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Ledley King

skiathospurs

skiathospurs

Well-Known Member
Founding Member
Cym28ahXUAI-2tZ.jpg


Spurs legend Ledley King wants to return to the club to continue his coaching role with the academy.
King: "It will be a learning process for me. It is like starting all over again. First I have to be good at what I do,If I feel I can be good then I can step by step start thinking about future roles."
 
Dorset

Dorset

The Voice Of Reason
Founding Member
What King Ledley wants King Ledley gets!

Fucking tremendous attitude from the King, he knows he has to graft and learn to be a coach and he will work his massive, humungous, gigantic cojones off to get to the top, unlike some folks whose name we won't mention who just want everything given to them and then bang on about racism when they don't get it handed to them on a plate.

Ledley to become the first black PL winning coach? Yep, nailed on. when the Poch moves on after winning the quadruple and Ledley takes over.

ledleykingof_zpsjz6vri2w.jpg


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Ted the Yid

Ted the Yid

Well-Known Member
Founding Member
Return to the club? He's never left.

Utter legend!
 
skiathospurs

skiathospurs

Well-Known Member
Founding Member
Return to the club? He's never left.

Utter legend!
I guess it means return to coaching,i seem to remember he did some of his badges?Not many great players make great managers,but i dont think ledley has the ego that has held many a hoddle,shearer back.
Delighted to have him around the club,this has just made me think,imagine that coount terry as a manager.Nah me neither.....
 
Flump

Flump

Well-Known Member
Founding Member
Ledley King managing a team of home grown talents to the league and cup double? I don't think my heart would survive it. Legend.
 
Don Diaz

Don Diaz

Zero tolerance of Numpty's
Founding Member
I think he'd struggle whilst we have Ugo Ehiougu for example................(not)
 
skiathospurs

skiathospurs

Well-Known Member
Founding Member
http://www.express.co.uk/sport/foot...e-news-football-Zinedine-Zidane-Thierry-Henry
Ledley King Interview: Tottenham hero reveals all on retiring with no life skills
HE HAS been tasked with keeping Zinedine Zidane and Thierry Henry quiet in a major summer finals and once led his side to Cup success in front of 90,000 at Wembley.
But when injury forced Ledley King to hang up his boots unexpectedly five years ago, the 31-year-old was left feeling as helpless as a wet-behind-the-ears teenager.
Such is the closeted world of modern football.
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“When you come out of school at 16 and go straight into football, you don’t really have any life skills,” says King, who is now an ambassador for Tottenham.
“For the first couple of years it was like being on work experience – learning to deal with people differently and come out of myself in a different way. It’s something I’ve been growing into ever since.
“You can be quite selfish when you’re a player because of the levels you’re playing at. A lot of players will tell you they can be quite distant because they’re so focused.
“That element is better now I’ve come away from the game. I don’t have to be so one-dimensional and live with my blinkers on just for football. It helps you evolve.”
Tottenham trained King in his new role to overcome that initial trepidation, just as they helped him 13 years earlier after an inauspicious start as a player.

This Saturday, Spurs travel back to Anfield, scene of King’s 1999 debut.
Still only a teenager, he came on at left-back at half-time only for Liverpool to claw back a two-goal deficit and beat 10-man Tottenham 3-2.
“I ended up feeling a little bit guilty,” said King, “almost as though it were my fault. I’d made my debut when we were 2-0 up and as soon as I had come on it had all gone wrong!
“I know I wasn’t involved directly for any of the goals but I didn’t bother to watch it back on Match of the Day. I’ve done that throughout my career. If I was unhappy with my game, I would never watch it.”

He quickly established himself as one of the best young centre-backs in the country but over the next 13 years, surgeries, pain-killing injections and playing through the pain left a toll on his body, so now he feels the after-effects of even the tamest kick-around for days.
But he says: “It’s quite nice not to have to deal with the knees on a day-to-day basis. For the last five years of my career every day was about ‘The Knee’ – how it felt, how I was dealing with the swelling. Even nowadays I don’t do too much because of the knee and it gets uncomfortable if I have it bent too long.
“I can still do the basics. I can kick a ball from time to time and it will play up after but in two or three days’ time I can do it again. It’s uncomfortable. At least I can still teach people without having to do it myself.”
King was initially reluctant to rush into coaching after hanging up his boots but with wheels in motion on his UEFA B licence he seems more up for a new chapter in his life.
“I came into the game and had George Graham who was a tough disciplinarian type of manager,” said King. “Then there was Glenn Hoddle who was a terrific player and I enjoyed my time under him in terms of the way we played football.
“But communication with your players is key – and I’ve not always had that throughout my career. You have to find the right mixture. On one hand, when things are there to be said and you have to be tough, then be tough.
“But there’s no reason why the next day you cannot come in and put an arm around somebody. Like Mauricio Pochettino does. That’s the sort of coach I would like to be one day.

“Coaching is something that intrigues me. Until I really give it a proper go I will not be able to rest or walk away from the game.”
 
skiathospurs

skiathospurs

Well-Known Member
Founding Member

"I met him. I worked quite close with him in this period. I know what he can give. I know what he has to learn and he's very happy to do it. "The fans love him, and he's one more connection with our fans, the local community, from the young people that he knows from the academy.
 
Glenjamin

Glenjamin

Well-Known Member
Founding Member
Good appointment that. Big Ledders on the side lines!
 
NiceOneCyril

NiceOneCyril

Player in Training.
Excellent news indeed, but it does beg the question - who the fuck was Ricardo?
 
Motspur Hotspur

Motspur Hotspur

Player in Training.
He's trying to worm his way into your affections, he's talking about 'our fans' now! Stay strong, keep Jose at arm's length, put your fingers in your ears, close your eyes and chant 'there's no coach like Poch'.

Ledders being a coach is great to see by the way
 
Yid

Yid

Well-Known Member
Founding Member
Is it great.... he is a club legend, it doesn't get better than that.

The only way is down from where he is, i almost hope he doesnt get involved too much as the inevitable shit storm that will surround "him" will be cast far and wide. If Ledders is too close he will get a solid coating.
 
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Don Diaz

Don Diaz

Zero tolerance of Numpty's
Founding Member
Mourinho trying to buy the fans favour, transparent little prick, don't fall for it Ledley, use him back.
 
NiceOneCyril

NiceOneCyril

Player in Training.
That would be a poster on my bedroom wall (if the wife would allow it)
 
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