btw ekipa, pogledajte ovo:
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1226271/http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Damned_UnitedFilm o Brianu Cloughu i njegovih 44 dana kao menadzeru Leedsa:
1974 Brian Clough: 44 days of turmoil
Don Revie had recommended Johnny Giles
as his replacement; however, the club's board made the error of
appointing the biggest, rather than the most appropriate, replacement. Brian Clough
was at the time one of the most successful and outspoken English
managers, having recently resigned his post at Derby County, where he
had won the league championship in 1972.
This was a surprise appointment, as Clough had previously criticised
Revie and his players; additionally, his abrasive management style was
in complete contrast to Revie's. At Clough's first team talk, he told
the Leeds players that they had won all their medals by cheating, and
antagonised several senior players - famously telling the injury-prone
Eddie Gray that if he had been a horse, he would have been shot years
ago. Clough also purchased players of moderate ability such as John O'Hare and John McGovern
from Derby County, and thrust them into the team ahead of established
international players. Unsurprisingly his start at the club was a poor
one, with just one league victory from his first five games in charge -
this from a team that had begun the previous season undefeated for the
first 29 games.
Some players such as Johnny Giles recognised the need to rebuild
Revie's ageing side, and thought Clough should be given more time.
Others - notably Paul Madeley
- felt differently, and said so during an extraordinary gathering
called by uneasy club directors to gauge the players feelings about the
new manager and his methods. Shortly after, an emergency board meeting
was held, and in September 1974 Clough was sacked after only 44 days in charge. Clough went on to greater things with Nottingham Forest; of his signings for Leeds, only Duncan McKenzie flourished at the club.