Robson shone like a beacon of decency

LONDON, (Reuters) – Throughout a life spent almost  entirely devoted to football, former England manager Bobby  Robson shone like a beacon of decency and old-fashioned values,  of all that is good in the game.

The 76-year-old son of a Durham miner lost his battle with  cancer yesterday after fighting the disease on and off since  1992 in which time he managed some of the world’s biggest  football clubs and gained the respect of millions.

The depth of feeling at the news of his passing was quite  extraordinary with the game’s most influential figures joining  the queue along with the man in the street to pay tribute to one  of the sport’s greatest football brains and a true gentleman.
Robson spanned the generations and cultures like few others.

Born in 1933 in a small coal-mining village he fell in love  with football watching the likes of Jackie Milburn and Len  Shackleton play for Newcastle United.
It was an education that was to serve him well throughout a  playing career as an inside forward with Fulham and West  Bromwich Albion and which earned him 20 England caps.

However, it was his more than three decades as a coach which  will leave his lasting legacy.
Wherever he went, be it sleepy Ipswich Town on England’s  east coast or the cauldron of Barcelona’s Nou Camp, Robson’s  ability to communicate his football principles, his instinctive  knack of handling players, stood him in good stead.

SMILING STATUE
When he followed in the footsteps of England’s 1966 World  Cup winning manager Alf Ramsey by taking over at Ipswich Town in  1969 he transformed them from a homely club to one regularly  challenging for the league title.

Twice during his 13 years in charge they finished  runners-up, they won the FA Cup in 1978 and the UEFA Cup in  1981. The smiling statue that stands outside Portman Road bears  testament to the affection Robson still holds in the town.

“Bobby Robson was an extraordinary man and an incredible  football manager,” said Scotland manager George Burley, who  learnt the game as a teenager under Robson at Ipswich.

“He brought me up as a person and I have always considered  him to be a second father.”
Burley’s description was poignant and his words were echoed  by many others on Friday.
Few will forget the relationship Robson had with the  precociously gifted midfield tearaway Paul Gascoigne during the  1990 World Cup finals — the culmination of an up-and-down  eight-year reign as England manager in which he won over the  merciless British tabloid media to come within a whisker of  winning the tournament in Italy.

“Words cannot describe how I feel,” said Gascoigne, who  famously broke down in tears in the semi-final defeat on  penalties against West Germany. “He was my other dad, the tears  I shed in 1990 are nothing to the tears I shed when I heard he  had died.”

DIFFERENT STYLES
While Robson demonstrated all the traditional attributes of  English football, it was clear from his Ipswich days when he  recruited Dutchmen Arnold Muhren and Frans Thijssen, that he  possessed a fascination for different styles of play and could  embrace a European-style passing game.

The Netherlands, a country in love with technical,  sophisticated football, could have proved a daunting place for  an English coach to make his first move into European club  football, but Robson won over the doubters when he became PSV  Eindhoven coach and won successive league titles.

After PSV, Robson turned his attention to Portugal, first  with Sporting Lisbon and then with Porto where he forged a  working relationship with a young Jose Mourinho.
With Mourinho as his assistant, Robson transformed Porto,  winning successive league titles in 1994-95 and 1995-96 despite  his second brush with cancer when he was diagnosed with  malignant melanoma.

His success alerted Barcelona and Robson moved, along with  Mourinho, to the Nou Camp in 1996 where he won the Spanish Cup,  Spanish Super Cup and European Cup Winners’ Cup and was voted  European manager of the year.

“Bobby Robson is one of those people who never die, not so  much for what he did in his career, for one victory more or  less, but for what he knew to give to those who had, like me,  the good fortune to know him and walk by his side,” Mourinho,  who credits Robson with his later success at Porto, Chelsea and  Inter Milan said on Friday.
Robson’s football odyssey turned full circle in 1999 when he  returned to his beloved north east and Newcastle where he stayed  in charge until 2004, twice leading them into the Champions  League.

Wreaths were laid on the St James’ Park centre circle on  Friday as the ailing club, which was relegated from the Premier  League last season, forgot the turmoil surrounding it to  celebrate the life of their favourite son.

“When he spoke and asked you to do well you wanted to do  well for him because you liked him and you adored him and you  felt for him and you felt the pressures and the pain he was  going through,” former Newcastle striker Alan Shearer said.
“He had that aura about him.”