
I
think when Kenny Jackett was with him it was good, like
a good cop bad cop type of thing. Kenny bought Olly down
when he got a bit excited and it worked really well.
QPRnet:
You made your QPR debut in a 3-1 home win over
Chesterfield, what do you remember from the day because
it must have been a pretty emotional occasion for you?
MB:
Yeh, who would have thought a game against Chesterfield
would get me so excited! I just couldn’t wait for it the
minute I signed for QPR, to put the kit on and run out
at Loftus Road was a dream come true. I had all the
family there, I had to buy about forty tickets so I was
well out of pocket but it was a great day.
QPRnet:
You’d only been a QPR for a few months when the Vauxhall
Motors debacle occurred, how do you pick yourself up
after something like that?
MB:
Yeh I got sent off at Wycombe by Rob Styles a little
while before and I’ve got to thank Paul Furlong actually
because he got me in a headlock otherwise I think I
would have throttled him!
So
I came back from that and we had a great win at Bristol
City but I tweaked my medial ligament so I was out
another three odd weeks, then I came back again and got
a reoccurrence of my glandular fever and that was really
hard.
So
we found ourselves in a bad run and the Friday before
the Brentford home game we didn’t even train, Olly took
us all out up the café for a few cups of tea and bacon
sandwiches. We all had a chat and relaxed and then got a
result in that game. I think that match turned it round
for us and Olly said that it saved his career and we
kicked on from there really. The Vauxhall Motors thing
turned out to be the kick up the backside we needed
really.
QPRnet:
The next games after the Vauxhall game we got hammered
by Cardiff and Notts County, Paul Furlong was getting
booed at the time, it can’t have been a pleasant time?
MB:
The Cardiff one was a strange because we should have
been about three up in the first half. I think I played
right wing that day and I set up Brett Angell for a
couple which he missed from about four yards. We played
really well first half but they came out second half and
beat us 4-0.
Furs turned it all around though and we were delighted
for him because you won’t meet a nicer person in
football than him. I call him the smiling assassin he’s
a bit nasty on the pitch but he does it with a smile!
QPRnet:
After Notts County we drew that game with Brentford and
you scored your first QPR goal and things improved from
there. Is that one of those things in football you get
the break and you’re off and running?
MB:
Yeh I think we had a bit of a siege mentality as well
because everyone was hammering the team and it bought us
all together. After that game we got more of a settled
side, Furs came into his own and started a good
partnership with Kev, Danny and Clarke started doing
well at the back, me and Palms started to cement
ourselves and it all seemed to work.
QPRnet:
That game seemed to really lift everyone and we went on
a great run only losing three games between then and the
end of the season.
MB:
Yeh there was some really hard games in there as well
plus every week we knew we had to win because Tranmere
were nipping at our heels. My mate Iain Hume was at
Tranmere at the time and he told me afterwards that
they’d win and come in every week to see we’d won as
well and it was really frustrating for them.
The other Brentford game was good as well, at Griffin
Park. Tranmere were infront and cruising and the
Brentford fans were telling us the score all through the
game, if it’d stayed like that they’d have probably
pipped us to sixth place but I managed to score the
winner. Hume said to me after that that result
devastated them. If we hadn’t won that game I don’t
think we’d have got in the play offs.
People tell me that my goal at Brentford was the most
celebrated QPR goal since Clive Allen in the semi-final,
people were on the pitch going mad, it was just mental!
QPRnet:
The play off game against Oldham is probably my
favourite game I’ve ever been to it at Loftus Road. It
must have been a fantastic occasion to play in?
MB:
It was such a special atmosphere, you could tell in the
warm up the place was rocking, there were people
standing in the aisles. It was like the old days when I
used to go in the 80’s for the matches against Chelsea,
they’d say there were 19,000 there and there were like
22,000. It was just fantastic after the up and down
season we had to go on such a good run and to finish it
with that game was brilliant.
QPRnet:
The play off final was a great day but at the end you
must have been as devastated as the fans?
MB:
I still believe we were the better team on the day, but
we got done with a sucker punch at the end. Actually I
got told after that had we gone up it could have
bankrupted the club because we owed money on player’s
contractual promotion clauses and we just didn’t have
it.
So
we stayed down, managed to get a better squad together
and I think that’s why we stayed up in the Championship
two years later so it all worked out well. Of course we
didn’t think that when the final whistle went at Cardiff
though because it was devastating,
QPRnet:
Did Olly use that disappointment to fire the players up
to get automatic promotion in the following season?
MB:
He didn’t need to, we did it for ourselves, when the
fixtures come out and you see you’re still in the same
place it hurts and I think we took it out on Blackpool
that first game. It was nearly 100 degrees that day and
people were tipping Blackpool to go up that year but all
the hurt from May came out and we destroyed them 5-0.
QPRnet:
Bristol
City
pushed us all the way but our bottle never went, the
squad must have been so fired up for the final weeks of
the season?
MB:
I think it helped us from the year before when Tranmere
were chasing us so we knew had to deal with it. I
remember Tony Thorpe had joined by then and he was mates
with Brian Tinnion at Bristol City and every time they
won he used to text through telling us we were going to
bottle it and he’d watch us in the play offs from Spain
so it was great to give him a few texts on the way back
home from Sheffield Wednesday!
QPRnet:
And that day at Hillsborough will live long in
everyone’s memories, it’s got to be one of your
favourite moments?
MB:
I think the last two games were possibly two of my best
games in a QPR shirt. We played really well, beat
Swindon 1-0 at home and it could have been more, then
the Hillsborough game was fantastic. Other than my
wedding and my kids being born it was probably the best
day of my life.
I
was like Pat Cash afterwards, I didn’t go in the
dressing room I ran straight in the stands to my family.
You don’t get times like that very often in football and
I just wanted to savour it all.
I
was doing an interview on the pitch afterwards and they
asked what my plans were and I said I plan to be pissed
for a week! I’d hired out a nightclub for after the game
as it was wife’s birthday, lucky we won really because
it wouldn’t have been much of a party otherwise! The
team bus pulled up outside the club and loads of us were
still in our kit we didn’t even bother getting changed!
That all just added to the day really.
QPRnet:
Rangers settled in The Championship well after
promotion, and we went on that great run of seven
straight wins things were looking good?
MB:
We struggled in the first few games, we were really poor
at Watford then all this stuff about what’s his name
coming in came out, Ramos or someone, no one had ever
heard of him anyway. That was when all the team got
right behind Olly and we went on that great run.
I
really believe we’d have got in the play offs that year
if we’d had a slightly bigger squad, the last few games
of that season we were calling up kids we’d already
released to sit on the bench at Burnley and Wigan.
QPRnet:
We got off to a good start the next season winning two
out of the first three but our form slipped as the off
the field problems hit the headlines, particularly the
incident with Paladini in the boardroom. Did that make a
difference to the teams form or is that just an excuse?
MB:
Yeh it does affect you cos it filters down, that started
us being a bit of a joke team in the media really, there
was a story about us every week and it was never
anything to do with what was going on on the pitch.
There were always rumours of administration and that
didn’t help and then Olly got the sack. At the time we
had loads of injuries but we were still in about
eleventh place and they sacked him. I think the only
reason we stayed up that years was because we ran out of
games.
Waddo came in and that was a bit of a disaster to be
honest. He’s done really well at Aldershot and perhaps
if he was allowed to do things his way it would have
been different but he was a bit of a puppet really.
We
had that pre-season in Italy the following summer and
they left me behind as well as people like Lomas,
Doherty and Evatt, I think we had a better team at home
than the one that went. It set it all up for the season
to go badly, then we got locked out of the training
ground because the bill hadn’t been paid, it was just a
shambles really.
John Gregory came in then and to be fair he did really
well, he kept us up and that was his job. I had quite a
good relationship with him.
QPRnet:
When Olly left the club you were quite critical of the
decision did that make things awkward for you at QPR?
MB:
Yeh but I’m a man of principles and I wouldn’t buckle to
that. They wanted me and Kev to do a press conference
welcoming the decision and welcoming Gary Waddock in and
I wouldn’t do it because I didn’t believe in it. I
thought the way Olly was treated was terrible especially
after everything he did for the club. If they wanted rid
of him they should have given him the decency of sacking
him not putting him on gardening leave. They were just
trying to save money and I thought he deserved more than
that. I’m not one of those players to kiss up the
Chairman, I didn’t believe it was right and I stuck to
my morals and that probably was the downfall of my time
with Paladini really. I wouldn’t change it though, I’m a
loyal person if someone’s good to me I’m loyal to them.
QPRnet:
Under Waddo you were transfer listed in the summer but
found yourself back in the side that must have been an
odd situation?
MB:
It was odd, the previous January Sheffield United had
come in for me and Paladini told me he didn’t want me to
go, we had no money troubles and as soon as we’re safe I
could have a four year deal. Towards the end of that
season I had another knee problem and I wasn’t training
and Waddo asked me to have injections to keep playing so
I did. Then I’m watching Sky Sports News in the canteen
and I find out I’ve been transfer listed as the club
need to sell me. I was really disappointed.
I
came close to joining Leeds but at the last minute they
asked for more money so that fell through then they
offered me to Swansea and I didn’t want to go there so I
told Waddo I wasn’t going anywhere. He said I’d be stuck
in the reserves and I said no problem because I know the
players you’ve bought in aren’t good enough and I’ll be
back in the team and that’s what happened. The last two
or three games I ended up with the armband under him!
QPRnet:
I imagine Waddock was one of your boyhood heroes did
that make it even more disappointing for you that things
just didn’t work out under him?
MB:
It was weird, Gary Waddock was a central midfielder like
me of course and I’ve known him since I was about ten.
He was being dictated to but he didn’t want to admit
that because it would have undermined him. The players
coming in weren’t good enough and all the lads knew we’d
be battling relegation which is how it turned out. I did
feel let down by Waddo to be honest, I’d like have a
chat with him one day because I would like to think he
regrets the way he handled me.
QPRnet:
Ultimately it was John Gregory that let you leave Loftus
Road, you must have been gutted it was all over but I
assume you knew it was coming?
MB:
Ultimately it was down to my relationship with Gianni to
be honest, I don’t think he liked that me and Kev cared
so much for the club and we didn’t like what he was
doing to it, plus I believe he hated the fact we had a
better relationship with the fans than he did.
My
injuries finished me though, I think John would have
liked to have kept me but I was on a good contract and
money was tight at the club so they couldn’t really sign
me up knowing I was only going to play 15 to 20 games a
year. To be honest if I was QPR manager I wouldn’t have
given me a new deal either.
After that I went out to LA Galaxy which would have been
interesting! I trained with Toronto which I really liked
but I don’t think the artificial pitch would have been
too good for my injuries. I was close to signing for one
of them but my wife was pregnant at the time and the
baby was due in October which was when their season
ended and it just wasn’t the right time for it.
So
we came back to England but because of my back problems
I was getting offered short term deals with clubs like
Bristol City then Yeovil came in with a two year deal
which I couldn’t really turn down.
So
I went there, I got through pre-season and injury reared
its ugly head, I made my first start in over a year and
split my head open and had to come off after half an
hour. Next game I played I got man of the match then got
sent off in the one after! Now I’m out with an ankle
problem, injuries have just killed me really.
QPRnet:
There were even some rumours of retirement a few months
back, is that accurate?
MB:
I think that was just frustration on my part really, I
was doing everything to try and get back, operations,
injections. I strung the last eight games together last
season, played nearly a full pre-season was looking
forward to the new campaign. I played the first game did
well and pulled my hamstring in the last ten minutes!
Now I’ve done my ankle ligaments, I think the Gods are
trying to tell me something but I’m not giving up until
I can’t walk!
QPRnet:
Once your playing days are behind you do you want to
stay in the game or will you do something totally
different?
MB:
I’ve done my coaching badges and I’m doing my UEFA A
license this summer so I’d like to be a manager one day
but I’ve got some other interests because you just never
know with football.
I’ve got a big project in Cyprus, I’m opening a sports
complex and football academy and I’m really looking
forward to that. It should open in about three years
which should coincide with the end of my playing career.
It’s been good for me with all the injuries to have
something to keep me busy and it’s kept me happy as my
family will tell you.
QPRnet:
What’s your take on things at QPR today?
MB:
You can never get too excited at Rangers because they
let you down all the time! No one supports QPR through
choice do we, you don’t choose it, you’re made to!
The investment has been a great thing for the club, we
were a week away from going bust and they came in and
saved the place and we owe them loads of course, but I
think they need to be sensible. They said we’re going to
be in the Champions League in four years which just
seems over ambitious. If they’d said we’re going to
stabilise the club and take it as it comes I think
Rangers fans would have been happy with that but because
they’ve come in with all this ambition the crowd are
expecting now.
I
think it hasn’t helped trying to turn us into a mini
Chelsea with the ticket prices and the box prices going
up. That’s not rewarding the fans that stuck with us in
Division Two, they’ve been through the bad times and now
they’re getting priced out. QPR are a working class West
London, you can jazz us up as much as you want but
you’ll never change that.
Now Iain Dowie has gone as well and we’ll be on our
sixth manager in two years and we need stability on the
pitch. Like a house needs strong foundations, a football
club needs to be strong from the top. We’ve got three
wealthy people owning the club and maybe there are too
many cooks at the moment.
QPRnet:
Looking back on your Rangers career, when are your
personal highlights?
MB:
My debut for sure, when you play for other clubs in your
career you never know if you’re going to achieve your
dream but I did and that was great. The goal at
Brentford wasn’t my best goal but it was my personal
favourite however mostly it’ll be the promotion at
Hillsborough.
Growing up I dreamed of playing for QPR and winning
something with the club I love and I did it. I’m a QPR
fan that managed to live their dream; I captained the
side and took part in a great couple of seasons so if my
career ended tomorrow I’d still be a happy man. |