Ferguson slams Beckham, Keane in book
Sir
Alex Ferguson has used his autobiography to settle scores with David
Beckham and Roy Keane, saying of the former that he had to leave
Manchester United as he “thought he was bigger than the manager.”
Ferguson’s much-awaited autobiography
was released to the press on Tuesday, ahead of its general publication
date on Thursday, and did not disappoint those hoping for an insight
into some of the rows that marked his lengthy career at United.
One of the most prominent targets was
Beckham, who has an 11-page chapter reserved for him. Ferguson claims
the world famous midfielder thought he was bigger than his manager,
resulting in his departure from Old Trafford in 2003.
“The minute a Manchester United player
thought he was bigger than the manager, he had to go,” he wrote. “David
thought he was bigger than Alex Ferguson. That was the death knell for
him.
“David was the only player I managed who
chose to be famous, who made it his mission to be known outside the
game. I felt uncomfortable with the celebrity aspect of his life.”
Of the famous incident in February 2003
when Ferguson kicked a boot that connected with Beckham’s face following
a game against Arsenal, Ferguson wrote: “He was around 12 feet from me.
David swore. I moved towards him and, as I approached, I kicked a boot.
It hit him right above the eye.
“Of course, he rose to have a go at me
and the players stopped him. ‘Sit down,’ I said. ‘You’ve let your team
down. You can argue as much as you like.’ I called him in the next day
to go through the video and he still would not accept his mistake. As he
sat listening to me, he didn’t say a word. Not a word.
“’Do you understand what we’re talking
about, why we got on to you?’ I asked. He didn’t even answer me. The
next day the story was in the press. In public, an Alice band
highlighted the damage inflicted by the boot. It was in those days that I
told the board David had to go.”
Regarding Keane, his former captain who
left the club in acrimonious circumstances following some severe
criticism of his team-mates in an unaired programme on MUTV, Ferguson also spoke candidly.
“Roy overstepped his mark, absolutely
overstepped his mark,” said Ferguson in a press conference. “That’s the
sort of personality he has. For some reason he decided to criticise his
team-mates. He did it in an MUTV show but we couldn’t release that video.”
“A few days later a few of the younger
players were booed as a result of what he’d said. So we decided we had
to do something. The meeting we had in that room was horrendous. But I
just couldn’t lose the control of that situation. If I had let it pass,
the players would have looked at me differently, much differently.”
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