by
JAMES MOSSOP
STROLLER
was a famous Scottish footballer who acquired that name through
his gentle touch - a tender caressing of the ball as he stroked it
around the pitches of the world with an art of his own.
Stroller
is now resident in the notoriously tough and scruffy dockland area
of South-East London that houses Third Division Millwall in the
aptly named Cold Blow Lane.
“Stroller”
is George Graham, whose efforts at making Millwall respectable and
successful grow more exceptional by the day.
Everything
he learned in a career that took him from the outskirts of Glasgow
to Aston Villa, Chelsea, Arsenal, Manchester United, Portsmouth.
Crystal Palace, Queen's Park Rangers and a dozen Scottish
caps,
is being used in the quiet Millwall revolution.
From
the foot of the Third Division, where they had to win 12 of their
last 15 matches to survive after he arrived in December 1982,
Millwall are now pushing towards the Second Division.
The
style has changed. The players have changed, and 38-year-old
Graham is working at changing the minds of some of
the most
ferociously demented louts—one recent violation was to
swipe a knife through the leather jacket of Chelsea reserve,
Robert Isaac with a blow so severe that his body required 55
stitches.
Talking
sense to such culprits is not easy, as Graham explains: “I met a
group of spectators after one match and we talked for hours. But
to half of them I might just as well have been banging my head
against a wall.
“The
sadness is that out of 5,000 regular supporters there are 100 who
cause trouble. I suppose they represent that degree of open
lawlessness that exists in Britain today.”
Critical
“We
don't want them here and nor do the other supporters who are
mainly docklands people and, although they are noisy and critical,
they are the salt of the earth.”
“I
want the team to be fully professional in everything they do and
if we can get things right with the team, I am sure it will spread
to the crowd.”
Graham's
style of getting things right has won him praise and recognition
in boardrooms higher up the League. He could soon find himself
receiving offers. He is a shrewd coach, a demanding manager and,
surprisingly, a regular visitor to Companies House where he can
familiarise himself with football's balance sheets - essential
knowledge if you are trading in the transfer market or considering
a new job, he says.