Chris coleman

19 min read

“Michael Jackson walked into the dressing room – I just remember looking down and thinking, ‘Jesus Christ, his feet are massive...’”

Interview James Andrew

YOU ASK THE QUESTIONS

CLUBS (PLAYER) 1986-87 Manchester City 1987-91 Swansea 1991-95 Crystal Palace 1995-97 Blackburn 1997-02 Fulham COUNTRY 1992-02 Wales CLUBS (MANAGER) 2003-07 Fulham 2007-08 Real Sociedad 2008-10 Coventry 2011-12 Larissa 2017-18 Sunderland 2018-19 Hebei China Fortune 2022 Atromitos COUNTRY (MANAGER) 2012-17 Wales

Chris Coleman could easily have dined out for the rest of his days on his success managing Wales. Having led his country to a first tournament in 58 years, the Swansea native then went several better by taking them all the way to the semi-finals, beating a much-fancied Belgium en route.

But that isn’t Coleman’s way. “I don’t live in the success I’ve had, because that’s a moment – it’s gone,” he tells FourFourTwo. “You’ve got to look at today and what’s coming tomorrow, because that’s the only way you can survive, especially in this industry.”

In January, his latest job took him to Greece’s Atromitos, a club dubbed ‘the Millwall of Athens’. After two and a half years out of management, it was a risk due to the club’s precarious position, battling relegation to the second tier. Eight points adrift of their nearest rival at the start of February, Atromitos recovered under Coleman to secure safety with weeks to spare.

When it’s put to the Welshman that his most recent achievement will have largely gone unnoticed back home, he doesn’t seem too worried. “Probably, yeah, but I quite like that,” he says. “I’m very proud of the job we’ve done.”

Coleman the manager, like Coleman the player, never shirks a challenge. That includes FFT readers’ questions…

As a teenager, you left Manchester City of the Second Division and joined Swansea City in the Fourth. Was that a tough decision?

Michael Evans, Barry I remember coming back from Man City with all sorts of different emotions. I didn’t think I was going to make it as a professional footballer and I thought the level was too high. Luckily, I had my dad by my side. He never, ever pushed me, but he gave me guidance. He went to speak with [Swansea boss] Terry Yorath, who agreed to let me join in with training. Man City didn’t want me to go, so they agreed with Swansea that if I made it into the first team and was later sold to another club, then City would get a third of the fee.

Terry was really tough, but fair, and he was the best thing that happened to me. I started out at left-back – I was 6ft 3in and about 13 stone, but I could run. I playe

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