Re: Autumn 2016 | Page 19

was just a horrible… I think it would have to be Mike Myers, in his villain role as Dr Evil. The fans would love that. LE: It’s become legendary that you used to carry out your hiring and firing at Topolino Restaurant on Church Road in Hove. It was known as the place that if you were called to a meeting with Dick Knight there, you were probably going to get fired!? DK: No, that’s an old wives tale. I would maybe have lunch with the Manager a couple of times a week, after training. I don’t think I ever sacked anyone there. Well maybe one, Mark McGhee. Sacking is difficult enough, I liked Mark and had shared many a glass of wine with him there, it seemed more appropriate. Normally, I would do it in the office. I wouldn’t do it anywhere else. I had what I thought was a Friday afternoon meeting with Micky Adams at the Little Chef at Hickstead, which turned out to be a resignation meeting. It certainly wasn’t a firing meeting from me. LE: The second time he was here, wasn’t it? DK: Yes, he’d decided he didn’t want to stay any longer and this happened on a Friday afternoon when we’re travelling the next day to play away at Millwall. As if I’m going to sack a manager on a Friday afternoon? You don’t do that…. LE: Who was the best manager you ever worked with? DK: Tricky. I think intellectually, Steve Coppell. He spent a lot of time studying opponents and the tactics of the game, a real student of the game, as befits someone that’s got a university degree. And he is a very private person, Steve. It took quite a lot of getting to know him but once you got to know him he… you had his trust and I enjoyed working with him because he was a challenge. In terms of motivational abilities, it has to be Micky Adams. The team that he put together when he first came; there were leaders throughout that team, strong characters, all through. Dodge (Paul Rogers), Charlie Oatway, Chippie (Richard Carpenter), Bobby Zamora, Danny Cullip, Paul Watson, Michel Kuipers. Full of leaders that team. That’s why they were so good on the field together, because each one knew their role as part of the bigger team picture. managers have their weak points, as do chairmen. But I’ll try and give you some perspective. Dean Wilkins was a good coach, but a bit of a fantasist who thought that he could take the Albion to the Premier League with all Sussex-born players, most of them under the age of 21. When I signed Glenn Murray, I signed him without any interest from the manager at all. Dean White who was the assistant manager and Barry Lloyd, both very good scouts said, “Come and see this player at Rochdale.” I watched him four times, I knew what I was buying. But Dean didn’t want Glenn Murray. He wanted Joe Gatting instead. Within a few weeks, Glenn, who was the most senior player in the club in terms of his salary, because he’d just been signed for £300,000 and was immediately scoring goals, put in a written transfer request to me, as did Steve Thomson, an experienced midfield leader we’d recently signed, and both of them said it was because of the manager’s behaviour. He treated them like kids In front of the young pros. I talked Glenn out of it, I talked Steve out of it and it was all settled down. But I couldn’t continue with a manager who had a problem handling senior players. LE: Didn’t Gus (Poyet) have a problem with Murray as well? DK: Gus wanted to play a different system, which was possession football and which didn’t need a guy playing upfront on his own. Glenn never wanted to leave in the first place. I’m very pleased he’s back, and he will play a major part this season. LE: I agree. I’ve met Glenn a few times and he always comes across as very humble. Is there one manager that you wish you’d worked with? DK: This is going to be controversial. Yeah,Gus Poyet. Absolutely, because Gus is a very good coach, right, and I think I would have got the best out of him. I think perhaps I could have advised him through his first manager’s job. LE: By the way, did you know, Mayo Wynne Baxter are now the new Platinum Lounge sponsors at the Amex? question, but who was the worst manager that you worked with? DK: Good. I think your company deserves that status because I know Mayo Wynne Baxter were there supporting the club when it really needed it. They were there backing the club when not many companies did. They were in it for the long haul. DK: That would be unfair to say. All LE: What’s your view on the rivalry with LE: You might not want to answer this Crystal Palace? DK: I don’t like the idea of the fans being at loggerheads with each other for no good reason other than they support one team or the other. Albion fans are at their best when they’re being humorous with other fans. The Palace thing is not even a longstanding rivalry, it only started in the 70s. LE: Yeah, with Alan Mullery, wasn’t it? DK: Yes, Mullery and (Terry)Venables. I think it’s parochial… Now, we want to have rivalries with the likes of Borussia Dortmund and Juventus. They’re the teams and fans we should be thinking of jousting with in the future, and Palace, good luck to them. I got on fine with Simon Jordan because he and I were innovators; we were running our clubs in a more adventurous way. So, sorry, Albion fans but I got on alright with Simon Jordan. I don’t hold those sorts of grudges and, you know, it’s Glenn Murray who’s the perfect antidote to that. He was a hero here before he left, he went to Palace and got them into the Premiership, and now he’s come back to help Brighton. What’s wrong with that? He’s played well for both clubs. And will do ag ain for us. LE: As a Chairman, what was the most memorable game for you? DK: Probably the semi-final victory over Swindon in the play offs, when we nicked it at Withdean at the very end, Adam Virgo’s header, and also the story around that with Willy Carson, the Swindon chairman at the time. DK: If you remember, going up to the 120th minute of that game, they were leading 2-1, then we nicked this goal in the added time of extra time, and Willy was absolutely devastated… I always got on well with Willy Carson, a great 17