Pep disciple, son of a great – Cardiff’s new boss

Pep disciple, son of a great – Cardiff’s new boss

JavaScript must be enabled in your browser to play this video.

He is the son of an Irish sporting legend who was a hero to Roy Keane and a disciple of Pep Guardiola in charge of his coaching.

Although Cardiff City’s new head coach is a man of considerable stock, Brian Barry-Murphy has made his own way.

The Irishman is the ninth person to take on this enormous job in just four years.

Most managers leave because their careers are sorely lacking because of the club’s potential.

Also noteworthy is Barry-Murphy’s habit of accepting responsibility. Thanks to his father’s heroics, Jimmy Barry-Murphy, who won numerous hurling and Gaelic football titles during a stellar dual-sport career, his surname is still relevant in Ireland.

When asked what are his three favorite athletes of all time, former Manchester United captain Keane, another Cork son, named the great Barry-Murphy alongside Muhammad Ali and Barry McGuigan.

The younger Barry-Murphy has switched from playing football in England to becoming a Manchester City coach.

As Cardiff prepare for their first season in the third tier for 22 years, the 47-year-old left his position as Leicester City’s assistant coach to become the club’s main man in League One.

Learning from Guardiola

Guardiola is a generous coach in addition to being one of the most powerful and highly regarded managers of his generation.

He travels with coaches from all other teams and shares his methods and session plans wherever he goes. Guardiola leaves behind a ton of coaching material to assist his former colleagues, whether it be Barcelona or Bayern Munich.

It is heartening to note that so many of his former players or assistant coaches, including Vincent Kompany, Enzo Maresca, and Mikel Arteta, have now established themselves as successful managers.

In his three years in charge of City’s top development squad, Barry-Murphy learned from Guardiola while assisting in the removal of Cole Palmer.

In 2024, he then joined Leicester’s coaching staff, and his fellow coaches would rave about the intensity and attention to detail in his training sessions.

In less than a month, Barry-Murphy has already had a similar effect at Cardiff, where fans who have spent decades there have praised him as the most impressive coach they have ever seen on the training ground.

The players are taken with him as well, so it’s obvious that full judgment won’t be available until the start of the competition.

Yousef Salech, a Cardiff striker, says, “Training is very specific on what we want to improve and how we want to play the games.”

There is a significant improvement in that, I believe. He understands the structure and method of playing football very clearly.

Rex Features

I want the fans in Cardiff to swoon.

When you inquire about Barry-Murphy’s coaching, specifics and intensity are frequently the subjects of conversation.

How exactly will his Cardiff team play, despite what has been said so far?

It has a very strong position and is very attack-minded, and I think the more we attack, the more we can control the opposition’s attacks. According to Barry-Murphy, it is a fundamental belief.

For instance, I don’t always concentrate on the individual defenders or goalkeepers’ profiles. I believe this style of play will help us dominate games, dominate games, and reduce chances for opponents to score our goal.

Barry-Murphy’s first taste of senior management was at Rochdale, where he received praise for his League One possession-based approach.

The former Preston midfielder spent three years in charge of City’s under-21s, who won successive Premier League 2 titles, before leaving in 2021.

Trophies are expected at a club with such high levels of wealth, but Cardiff’s attention was drawn to Barry-Murphy’s track record of working with young players and his clear vision for a particular playing style.

Fans have turned off by turgid, directionless football at the Bluebirds over the past few years because the team has failed to instill a coherent playing style.

Barry-Murphy intends to address the glaring issue while also achieving negative outcomes.

He says, “I’m telling the supporters that I want them to be excited about what they see.”

It will depend on how well we play, but if they see a team that wants to attack as much as they can, it will be pretty straightforward.

“We can’t guarantee that we’ll win,” the statement read. We can guarantee what we look like in terms of personality and aggressiveness.

Because it hasn’t been a long time since we have been together, but the players have shown a brilliant attitude and an open-mindedness to everything we’ve suggested, I suppose the most important challenge is in a team is the concept. I’ve had a great time.

Cardiff’s League One opener will be played at home to Peterborough United on Saturday, with Barry-Murphy taking the field.

With disappointing results and performances, fan protests, and a general feeling of dissatisfaction, Cardiff City Stadium has recently been a miserable place.

Barry-Murphy, who was not there, is fortunate to be able to enter the new season unhampered by Cardiff’s recent failures.

At the conclusion of last season, he says, “It’s probably hard to quantify what that feeling was.”

“I genuinely serve as a role model for the players for the supporters,” he says. Everything has been about this season, this pre-season, the games coming up, and what they hope to achieve in terms of what they want to see, not even one mention of the previous season.

And in the end of the season, I believe that I should look forward and take advantage of the opportunities that are available to us and comprehend the steps and steps we must take to get there.

Barry-Murphy is asked to specify where that is. Promotion ?

related subjects

  • Cardiff City
  • Welsh Football
  • Wales Sport
  • Championship
  • Football

Source: BBC

234Radio

234Radio is Africa's Premium Internet Radio that seeks to export Africa to the rest of the world.