What's new

Robbie Savage reveals footballers' tricks to engineer a transfer

tototoner

Staying Alert
Mar 21, 2004
29,413
34,178
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/23703265

Robbie Savage is one of British football's most controversial and colourful characters.
Now a successful football pundit, he enjoyed 17 seasons as a professional footballer, beginning his career at Manchester United and ending it at Derby County.
Here is his 11-point guide to the dirty tricks footballers will use to get the transfer they want:

Sulk

Sulking is horrible and can have a really negative impact on your team-mates and the club as a whole. When you sulk, your whole demeanour changes and you bring people down with you.
I came across it all the time when I was a player and at times I could be one of the worst offenders because I couldn't hide my emotions. When I was unhappy, it was obvious. My mood would change completely.
Stop communicating

Clamming up and staying silent is a very effective tool. It was a tactic I adopted on occasion. Normally, I am a fun, happy-go-lucky guy, so if I stopped communicating, people knew straight away that something was up. I just wouldn't speak to anybody.
I'd train as normal but would leave as soon as it was over. I wouldn't stay for lunch and eat with my team-mates, I would simply disappear off home.
_69289684_51913483.jpg

Savage did not play in Birmingham's last three games before his acrimonious switch to Blackburn in 2005
Faking injury

Feigning injury is probably the most popular way of letting a club know you aren't happy. I've seen quite a few mystery injuries in my time. Some players could be sidelined with a twisted sock if they wanted to. It used to be so easy to fake an injury, but that has changed now.
If you get an injury, you are usually seen by a physiotherapist and have a scan within an hour. You can't kid people as easily, but you can still fake a niggle - and they can last for ages. When you feign an injury, there is no need to limp or play act. Just say you're not right.
Make up newspaper stories

Some players have friends in the media and make use of those contacts to get the move they want. I've called newspaper reporters I was close to and asked them to link me with this team or that team, even when I knew it wasn't true.
It helped get my name out there and flush out possible interest. It's harder to do that nowadays because the media often know what's true or not, but I called people I knew a few times and got them to make up a story.
You have to be realistic, of course. There was no point linking myself with Real Madrid because everybody would know that would be a lie!
Use the media

From Birmingham to Blackburn

Savage's 2005 move from Blues to Rovers was protracted and controversial with Birmingham threatening to make a complaint to the Premier League
You can go one step further with the media and enlist the help of the television companies. When I wanted to put pressure on one manager, I arranged for a camera crew to meet me at the training ground when I knew everyone was enjoying a day off.
I wanted to give the impression I was being forced to train on my own. That night, the TV report went out and I thought I had accomplished my mission. Unfortunately for me, the manager saw straight through my gimmick. It was then that I knew I had made myself look a fool.
You can listen to Savage explain on 606 how he tried to engineer a move from Birmingham to Blackburn using the above tactic on BBC iPlayer (topic starts at 35:55).
Undermine the manager

How do you do that? One way is to go straight to the chairman or owner of the club when you want to discuss your future. It was something I did. On one occasion, I was out of favour, so I went to the chairman and told him I wanted to leave.
I had two years left on my contract and told him I would settle for one year's pay if he would let me go. The news got back to the manager, who was waiting for me in reception the following morning. He wasn't happy.
At another club, I phoned the chairman at home. It was forbidden to do that, but I felt I had no other choice. The chairman was very understanding, but the manager called me into his office the next day and told me I was out of order.
Fight with team-mates

It's an extreme measure but does happen. At one club, the players knew I wanted to leave but some started to get a little upset at my antics. There was some unrest in the changing room.
One day, I had a big argument with the goalkeeper. He came over to me, had a right go and grabbed me by the throat. I got up, we scuffled and he ended up with a cut lip after my head came into contact with his face.
Moan to backroom staff

Physiotherapists, coaching staff, canteen workers and secretaries are all capable of reporting back to the manager, so if you want to create a stir, have a moan when these people are in ear shot. It won't be long before the manager finds out how you're feeling.
At one club, I was sitting in the physio room and let it drop that I wanted to join another club. I added that I was so confident of a deal happening that I insisted I would be playing for that club the following week.
Lo and behold, the manager called me in the following day and asked me to explain myself.
Be a bad influence

Any player can cause havoc in the changing room or out on the training pitch. You just need a bad attitude. It doesn't matter what it is, do it badly and you soon get a reputation the manager cannot ignore. If he doesn't, then the risk is you start affecting everyone around you.
Don't put the effort in

It can be hard to do, but one sure way of losing the manager's backing is by not giving 100% in a match. I say it's hard to do because you're not just letting yourself down, you are letting your team-mates, fans and family down.
I only did it once and I'm not proud of my actions, but it felt like it was the only avenue left open to me. That was the point at which the manager knew he had lost me and there was nothing he could do to keep me.
Let other clubs know you want to move

Tapping up is illegal but it goes on. Players do it and managers do it. I had two managers call me at home while I was still under contract at a club. And I've tried to engineer a move myself by speaking to players at clubs I was interested in joining.
A discreet chat with a player from another club - maybe while we were both on international duty - was an obvious way of letting another club know I was interested in signing for them.
 

Syn_13

Fly On, Little Wing
Jul 17, 2008
14,853
20,662
In other words:

My name is Robbie Savage and I've been an unprofessional prick throughout my career.
 

Gassin's finest

C'est diabolique
May 12, 2010
37,716
88,861
What the hell is wrong with the BBC? So they employ a known twat of a footballer to be an "expert", who then admits to being a twat, and they publish a story about it and are proud of it?!

11 point guide to dirty transfer tactics? More like 11 point guide to how Savage is a massive bag of ****s and how little the beeb give a shit about football these days.
 

dwayne-mooney

Active Member
Jan 6, 2004
282
455
Seems to me this is real life, this is what actually goes on.

You can either moan hes being a twat or accept that football is a business and this sort of shit goes on all the time.
:eek:
 

coopsy13

Well-Known Member
Apr 4, 2008
293
655
What I learnt from this... Savage is a twat.

Although I already knew that...
 

vavaboom

Well-Known Member
Jul 19, 2011
754
551
I simply cannot stand that we're paying Savage's wages (at the Beeb). His second name is an accurate description of his ability to present coherent and accurate analysis of football games or stories. He provides simple contrary points that even the most uninterested fan could muster up, and the gems of anecdotes from the world of professional football that he spews out are not even interesting.

This list, for example... how much of that is a revelation to anybody? We already know how footballers try to engineer moves away from their clubs, we see it every summer. All he's managed to do is highlight his appalling manner and inability to conduct himself.
 

Misfit

President of The Niles Crane Fanclub
May 7, 2006
21,312
35,138
Absolute scrotum of an individual. Thick as pig shit as well. So very pleased we made him eat a shit sandwich in the LC final. The cheat didn't prosper that day. Poor old Justin. Looked like his dog had just been shot as he was walking off the pitch.
 

fieryjack

Well-Known Member
Jan 13, 2006
3,375
697
No. 3, he was thinking about Bale when he wrote that.
All the rest he`s thinking about Suarez.
 

barry

Bring me Messi
May 22, 2005
6,505
15,345
I actually like Savage and I found the article fairly informative. He could of just said 'I knew a lad who did this or did that but he himself admitted to doing these things which I find refreshing. He never said he was proud, or released this as a guide for players to leave their clubs.
Let's not fool ourselves into thinking only pantomime villains like Savage do this, I'm sure many players do it. We only hear about the real extremes (players who go on strike) or the Greats like Bale or suarez.
To me the article shows that an unhappy player can be a real cancer within the dressing room. I suppose it's something to think about in regards to Bale. Take a small loss on our valuation so he doesn't disrupt our season or hold out, and hope he doesn't cause a disruption.
 

mpickard2087

Patient Zero
Jun 13, 2008
21,900
32,611
Pretty much all of those points just show he is a bit of a prick, admitting to not putting any effort into a match is pretty shocking though.
 

gushayes11

Well-Known Member
May 24, 2007
6,824
13,003
Not surprised by any of that, players are only human and expect agents etc tell them exactly how to behave to engineer a move, this must go on all the time.
 
Top