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    West Brom: Roy Hodgson gives Simon Cox hope

    By Chris Lepkowski
    Oct 13 2011


    ROY Hodgson has spoken in glowing terms about Simon Cox, who remains on standby for Sunday’s derby against Wolves.

    The striker has tasted just 25 minutes of Premier League action this season, despite finishing last term strongly.

    Cox could find himself in contention this weekend due to Peter Odemwingie’s ankle problem.

    Odemwingie was due to see a specialist in Holland this week and although the injury is not expected to be serious, it might keep him out of the eagerly-anticipated Hawthorns clash.

    If the Nigerian does miss out then Cox will compete for the vacant first-team berth with Somen Tchoyi and Marc-Antoine Fortuné.

    Cox revealed his admiration for Hodgson in an interview last week and the manager has reciprocated, saying how impressed he was with the striker’s performance for Ireland against Armenia. “I’ve admired Simon’s patience,” said Hodgson.

    “He’s done very well for hiself. I was probably expecting Shane Long, who was picked in front of Kevin Doyle before his injury, to start for Ireland.

    “But I’m sure Giovanni Trappatoni had some tactical reason for using Doyle and Cox together.

    “It’s very flattering for us that in Long and Cox, one was chosen as first choice in the last Ireland game but missed out through injury and now another one has got in when Robbie Keane is injured.

    “It was important for him to take that chance and I think his confidence has improved by being with Ireland and doing well.

    “He did well for us at the end of last season, played some good games. He works very hard in training and is a very serious professional.

    “So it’s great he’s been rewarded in this way.”

    Hodgson also revealed Cox’s professional and willing approach to training, despite a lack of reward in terms of first-team opportunities.

    “I’d have to think very hard and be very critical to think of a training session I’ve done with him where I’ve been very disappointed by his attitude or performance, which says everything,’’ Hodgson added.

    “I’ve done hundreds of training sessions and there must be one or two where he’s not been top draw but I can’t think of them.


    “My lasting impression of him in training is that he’s lively, does his work, wants to improve all the time and that’s how it should be because he’s still a young man.

    “He’s still got a long period ahead of him, another ten years in the game if he’s fortunate, eight years at a conservative estimate.

    “It might be the reverse effect of a Peter Odemwingie – and to some extent Chris Brunt – that he comes back firing on all cylinders.



    What a blundering buffoon he is Why use 3 words when you can use 58.

    Comment


      ‘I'LL CHEER UP PETER ODEMWINGIE’ – West Brom’s Roy Hodgson


      The striker was accused of not making enough of an impact in Nigeria’s 2-2 draw with Guinea, which meant the country failed to qualify for next year’s African Cup of Nations.

      This is the first time a Nigerian side has failed to qualify for the tournament since 1986, but the Baggies manager hopes that Odemwingie is strong enough to bounce back to form against Wolves in their upcoming match.

      "Sometimes it works for you and sometimes against you," Hodgson told the club's official website.

      "The last thing Peter needed at the moment was to go and be heavily criticised in Nigeria but we could have been lucky, he could have gone to Nigeria, had a wonder-game, scored three goals and been carried off as the hero - and that would have helped us a great deal.

      "It's just one of those things and there's nothing we can do about it except make certain that when he comes back he divorces Nigeria from West Bromwich Albion.

      "We think here he is a very good player, we believe in him very much, we think he's going to be the man alongside Shane Long, and possibly Tchoyi and Cox, who are going to keep us in this division.

      "We need to make certain he understands that.

      "We can't help what's going on in Nigeria, we just have to make certain he comes to terms with that and deals with it.

      "We will make it clear it has no impression on us whatsoever and, as far as we're concerned, he is the Peter Odemwingie of West Bromwich Albion that we appreciate, are impressed by and we know will do very well, even though in 38 games he will play some very good ones, some pretty good ones and some not so good ones, because that's what front players do.

      "I don't think there's any front player in the world who is different.

      "Against Bayern Munich [Manchester City's Sergio] Aguero was taken off the field after 60 minutes after three or four games previously running the show.

      "It doesn't make him a bad player; it just means it's not his night."

      The West Brom boss went on to say that although the international break had a potentially negative effect on Odemwingie, it has boosted other players in the squad.

      "National team games can work for you or against you," he said

      Comment




        By the way, "top draw". That Lepowski bloke who writes West Brom stuff is clueless.
        Thanks very much for being ‘This Mornings’ Farmer’

        Comment


          Lepowski has been in that job for a decade. Or eight years at a conservative estimate.

          Comment


            The only gracious way to accept an insult is to ignore it; if you can't ignore it, top it; if you can't top it, laugh at it; if you can't laugh at it, it's probably deserved.

            Comment


              Member #1 of the Luis Suarez fan club

              Comment


                i think he's bias.
                dave of mutilation

                Comment


                  Roy Hodgson: A civilised man tries to make sense of the hatred

                  It's high noon for the Black Country derby and the darker side of human nature will be on display, but Albion's manager Roy Hodgson has seen it all before, writes Michael Henderson.

                  A singular man, Roy Hodgson. Last week, as other Premier League managers took an international weekend off, he went to see Broken Glass, Arthur Miller's drama about kristallnacht seen through the filter of a Jewish family in Brooklyn. At midday today, when he sends out his West Bromwich Albion players against Wolves in a derby that means more to both sets of fans than any other fixture, there will also be a whiff of cordite in the air.

                  "The narcissism of small differences," Dr Freud called it, and doesn't football continue to prove him right? Already this season there has been vile behaviour at games involving Leeds and Manchester United, Tottenham and Arsenal, and – with the difference no wider than a park – Everton and Liverpool. The Black Country derby will be just as nasty. These people – not every one, but thousands of zealots who will make sure they are heard – detest "the other" and don't care who knows.

                  As one might expect of a man who has spent most of the past three decades working abroad, Hodgson, 64, takes a broader view. "The peculiar thing about hatred," he says, "is how it gets passed on. You would have thought it was good for this region to have two clubs in the Premier League. Rivalry, yes. Fierce competition, of course.

                  "I suppose you have to be born and bred here, to have it instilled in you. We don't have any players from the area, and neither do Wolves. Mick McCarthy isn't from round here, nor am I. We didn't grow up with the taunts and the teasing.

                  "The really worrying thing is seeing young children making obscene gestures when they don't know what they are doing. When I was growing up, watching Crystal Palace, you supported your club and cheered them on, but I'm not sure in those days that people even booed. The opposition were not there to be hated.

                  "Let's face it, without opponents there isn't a game," he adds. "Yet recently, when Liverpool played at Everton, a Liverpool player went to take a corner and you could see the hatred on the faces of Everton fans. You got the impression that some of them would willingly have jumped over the fence to get at him.

                  "Human nature should not astonish us, but what engenders that degree of hatred? I don't know whether we do enough to educate people to be more tolerant of the opposition, or whether society has changed to such a degree that it is impossible. Teachers are there to be hated, police officers are there to be hated. We don't seem to have many public figures any more who command respect.

                  "The people we look up to, it seems, are sporting idols, and even then we hate them if they are not ours."

                  Pick that one out of the net. Yet Hodgson is not an angry man. Old-fashioned (in the best sense) in manner and appearance, he looks as if he has wandered out of The Lavender Hill Mob. Despite his experience of life on the Continent, which clearly shaped him, and his fluency in four languages other than his own, he could not pass for anything other than an Englishman; more specifically, an Englishman from south London, who happens to be supremely well-versed in English and European literature.

                  It was the London background that helped do for him at Liverpool, where he spent an unhappy seven-month period that ended earlier this year. He doesn't dwell on that interlude, nor does he need to. The club were in a mess, the locals regarded him as an outsider (shades of the Old South and barely coded talk of "those New York lawyers"), and the press proved biddable. Liverpool are a great club in a parochial provincial city. A modest, well-rounded man was never likely to prosper there.


                  Instead Hodgson finds himself, as he did with Fulham, at a friendly club where expectations are more modest. He performed wonders at Craven Cottage, first by keeping Fulham up when they had one foot in the Championship, then by taking them into the Europa League, where they reached a final they lost by the odd goal in three. Named manager of the year by his peers, his work by the Thames ensured that he will be considered for the national coach's job when Fabio Capello stands down next summer.

                  "It would be hypocritical of somebody like myself, who has managed three national teams, to say that only an Englishman should do the job, but the mood of the country seems to be that the job should come back into native hands. I am not prepared to say that managing England is the be-all and end-all. But I would like to think that English managers will be among the leading candidates. Some of the smaller countries, if you like, may not have the coaching knowledge. But it is hard to fathom why that should be the case in countries like England, Germany, Italy or Spain."

                  With the post, he knows, come expectations that cannot possibly be met – or, rather, have been met only once, 45 years ago, when this country staged the tournament. "All the soul-searching about English football is baffling. Wayne Rooney was sent off for kicking an opponent in Montenegro. We all know he shouldn't have done it, but on the basis of a small episode in a game of 90 minutes people call into question the state of the game.

                  "Is it time to kick out the players? Is it time to boot out the manager? I heard that put forward on the radio. But I can tell you that if, for instance, John Terry became available tomorrow there would be plenty of clubs here and in Germany who would be happy to take him. If you were putting together a 'best eleven' from the European countries, there would be a few candidates from the England team. I don't think that powerful reactions to minor incidents get us very far."

                  In the meantime he tends his garden in the Midlands, content in the knowledge that the experience gathered over 35 years offers protection. "What matters is this: do I still have the passion? Yes, I do. I don't think being a football coach leads to equilibrium. It is a constant fight you have with yourself to maintain it, or restore it, but I have a greater sense of perspective now. I do this work because I really enjoy it, and I still think I have a lot to offer.

                  "I get as much fun working with the players here as I did when I started in 1976. You might think I would have got a bit cynical but that is not the case. Almost the opposite, in fact. It's easier to have the conversations and sometimes the intimacy, if that is the right word, with players now precisely because they do not belong to my peer group. I can adopt an avuncular approach at times, or I can say, 'We're all in this together'."

                  A football man to his fingertips, not easily deceived by the whims of a fickle world, Hodgson's race has a few more laps to run. Perhaps the Football Association should make a start by charging him with bringing the game into repute.



                  Good Lord A parochial provincial city which embraced a Scot, A Geordie, Frenchman, and a Spaniard as one of their own.

                  Comment




                    It had nothing to do with his background it had to do with him being a **** manager, when will people realise?
                    The only gracious way to accept an insult is to ignore it; if you can't ignore it, top it; if you can't top it, laugh at it; if you can't laugh at it, it's probably deserved.

                    Comment


                      Well what a load of utter bollocks. That people actually get paid for writing this **** never ceases to amaze me, what a strange world we live in.

                      Comment


                        What a disgusting article.
                        www.Liverpoolbaymlt.org

                        www.twitter.com/lbmlt

                        www.Facebook.com/liverpoolbaymarinelifetrust

                        Comment


                          In the meantime he tends his garden in the Midlands, content in the knowledge that the experience gathered over 35 years offers protection
                          I have this vision now of Hodgson sitting back in his garden, quietly nodding to himself in smug self-satisfaction.
                          "I will make the boys feel your support"
                          Jurgen Klopp June 2020

                          Comment


                            What utter utter garbage that article is.

                            "Modest"? Give me a ****ing break.
                            Thanks very much for being ‘This Mornings’ Farmer’

                            Comment


                              Bored so reported it the PCC for discrimination.
                              www.Liverpoolbaymlt.org

                              www.twitter.com/lbmlt

                              www.Facebook.com/liverpoolbaymarinelifetrust

                              Comment


                                Checked to see who was the cunt who wrote that (I didn't read past the points you highlighted as it was enough for me). I couldn't see any name in there.
                                Last edited by Fredo; 16-10-11, 06:38 PM.
                                Are we winning?

                                Comment

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