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Could Sir Alex Have Saved Gazza From Self Destruction?

The shocking images of Paul Gascoigne on the front of this weeks tabloids portrayed an ex football genius who has sadly struggled to cope with life after the beautiful game.

Arguably the most gifted English player of all time is now in America undergoing rehabilitation for an alcohol addiction that is threatening to bring the former players life to an end prematurely.

If Gazza had been protected better and looked after when he hung his boots up, could he have been saved from attempting to self destruct? Would Sir Alex Ferguson have been able to keep him on the straight and narrow if the player had signed for Manchester United in 1988, after verbally agreeing to join the club before deciding to join Tottenham Hotspur because they offered to buy his mother and father a house?

Gazza has never shied away from the fact that hanging his boots up was the start of his problems, once adored by millions, he turned to alcohol to try and achieve the same fix of euphoria that he got from playing football, sadly this was the start of his decline.

Many believe that Gazza should have been offered some kind of role within the Football Association to keep him busy. He has so much experience of the game and talent that he should have been able to pass on his experiences of his playing time to the next generation of footballers coming through, sadly this never happened, but would it have happened if Gazza had chosen Manchester instead of London?

Choosing Manchester in 1988 would have meant that Sir Alex Ferguson would have been in charge of managing the player, a manager who has proved over his 26 year spell with the club that he has the credentials to man manage superstar talents who have diverse personalities.

Could Sir Alex have provided a long term structure for the player that would have seen the ex genius still working at Manchester United’s Carrington training complex in a coaching role? Would he be an ambassador for the Reds working regularly on United’s MUTV channel keeping his mind focused?

I’m obviously talking hypothetically, but I believe that there is no doubt that Gazza would have been a success at Old Trafford, his spells at Tottenham, Lazio and Glasgow Rangers have proved that.

Manchester United would have been a fantastic fit for Paul Gascoigne, the supporters would have adored him, the manager would have acted as a father figure towards him and most importantly, the club would not have turned their back on him when his time as a player had ended like the FA did. A player who gave so much for England should have been looked after far better when you consider the problems he has faced.

The Paul Gascoigne situation is very similar to that of the late George Best, both were a genius with a football at their feet who also had an alcohol addiction, let’s hope that Gazza can fight his demons and his self destructing ways before it’s too late.

The recent shocking images of the former player, who looks a lot older than the 45 years that his birth certificate displays, are not the images we want to remember him by. Hopefully he is back on the straight and narrow soon and we can replace the recent alarming images of him with past iconic ones, like his eyes welling up in Italy at World Cup 1990 following a booking that would have ruled him out of the final if England had progressed.

I can’t help but wonder if things would have turned out different for Paul Gascoigne in the long term if he had made the switch to Manchester United and worked under Sir Alex Ferguson, we will never know.

By Kevin Ashford @KevinAshford7

4 Comments

  1. What a load of crap. Are the FA responsible for every football player after they retire? No they are not. Why should Gazza be singled out for special treatment from the FA? Neither is it Fergie's responsibility to nursemaid ex players. As you say, hypothetical and a pointless article.

  2. Agree with Matt, a total misunderstanding of the man who played his own brand of football and could not have the outrageous coached out of him. He has simply carried on his life this way by doing what he wanted.
    People with a self destruct button can be offered all the help in the world but that button is always there.
    George Best, who I met and can say was a kind decent man, had the love of a beautiful woman and many good friends, as well as the hangers-on, but still could not make it even after a second chance.
    Busby was all that Ferguson is and went through a great deal more tragedy so was perhaps a more understanding man, he could not bring Best round.
    It is wishful thinking that playing for MU and managed by Ferguson that Gazza would still be on the straight and narrow.

  3. One of these days the level of arrogance United fans show and their obsession with a very good, but also very underhand, football manager being some kind of World saviour, will swallow you all whole.

    He didn't sign for United, he signed for Spurs – get over it. At the time, Spurs looked the better bet for the future (better in terms of revenues generated, better in terms of recent success), and, in spite of United fans' attempts to rewrite some kind of ultra-dominace into the past based on their, albeit, epoch making, dominance of the English game under Fergie. At the time that Gazza joined Spurs, the two clubs were roughly comparable in terms of trophies (yeah, I know, United had won more top flight titles, and a European Cup, but Spurs had won more European trophies and more FA Cups – and those last counted for so much more then).

    This “messiah Fergie would have 'saved' Gazza appears periodically, just like the 'grudge' United fans bizarrely hold against Alan Shearer for daring to join his home-town team who were 'actually' challenging the Manchester variant of United at the top of the EPL at the time – the bounder.

    Honestly, United fans, when you display this level of obsessive arrogant self-regard is it any wonder no other fans in the land can stand you.

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