Ryan Nelsen reconciled with 'naive' Herbert


Ryan Nelsen reconciled with 'naive' Herbert

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Joffa
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Is Ryan Nelsen NZ sport's 'Mr Clean'?

By STEVE KILGALLON - Sunday Star Times
Last updated 05:00 23/05/2010

If people want bad stories, gee whiz, if they want to find them of course [they can]," says Ryan Nelsen.

"I've been drunk and gambled just like any other person off the street [has]. I don't say I'm Mr Clean ... I just live my life like any other dude off the street."

But in seven years of premiership football, while his work colleagues have ingested drugs, slept with prostitutes and fought in nightclubs, Nelsen has remained untouched by the slavering beast of the British tabloids. And using the phrase "gee whiz" probably doesn't lend you much street cred either.

So even if he rejects the label, if New Zealand sport has a Mr Clean, it's Ryan Nelsen. Sure ain't Sione Lauaki.

"I've luckily managed to avoid most of it, but I still feel like I've got something in me: some wild party, or to fall out of some nightclub somewhere," he counters. "I'm not over the hill yet; I've still got a rebellious streak in me."

In New Zealand, the Nelsen brand is guided by Hamish Miller, a former senior executive at NZ Football and the New Zealand A1 GP team who runs his own sports marketing firm and has been co-opted by NZ Football as part of their World Cup project team. "He's one of the sharpest marketers and sponsorship dealers I have ever come across and New Zealand has ever come across," says Nelsen. His agent in Europe is an old classmate from university.

Asked if high-profile sporting miscreants have irritated him, Nelsen says: "Only as much as the next guy. Unfortunately, they live in the public eye and that's why it's out in the media. Am I going to sit on a bright white horse and judge people? [No].

"Everyone's got skeletons. Probably living away from New Zealand the past 12 to 13 years has helped."

He swerves the question of whether he's been surprised, given that long absence from these shores, how substantial his public profile is here and talks instead about the general excitement about the cup.

But he admits that in New Zealand, "it's a lot more fun. You can do a lot more here without people really worrying about you. In England, you are under the microscope non-stop but I love a beer, I love a wine, I love a gamble. I just do whatever normal guys do".

Nelsen says he's moved from novelty value with the English hacks to becoming old news. "For those guys, there are far more young exciting players to make headlines than me."

Nelsen has made plenty of headlines this week, although most would be blander than he might be accustomed to ('Nelsen says All Whites steeled for world cup'. Really?). It began in Fargo, North Dakota, and a flight to Denver. Denver to Los Angeles. LA to Auckland. Auckland to Christchurch. A visit to his old primary school (The Press: "The Blackburn Rovers star said he had many happy memories of his old school, Our Lady of The Assumption"). A morning of interviews, a book signing, an evening speaking engagement. Interviews the next morning from 7 o'clock. A flight to Wellington for an afternoon of more interviews. An evening speech at a city hotel. Then a breakfast TV appearance (Nelsen rated 2/10 for "hotness"), a flight to Auckland, "and now I'm sitting in front of you". It's only midday on Wednesday.
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All the trappings of the celebrity interview accompany this arrangement. We have the immaculate PR person looming over us with theatric watch-tapping. We have the opposition newspaper sitting a few tables away awaiting their own precisely-minuted turn. We have Nelsen trying to answer questions and simultaneously masticate a chicken salad. This is about his "three-thousandth" interview this week. He calmly diverts the first question into a lumbering plug for his book which he had ghost-written "to let everyone know about the players and the team".

All thes things aside, he is lively enough company. Nelsen is desperate to divert attention away from himself, declaring that "despite what you might think about the last three days, I am quite a self-conscious person". He wants to push it, instead, on to his team-mates, saying: "There are a lot better-looking guys than me on our team" and later "There are much better human beings than me in the All Whites". He suggests that "six or seven" could have higher profiles than he enjoys by the tournament's end. This seems somewhat unlikely.

The pursuit of skeletons is joyless. Nelsen admits enduring the "soccer poofter" connotations of choosing football over rugby in enlightened early 1980s Christchurch and to being an "awful student" at St Thomas of Canterbury College. But yet he possesses a political science degree – which he insists he worked for despite being on a sporting scholarship at Stanford University – which was originally intended to be the precursor to a legal career.

He says "of course" he will get a real job when he retires, "in the real world, not this utopian, fake football lifestyle I'm in now". Yeah, but he doesn't have to work. "For me, to get my head round it, I will have to work."

Yeah, but he doesn't have to work. He concedes that, but insists he's "intrigued" by the business world and hints he'd move back to the US to pursue it. It's as near as he gets to admitting he's unlikely to live fulltime in New Zealand again (his wife is American) and while he plans to collect his British passport, has no intention of staying amidst the mill towns of north-west England beyond the final whistle of his last Premier League game.

And while Nelsen is self-mocking enough to claim his greying temples as merely "Arctic-blond" highlights, he shows a brand awareness strong enough to decline, courteously, the proposal of a staged photograph on the grounds that he's already up for enough mocking.

"Can I pull the bad attitude now?" he says lightly. "You know what shit I will get from the guys? For you, you take your photo and walk away, and I get crap from all the guys."

http://www.stuff.co.nz/dominion-post/sport/football/3728218/Is-Ryan-Nelsen-NZ-sports-Mr-Clean

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Ryan Nelsen reconciled with 'naive' Herbert

By STEVE KILGALLON - Sunday Star Times
Last updated 05:00 23/05/2010

All Whites skipper Ryan Nelsen has revealed that a four-year absence from the national side was a protest at the "ostracising" of former coach Mick Waitt by his own coaching staff – including incumbent boss Ricki Herbert.

Nelsen told the Sunday Star-Times that Herbert was "young and probably a wee bit naive" as Waitt's assistant coach when the All Whites, amid internal turmoil, succumbed to a disastrous 4-2 defeat by Vanuatu in Adelaide in 2004, ending their 2006 World Cup finals hopes.

Herbert then succeeded Waitt as coach, with Nelsen in a self-imposed exile that NZ Football later described as a "recurring hamstring problem" before he returned to the national side in 2008.

But Nelsen says he and Herbert have mended any differences and now have a strong working relationship as they prepare for next month's World Cup finals.

However, he did appear to lay some of the blame for that turmoil at Herbert's feet, saying: "I felt really sorry. Mick Waitt was head coach and at the time, he got ostracised by pretty much the other coaching staff.

"It was a horrible situation – the players loved Mick and at that time, I was captain and I hated what I saw... our level just dropped, it was so obvious to see, it was pretty bad. And I said: `I can't carry on like this, I don't want to be involved."'

Asked about Herbert's role, Nelsen said: "It's a question you would have to ask Ricki, but I think he was young and probably a wee bit naive as an assistant coach at the time. I have spoken to Ricki about [it], and we are great now. He has matured about it and I have matured as well – I was probably a wee bit hot-headed back then.

"So we talked about it... and we are in a good spot."

Herbert declined to comment, but last week, Herbert's assistant, Brian Turner, told the Star-Times that Herbert had been "very concerned at some of the things" he saw as Waitt's assistant.

The dispute put Nelsen into international exile. He said NZ Football responded to his walk-out by saying: "We don't know if we want you involved either."

"Unfortunately for those guys, at the time, I signed for Blackburn in the Premier League. So a few months went past and I got a phone call asking me to come back. It was probably me being a bit stubborn [because he said no]. They had told me to start walking, so I turned my back for a couple of years and I really wanted to solidify myself in England: I didn't want to be a one-season wonder, I wanted a career in England, so I put my head down and focused on that."

One of the two other survivors from that Vanuatu squad, Simon Elliott, said he didn't play for the national side for some time after that game. He wasn't unavailable, but "I don't think it was a bad thing not to be around".

"The environment there and the environment here is night and day – the environment now is great, a lot of people have worked really hard ... and it just wasn't the case [in 2006], it wasn't an enjoyable experience. Those kind of goings-on didn't need to happen, it doesn't leave you with the best memories. But it was different people in charge, really a totally different regime."

http://www.stuff.co.nz/dominion-post/sport/football/3728215/Ryan-Nelsen-reconciled-with-naive-Herbert

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