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Another 70's star is tracked down for our latest
interview. Don Givens talks about that great side of
thirty years ago, how exciting it was to play in, the
agony of missing out on the league title and much more.
QPRnet.com:
You moved over from Limerick to sign for Manchester
United when you were 17 that must have been like a dream
come true for a kid for Ireland?
DG:
It was, I was a United supporter as a kid
and it was fabulous for me to be mixing with the great
players they had at the time like George Best, Bobby
Charlton and Denis Law.
I actually made my international debut
for Ireland at nineteen having never played a first team
game for United. We went on a close season tour of
Ireland and there was a few first team players missing
so I played a few games and scored some goals. There was
an international coming up and it pushed my name forward
a bit and I got selected. It was a great boost for me at
the time.
QPRnet.com:
You made 8 appearances for Man Utd, moved onto Luton for
a couple of seasons before Rangers came calling in 1972.
At the time both sides were in Division Two, what made
you sign for us?
DG:
The first season I was at Luton we didn’t
make a good attempt at promotion and that summer they
sold Malcolm MacDonald to Newcastle so it was clear that
they were settling to stay in the division. QPR
meanwhile had just missed out on going up and looked
like they were more willing to give it a go in the
coming season so I just thought QPR had more ambition at
the time and that seemed to be a better move for me.
QPRnet.com:
You made your debut in the first match of the season at
Swindon and scored your first in the next game against
Sheff Weds. What do you remember from those early days?
DG:
I enjoyed it greatly, I settled in
nicely. We were almost playing with three front players
with John O’Rourke, Mickey Leach and myself. As we got
into that season we bought Stan Bowles and Dave Thomas
and with myself that very quickly became the new front
three. The very fact they splashed out on two players
like showed me the ambition they had and proved we had a
chance of doing something.
QPRnet.com:
You returned to Luton with Rangers in December and
scored both goals in a two all draw, how were you
received at Kenilworth Road?
DG:
I never really had any problem, it was
nice to go back and do well. Back then, and even now I
suppose, they were a team of limited ambition because of
the size of their support so they never really held
anything against people who did well and moved on. I had
two seasons there and did all right for them so I was
quite well treated.
QPRnet.com:
Rangers and Burnley dominated the league that year and
we were promoted, just a point behind them as champions.
Was there any disappointment in not finishing first or
was it all about promotion?
DG:
At the time I thought
we were a better side than Burnley
but I guess the league table doesn’t lie. At the start
of the season the aim was to go up, which we did, we’d
have liked to won the league of course but the main
objective was achieved.
QPRnet.com:
After a season or so back in the big time Gordon Jago
left and was replaced by Dave Sexton. How did they
compare in management style?
DG:
Gordon was a lovely man but I thought
Dave had a lot more football knowledge. Gordon would
rely on Bobby Campbell and Terry Venables to do the
coaching and he would concentrate on being a manager
whereas as Dave wanted to be on the training pitch.
Dave was ahead of his time, we’d play on
a Saturday and he’d fly out to Holland and Germany and
watch games there on a Sunday to see what he could learn
and use to help us. He had a good relationship with the
coach of Borussia Monchengladbach and he was heavily
influenced by the great Ajax team of the time so he’d be
coming back with ideas for us to work on in training the
following week. I’m not even sure managers would do that
today.
He
was a great coach for forwards, it’s harder to coach
strikers than defenders because it’s easier to destroy
rather than create. As a forward myself it was
marvellous to work with him because he was always coming
up with new ideas and new tactics that he could bring
into our style of play.
QPRnet.com:
Rangers had a couple of average league finishes and then
in our third season nearly won the league. Could you see
the signs of progression or did it take you by surprise?
DG:
It was perhaps a little surprising but we
were progressing as a team, We were playing some very,
very good football and we had a great bunch of
characters in the side but they still gave everything
for the team.
We had someone in Frank McLintock who was
a marvellous influence on the team, he’d come from
Arsenal where things were done at a different level and
he tried to introduce those things to QPR and help make
it better for us. He didn’t always succeed on the club
side of things but he did help the team. He was probably
the most influential player I’ve ever lined up with.
We also had Dave Webb who came to us and
got a new lease of life. He had moved from Chelsea and
people may have thought he’d come to take it easy in the
later stages of his career but he really got into the
atmosphere and the spirit of the team. We had quality
players and we were allowed to play in ways that suited
us. We had great attacking players in Gerry Francis,
Stan, Dave Thomas and myself and we were given the
freedom to play. We all blossomed at the right time.
QPRnet.com:
It was a great attacking side what was it like to play
in?
DG:
It was a fantastic time, especially as a
forward. We knew we could score goals and create things
and that’s what we were geared towards. We still had the
work ethic when we lost the ball but people were allowed
to try things and play a little bit off the cuff. I
still talk to people now who go on about that side. For
example Ron Atkinson was manager of Cambridge at the
time and he tells me he would never miss QPR play if he
didn’t have a game himself because he just loved the way
we played. There are an awful lot of people within the
game who appreciate the quality of that side.
QPRnet.com:
We were champions with 15 minutes to go of the last
game, it must have been devastating to see the title
slip away in the way it did?
DG:
It was difficult to see it happen.
Liverpool at the time were an exceptional team and you
would never have bet against them, they seemed to be
able to pull things out even if there was five minutes
to go. Deep down I always had the feeling that because
they did it year in, year out that they would do it
again that day. We were downhearted but they had such a
good side it didn’t surprise me that they went to Wolves
and won.
I was up in Manchester for a United game
that was being played at the same time, the score came
through at half time as one nil to Wolves which was all
very nice but I had a feeling inside that you couldn’t
rule them out and unfortunately they proved me right. It
was a shame because I think it would have been good for
the game if a team playing the kind of football we were
at QPR had won the championship.
QPRnet.com:
Rangers spent a few more years in the top flight but
struggled to make any impact, what had changed?
DG:
Rangers had a good team at the time but
we didn’t have a good club. I know that sounds critical
but it wasn’t structured properly. I felt Jim Gregory
wasn’t always interested in doing the best thing for the
club. The progression of the team wasn’t always his
number one priority. We had a very good manager and a
very good team but we were in the wrong place at the
right time. That team should have been built on a little
bit and we could have been in contention for a few more
years. It didn’t happen and within a year to eighteen
months that team broke up.
QPRnet.com:
You left for Birmingham in the summer of 1978 and we
were relegated the following season. What made you move
and considering Birmingham were also relegated, do you
wish you’d stayed at QPR?
DG:
About a year earlier
I had the chance to go to Bordeaux and the chairman
knocked it on the head. They’d offered two hundred
thousand and QPR had only paid Luton thirty five
thousand for me. I’d had five seasons at the club and
scored around twenty goals a season so I felt there
should have been some gratitude coming my way. Then the
season after that I was sold to
Birmingham for fifty grand less.
When you decide to go you make what you
think is the best move at the time. Football wise it
didn’t work out for me but I moved to an area where I
still live now, made an awful lot of friends, my girls
have grown up here and we’re very happy. Sometimes
things can go wrong in one way but right in others. I
regretted it when we went down and I can honestly say
that after QPR I never produced my best stuff again.
QPRnet.com:
After a spell with Sheffield United you moved onto Swiss
side Neuchatel Xamax, what brought about that move,
which must have been seen as an unusual one at the time?
DG:
It
was unusual, I’d moved to Sheffield United on deadline
day until the end of the season. There was a man at the
club called Harry Haslam who was the scout who’d
recommended me to Luton all those years back. He asked
me what I was going to do at the end of the season and I
told him I was thinking about going abroad as I’d had an
approach from a couple of Dutch clubs. A bit nearer the
time he called me and suggested Neuchatel in
Switzerland. I went out to watch them play their last
game of the season and they won it and qualified for the
UEFA cup so that was a bonus as well. I signed for them
and had six wonderful seasons, we played in Europe four
out of the six years and in the last season I was made
captain and we won the league for the first time in the
clubs history.
QPRnet.com:
How did the Swiss football culture differ to the
English?
DG:
It
differed greatly at the start, I was the only full time
player when I first joined. All the boys worked until
the afternoon and we trained from half four. I found the
players had a really refreshing attitude though. Because
they were part time they were so enthusiastic towards
training it was amazing, if they coach told them to do
forty laps they’d do it and enjoy it. You wouldn’t have
got that response from an English pro.
We
played on Saturday nights which took some getting used
to and if you had an away game you didn’t get home till
one o’clock in the morning and then we trained on Sunday
mornings as well. Of course in England you have Sunday
off. After a while I realised that it was better to do
it the Swiss way because you got rid of all your
stiffness. We’d come in and do half an hour of jogging
and stretching and you felt better for it.
The
whole environment was great for me. We got to the
quarter finals of the UEFA cup one year and it was great
being in a small town, everyone was getting more and
more carried away with every round we got through so it
was a lovely atmosphere to be involved in.
I
went back there as coach and did all my coaching badges
out there. I enjoyed the playing side more than the
coaching actually because the directors interfere more
out there than they do here so that caused one or two
arguments!
QPRnet.com:
Now you’re coaching the Irish Under 21’s, you’ve had
some involvement with QPR’s Martin Rowlands. How do you
see him progressing as an international?
DG:
Yes,
Martin was in the under 21’s when I first took the job.
I still think Martin is a little bit too impetuous for
me. He is a good player with a lot of qualities but
every time I’ve seen him play he could have had a red
card, even when he made his full international debut
this summer. That’s the area I think he needs to improve
on because he certainly has some ability.
QPRnet.com:
You were Ireland caretaker manager after Mick McCarthy’s
departure; having been an accomplished international
yourself did you have any ambitions to take the job full
time?
DG:
No I
was quite happy to stay on the development side. I’ve
been doing it for four years now and I’ve seen plenty of
players come through and get full caps, it’s a very
rewarding feeling. When they make their debut I end up
being more nervous than the kid though! I work with them
for eighteen months and when they get on with the full
side I’m kicking every ball with them!
I’m
happy doing what I’m doing at the moment but you never
know what’s round the corner. An offer could come up in
the future but you never know. Right now it’s very
satisfying helping players come through and improve.
Once a player gets to under 21 status with us he already
has the ability, after that it’s all down to what’s
between their ears, so sometimes it’s not just about
coaching the technical side of the game. You can spend
half an hour just talking through things with a player
and making sure the attitude is right, that’s just as
important as the football coaching.
QPRnet.com:
As someone who played in the golden era of football and
is coaching today, how has the game changed, are the
players better in any way now?
DG:
I
think things have changed for the better in many ways, I
don’t think players are better technically but the
players have much better facilities to work with. If you
go back and look at old photos of Loftus Road from when
I was playing it was like a beach once you got past
September there was so much sand on it. So for us to
have played the stuff we did on that surface proved we
were a pretty good side. These days Highbury is like a
billiard table every single match and the players train
on a billiard table every single day so things have
improved in those areas.
Also
the nutrition, recovery and the stretching have improved
so much. In the seventies we barely did a warm up, you’d
come out three minutes before the game, do a couple of
stretches have a shot or two and away you’d go. At the
time I knew no better but I know now that it isn’t the
best way to do things. So I think all the scientific
knowledge that has come into the game has made the world
of difference.
On
the flip side though is the pressure to get results has
increased so much now. Managers don’t have the time to
develop a style of play or let players have any freedom
because a few bad results and they’re out of the door.
So they go for the type of player that will get them
results not necessarily the type of player that will
play good attacking football.
I’m
convinced this is why England struggles to find good
wide players because they can be a bit of luxury and not
the best workers and with a managers job on the line
they will pick the workers every time. That’s a great
pity because it stems from the Premiership all the way
down the leagues.
Most
of the football I watch is down the divisions and
sometimes I can go four or five weeks and never see four
passes put together. It’s all about squeezing up and
getting it in over the top of your opponents and good
players are never going to develop under that style of
play. That’s the bad side of modern day football.
QPRnet.com:
How do you look back on your time at Rangers?
DG:
From
my playing point of view it was my best time in football
and if I meet anybody today then the club they associate
me with is QPR. I still see a lot of the boys from that
team, I’m in touch with Frank McLintock, Phil Parkes,
Dave Thomas and Don Masson. It was just a special time
and it’s nice that the team we were in is still
remembered thirty years later because of the quality of
football we played. |