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Frank
Sibley's unique Rangers career started in the 60's and
went all the way through to the 90's. He has been a
player, coach, assistant manager, as well as manager and
caretaker boss on countless occasions. He talks to us
about his time at QPR.
QPRnet.com:
You were just 15 when you made your debut, what do you
remember from the day?
FS:
It
came out of the blue really, Alec Stock told me and then
it became a bit of media event. I was the youngest
footballer to play at the time so I had the press round
my house interviewing me and my Mum didn’t know what hit
her! So it was a bit daunting in that respect.
I
actually made my debut for the first team as an outside
right but I’d come to the club as a centre forward. In
my first season I’d got plenty of goals in the south
east counties league but the next season I didn’t so
well. Jimmy Andrews was the coach at the time and he
suggested that I had a look at going in a different
direction and playing facing the ball rather than with
my back to it so he was instrumental in turning me into
a defensive player.
QPRnet.com:
So as a young lad how did you take to being asked to
change your game?
FS:
Well
if you’re not doing well at something and someone shows
you another way of playing then you should listen. I
took to it quite well, I enjoyed it and it worked out
well for me in the end.
QPRnet.com:
As someone who’s still in the game you must see massive
differences between the 15 year old apprentices today
and from your time?
FS:
When
we were apprentices it was a three year commitment, my
first wage was about five pounds a week, in the second
year it went up to seven and then nine in the third.
Then the club had the option of signing you as a pro.
You
worked all morning around the ground doing odd jobs like
painting the stands and so forth then the coaches would
take you for training in the afternoon. By the time you
got the kit packed away and got the bus home it was six
o’clock and you’d done a full days work.
Kids
these days don’t have to do any work as such but I
wasn’t adverse to it, it gave all the lads a great sense
of camaraderie. We all played together in the south east
counties league in the morning and sometimes you had to
turn out for the reserves in the afternoon as well and I
think that benefited the club when we progressed onto
the first team.
QPRnet.com:
Do you think making kids work like that gives them more
of a respect for the club as a whole?
FS:
I
think it sorted out the ones who wanted to be players
and those who didn’t because you had to do the work to
get to the football. Today with the young academy
scholars they almost make them into pro’s before they’ve
achieved anything.
We
had a great trainer called Alec Farmer, Derek Healey was
running the youth set up and then there was Jimmy
Andrews coaching and of course Alec Stock. They didn’t
give you an inch but they taught you the right way to go
about things. Alec always used to say to us if you’re
going to a game and you have to be there at eight
o’clock make sure you get there for seven and I still do
that today.
QPRnet.com:
Alec must have been an incredible man to grow up around?
FS:
Yes
he was. He was quite strict but in a positive way, he
used to moan at us for buying things like cheese rolls
from the shops down the road from the ground. He’d say
things like “get a steak inside you”, of course we
couldn’t afford steak on our wages!
QPRnet.com:
So the diet and nutrition advice was a bit different
back then?!
FS:
Oh
yes, that’s changed massively. Every Friday on pay day
we’d treat ourselves and go to a Greek restaurant on the
Goldhawk Road and have a big brunch. Our pre match meals
would be fillet steak, rice pudding and as much toast as
you can eat! Players are so much fitter these days and
get much better advice than we did in our day.
QPRnet.com:
Going into the 1966-67 season, did we have high hopes of
promotion?
FS:
As
young players we didn’t really think about it, our main
concern was getting in the team and playing football.
It’s only when you start winning games and going up the
leagues that it becomes apparent you can do something.
Jim
Gregory coming to the club was very significant and the
signings of players like Rodney, Mark Lazarus and Les
Allen were very astute. He knew he had a good group of
young kids but he needed some experience to go with it.
QPRnet.com:
Reaching the League Cup final with such an emphatic
victory over Birmingham must have been a great occasion
for the players?
FS:
I
think that was the game that gave us the confidence to
go on and win the final. Nobody really gave us a chance
against them and we played really, really well. I
remember getting an injury, a big cut down my thigh and
the physio at the time told Alec I was losing too much
blood and would have to come off. Alec turned round to
me and said “you’re all right son aren’t you” and I
agreed because there was no way I was going to come off.
Of course we didn’t just beat them once we had to do
twice as well.
QPRnet.com:
Going into the final what message did Alec send you out
with?
FS:
He
was very simplistic in many ways, Bill Dodgin’s did most
of the tactical stuff. Alec was very strong on certain
things, he knew if someone had pulled out of a challenge
and he knew if you should have got a shot in. He would
have just sent us out to enjoy ourselves because he was
very good at taking the pressure off of us.
Obviously we came in two nil down at half time but there
was no shouting or aggravation, we just knew we could
play better. Alec made the point of saying that our
families were here and it sent a message out to everyone
to give that little bit more.
QPRnet.com:
The feeling at the final whistle must have been amazing?
FS:
It
was unbelievable, to think we were a third division team
playing at Wembley in front of 100,000 people was
incredible. It was the first time that final was played
at Wembley and if it hadn’t have been such a success it
may have been the last. The only sad thing about it all
is we never got into Europe because of the league we
were in.
I
find it sad today that the league cup has been so
devalued because it’s a way into Europe and way to
Wembley, or Cardiff and whatever you say the fans want
to be there. If some clubs aren’t interested in going to
the final then I don’t think they should be accepted
into the competition.
QPRnet.com:
You mentioned earlier about playing two games in a day,
what do you think when hear modern day players
complaining about playing two games a week?
FS:
I
think the game is so much quicker now, I’m not saying
all the football is as good because in the 60’s and 70’s
the football was still excellent and most Division One
sides had international players but it was just the way
we did things in our era.
QPRnet.com:
You were part of a great side with fantastic attacking
players like the Morgans, Mark Lazarus and Rodney Marsh.
Marsh became the Rangers icon; did the other players
ever resent the attention he got?
FS:
Not
at all because we knew that if Rodney played well we had
every chance of wining the game and getting a bonus!
He’s a terrific guy as well, we had lots of fun together
and us youngsters just looked forward to him getting a
goal or winning a penalty.
Me
and Ronnie Hunt as the two back players used to try to
keep a clean sheet and hope Rodney got the goals, that’s
the way we set about it. We knew at home Rodney would
win it for us and that away from home the emphasis was
more on us to help get something out of the game.
QPRnet.com:
Going into our first season in the old division two and
we were promoted again, was that an ambition at the
start of the season or we were expecting to just
consolidate?
FS:
That
season passed me by a little bit, at the end of the
66-67 season Rodney was due to go away with the England
under 23’s, he got an illness and couldn’t go and I was
called up instead. When I got back from that I got a
call saying I had to go and join the club tour of Spain,
I think that was the first time we’d ever had a foreign
tour!
Our
car broke down and it took about 16 hours to get there
but I made the game, played and got injured in the last
minute. I was carried off and that’s where my injury
troubles started from there. I was flown home and they
couldn’t decide for two weeks what was wrong because
there was so much swelling on the leg, eventually I had
to have a cartilage operation so I didn’t play too many
games in Division Two, as it was called then.
I
came back into the side then I had to have another
cartilage operation so I was on the sidelines again.
Today those injuries wouldn’t be too much of a problem
but in those days it was career threatening.
QPRnet.com:
Being injured as a footballer is frustrating anyway but
to miss out on a season like that must have made it
doubly worse?
FS:
It
is, when you’ve been a big part of the side sitting on
the sidelines is never the same and you feel a bit of
spare part in all the celebrations.
QPRnet.com:
Though it must have been great to rise so quickly
through the divisions, as a young player was it hard to
develop your game when the standard you were facing was
constantly improving?
FS:
I
think it helped in the respect that it gave us
confidence because we were winning games but that back
fired when we got to the top division because we’d never
really experience losing. We lost so many games by the
odd goal because we lacked that extra experience to cope
in that situation. So it was good while we were getting
there but once we made it into the first division it
caught up with us.
QPRnet.com:
You were forced to retire in 1971 aged 23 it must have
knocked you for six but did you always intend to move
into coaching once it happened?
FS:
I’ve
got to be honest and say no I didn’t. All you think
about when you’re a young player having that sort of
success is that it’s going go on for ever. When I was
told by the specialist to pack it in it was a terrible
shock, I’d just got married and taken on a mortgage and
all I could think was “what am I going to do”.
Academically, like many footballers today I wasn’t the
greatest and once you take the football away you’re
lost. The club was very good to me though, Gordon Jago
and Jim Gregory set me up at the club and I took my
badges, passed them and they let me start coaching.
QPRnet.com:
You were still a young man at the time, how did you find
coaching players who were older than you?
FS:
It
wasn’t a problem because to start with I worked with the
youth team players. That wasn’t too bad because they
were looking up to me really as they could still
remember me as a player. It developed from there and I
took the reserve players then worked my up to coaching
the senior players so I earned the respect along the
way.
QPRnet.com:
You were appointed QPR manager in 1977, was following
Dave Sexton an impossible job?
FS:
It
was very difficult. I was assistant manager to Dave and
it was a wonderful team. He produced the second best
footballing team I’ve seen at QPR, second only to our
side in the sixties but when I took over one or two
players were getting a bit older and Jim Gregory wanted
to bring in some younger blood.
I
was given a chance to take on the managers role and
possibly I wasn’t ready for it, but you’re only given a
few chances in life and unless you put your finger in
the water you’ll never know if it’s too hot so I thought
I had to have a go.
In
retrospect I went about one or two things the wrong way,
I was only 29 and I had no experience of managing, being
an assistant is no comparison, you can do it all your
life and it is not comparable in any way. I found it
quite difficult to be truthful and I was very hard on
myself, I thought everything I was doing was wrong. It
was a tough time for me.
QPRnet.com:
You left as manager in 1978 and rejoined the Rangers
coaching staff in the late 80’s, what prompted your
return?
FS:
Terry Venables was in charge and he was looking for
someone to take the reserves side. I was working at
Hounslow at the time but I jumped at the chance. Then at
the end of that season Terry left and went to Barcelona
which was a shame because I thought there was a lot of
things I could learn from him but he went off to Spain
and then Alan arrived.
QPRnet.com:
You were often in caretaker charge after the departure
of many mangers at Loftus Road did you never fancy
another crack at the job full time?
FS:
I
think I would have been better at it, I’ve worked with a
lot of talented managers and you pick up bits and pieces
from each but it wasn’t to be. I’m just grateful for the
time I spent at QPR, it’s always been my club and my
family all still support them.
QPRnet.com:
You were assistant manager to Gerry Francis when we had
the great side in the 90’s. Having been involved with
each of great sides over time how do you think they all
compare?
FS:
I
think they all had different elements really. The team I
played in during the 60’s had a lot of young players
sprinkled with experienced pro’s that gelled together
perfectly and came up the leagues.
Dave
Sexton’s team in the 70’s was mostly made up of
experienced players like Don Masson, Dave Webb, Frank
McLintock and Johnny Hollins but also lads like Gerry
Francis, Don Givens and Stan Bowles. They played some
incredibly exciting football, the likes of which hadn’t
been seen in England for a long time. Dave nurtured the
players really well and that was probably the best team
out of the three.
Gerry’s team in the 90’s was a good side as well though.
He had his own way with players, he was a great coach
and he got the best out of players that were looked upon
elsewhere as not being brilliant. I also think he made a
very brave decision when he let Roy Wegerle go because
in doing that he gave Les his opportunity to come to the
front. I think that was a significant move at the time
because Les turned out to be a terrific player for us.
QPRnet.com:
Obviously Gerry went and Ray came in, you mentioned how
valuable Les was and losing Ferdinand was a massive blow
that ultimately sent us down.
FS:
People often blame Ray Wilkins for us going down but I
don’t see it that way. Les wanted to leave and that was
the big factor, if you look back over the previous
seasons his goals kept QPR in the Premiership. He had an
opportunity to move on and make a lot of money for
himself somewhere else and QPR couldn’t match it so we
had to let him go. We thought that Kevin Gallen and
Danny Dichio would then step up.
QPRnet.com:
Players from the time were pretty stunned that Ray left
so early into first division campaign, especially as we
started so well in the few games he was in charge for.
FS:
Yes
I think that was disappointing. I’d rather not get into
what went on but it was shame because I think we’d have
come close to going back up again. I was offered the
chance to stay but I made it clear at the time that I
wasn’t going to because I felt what was done to Ray was
wrong.
QPRnet.com:
Having been part of a promotion winning side, what
advice would you give Rangers players of today as they
start life in a higher division?
FS:
I
think the most important thing is to keep a good spirit
around the club. If you can keep that camaraderie there
and keep everyone playing for each other then you’ll do
well. You might get a few bad results or have a bad run
but you’ll win more than you’ll lose. Spirit pulls you
together and steers you through adversity, that’s all
I’d say to them.
QPRnet.com:
When you look back on your long association with Rangers
it must make you immensely proud to have been involved
in so many successes as a player and a coach but if you
had to pick one moment to re-live over again what would
it be?
FS:
I’ll
tell you one moment I wouldn’t want to relive again and
that’s the League Cup final, the other one in 1986. That
was the worst day of my life, I felt so low after that
game.
It
was only a couple of weeks earlier we’d taken Oxford to
the cleaners in the league game and if anything I think
we thought we only had to turn up to win it. Everyone’s
got their own ideas about what happened but for whatever
reason we didn’t perform and it was the most
demoralising day for the players and staff but most of
all for the fans because we went out with a whimper, we
didn’t even lose gracefully.
I
strongly believe if we hadn’t got the amount of points
we already had in the league that we would have got
relegated that season because it took a hell of a long
time to get back on track, it just hit everyone so hard.
That
was the worst though but the best would have to be the
other League Cup final in 1967. The first third division
side ever to get there, in the first Wembley final,
playing a first division side who’d won it before and
coming back from 2-0 down to win 3-2. It was storybook
stuff!
QPRnet.com:
Since leaving Rangers you’ve stayed in football, you’re
now the chief scout at Watford, how are you enjoying
things there?
FS:
I’m
enjoying it greatly; this is my second season now.
They’re a nice club, similar to QPR in many ways.
They’ve come out of the Premiership, had a phase of
losing money and now they’re fighting they’re way back,
hopefully before I die both clubs will be in the
Premiership again. |