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I love divisive individuals. They enhance
the debate, and an amalgam of compliments and insults,
congratulations and denouncements, make for fascinating
reading, with nobody ever able to say fully that they
are right.
Except for me, right here, right now - as
while somebody out there could write 15 paragraphs right
now on why Peter Taylor is a villain (try tepid
football, Junior Lewis and leaving the club behind when
he did, for starters) they would be categorically wrong
to do so.
Peter Taylor is a proper hero and anyone
who holds contrary views was ruined as a child. And
possibly dropped on their heads as part of the
ruination. |
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The background then...
Taylor was a terrific player. He was a burly, hip-swivelling
left-footed right-winger (the explanation for Kevin Ellison at
Luton suddenly becomes clear as day) who shot to national fame
when he scored two stunning goals for Third Division
sash-wearers Crystal Palace at Chelsea in an FA Cup fifth round
tie in 1976, earning him an England call-up (only Steve Bull has
since matched that particular achievement) which prompted
bigger-name players to ask who he was during training. Palace
made the semi-finals that season and Taylor's increased standing
got him a move to Tottenham a year later. After his playing
days, er, petered out, he went into coaching through the
then-traditional method of starting at some non-league jokers
(Dartford, in his case) and working his way up. By the time he
arrived at Hull City in 2002, he had acquired a terrific
coaching reputation and a momentarily chequered but largely
efficient managerial CV. A weirdly unsuccessful spell at
Leicester in the Premiership had sullied his references, but
he'd just done a devastatingly effective job at Brighton, taking
them up as champions of the third tier in his only season, and
had previously managed a similar masterly task at Gillingham. He
also had a nation's sympathy and goodwill, having been
maliciously fired by Howard Wilkinson as England under 21 coach
(because he was associated with the 'disgraced' Glenn Hoddle)
despite a 100 per cent record in qualifying matches, only for
him to be then handed the caretaker's job for the full squad
prior to Sven Goran Eriksson's arrival. It was he, of course,
who gave David Beckham the England captaincy. So, despite paying
£5million for Ade Akinbiyi and losing an FA Cup quarter final to
a FNLS team that bought its winning goalscorer off the internet,
clearly City had landed a chap who was nationally lauded and had
the notices to back it up.
And the Tigers needed one. Jan Molby's three months in charge
had been a case study in underachievement. Molby's complaints
and excuses didn't become him, and Adam Pearson quickly
acknowledged he'd erred in appointing the salad-dodging Dane.
Yet one thing Molby did leave behind was a team - a team yet to
gel, but a team nonetheless. Three of his summer signings would
go on to become indelibly linked with Taylor's reign at
Boothferry Park and the KC, and predominantly for positive
reasons.
Much of Taylor's attainments over the next four years emerged
from his own bloody-mindedness. An immediate example of this
would be Damien Delaney, a rosy-cheeked Irish defender whom he
collared from his old club Leicester for £50,000, and who
initially would look out of place wherever he played. Taylor
threw him into the left back position which with its initial
lack of wisdom did at least rid the side of the wholly
ineffective Shaun Smith. Sadly, Delaney seemed rarely better and
became something of a target of the South Stand. Taylor, for the
first of many times, would ignore the faithful and be proved
right as Delaney developed into a fine central defender who
would spend five and a half gratifying years with the club.
There seemed to be something poetic from Taylor's point of view
that his first acquisition would also secure an indelible entry
in the club's record books by scoring the last City goal at
Boothferry Park, albeit entirely unintentionally.
Delaney issues aside,
City began well under Taylor. Molby's talented but unentwined
team, which had won only twice, were victorious in four of his
seven opening matches, drawing the other three. Boothferry
Park's farewell match also heralded the farewell of Taylor's
unbeaten record, but as City settled into the KC Stadium, things
remained on course for sufficient recovery. Molby's new boys -
Stuart Green, Stuart Elliott, Ian Ashbee, Dean Keates - reacted
well to their new manager, and gently City began to look like a
side ready for an assault on the division in the second half of
the season.
A bad January got worse; City lost poorly at Leyton Orient and
Southend, drew with York at the KC and then were done by Lincoln
at home too. During this time, Green undertook his bit of
vintage toy/pram separation after being left out of the Lincoln
match (he and the others had stunk at Southend), while Marc
Joseph joined to cause havoc in his own defence. Green was
packed off to Carlisle on loan and though he rehabilitated
himself in the summer, Taylor's unequivocal refusal to rule out
Green's return to City prompted derisory comments from the Tiger
Nation over remaining loyal to players whose ability, bottle or
attitude was in question. Taylor's bloody-mindedness would,
again, win the day.
Joseph's arrival was uncontroversial to begin with. Fans'
favourite Justin Whittle, plus the impressive John Anderson,
maintained their partnership, and so Taylor more frequently
stuck Joseph in at right back (having told Mike Edwards, just
back from a cruciate injury, that he was releasing him without
watching him play). The issue of Joseph's inclusion at a higher
emotional cost would come later.
Although the departure of Edwards, to this day the last lad from
the ranks to become a fully-fledged first team player, left a
sour taste, Taylor also succeeded in clearing out genuine
deadwood. Injury-ravaged horizontalist Richie Appleby and
talented shirker (and utter waste of a shirt) Ryan Williams were
escorted from the premises. In came new striker Ben Burgess,
ugly and surly but in possession of a smart left-foot and a
facility to score goals, while loan signings Jon Walters and Jon
Otsemobor made tidy contributions to the season's end, which
proved to be mixed but clear in its potential. City managed
numerous five-figure crowds at the Circle in the last five
weeks, by which time a push to the play-offs had been largely
ruled out. The football wasn't always pretty, but for the first
time since Brian Little's play-off season, there was a
groundswell of hope.
Yes, the football wasn't always pretty. This is a stick with
which Taylor's plentiful detractors use to beat the man
regularly. He bought and utilised good attacking players but was
often seen as unduly negative, especially at home, and was
rarely seen trying to win away matches with anything other than
breakaway football. Yet sometimes, maybe even despite Taylor
sometimes, City won away from home superbly, freely,
flamboyantly. His brand of football was sometimes hard to call,
and his regular refusal to express any regret over stifling or
lukewarm tactics, irrespective of their effectiveness, put backs
up.
This was also a contributory factor to a general media image
Taylor procured - that of a moody, monotonous and soundbitten
bore. He was probably none of these, and certainly those who
ever had his company privately said he was a pleasant and
sometimes amusing man and clearly a talented thinker on the
game. He didn't enjoy the media obligations which management
brought; rarely did he give elongated post-match interviews or
provide great insight, in spite of any respectful questions put
his way. He liked getting players "in the building" and used
north-south rivalries to try to inspire his players with accents
of a higher geographical origin than his own. But the
freer-thinking supporter tolerated Taylor's blandness in voice;
what mattered was his first full season in charge of the Tigers,
which was ahead.
Numerous things went Taylor's way in the Division Three (now
League Two, keep up) promotion campaign. He purchased well in
the summer; clinical Aussie striker Danny Allsopp formed a
33-goal partnership with Burgess; twinkle-toed winger Jason
Price pleased the crowds with some scrumptious displays on the
right flank; and left back Andy Dawson, deliciously snatched as
he fell out of contract at Scunthorpe, became an effortless
presence in defence. Other players hit big spells of form;
Delaney had shifted into the centre of the back four and became
almost superhuman (not to mention ever-present, a remarkable
feat); Ashbee was a fantastic spoiling presence and a natural
captain; Elliott cracked in a splendid 14 goals from the wing
and Green, rejuvenated and repentant, returned from his
Carlisle-based period of chokey to play an active and sometimes
spellbinding role in the centre. And midway through the season,
Taylor shelled out £50,000 on the oddly-named Villa reserve
keeper Boaz Myhill, who quickly provided extra security behind a
tightened back line and provided the final piece of a
long-awaited jigsaw.
Taylor, however, didn't help himself with a couple of decisions
which fray his legacy to this day. His decision to sign Karl
"Junior" Lewis, a trier of negligible skill who had followed
Taylor round various clubs, was treated with a mixture of
concern and humorous consternation. Lewis, however, sometimes
redeemed himself with the odd vital goal and could, at least,
tackle. He just couldn't pass, trap or dribble.
While the decision to deploy Lewis was capable of emitting
laughs as well as groans from the Tiger Nation, the regular
re-assignment of Whittle to the reserves did not. Whittle,
already relieved of the captaincy thanks to Ashbee's arrival and
his own lack of rubberstamped involvement, had now seen his
place disappear in favour of Joseph, whose lack of positional
sense and aggression, among other things, made the decision all
the more galling for the large number of Whittle devotees in the
seats.
Strike me dead if you desire, but Whittle was never quite as
good as many made out. City have certainly had better defenders
in the last generation, even though the context needs applying,
and as such, Whittle was marvellous for the sort of scrap City
required when he joined as the Conference loomed. There was no
doubt, however, that he was the better option to partner the
talented Delaney when held up alongside Joseph, and Taylor knew
that the supporters were all behind Whittle. He dropped Whittle
after a 2-2 home draw with Macclesfield, having used as many
excuses involving Whittle as he could for City's
disappointments; then watched, undoubtedly in horror, as City
succumbed 3-1 at promotion rivals Huddersfield, with Joseph
making a mockery of the central defensive position in Whittle's
place. The City fans' unabashed calling of Whittle's name during
the match just served to tighten Taylor's resolve, and by the
time the fans forum, broadcast on the radio, came round he had
pinned down every answer to every question he doubtlessly
expected from the Whittle camp. For his part, the former skipper
kept a dignified silence and remains uncommitted on the subject
to this day. He started just one more game for City and,
unpalatable though it may be, City managed to clinch promotion
without his help.
City were inconsistent at the end of a relief-filled campaign,
with wonderful wins over Scunthorpe United, Leyton Orient and
especially away at Swansea tempered by maddening defeats to
Torquay, Mansfield (Mansfield, for God's sake!) and Northampton.
Doncaster Rovers - whose post-Christmas visit to the KC produced
a 23,000 crowd, a tremendous away support and a flukey but
symbolic hat-trick from Price - were the worthy (if rather too
territorial) winners of the title, and City secured second place
and a first promotion for 19 years with a famous win at Yeovil,
with Ashbee rounding off a fine season of collected leadership
with a ludicrously unAshbee-like winner.
Taylor's shtick and standing was now familiar to the City
supporters. We had a manager who was very hard to like. He
wasn't warm, he didn't seem to identify with the area or lay
down any roots. He had no real feeling in his post-match (or
pre-match) musings, he was just doing a job and being paid for
it. Yet it was also very hard not to respect him, not to wish
him well, not to admire his ability. And his demeanour paid
dividends for him - City's promotion proved he made the right
decisions when the Tiger Nation would have had it differently -
he was right to bring back Green, to buy a seemingly ordinary
Scunthorpe defender, to replace the reliable Paul Musselwhite in
goal with an untried youngster with a daft name, and to utilise
Junior Lewis and Marc Joseph. Maybe he was lucky in some
respects. But when luck is on your side, you don't bemoan it, as
you're quick to curse its absence when fortune goes against you.
Peter Taylor had done what plebs like Hateley and Molby and
triers like Joyce and Little had failed to do - get City out of
the bottom division.
The detractors didn't give up - okay, so he'd got us up, but
with the money and players available, he should have got us up
as champions, they say. It's a point, certainly, and some of the
aforementioned defeats at uninhabitable holes like Field Mill
were galling and contributory. But Doncaster, painfully, deserve
credit for a freakishly outstanding season during which we
didn't lose to them (though the televised goalless draw at Belle
Vue was unarguably the least compelling match Sky has ever
covered). Maybe the newcomers who didn't ever entertain the idea
of watching City at Boothferry Park but quite liked the KC when
they went for a nosey were responsible for this blinkered
viewpoint. Those who watched the team under Ternent, Dolan and
Hateley would surely be more grateful for a promotion,
irrespective of its nature. Frankly, anyone who did complain
that Taylor hadn't earned any plaudits because we only went up
as runners-up and with a small silver plate should shut up.
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So, along came League One (and it was
League One by now), and again with Adam Pearson stumping
up the readies for an immediate attack on a weak-looking
division, Taylor stuck his fingers in his ears and made
more crucial and controversial decisions on
strengthening.
With Burgess suffering from a long-term
injury, he signed goal-free strikers Aaron Wilbraham and
Jon Walters and persevered with putting both Lewis and
Joseph in his starting line-ups.
However, he also acquired Leon Cort, an
imposing, balanced and remarkably fair-playing centre
back from Southend on a free transfer - and then sent us
all silly by adding Hull-born ex-England player Nick
Barmby to the squad, fresh from his release by the
declining Leeds. |
Much will always be
speculated upon as to who really decided to bring Barmby in.
Pearson, with one eye on the PR and another on the finances, was
seemingly more enthusiastic about the securing of the Wolfreton
High alumnus than Taylor himself, though enthusiasm was
something Taylor rarely did about anyone or anything. And,
frankly, once Barmby settled in and began to lord it over a
division in which he could have played with tuxedo and cigar,
the origin of the move was insignificant.
Cort and Barmby were immense signings, among Taylor's best. For
every missed chance from Walters (a shadow of the player who'd
been in on loan two seasons before) or scuffed piece of
confidence-free marksmanship from Wilbraham, there'd be a
blessed bit of Barmby genius or, more stunningly, a goal from
Elliott. And another. And another. City looked promotion
candidates from the outset, and this heralded the most joyous
season under Taylor, despite the odd regression into tedium
beyond definition. Elliott became the most important player of
the Taylor reign from this point, and perhaps the detractors
could take some form of mediocre, ironic consolation from this,
in that despite signing a lorryload of players, the best one to
serve Taylor was one already in place before he arrived.
Sometimes, City were mesmeric. A fantastic 3-2 win at
Peterborough, which included the first of a neat handful of
crucial goals from the dangerous Cort, was a particularly
memorable treat for the travelling support. City were also
dogged, something Taylor could claim real pride from - the late
2-1 win at Barnsley thanks to a very late goal from the
circular, pygmy-like, about-to-be-ditched-for-twatting-someone-in-the-stiffs
Michael Keane was a typical example of this, and the nature of
the display did not dampen the sheer joy of the win.
Through the latter part of 2004, City began a sequence of eight
straight League wins which began with Elliott's brace in a 2-0
success over Brentford and ended with a 3-1 win at Stockport and
goals from Wilbraham, Price and Allsopp. Yet medicine inevitably
followed the sugar, and the four match winless sequence -
hindered by the madly prolific Elliott's absence with a busted
cheekbone - which followed almost certainly cost the Tigers the
League One title, especially as it included a defeat to main
rivals and eventual champions Luton. Taylor again fended off the
brickbats about unmotivated players or uninspiring tactics and
instead set about securing the player who would inspire a final
push to promotion.
Elliott's goalscoring from the wing had been a welcome antidote
to the collective inability of the centre forwards to score -
Allsopp was homesick and allowed to go after a humdrum season,
while Walters and Wilbraham were unqualified calamity signings
who scored three League goals between them. Barmby was very much
the second-position striker who sometimes played wide, but nine
goals from him eventually proved vital. Taylor's supposedly
uneven relationship with his superstar did not effect either the
manager's judgment in picking him, nor Barmby's facility to
deliver. It was still obvious, however, that one more forward
was required - and here Taylor's influence and reputation as a
national coach of distinction as well as a club coach of
efficiency was confirmed, as he gently persuaded Craig Fagan, a
former Birmingham player, out of Colchester and up to Hull.
Fagan, despite a mild doubt about his temperament, was a
roaringly instant success, scoring on his debut in a fabulous
win at chasers Tranmere (which also brought a goal for Ellison,
the more typical Taylor signing - the limited trier). Fagan's
arrival coincided with Elliott's return and City embarked on a
thrilling couple of months of matches - a 4-0 win at Bournemouth
putting to bed last-ditch doubts and a thoroughly satisfying,
dominant 2-0 win at Bradford (where the City fans were given one
of the home stands - justice in evidence right there) turning
the probable into the inevitable.
The fact that City didn't win any of their last four matches and
went up thanks to Tranmere losing a midweek game in hand was
also, perhaps, typical of Taylor's reign. Yes, two promotions,
but the hardline anti-Taylor extremists would state that we
didn't go up with panache, with a fantastic destruction of some
collective of lower league shiteaters. They can get lost.
Certainly, as the Championship loomed, the prospect of Peter
Taylor leading Hull City into her first season of second-tier
football since 1991 seemed a viable one. His brand of occasional
negativity and baffling dullard's football would perhaps be an
astute way of making sure we kept our heads above the surface.
After all, we were no longer going after promotion - this was
now a season of survival. City were going to be beaten and
seriously outplayed at times and reach troughs in performance
not experienced since the months prior to Taylor's arrival. A
manager who knew the division (which Taylor did) and could
handpick his tactics depending on availabilities and form (which
Taylor could) was vital.
Again, supporters
occasionally despaired of Taylor's short-sightedness. The
Championship holiday was over by Christmas, when even though
some sound home performances had given City a base to secure
their survival, occasional personnel issues gave City fans mild
causes for concern. In a marked contrast to his two successors
thus far (plus his transfer policy at his own next club),
Taylor's recruitment ideal consisted almost exclusively of
gathering players from the lower divisions in the hope of
nurturing them into Championship performers. This was mainly a
failure - Sam Collins and Danny Coles would be limited and
error-ridden (not to mention injury-prone) centre backs (though
to be fair to Coles, he barely played a game under Taylor);
striker Billy Paynter was noticeably unable to raise his game.
Signings from above, such as full back Mark Lynch and
midfielders Keith Andrews and John Welsh were - in order -
overused, misused and just not used. Ultimately it was old guard
players - Barmby, Elliott, Delaney, Cort, Dawson, Myhill - who
would prove most crucial in City's eventual survival. Oh, and
the one signing from below which did work - for Taylor at least.
Jon Parkin's arrival
in January was somewhat divisive; an arrival in Taylor's own
image, you might say. City fans with memories of the large
striker's comic displays at Macclesfield, to whom Taylor paid
£150,000, were apoplectic. But Parkin became City's saviour,
defying and demolishing supposedly capable defenders, scoring
fine goals against Crystal Palace, Stoke (in a stunning 3-0 away
win), Millwall, Luton and, eventually, the goal of all goals
against Leeds at the KC which earned a generation-making 1-0
win. His fitness (put down to the lack of a pre-season) let him
down at the death but by then City had done enough. Parkin had
delivered, and again Taylor could look at those waiting for his
downfall and stick two more fingers up in their direction.
Parkin's subsequent decline was nothing to do with Taylor.
Come the season's end,
and Taylor had led a scratchy, inelegant but entirely efficient
team to safety with some ease. He had now taken the club to two
promotions and unflustered Championship survival in his three
full seasons. Charlton began sniffing and maybe, just maybe,
some of his detractors were wondering if the grass would really
be greener if a new manager came in. When Taylor pledged his
future to the Tigers, the sigh of relief was almost wholly
collective. But there was clearly strain between his chairman
and himself, and a week later the lure of Palace, the team with
which he enjoyed his shot to fame as a player, was too much.
Rightly, people mourned his departure and offered scolding words
his way for going so soon after a pledge of loyalty. But Taylor
had perhaps taken City as far as he could, and albeit messily,
had secured his place in the Tigers history by leaving. When the
Bright Young Thing of football management, Phil Parkinson,
arrived at great expense and to everyone's approval as Taylor's
replacement and proceeded to lose numerous things - opening
games, his nerve, the support of the dressing room and his job -
the shadow of Taylor's prosaic achievements loomed larger.
Taylor paid a seven
figure fee to take Cort to Palace with him, thereby earning City
a profit of £1.25m after just two seasons; and more comically
took Green with him too, almost certainly as much for family
reasons as for playing reasons. The anti-Taylor brigade finally
got their wish to see their man dismissed following a Hull City
match when the Tigers got a 1-1 draw at Selhurst Park in October
2007 and Taylor, whose side were on a poor run, paid with his
job. Glee was expressed among the lamer brains within the Tiger
Nation. He is now managing Stevenage Borough in the Conference.
Peter Taylor's legacy
may include some dodgy signings and a distinct unwillingness to
lighten up and embrace his surroundings, but these foibles
should be easily outweighed by two promotions and a rather
comfortable opening Championship season. If you can't see beyond
his character shortcomings and ignore his actual achievements,
then you're the one with a problem. Peter Taylor is the best
manager, on stats, to work for Hull City. Only the unduly
churlish, emotionally disadvantaged or cranially vacant would
try to deny him status as a Hero.
Matthew Rudd |