David James talks about whether or not Eddie Howe is the right fit for England | OneFootball

David James talks about whether or not Eddie Howe is the right fit for England | OneFootball

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·26 July 2024

David James talks about whether or not Eddie Howe is the right fit for England

Article image:David James talks about whether or not Eddie Howe is the right fit for England

David James knows Eddie Howe well.

The former goalkeeper having played under him when at Bournemouth.


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David James last year (see below) ranked Eddie Howe as one of the best two managers he had played under in his long career, better than the likes of Graeme Souness and Gerard Houllier.

Now David James has once again been discussing his old boss, this time in relation to the England job.

James believing that Eddie Howe enjoys far too much the day to day contact with players as Newcastle United boss and to influence them with his coaching and management skills, rather than managing the national side where you have so little time with players.

David James talking to Fair Betting Sites about Eddie Howe and the England vacancy – July 2024:

“Eddie Howe is too easy to say [for the England job] because everyone is talking about him.

“He was my manager at Bournemouth and I can say that from a footballing point of view he would a be a good fit 100%.

“However, I also know that he likes to train every day and be in control of his environment all the time, and you don’t get that liberty as an England manager.

“It’s whether or not that would suit someone like Eddie Howe, or whether you’d get the best out of him without being able to have that access.”

David James talking about the two best managers he played under in his career – March 2023:

“Eddie Howe when I was at Bournemouth in League One. He wasn’t the manager that signed me for Bournemouth, he took over after a few games of me being there.

“We had a dressing room of very interesting and lovable characters. In fact, the best changing room I’ve ever been in was at Bournemouth. We had an amazing harmony. It was bizarre.

“Every morning we would get changed and train at the stadium. The lads would walk in and you could see these characters going through their roles in the team. There was a lot of banter in there, but you knew that the club was going to be successful because the group of players were so close.

“Richard Hughes, who I played with at Portsmouth asked me ‘What do you think of Eddie?’ I thought he was fantastic.

“Eddie’s delivery, and I say this fondly, was quite monotone. He speaks very clearly, very concisely, without emotion. At the time, we had some very gifted younger players who were a little bit insecure and what these players are looking for from a manager is an emotional response – that is what they feel they needed to give them reassurance they were doing the right things. Eddie’s approach was different. At half-time, he would say to his players ‘I’ve asked you to do something on the pitch, if you don’t do it within the next fifteen minutes, I will bring you off.’ He didn’t rant and rave, so the player that was waiting for an emotional response got a very clear message and responded accordingly.

“With me, he was very clear on what he wanted me to do. The irony of this is that I had a clause in my contract that would trigger a one-year extension if I played a certain amount of games. Eddie approached me and said ‘Jamo, next season, we’re looking in a different direction. The clause in your contract is a problem for me. As long as you’re playing well, you’ll stay in the team.’

“I didn’t have a problem with it. I was 42 or 43 years-old at the time and understood my place at the club. We played Walsall away, lost three one – not all of the goals were my fault – he called me into the office and said ‘Jamo, I’m not going to be involving you anymore this season. You’re free to do what you want.’

“He said it in this monotone way and when I walked out of his office, I realised that I just had the nicest sacking that you could ever give a player (laughs)! I totally respected him for the way that he dealt with that. I knew Bournemouth were going to do well – I didn’t think they would get to the Premier League. When they got to the Premier League, there were seven players from League One that went with them two years later.

“When Eddie got the Newcastle job, straight away I thought that Newcastle were going to do well.

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