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Published 15:13 30 Nov 2021 GMT
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When he finished up playing, Keane took over as Sunderland manager and led them to the Premier League. Ahead of the 2008/09 season, he travelled to New Zealand to spend a week learning from Graham Henry and his All Blacks coaching staff.
"Seeing them in action in New Zealand fulfils a lifetime ambition," he said, at the time.
In an interview with David Walsh in The Sunday Times, Keane recalled seeing an All Blacks player dropping a couple of passes. It struck him that no-one had admonished the player for the repeated errors. The ABs coach replied:
"Do you think we are here to coach him how to catch a fucking ball?’ He said he’ll fall by the wayside, don’t worry about him."
"I loved it," Keane said. "Brutal."
[caption id="attachment_242334" align="aligncenter" width="694"]
Roy Keane and Graham Henry chat during an All Blacks training session at Rugby League Park in Wellington, New Zealand. (Photo by Ross Land/Getty Images)[/caption]
Roy Keane kept up that interest in rugby and got along to a couple of big Ireland games in recent years.
In 2019, he was invited to speak with the England rugby team at their Pennyhill Park Hotel training base, in Surrey, not long before they set off for the World Cup. He had a Q&A session with the squad and recalled being approached by the England captain after that wrapped.
"Owen Farrell asked if he could have a private one-to-one chat. He was a really interesting fellow, a little vulnerable because he was captain of England but not of his club," said Keane.
"We talked about leadership. General chat, I like innocent people, ones who aren’t cool, who don’t worry about going against the tide. I gave him the advice I would give anybody who is trying to lead - Be a decent human being, be on top of your own game and don’t be an arsehole."
Three tips from one of the best footballers of his generation, and a man that rinsed every bit of talent and determination he had to make it to the top. Farrell and Keane have a lot in common. They are both divisive players and can rile up opposition fans, but they lead by example and command the respect of those around them. "When he plays for England, everyone loves him," Saracens teammate Alex Goode once said, "but, the rest of the time, people want him to fail. "And they're like, 'Oh, he's a dirty player' and 'He's not the sort of player we want to have as captain'. And you're thinking, 'What's it to be?!'" Perhaps the definitive answer on whether Owen Farrell is a natural leader came from British & Irish Lions head coach Warren Gatland, earlier this year. The Kiwi revealed that when votes were tallied for the squad's leadership group, Farrell got the most. "It speaks volumes for the respect in which he’s held by the other players in the group - not just the England players, but the others too," said Gatland. Related links:Football

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