Sign of 'The Times'
As the rumours continue regarding John Gregory's future with QPR, I have continually pledged my support to the Rangers boss despite our bad start to the season. Following the Briatore/Ecclestone takeover, instant success seems to be on many fans agendas and calls for JG to be replaced are becoming more and more common. For this reason, I am including an article from todays 'Times'...
Gregory’s hard times over with QPR in fast lane again
The manager can put his credit card away with an affluent new ownership team in place to pick up the bills instead
Kaveh Solhekol
Where do you start? John Gregory has been the manager of Queens Park Rangers for 12 months but he already feels ten years older than he did last September. As a football reporter you get used to asking questions that you already know the answer to, but Gregory has a lot to get off his chest.
QPR nearly went out of business before Bernie Ecclestone and Flavio Briatore bought the Coca-Cola Championship club for £14 million three weeks ago, and there have been plenty of mornings during the past year when Gregory has looked in the mirror and wondered whether he could carry on. Last month, one of his star strikers died in a car crash, in February his players hit the headlines for kung-fu fighting with the China Olympic team and the threat of administration and relegation have been haunting him nearly every day.
“We couldn’t pay our hotel bills on away trips so I had to get my credit card card out,” Gregory said. “That’s how bad things were before Bernie and Flavio arrived.”
As well as dipping into his own pocket, Gregory had to dismantle the club’s scouting system - “what’s the point of having scouts when you don’t have the money to buy anyone”, he said – and get rid of half his first-team squad. Just when he thought things could not get any worse, the photocopier in his office broke down last Christmas. When he tried to get it fixed, he was told that it would be impossible because the last repair bill was six months overdue.
“That was scratching the surface of the problems here,” Gregory said. “When I arrived the whole place had relegation written all over it. There was no love. No one cared. The players hated Saturdays. Twenty of them were injured because they didn’t want to play and they didn’t want to be associated with our problems.”
Showing demoralised players the door was the least of his problems. When he tried to sign replacements – on free transfers – he discovered that word had spread about the club’s financial problems and that players were reluctant to sign on the dotted line when their contracts might not be worth the paper that they were written on. “It was bloody hard,” Gregory, who played for QPR from 1981 to 1985, said. “I had to tell the players that we signed that everything was wonderful here. They kept telling me that they had heard that we were close to administration but I’d say no, no, no, where did you hear that? That was three years ago, everything is fine now, of course you’ll get paid next month.”
While Gregory demonstrated his ability to be economical with the truth, Gianni Paladini, the chairman, rang up everyone he could think of to try to raise funds to keep the club going. When Paladini rang Gregory and told him that Ecclestone, the Formula One ringmaster and one of the richest men in Britain, and Briatore, the managing director of the Renault Formula One team, wanted to buy the club, he could hardly believe what he was hearing. “I told Gianni he was living in a fantasy world when he mentioned their names,” Gregory said. “I told him to ring me back when he had sobered up. He was trying to convince me that they were coming but I refused to believe it until the deal was signed, sealed and delivered – what has happened is beyond our wildest dreams.”
At a meeting with Gregory last week, the new owners explained what was expected of him. He would be given money to spend in the transfer window in January, but in the meantime QPR had to start winning games. Unfortunately for Gregory, his team have not won this season, leading to speculation that he would be replaced by somebody with a higher profile, such as Gianluca Vialli, the former Chelsea manager. “I’ve been given no guarantees about my future,” Gregory said. “I was just told to carry on doing my job and to prepare the team as best as I can.”
Even if the worst comes to the worst and the club’s new owners opt for a quick fix and show him the door, Gregory has at least repaired some of the damage done to his reputation after his acrimonious departure from Derby County in March 2003. “The allegations against my role in transfers started when I left Aston Villa five years ago,” Gregory said. “Then Derby threw allegations at me which I proved were totally false and I won my case against them for unfair dismissal. I got paid a seven-figure sum in compensation. You don’t get that if you are guilty of anything.”
The photocopier in his office is fixed now and new scouts are being employed, but one thing Gregory cannot change is what happened on August 25, when Ray Jones, the club’s highly rated 18-year-old striker, died in a car crash in East London. “I’ve lost a few friends in the past but to lose one of your players was unbelievably difficult,” he said. “We had to go and bury one of our teammates – that was really tough.”
As his voice trails off, Gregory glances at the tape machine recording our conversation. “I’m sure you’ve got enough in there,” he said. More than enough, John. More than enough.
4 Comments:
At 1:29 pm, bobo said…
Thanks for posting this Lofty. I already had a lot of respect for JG before, but reading this put him in a mortal lock for eternal "Legend" status. I thought he did an incredible job keeping the Rs up last year despite some very long odds and a situation that was much more dire than I think most of us knew.
A win against Cardiff when they were top of the table last year really got the team going and I'm hoping the Watford game is going to do the same for the Rs this year.
Great writeup as always Lofty, thanks.
Bobo
At 6:30 pm, Anonymous said…
I haven't been overly happy with what I've seen so far this season -but equally I haven't been rushing to blame JG. I think QPR fans could be thought niave if they think that, just coz Briatore/Ecclestone have saved our bacon now, things are going to be rosy immediately - and having read your article, for which many thanks, I think it proves the point. Let's give JG time - let's see what he can do with real money and real players who want to come to us and play for us. Thanks for this article - it shows us how much JG really has QPR in his heart.
At 7:38 am, Anonymous said…
Thanks Lofty
We Rangers fans are fickle as you well know we all think we know better than our manager,
When Olli was in charge we were told we played rubbish and we would win nothing?
Olli saved rangers and should have ranger’s eternal thanks, but now it seems as if JG has done the same lets hope he does not get the same end treatment.
I would like to make a point at that one of the best manager Fergie everyone known’s was one game away from the boot,
What we need at rangers is a sound base to build on JG should be given time and money.
Successes will not come over night I think if they are worried about JG doing the job they need to bring in some good sound help as director of football.(more money) oh sorry we have got some now.
Scouting system youth academy and so on and so forth lets not have a short term fix but look at the long term,
The new owners said 5 year plan so lets give them and there team 5 years lets be honest we have watching Rangers for many years now the past few have been up & down so 5 more years wont be that hard if we start winning things.
So let’s get behind the team. YOU RRRrrrrs
Corp
At 12:45 pm, LOFTY said…
thanks for the replies, in particular, Corp. I am fully behind JG. He came in and saved us last season despite extremely diffucult circumstances and the fact that supporters are on his case at this stage of the season is ludicrous.
Again, this year has been just as difficult with what has been going on off the pitch and of course, the tragic death of Ray Jones. Okay, so the Formula One guys are now in charge, but that doesnt mean instant success.
I repeat what Corp has said and I hope we dont treat JG like we did Holloway. Just read the atricle back and come back and tell me that he doesn't deserve time and more importantly, our patience.
Come on You R'sssssss!!
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