Alex Ferguson My Autobiography

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Alex Ferguson My Autobiography Page 32

by Alex Ferguson


  Riley, Mike

  Robertson, John

  Robinho

  Robins, Mark

  Robinson, Peter

  Robson, Bobby

  Robson, Bryan

  at Manchester Utd FC

  leaves Manchester Utd FC

  Middlesbrough FC

  and Ryan Giggs

  Rock of Gibraltar

  Rockefeller

  Rodger, Jim

  Rodgers, Brendan

  Roma

  Ronaldinho

  Ronaldo, Cristiano

  fans

  father dies

  at Manchester Utd FC

  marks AF’s 25 years as Manchester Utd FC manager

  and Ruud van Nistelrooy

  scores hat-trick

  signs to Real Madrid

  at Sporting Lisbon

  talent

  2004 European Cup

  2004 FA Cup final

  2006 World Cup

  2007–08 UEFA Champions League

  2008–09 UEFA Champions League

  2012–13 season

  Rooney, Coleen

  Rooney, Wayne:

  AF suspends

  best goal

  celebrity endorsement

  fitness

  injuries

  and referees

  and Ronaldo

  and Roy Keane

  signs to Manchester Utd FC

  swearing incident

  talent

  2006–07 UEFA Champions League

  2008–09 UEFA Champions League

  World Cup

  2010–11 UEFA Champions League

  2011–12 UEFA Champions League

  2012–13 season

  Rosetti, Roberto

  Rowlands, Derek

  Roxburgh, Andy

  Rudge, John

  Rummenigge, Karl-Heinz

  Rush, Ian

  Ryan, Jim

  Cristiano Ronaldo

  Roy Keane

  Wayne Rooney

  Saha, Louis

  St Mirren FC

  Frank McGarvey incident

  loses to Raith Rovers

  players at

  Salmon, Peter

  Sar, Edwin van der

  and Manchester Utd FC

  and Roy Keane

  2008–09 UEFA Champions League

  2010–11 UEFA Champions League

  Savage, Robbie

  Schmeichel, Peter

  relationship with team-mates

  retires

  talent

  view of Ronaldo

  Scholes, Paul

  and Arsène Wenger

  Class of ’92

  fined by AF

  first XI

  going to ground

  interest in horses

  position

  retirement

  Robin van Persie

  shapes future of Manchester Utd FC

  talent

  2004 European Cup

  2008–09 UEFA Champions League

  2010–11 UEFA Champions League

  2011–12 UEFA Champions League

  2012–13 season

  Scotland

  Scotland Boys Club

  Scottish Football Association (SFA)

  Second Board

  Shankly, Bill

  Sharpe, Lee

  Shaw, Angus

  Shaw, Bob

  Shearer, Alan

  Sheffield United FC

  Sheringham, Teddy: at Manchester Utd FC

  at Tottenham Hotspur FC

  Shilton, Peter

  Shotbolt, Karen

  Sillett, John

  Silva, David

  Silva, Fábio and Rafael da

  Sivebaek, John

  Sky

  Smalling, Chris

  signs to Manchester Utd FC

  2010–11 season

  2011–12 UEFA Champions League

  2012–13 season

  Šmicer, Vladimír

  Smith, Alan

  Smith, Jim

  Smith, John

  Smith, Sir Roland

  Smith, Walter

  Solskjaer, Ole Gunnar

  Souness, Graeme

  Spearing, Jay

  Spector, Jonathan

  Speedie, David

  Sporting Lisbon

  Stam, Jaap

  Staunton, Steve

  Steele, Eric

  Stein, Jock

  Stiles, Nobby

  Stone, Mike

  Stretford, Paul

  Styles, Rob

  Suárez, Luis

  Sunderland FC

  Sutton, Alan

  Swales, Harry

  Swansea City FC

  Switzer, George

  Taibi, Massimo

  Taylor, Gordon

  Taylor, Graham

  Terry, John

  Tévez, Carlos: at Man City FC

  at Manchester Utd FC

  2008–09 UEFA Champions League

  Thomas, Michael

  Thornley, Ben

  Thornton, Bill

  Torres, Fernando

  Tottenham Hotspur FC

  Touré, Kolo

  Townsend, Phil

  Turner, Graham

  Tyldesley, Clive

  UEFA Champions League: 1991

  1992

  1993

  1999 5

  2001–02

  2003

  2003–04

  2005

  2006

  2008

  2009

  2011

  2011–12

  2012–13

  2013

  United States of America: AF’s interest in

  American Civil War (1861–1865)

  Unsworth, David

  Valdés, Victor

  Valencia, Antonio

  2010–11 UEFA Champions League

  2011–12 season

  Verón, Juan Sebastián

  at Manchester Utd FC

  and the press

  signs to Chelsea

  Vidić, Nemanja

  as a centre-back

  injuries

  signs to Manchester Utd FC

  2008–09 UEFA Champions League

  2011 Community Shield

  2011–12 UEFA Champions League

  Viduka, Mark

  Vieira, Patrick

  Villarreal CF

  Vitesse Arnhem

  Walker, Dan

  Walker, David 1

  Walker, Jack

  Wallace, Jock

  Wallwork, Ronnie

  Walsh, Andy

  Walsh, David

  Warnock, Neil

  Watford FC

  Watkins, Maurice

  Watson, Geoff

  Webb, Neil

  Welbeck, Danny

  2011–12 UEFA Champions League

  2012–13 season

  Wenger, Arsène

  and AF

  at Arsenal FC

  and Robin van Persie

  2011–12 Champions League

  West Bromwich Albion FC

  West Ham FC

  Westwater, Jimmy

  Whelan, Ronnie

  Whelan, Tony

  Whitehouse, Brian

  Whiteside, Norman

  Wigan Athletic FC

  Wiley, Alan

  Wilkinson, Howard

  Wilshere, Jack

  Wiltord, Sylvain

  Wimbledon FC

  Winter, Jeff

  Winterburn, Nigel

  Wise, Dennis

  Wolverhampton Wanderers (Wolves) FC

  World Cup see FIFA World Cup

  Wrexham FC

  Wright, Ian

  Xavi

  Yeats, Ron

  Yorke, Dwight

  Young, Ashley

  Zabaleta, Pablo

  Zola, Gianfranco

  I had no idea an Old Trafford stand would be named after me. It was a conspiracy, but one that left me very proud.

  Bobby Robson had great charisma. We take turns with the media after a 1981 UEFA Cup tie between
my Aberdeen and his Ipswich Town.

  My big European breakthrough – Aberdeen beat Real Madrid in the 1983 European Cup Winners’ Cup.

  In Gothenburg, Willie Miller lifts our European trophy. Aberdeen beat one of the biggest names in football.

  I was assistant Scotland manager alongside Jock Stein. He was touched by genius and I would bombard him with questions about management.

  Martin Edwards, the United Chairman, stood by me in the dark days before my first trophy.

  Did the 1990 FA Cup final replay win over Crystal Palace save my job as United manager? I reckon I would have survived. On the left is Norman Davies, kit man and close friend, who is sadly no longer with us.

  Ryan Giggs was revered by the other United players. Here he floats past Wimbledon’s Warren Barton in his boyish early days.

  Paul Scholes was better than Paul Gascoigne. ‘Too small,’ I thought when I first saw him as a lad. Wrong.

  The 1992 vintage: coach Eric Harrison with the golden boys who became the heart of a great United Team, (left to right) Giggs, Butt, Beckham, Gary Neville, Phil Neville, Scholes and Terry Cooke.

  Eric Cantona could shape games in his own artistic image. His late goal won us the 1996 FA Cup final.

  The banter always flowed between Steve Bruce (left) and Gary Pallister. But they were one of the greatest centre-half partnerships.

  Peter Schmeichel was a mighty goalkeeper. A battering from Wimbledon’s Crazy Gang soon after his arrival failed to break him.

  Never give in. Three–nil down at Spurs in 2001, we fought back to win 5–3. Here Verón has just scored our fourth goal.

  David Beckham’s self-confidence never wavered. He was a fit boy and a marvellous striker of the ball.

  Champions again, in May 2003. Beckham’s last match for us. David deserves great credit for reviving his career.

  The Brazilian Ronaldo was given a standing ovation after his Old Trafford hat-trick for Real Madrid in 2003. United fans know what talent is.

  The heart was in for a test on big European nights. Tension gnawed away at us in that 2003 Champions League tie against Real Madrid.

  Rio Ferdinand was due to face a hearing for missing a drugs test when Roy Keane offered his support as they left the Old Trafford pitch.

  A draconian sentence. Rio is banned for eight months. The club would not abandon him.

  Roy Keane took parts of my own character on to the pitch. In his later years injuries made it harder for him to gallop from box to box.

  Cristiano Ronaldo worked on every aspect of his game, even heading. Look at him leap in the 2004 FA Cup final win.

  Reaching out to our fans. We’ve just beaten Millwall 3–0 in the 2004 FA Cup final and Mikaël Silvestre is with me.

  Work hard, play hard. The dressing room after our victory over Millwall. Ronaldo looks so young.

  Rivals to the end. Arsène Wenger and I had our fall-outs but there was more to unite than divide us.

  Arsène was livid after we stopped Arsenal’s unbeaten 49-match run in October 2004.

  Ruud van Nistelrooy opened the scoring as we prevented Arsenal from going 50 games unbeaten. A volcanic day.

  Rafa Benítez turned our rivalry personal. I could handle that.

  When José Mourinho joined Chelsea I thought: ‘New kid on the block. Confident.’ A new challenge had arrived.

  My hero Denis Law and close friend Bobby Robson at a lunch to celebrate my 20th anniversary as United manager. As a player I wanted to be Denis.

  Ronaldo was a model student. Carlos Queiroz played an important role in his development.

  Ole Gunnar Solskjaer was a natural finisher. I always saw myself in our strikers.

  Fergie Time. I pointed to my watch to strike fear into opponents, who knew we often scored in the last minute.

  Michael Carrick strikes in our thrilling 7–1 win over Roma at Old Trafford in 2007. A near perfect display.

  The wonder boys, Ronaldo and Rooney, in that 7–1 victory over Roma. Ronaldo scored twice and Rooney once.

  Moscow, Roman Abramovich’s home town, was the stage for our 2008 Champions League win over Chelsea. Here, Ryan Giggs tucks away his penalty in sudden-death.

  My record in penalty shoot-outs wasn’t good. At first I couldn’t believe we had won when Edwin van der Sar saved from Nicolas Anelka.

  The retreat from Moscow. A happy one. Giggs and Ferdinand hold the 2008 Premier League and Champions League trophies on the tarmac in Manchester.

  Labour can always count on my support and Tony Blair and Gordon Brown became friends.

  The Glazers were supportive from day one. They let me get on with the job. Avram (left), Joel and Bryan joined us at Vale do Lobo in Portugal.

  Racing helped me escape the pressures of management. Fellow owner Ged Mason and I celebrate What A Friend’s big win at Aintree.

  Ruby Walsh tells me how he guided What A Friend to victory. I always enjoy the company of jockeys.

  Out in front. What A Friend leads them home in The Betfred Bowl Chase.

  Vidić and Ferdinand were a rock to build a team on. Nemanja has just scored against Inter Milan in the Champions League and Rio is hitching a ride.

  Left-backs are like rare birds. But we had one of the best in Patrice Evra, a born winner.

  The greatest goal in my time at United was this bicycle kick by Wayne Rooney against Man City in February 2011.

  We prepared meticulously for the 2011 Champions League final against Barcelona at Wembley. Plans don’t always work.

  The best team I ever faced. The great Barcelona side of 2011.

  What better man could you have beside you than Bobby Charlton? He was a loyal and wise friend to me.

  It’s not an old bus stop, it’s The Cliff, our training ground until 1999. Scholes and Giggs travel back in time with me.

  Lyn Laffin, my indispensable P.A., helps me with the daily mountain of admin.

  Daid Gill was the best chief executive I worked with. Straight-talker; knew the game; always loyal.

  Read all about it. Phil Townsend, our communications director, talks me through the day’s papers.

  Staff numbers increased enormously in my 26½ years at the club. I valued them all. Here I am with the laundry team.

  Albert Morgan, kit man, friend and wisecracker, in the Old Trafford changing room, August 2011.

  Edwin van der Sar was one of the great goalkeepers of the last 30 years. I should have signed him earlier.

  David de Gea, a magnificently athletic young goalkeeper, who grew in stature after joining us from Spain.

  The tunnel of love. Making my way to the pitch, Old Trafford, August 2011.

  The one-time King of Old Trafford, Eric Cantona, returns for Paul Scholes’s testimonial in the summer of 2011.

  Mick Phelan and René Meulensteen were my trusted assistants at the end. I owe all my coaches a great debt.

  The indestructibles: Paul Scholes, Ryan Giggs and Gary Neville.

  My 25th anniversary dinner, in November 2011. Some of our foreign players might have been a bit confused by the kilt.

  I felt Roberto Mancini was hassling the fourth official too much in this Manchester derby and told him so. A brief skirmish, soon forgotten.

  I respected Mancini’s work at City. I saw a few City managers off in my time.

  The Hillsborough commemoration at Anfield in September 2012 was brilliantly handled by both clubs. Sir Bobby Charlton and Ian Rush clasp hands.

  The press gave me a cake with a hairdryer on as parting gift. I was fierce in news conferences, but there were laughs too.

  My successor, though I didn’t know it then. David Moyes brought Everton to our ground in February 2013.

  The final ingredient. Robin van Persie’s hat-trick against Aston Villa secured our 2012–13 title win. A great buy.

  I still don’t know how David Gill persuaded Cathy to unveil a statue of me. She refused to bow at its feet.

  Success gave me control. With each trophy won my thoughts turned to the ne
xt one.

  When the statue was unveiled I joked: ‘I’ve out-lived death.’ What an honour.

  The 2012–13 Premier League trophy is waiting for us out on the pitch at Old Trafford. My work is nearly done.

  Special fans, and a special day at Old Trafford in May 2013, as my time as manager draws to an end.

  Cathy rarely came to games but she was always there for me. We pose with the Premier League trophy one last time.

  Drama to the end. At West Brom, for my final game, waving to my family before a match that finished 5–5.

  The next wave of Fergusons. My wonderful grandchildren were part of the farewell party.

  Still going strong, friends from my Harmony Row days reunite in Manchester, March 2013.

  Would you take us on? Harmony Row, at our annual reunion. Football teams go on forever.

  PHOTOGRAPHIC ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

  The author and publisher would like to thank the following for permission to reproduce photographs:

  Action Images, Roy Beardsworth/Offside, Simon Bellis/Reuters/Action Images, Jason Cairnduff/Livepic/Action Images, Chris Coleman/Manchester United/Getty Images, Dave Hodges/Sporting Pictures/Action Images, Ian Hodgson/Reuters/Action Images, Eddie Keogh/Reuters/Action Images, Mark Leech/Offside, Alex Livesey/Getty Images, Clive Mason/Getty Images, Mirrorpix, Gerry Penny/AFP/Getty Images, John Peters/Manchester United/Getty Images, Matthew Peters/Manchester United/Getty Images, Kai Pfaffenbach/Reuters/Action Images, Popperfoto/Getty Images, Nick Potts/Press Association, John Powell/Liverpool FC/Getty Images, Tom Purslow/Manchester United/Getty Images, Ben Radford/Getty Images, Carl Recine/Livepic/Action Images, Reuters/Action Images, Rex Features, Martin Rickett/Press Association, Matt Roberts/Offside, Neal Simpson/Empics Sport/Press Association, SMG/Press Association, SNS Group, Simon Stacpoole/Offside, Darren Staples/Reuters/Action Images, Bob Thomas/Getty Images, Glyn Thomas/Offside, John Walton/Empics Sport/Press Association, Kirsty Wrigglesworth/Press Association.

 

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