Irish Daily Star

CLOUGH A ‘ONE-OFF’

- ■■Jim VAN WIJK

WHEN new Nottingham Forest manager Brian Clough burst into the dressing room and promptly pinned up his first team sheet, defender Viv Anderson thought his own days at the club were numbered.

But under Clough’s guidance Anderson would go on to win the First Division title and lift the European Cup twice as well as play for England.

Clough, who died aged 69 on September 20, 2004, was appointed Forest boss in January 1975 — soon back in the game following his ill-fated 44-day tenure at Leeds.

Middlesbro­ugh-born ‘Old Big Head’ Clough continued to rub plenty of people up the wrong way as he transforme­d Forest’s fortunes — just as he had done when taking Derby from the Second Division to become League champions in 1972.

Knack

There was, though, no denying Clough’s knack of wringing every ounce of ability out of his players along the way.

Released as a schoolboy by Manchester United, Anderson returned home to Nottingham and was given his opportunit­y at Forest by Allan Brown.

But the arrival of Clough left Anderson far from certain of just when he would get a game again.

“I had played on the Saturday against Tottenham in the FA Cup and came off with 10 minutes to go with cramp,”

Anderson said.

“But when he burst into the room saying, ‘I am the new Nottingham Forest manager and the travelling team for the replay is pinned up on the board’, I wasn’t on it.

“I am thinking, ‘Well, he doesn’t fancy me, so the writing is on the wall here’.

Anderson, however, went on to become a regular in Clough’s side, the right-back eventually making more than 300 appearance­s for Forest before he left to join Arsenal in 1984.

“He had a nucleus of decent players and very good profession­als,”Anderson said.

“He could instil the right attitudes and the right virtues into the younger players, then he bought the likes of Frank Clark, Colin Barrett, Larry Lloyd and Peter Shilton, a lot of experience­d players to help us young lads get through.

“We never followed strict regimes in training. It was like a bit of five-a-side and then go out and play matches.

“But the players knew what they had to do to reach the expectatio­ns of the manager.”

Anderson recalled:“You never knew from one minute to the next what he was going to do.

“But it kept you on your toes, he was very fair and at the end of the day, you wanted to please him.

“Larry Lloyd always used to say, ‘If you got a thumbs up from the manager, then you know you have done well’.

“Kenny Burns would get them — but I had never got one, then finally I got one and I was absolutely chuffed.”

Anderson, who later played under Alex Ferguson at United, believes Clough was also very much ahead of his time as a coach.

Front

“In the 1980

European Cup final against

Hamburg, we played five in midfield, with young

Gary Mills out wide and

Garry Birtles playing up front on his own,” Anderson said.

“Then about 10 years afterwards, people started to adapt that system, so he was really forwardthi­nking in his views and was certainly a one-off.”

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