The Making of Frank Lampard: Why the Derby Manager Can Be a Success

Derby County manager Frank Lampard. (Reuters)
Derby County manager Frank Lampard. (Reuters)
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The Making of Frank Lampard: Why the Derby Manager Can Be a Success

Derby County manager Frank Lampard. (Reuters)
Derby County manager Frank Lampard. (Reuters)

Taken in isolation, Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink’s description of Frank Lampard as a player without an awe-inspiring skill could be interpreted as an insult. When Hasselbaink thinks back to the youngster who joined him at Chelsea in 2001, he recalls a footballer with a good shot, decent technique and some pace. “He tackled all right,” the Dutchman says. “I think if you look at his abilities, there was nothing really outstanding.”

Hasselbaink, however, is in the middle of paying Lampard a glowing compliment. The point he wants to get across is how hard Derby County’s manager worked to become one of the finest footballers of his generation.

“Everything together made him an exceptional player,” the former Chelsea striker says. “He came from West Ham and we had some big names in the team but it didn’t faze him. He wanted to show he was worth the money. Mentally, he was one of the strongest players ever. Nothing really knocked him back. That will be a good asset for him as a manager. You have to have a thick skin.”

Tony Carr, West Ham’s former academy director, has similar memories of a kid with an iron will to succeed. “When challenges have come along, Frank has always risen to it and kicked on,” Carr says. “I’m sure he’ll take that trait into management. There’s lots he won’t be able to control when they’re out on the pitch but I’m sure his attitude will always help him.

“As a young player, he was a breath of fresh air. A lot of youngsters can be apathetic about training hard, being patient and working on their weaknesses. Frank was always looking for ways to improve, whether it was fitness or technical work, and as he got more senior the managers he played for allowed him to become more versed in the tactical side of the game.”

Carr bumped into Lampard a few weeks before his appointment by Derby and the meeting left him with an inkling his former student was ready to make the leap into management. Lampard spoke about completing his coaching badges and helping Jody Morris coach Chelsea’s under-18s. A few weeks later the 40-year-old was asking Morris to become his No. 2 at Derby, who had just missed out on promotion to the Premier League after losing their play-off semi-final to Fulham.

Hasselbaink, who has managed at Burton Albion, Queens Park Rangers and Northampton Town, believes Morris will be an important ally for Lampard. “I played with Jody and he had a lot of football intelligence,” he says. “He wanted to play in a continental way. He is astute, a student of the game and very single-minded on how football should be played.

“He has learned his trade at Chelsea, so it should be a good fit. They have played together and trust each other. That’s what you need as a manager: people who have your back and who can transmit your ideas to the players every day.”

One challenge for Lampard will be accepting Derby’s players may not possess his talent. Hasselbaink knows there will have to be compromises at times. “But I can see him succeeding because he is calm and knows what he wants. He will not sit back and wait for it to come to him. He will go and get it. He has played under a lot of great managers, so tactically he has learned a lot. It is about how he will communicate that to his players now.

“You see managers struggle to accept players with lesser ability. They might not have the patience and struggle to understand why a player can’t do something. But Frank is a smart guy who thinks things through. He will know what to expect.

“When you become a manager, you go from being a student to a teacher. You have to think about everything: the players, the fans, the board, your staff and then you have to combine it all. You don’t turn up at 9.30am, train at 10.30am and go home at 1pm.

“You turn up at 7am, make sure training is prepared, take the training. Then you assess what has gone right and wrong. Then it’s about planning for the next day. Before you know it, it’s the end of the day. It’s totally different. But he won’t go into this with his eyes closed, he’ll be fine.”

Lampard will be expected to challenge for promotion despite his inexperience. He has taken a risk in his first job. “But why not go where you have the opportunity to go for promotion?” Hasselbaink says. “That’s the kind of animal he is – he needs that edge, that feeling that he’s playing for something. The pressure won’t trouble him.”

The Guardian Sport



Serena Williams Returns to US Open - as a Fan

Serena Williams (L) watches the match between Jannik Sinner of Italy and Christopher O'Connell of Australia, during the third round of the US Open Tennis Championships at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in Flushing Meadows, New York, USA, 31 August 2024. (EPA)
Serena Williams (L) watches the match between Jannik Sinner of Italy and Christopher O'Connell of Australia, during the third round of the US Open Tennis Championships at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in Flushing Meadows, New York, USA, 31 August 2024. (EPA)
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Serena Williams Returns to US Open - as a Fan

Serena Williams (L) watches the match between Jannik Sinner of Italy and Christopher O'Connell of Australia, during the third round of the US Open Tennis Championships at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in Flushing Meadows, New York, USA, 31 August 2024. (EPA)
Serena Williams (L) watches the match between Jannik Sinner of Italy and Christopher O'Connell of Australia, during the third round of the US Open Tennis Championships at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in Flushing Meadows, New York, USA, 31 August 2024. (EPA)

Serena Williams set Flushing Meadows abuzz on Saturday as the 23-time major winner appeared at the US Open - as a fan - for the first time since stepping away from tennis two years ago.

The six-time winner dominated New York throughout her career and fittingly made an emotional goodbye in Flushing Meadows, when she played her final match against Australian Ajla Tomljanovic in the third round of the 2022 tournament.

The tension of competition was gone on Saturday as Williams stepped on to the blue carpet decked out in a denim ensemble, all smiles and at ease as she flashed peace signs and smiled for the cameras.

"I feel like to me she's always been that upbeat and happy person. Obviously we're all in the zone when we're about to compete, and so that's different when you don't play anymore," said Caroline Wozniacki, Williams' longtime friend.

"But at the end of the day, I think she's always been, you know, a happy and outgoing person."

Williams was seen chatting with world number one Iga Swiatek at the players' gym ahead of the Pole's third-round match against Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, which she won in straight sets.

"Even though we met before and for, like, couple of years we have been on the same sides and on tour together, she's still, like, star-striking me," Swiatek told reporters.

"It was nice that she approach me, because I wouldn't, for sure, find courage to do that if it was the other way."

The American watched Italian number one Jannik Sinner beat Australian Chris O'Connell and American Jessica Pegula get past Spain's Jessica Bouzas Maneiro at Arthur Ashe Stadium, where she played her final match.

Wozniacki, who included Williams as a bridesmaid in her wedding, won her third-round meeting with French qualifier Jessica Ponchet at the Grandstand and joked that she was "pretty mad" that Williams was not in attendance for her match as well.

"Serena is obviously still very busy. I think when you've been such incredible at something, I think you'll always have the opportunity, you'll always be great at whatever you put your mind to," said Wozniacki.

"I love hanging with her. I love talking to her. You know, I love the support that I get from her, as well."