Time to ban the post match interview?

Post Match Interviews

Pointless post match interviews?

In the past week or so Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson has been charged by the Football Association for comments he made regarding referee Martin Atkinson following his club’s 2-1 defeat to the reigning champions and refused to speak to any media rights holders after the 3-1 humiliation at the hands of Liverpool on Sunday at Anfield. He didn’t speak to Sky Sports, TalkRadio and even the club’s own channel, MUTV.

Ferguson, of course, is not the only manager to fall foul of the FA when speaking openly and honestly (and very much in the heat of the moment, it has to be said) in a post match interview. It’s just when he does it, it is highlighted that much more. This, of course, is his own fault. The Scot’s relationship with the media has always been a rocky one. Many print journalists have been banned from Old Trafford press conferences over the years, he still refuses to talk to the BBC at all and woe betide any interviewer who asks a slightly difficult question or casts doubts over Ferguson’s decision making or squad members.

That aside though, you do begin to wonder if it’s all worth it.

Ferguson, or indeed any manager, is damned if he does and damned if he doesn’t and it raises the question of the worth of these post match interviews by managers. If a manager isn’t free to express his true feelings during these interviews because of the threat of a fine or suspension, what’s the point in interviewing him in the first place? Where’s the value to the watching audience if what is said is censored so much it no longer has any relevance?

I’m not saying managers should be free to rip into referees as they see fit, that would be unfair. But surely when they make mistakes that cost teams managers should be free to point it out and say how they feel about it? Using Ferguson as an example, what he said about Atkinson’s performance after the Chelsea game wasn’t a personal attack, it was an honest opinion on how well he thought the ref had handled the game – not well, basically.

An assessment like that is fair enough. When a manager gets personal or casts suspicion over a referee’s impartiality, that’s where the line is crossed for me. At the moment though, the FA does not want anyone to criticise a referee for anything, not even in a cold and analytical manner. Well, why not? Refs are now paid professionals and so should be as open to criticism as much as the players and managers themselves are.

No manager I know of has ever been hit with a fine for criticising a tackle by a player, so why should he for criticising the performance of a referee? I’m not naive enough to think that the FA will ever backtrack on their current rules, however, so I return to the worth of the post match interview and frankly, I don’t see any.

I don’t want to listen to a manager or player trot out the same old lines after a match every week and that, bar the odd outburst from our top flight managers, is exactly what is happening. The exception that proves the rule, of course, is Ian Holloway at Blackpool, who can give an entertaining (if occasionally unfathomable) interview following a 1-0 win or a 6-0 defeat.

The likes of Ferguson, Wenger and Ancelotti can’t do this though, so they either trot out some clichés or get in trouble for speaking their minds. Sod that, I’ve already changed channel.

What do you think? Is the post match interview utterly pointless if the interviewee can’t at least be honest about how he feels or do you still enjoy them, even as censored as they have become?

 

Capello returns to work to face FA board

Fabio CapelloBack from his undeserved holiday, England manager Fabio Capello faces the FA board on his return to work (assuming he decides to attend – he doesn’t have to, but he damn well should), expected to hand in his report on what happened in South Africa during the World Cup.

Smacks of the failed school child filling in his end of term report, doesn’t it. I can imagine Capello and his ‘gang’ – Franco Baldini et al – staring at their shoes, looking sheepish, in front of a long table occupied by the FA board members as they peruse his broken English report.

It’s almost demeaning.

Yet should he expect anything else? I don’t for a second lay all the blame for England’s poor tournament performance at his door. They players MUST shoulder the majority of the blame, they didn’t do themselves or their country justice. However, several of Capello’s decisions in the run up to and during the World Cup were questionable.

What I’m wondering now is what does he do between now and England’s friendly against Hungary in August?

Capello talked about freshening up the England squad with youth and exuberance. He has the chance to run the rule over our Under-19s from the 18th-30th July during the European Championships, yet reports suggest he won’t be attending. One can only assume he is sending Baldini – or should I say one hopes?

I can’t see that he has anything else to do for those 12 days, so why isn’t he going? This is England’s future and he has two years left on his contract, by which time at least some of these players could and should be pushing for a senior place. This is the ideal time to earmark those he feels will make it and follow their progress in the run up to the Euros in 2012.

It will be baffling if he doesn’t take that opportunity.

Of course, he has that tricky board meeting this afternoon first. Sky Sports are reporting that the World Cup is NOT an item on the agenda, however. Nothing like sweeping things under the carpet, eh, lads. They should be sitting down and picking apart EVERYTHING that went wrong, no matter how uncomfortable it is.

We’ve all read the reports of dressing room unrest and players falling out with one another. Surely decisions need to be taken on who was at fault for this and banish them from the squad for good, freeing up those places for youth. No matter who they are…

I laid out my blueprint for England’s future a couple of weeks ago and I stand by it. Radical action needs to be taken to start getting England back to the pinnacle of world football and it seems to me it isn’t going to happen…again.

The FA have always been stuck in the past but I thought Capello was dynamic enough to start changing that, respected enough to be allowed to do so. Seems I was wrong and he has been ground down by the sheer idiocy and resistance to change from his bosses. That’s why change is needed at the very top, not at manager level.

In the meantime, we may as well resign ourselves to overall mediocrity and the boom and bust mood England’s performances (and the media reporting of it) will create in the country.