Larry Lloyd Interview - Independant

Randy Bumgardener

AKA Randy Bumgardener
Just found this. granted it's over a year old but what a blunt and honest interview from the man. I had no idea Platt had more to answer for than just the team ! Seems he didn't take critisism well !

EDIT: - Just ordered his book. Anyone else read it ?

Link


Monday, 17 March 2008

This year is the 30th anniversary of Nottingham Forest's only League title win, which launched them to two European Cup wins. Is there a reunion planned, and what are your abiding memories of that season?
I keep in touch with our captain, John McGovern, who arranges these things, but nothing so far. That season, we had no fear. We'd just scraped promotion, so didn't even expect to be in the division. Brian Clough added three players in the summer, Archie Gemmill, Kenny Burns and Peter Shilton, and we had good youngsters like Viv Anderson, Martin O'Neill and Tony Woodcock. We just went out and attacked. It paid off. People kept saying, "Forest can't go on". But we did.


You won the title and the Uefa Cup with Liverpool in 1973, and a title and two European Cups among other things with Forest. But what do you consider your greatest achievement?
I've was lucky, or talented enough, to win quite a few things. 1973 was the first time Liverpool won the domestic title and a European trophy in the same season. But then at Liverpool success was expected. At Forest, it was all quite an achievement. The 1979 European Cup stands out, because it was the first, although a poor game against Malmo. The second, against Hamburg, was more impressive. But if there's one single occasion that sticks in my mind it's the 1979 semi-final against Cologne, second leg, away, having had a 3-3 draw at home. We thought conceding three away goals meant the end. But we went over there, and won 1-0 in probably the best performance in my time. That set up everything else.

You've just written your autobiography. Why now? And why should we read it?
Because I'm 59 and it's a proper autobiography about someone who's actually had a life in and out of the game. These days it seems every 23-year-old with nothing to say has a book out, and so does his effin' girlfriend, who has even less to talk about. Mine's about football, of course, winning it all, but it's about life, all the ups and downs, and I've had my share, from struggling at Bristol Rovers, to Liverpool, Forest. My father being blind and never seeing me play, which gutted me. This is a proper life story, warts and all.

You sold all your medals, didn't you? About eight years ago.
I was absolutely skint. I'd lost my job as a radio show host in Nottingham. I blamed David Platt, the Forest manager at the time. Forest were having a dreadful time, the fans had their say on my phone-in. They slagged him off, I let them. Platt said if it carried on, the club wouldn't cooperate with the station. I lost my job. I was very low. My second marriage was in trouble. I sold the medals: two European Cups, two championships, a Uefa Cup, two League Cups. I got £12,000 altogether. Awful. But I needed the money. It was January, freezing. I logged on the net, looked at property agents in Spain, bought a bar. That lasted about six months. I still live in Spain, but I'm in property now.

You played under some truly great managers: Bill Shankly, Brian Clough, Alf Ramsey. Compare them.
Shankly and Clough were similar characters, all motivation and hardly any tactics, although Shanks did the occasional bit. If Shankly hadn't been in football, he would probably have been a hooligan! He had so much pent up energy. He motivated us, though. One match, 10 minutes before kick-off against Ipswich, he shouted: "Everyone! Shirts off!" We did as we were told, gave our football shirts to Ronnie Moran. Shankly told him: "Throw them on the pitch, Ronnie. Our shirts are good enough to beat this lot without players inside them." And Ronnie did! Crazy, but it worked. Alf Ramsey was totally different. I never heard him raise his voice. He quietly explained to each player what he wanted.

And Cloughie?
His man management was extraordinary. He knew who to bollock and who to put his arm around, and when. Him and I were never great pals. I was fined repeatedly. I once said to him: "I have great respect for you as a manager, but if I'm having a quiet pint and you come in, I walk. I don't want be around you." Of course, he has the last word. He said: "I feel the same about you." But when I was fit and not suspended, I was always in the team. He knew what I could do for him in football, and I knew what he could do for me.

Which of your Forest team-mates do you still see?
John Robertson. We speak every week. John McGovern. I see Kenny Burns when I come over. I've spoken to Martin O'Neill now and then. But Martin's got his own agenda now as a football manager. He's in a league of his own and doing fantastically.

You managed at Wigan and Notts County. Why did you leave football?
On reflection, I should have stayed in the game longer. These days you get sacked and you find another job. But I was disillusioned. I went to run a pub, The Stage Door, in Nottingham.

Didn't you throw Roy Keane out of there once?
Once. It was Forest's Christmas party, and let's just say I thought Roy was being a bit naughty. I asked him to leave. He gave me some lip. I had a word with his captain, Stuart Pearce, and asked him to get Roy to leave. Stuart said: "He's no harm". So I chucked all of them out.

Do you ever see another club getting promoted and winning the Premier League the next season?
Never. That would need some sugar daddy.

'Hard Man, Hard Game' by Larry Lloyd (John Blake Publishing, £17.99), will be published on 3 April

Attachment

*Born Laurence Valentine Lloyd, 6 October 1948, Bristol

*Playing career

1967-69 Bristol Rovers (43 games, 1 league goal)

1969-74 Liverpool (150, 4)

1974-76 Coventry City (50, 5)

1976-81 Nottingham Forest (148, 6)

1978 Houston Hurricane (loan)

1981-83 Wigan Athletic (52, 2)

1971-80 England Under-23s (8, 0)

England (4, 0)

*Managerial career

1981-83 Wigan Athletic

1983-84 Notts County

*HONOURS

League title 1973, 1978

Uefa Cup 1973

League Cup 1978, 1979. Runner-up 1980

Charity Shield 1978. Runner-up 1971

European Cup 1979, 1980

European Super Cup 1979. Runner-up 1980

FA Cup runner-up 1971

Intercontinental Cup runner-up 1979
 

alfordred

First Team Squad
b@stard wants shooting. Platt that is not Larry.
 

Lovejoy's Hair Island

Grenville Morris
i was away alot during the platt days, i didnt realise where larry lloyd had been sacked i always liked listening to him on the wireless...... i also didnt know he played for the scousers but i wont hold that gainst him!
 

Randy Bumgardener

AKA Randy Bumgardener
Rev. Utrinque Paratus said:
i was away alot during the platt days, i didnt realise where larry lloyd had been sacked i always liked listening to him on the wireless...... i also didnt know he played for the scousers but i wont hold that gainst him!

I was too. But when I came back I used to go down with Darren Fletchers dad on his spare ticket (old family friends) and used to go and chat with larry. Top bloke, absolute legend. Him and Kenny write their articles as they played footy. Honest, well thought out and quite brutal at times !
 

Flaggers

May not be the best moderator on LTLF, but he's...
LTLF Minion
Didn't you throw Roy Keane out of there once?
Once. It was Forest's Christmas party, and let's just say I thought Roy was being a bit naughty. I asked him to leave. He gave me some lip. I had a word with his captain, Stuart Pearce, and asked him to get Roy to leave. Stuart said: "He's no harm". So I chucked all of them out.

lol lol quality!!
 

Lovejoy's Hair Island

Grenville Morris
Randy Bumgardener - A True American Hero said:
I was too. But when I came back I used to go down with Darren Fletchers dad on his spare ticket (old family friends) and used to go and chat with larry. Top bloke, absolute legend. Him and Kenny write their articles as they played footy. Honest, well thought out and quite brutal at times !


ahhh daren fletcher ! i hear him every now and again when i scan through to get results etc when im in the car............... but yes larry is a legend id love to see him well hear him again on the radio!
 

Eddie

Grenville Morris
Larry was the first member of the European Cup winning team i ever met,, he's a top bloke. I used to enjoy the the football phone-in until he got sacked. I hope he gets an opportunity to lay one on pratt.
 

Lovejoy's Hair Island

Grenville Morris
Eddie said:
Larry was the first member of the European Cup winning team i ever met,, he's a top bloke. I used to enjoy the the football phone-in until he got sacked. I hope he gets an opportunity to lay one on pratt.



celebrity death match? :ph34r:
 

Eddie

Grenville Morris
I think it should be arranged!,, i'd pay to watch anyways. He could settle the score on the pitch at the CG.
 

Randy Bumgardener

AKA Randy Bumgardener
Eddie said:
I think it should be arranged!,, i'd pay to watch anyways. He could settle the score on the pitch at the CG.

OOOh, H4H fundraiser ;D

Darren was allways more into his American football and hockey tbh than his football. He's a 5 live commentator now isn't he ?
 

Eddie

Grenville Morris
Its wrong that a working class footballer who achieved so much, had to give it all up for so little. 12k is nothing in the scheme of things. Hope he made enough money out of this book to try and reclaim the medals as well as getting a few pennies towards his bills.
 

zigga-zagga

Viv Anderson
I know Larry very well, used to play giolf with him and have had many a 'session' at the bar with him.

I caught up with him at the recent dinner at the City Ground and he really does still regard Platt as the devil incarnate. He is now doing PR for a property company on the Costa del Sol and reckons that he has no intention of coming back.

During the European ban of the late 80's Lloydie and I stood shoulder to shoulder (pissed as farts) in the middle of a bar in Cognac threatening to rip the heads off a dozen 'sweaty socks', who were on the same trip, because they had maligned the English football fan!

Happy days!
 

weasel

Grenville Morris
Is it only me who looks back on the Platt era and thinks ok, it didn't go according to plan, but it wasn't actually that bad at all.
 
W

winnits

Guest
I think it laid the foundations for an era of abject shite quite nicely, but in itself, no, it was merely a sneak preview of what was to unfurl.
 

Anatoli

Stuart Pearce
weasel said:
Is it only me who looks back on the Platt era and thinks ok, it didn't go according to plan, but it wasn't actually that bad at all.
Yes, the rest of us think it was shit and the beginning of us getting relegated to the third division.
 

weasel

Grenville Morris
Anatoli said:
Yes, the rest of us think it was s**t and the beginning of us getting relegated to the third division.

Well yes, kind of, but I don't think in either of Platt's seasons we finished as low as Derby did this year.
 
W

winnits

Guest
Quite a costly way to finish midtable though, I guess Platt's tenure is villified as it's identified as the beginning of the problems, he spunked millions on shite players which ultimately created the debt which required us selling off players with whom we could have built a promotion winning side. Ultimately the slow demise (and subsequent mismanagement, let's be honest) lead to League One.
 

weasel

Grenville Morris
Winnits said:
Quite a costly way to finish midtable though, I guess Platt's tenure is villified as it's identified as the beginning of the problems, he spunked millions on s**te players which ultimately created the debt which required us selling off players with whom we could have built a promotion winning side. Ultimately the slow demise (and subsequent mismanagement, let's be honest) lead to League One.

Absolutly, that was hugely costly financially, but I blame Doughty and Eric Barnes for that. The sums were clearly atrocious. The only thing that would have avoided financial meltdown was promotion and it clearly wasn't even taken into consideration what it would mean to the club if Platt didn't achieve it.

I'm not so sure Platt's signings were all that bad anyway. Scimeca? Brennan? Johnson? All class in the end. And as for the 3 italians ok they were the biggest mistake but apart from the old fella I actually think the other two were good players, they just just a mixture of crackers and injury prone.
 
W

winnits

Guest
The italians were bad signings, as clearly they didn't have a great desire to be there.

Brennan was good, Scimeca too, Johnson had one and a half good seasons and about 4 of abject shite. I wouldn't call any of them class!
 

Caly in our Alley

Jack Armstrong
That John Terry kid had enourmous potential, shame it never really worked out for him.
 

B Block Red

Viv Anderson
Lets be honest, Forest were in big trouble before Platt.

Harry Bassett fell out with Pearce and wasted DOUBLE what Platt did on useless Italians.

The side that got relegated simply never replaced Collymore. Bassett dismantled that and it was downhill from there.

Platt was crap, but the rot was in before that.
 

Anatoli

Stuart Pearce
B Block Red said:
Lets be honest, Forest were in big trouble before Platt.

Harry Bassett fell out with Pearce and wasted DOUBLE what Platt did on useless Italians.

The side that got relegated simply never replaced Collymore. Bassett dismantled that and it was downhill from there.

Platt was crap, but the rot was in before that.
Bassett got us promoted...
 
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