Did Harry Redknapp REALLY know Frank Lampard was going to be so successful? | The Football Show



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Harry Redknapp joined The Football Show to discuss his nephew and Chelsea manager Frank Lampard. Redknapp relives that iconic press conference in which he is forced to defend Lampard stating he was destined for the top. They also discuss whether Lampard was also always destined for greatness in management and what distances himself from others.

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31 thoughts on “Did Harry Redknapp REALLY know Frank Lampard was going to be so successful? | The Football Show”

  1. Football intelligence is leaving the game, as all people care about today is impact and speed

    Just think todays football, you would never of had stuart pearce, or ian wright, who came into football late

    Such players would be lost in todays football, ie never would of made it into football, as football is seen as impact and speed today. Football intelligence is being ignored, ie what players used to be

    The fans can see for themselves football quality is not the same anymore

    Even though i do not like england, lampard was a good player, he was an good as any england striker in getting you lot goals

    Rare quality to be able to put the ball into the net, and lampard had that from midfield

    People think its easy, but its not.

  2. Successful manager? Not sure about that, and I'm a huge fan of Frankie Lampard and Chelsea through and blue. Unfortunately, his stints at Chelsea as a manager came to early for him, but you can't blame him for accepting those opportunities. To be honest, his first season wasn't bad and he did so much to bring in the youth talent. He even recognised the value of an experienced player like Oliver Giroud. So there is no doubt Frankie has got potential to be a good manager, but he probably needs to work as an assistant manager to someday that IS a great manager, much the same way that Arteta did under Guardiola. That kind of experience will give him the extra insights and managerial experience that he needs. Nobody questions his commitment and football credentials, but he hadn't yet proved himself as a top class manager. It takes time. Just like when he was a young footballer, if he wants it bad enough then he'll need to work hard at it. Maybe life is too comfortable for him now to really want to make the sacrifices, we'll see what the next 5 years bring for him.

  3. To be fair, I've never seen another player improve during his career to the extent Frank Lampard did. When he started he was decent, then he became very good, then he became excellent and eventually he was world class.

  4. So , comes down to favoritism and nepotism. If it wasn't for Harry R. to vouch and use his name , Frankie would've been turned around because "he couldn't run and he's never gonna make it". Harry bought the time for Frank to work hard, most of us aren't so lucky, time is against us – the ones without connections and I mean powerful connections.

  5. I loved Frank at West Ham, I was there the day he broke his leg at Villa, I was around 15 at the time, I did not hear people laughing or finding it funny when it happened, there were a few fans before the game moaning about his inclusion but I think that was his nephew status. It always annoys me when Frank includes every idiot in the stands as all West Ham fans

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