tomreagan84
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The rejuvenation of Frank Lampard at Coventry: “This is what I love doing the most”
Oliver Kay
The board goes up, signalling five minutes of stoppage time, and Frank Lampard looks nervous. He has spent the afternoon prowling his technical area, back and forth, but now his pace quickens, arms folded tightly, brow furrowed — an agitated look and a helpless feeling familiar to coaches everywhere.
His Coventry City team are hanging on at Oxford United. They have let a lead slip twice but now, 3-2 up, they just need to see this one out.
They are doing the right things, running down the clock, but then they concede a cheap free kick, then a corner. The ball runs loose and is sent goalwards, through a crowd of players. Lampard’s heart is in his mouth, but goalkeeper Oliver Dovin smothers the ball and the final whistle heralds Coventry’s eighth win in their past nine Championship matches, the club’s best run in league competition since 1969-70.
“Stressful” is how the former Chelsea and England midfielder describes those nerve-fraught closing stages, but stress immediately gives way to relief and … not quite euphoria, but certainly joy. He walks onto the pitch, bear-hugs each of his players, heads towards Coventry’s supporters and, responding to their cue, gives them a flurry of fist-pumps. He looks delighted and so do they.
How Lampard missed this during a difficult 18 months waiting for a route back into management. Not the stress, but the feeling of working all week with a team and seeing that work rewarded on a Saturday afternoon.
Coventry were 17th, just two points clear of the relegation zone, when Lampard took the job in late November. The appointment attracted cynicism amid unflattering portrayals of his tenures at Chelsea and Everton, and a desire in some quarters to write off his career prospects as a manager.
But now Coventry are fifth, in the play-off places, dreaming of promotion to the Premier League, and one of the season’s more unexpected redemption stories is beginning to take shape.
Lampard and his players celebrate the win at Oxford United (Eddie Keogh/Getty Images)
Oliver Kay
The board goes up, signalling five minutes of stoppage time, and Frank Lampard looks nervous. He has spent the afternoon prowling his technical area, back and forth, but now his pace quickens, arms folded tightly, brow furrowed — an agitated look and a helpless feeling familiar to coaches everywhere.
His Coventry City team are hanging on at Oxford United. They have let a lead slip twice but now, 3-2 up, they just need to see this one out.
They are doing the right things, running down the clock, but then they concede a cheap free kick, then a corner. The ball runs loose and is sent goalwards, through a crowd of players. Lampard’s heart is in his mouth, but goalkeeper Oliver Dovin smothers the ball and the final whistle heralds Coventry’s eighth win in their past nine Championship matches, the club’s best run in league competition since 1969-70.
“Stressful” is how the former Chelsea and England midfielder describes those nerve-fraught closing stages, but stress immediately gives way to relief and … not quite euphoria, but certainly joy. He walks onto the pitch, bear-hugs each of his players, heads towards Coventry’s supporters and, responding to their cue, gives them a flurry of fist-pumps. He looks delighted and so do they.
How Lampard missed this during a difficult 18 months waiting for a route back into management. Not the stress, but the feeling of working all week with a team and seeing that work rewarded on a Saturday afternoon.
Coventry were 17th, just two points clear of the relegation zone, when Lampard took the job in late November. The appointment attracted cynicism amid unflattering portrayals of his tenures at Chelsea and Everton, and a desire in some quarters to write off his career prospects as a manager.
But now Coventry are fifth, in the play-off places, dreaming of promotion to the Premier League, and one of the season’s more unexpected redemption stories is beginning to take shape.

Lampard and his players celebrate the win at Oxford United (Eddie Keogh/Getty Images)