Italian connections run deep for the man Inter call 'Mister Flanaghan'
That Roy Hodgson was appointed coach by a club like Inter shows he is highly thought of by Sunday's opponents. By Sam Wallace
Your support helps us to tell the story
From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging.
At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story.
The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it.
Your support makes all the difference.You probably had to be there, and know the politics around Internazionale in the mid-1990s, to find it funny, but footage of a sketch involving Roy Hodgson and an Italian comedian is still available on the internet.
Hodgson, then the Inter coach, does not yet have the grey hair he has now but, in a double-breasted suit standing in an office, he has changed little in 15 years.
The man alongside him is a comedy character known as "Mister Flanaghan" dressed in what Italians regard as the archetypal British fashion. He asks Hodgson questions in heavily accented English, egged on by unseen presenters in the studio whose voices can be heard. First he asks Hodgson's name and when he gets his answer, asks, mystified: "Are you from Massachusetts?" Hodgson replies he is from London. "South Massachusetts or north Massachusetts?", comes the reply.
Finally "Mister Flanaghan" asks "What's your job?" Hodgson, as one can only assume he has been told to say, replies: "I don't know." That is the end of the sketch. The voices in the studio react with delight. As previously mentioned, you really had to be there.
The strange thing about the "Mister Flanaghan" skit is that it tends to be what many Inter fans remember first when you ask them about Hodgson's time in charge of the club. That, and selling Roberto Carlos to Real Madrid. He came back to manage them briefly again in 1999 and had a short, difficult stint as Udinese coach in 2001. The notable aspect of the "comedy" routine is that it proves Hodgson does not take himself too seriously.
"Mister Flanaghan" is clearly sending up Hodgson's Englishness and there may be a few sniggers from the Italian media tomorrow when Hodgson speaks his British-style Italian at his press conference ahead of Sunday's Euro 2012 quarter-final against Italy, but his Italian is better than Fabio Capello's English ever was in four years.
Hodgson's connection with Italy runs deep. "I got the job at Inter on the back of qualifying Switzerland for the 1994 World Cup and Euro 96," he said. "We drew 2-2 with Italy in Cagliari and beat them in Berne, so I suppose that and also Malmo FF eliminating Inter from the European Cup [in 1988] had a part to play when Inter were looking for a coach, in particular my very dear friend Giacinto Facchetti [then on the board at Inter] who, unfortunately, is no longer with us.
"I think he admired the way I worked and he persuaded Massimo Moratti to take me. It was a wonderful two years with the club and when they were in difficulty I went back at Massimo's request to help out for a few months [in 1999]. I don't know that I have any particular revered status in Italy, it is more Sweden and Switzerland that I can rely upon."
Hodgson's Inter reached the Uefa Cup final in Hodgson's second season. He has remained close to the club – he often refers to his "friends" in Italy chiefly being those at Inter – so much so that he went back for two months at the end of the 1998-99 season as a caretaker manager before the arrival of Marcello Lippi. His six months at Udinese from June to December 2001 are more of a mystery, given that he left FC Copenhagen to go there. In Denmark, Hodgson had been an enormous success, transforming a big-city team beset by underachievement and problems into a club that has since won eight Danish Superligaen titles, including the one their English coach won in his only season. At Udinese, the experience could not have been more different. "It was a very different way of working at Udinese to the way I had been used to working at Inter," Hodgson said this week. "It was better I thought that we parted company but we weren't unsuccessful. We were seventh in the league when I left and we knocked Inter out of the Italian Cup. It was pretty obvious that the way the club wanted to work and the way I liked to work wasn't terribly compatible."
Capello would undoubtedly have understood the Italian mentality and their likely approach on Sunday better than anyone in the current Football Association set-up. Nevertheless, Hodgson is not a bad alternative. When he was asked this week whether he would seek Capello's advice on Italy, his answer was a polite but very definite "No".
Join our commenting forum
Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies
Comments