Fulham deserve the plaudits
By Simon Overall, 10 May 2010 Simon Overall is a Roar Rookie
- Tagged:
- europa league, football, Fulham, Mark Schwarzer, Roy Hodgson
Roy Hodgson’s Fulham have won plenty of admirers this season, constantly defying the odds both domestically and more significantly in Europe to find itself only ninety minutes away from a first European trophy on Thursday.
Hamburg maybe the venue but Fulham’s journey to the Europa League final arguably began in the 2001/2002 season when they returned to the top flight for the first time since 1968, under the stewardship of owner Mohamed Al-Fayed and then French manager Jean Tigana.
A succession of managers followed the club’s various struggles with flirtations with relegation to mid-table mediocrity, with Tigana, Chris Coleman and Lawrie Sanchez all heading out the door of the South West London club, before Al-Fayed turned to former Blackburn Rovers manager Roy Hodgson, the journeyman tactician whose resume had seen him work in Sweden, Switzerland, Finland, and most notably at the helm of Champions League finalist Inter Milan in two separate spells.
Al Fayed’s faith in the mercurial Hodgson has seen a once unfashionable outfit into one of the true surprise packets of European football.
A first season at the helm saw the English manager hailed as a saviour as a Danny Murphy goal saved Fulham from relegation, but it was the following season in 2008/2009, that Hodgson’s managerial magic began to shine through.
A quarter-final defeat to Manchester United in the FA Cup, and a seventh placed finish for the Cottagers was just reward for fans, players and manager alike as Fulham earned a place in the newly formed Europa league for the following season.
2009/2010 has seen Craven Cottage play host to some of the biggest names in Europe, including last season’s German champion Wolfsburg, Hamburg, Scott Chipperfield’s Basle and Italian giants Roma and Juventus.
The Cottage has proven to be a veritable fortress for Hodgson’s men who defied the odds of a limited squad and injures to crush former European champion Juventus 4-1 after looking on the brink of an exit following a 3-1 defeat in Turin.
Wins over Wolfsburg home and away and a come from behind performance against Hamburg has ensured Hodgson will get his chance to go one better than the 1997 UEFA Cup final where his Inter Milan side finished runner-up to Schalke 04.
The ethos behind the success of the traditionally family run club that is Fulham Football Club lies with the humble nature of those who have contributed to its success, from the players through to the manager. There are no stars at the club, no big egos.
Yet players like Australian Mark Schwarzer, American Clint Dempsey, Irish winger Damien Duff, Hungarian Zoltan Gera and the often chided but now much loved Bobby Zamora have proved to be the lynchpins in a season which could well culminate in European glory, but all remain steadfastly grounded and genuinely humble.
On the domestic front while clear Europe has been its priority, Hodgson has still turned Fulham into a strong unit, as wins at home over Manchester United and Liverpool proved.
While its away form left plenty to be desired, another strong run in the FA Cup only to bow out to Tottenham in the Sixth round was all but an entrée to what lies ahead in Hamburg this Thursday.
The main attention maybe on the Santiago Bernabéu the following weekend, but there is no doubt Fulham has made the neutrals sit up and watch this season. The Champions League has its glitz and appeal, but this week all eyes will be tuned to a small club that lies on the Thames and a side that has provided more surprises this season than you get in a Tarantino film.
Football has its fairytales, and should the Cottagers come up trumps this week, it will go down in sporting folklore as a true achievement for a truly traditional club.
Here’s hoping.
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- Explore:
- europa league, football, Fulham, Mark Schwarzer, Roy Hodgson


May 10th 2010 @ 8:19am
David V. said | May 10th 2010 @ 8:19am | Report comment
Fulham shows that mid-table is not always synonymous with mediocre, they have shown it in Europe by demolishing Juventus.
May 10th 2010 @ 8:38am
punter said | May 10th 2010 @ 8:38am | Report comment
Well done to Fulham, I’ve enjoyed the ride from afar & as a neutral.
May 10th 2010 @ 8:58am
Lu said | May 10th 2010 @ 8:58am | Report comment
With all due respect, it’s great result for a mediocre team.. It shows with hardwork, good set up and excellent manager, you can go far.
Hilarious Schwarzer clanger this morning for Arsenals first goal.. But as one of the reasons why Fulham has gotten to where they are right now, he’s allowed one mistake a year.. lol
May 10th 2010 @ 10:58am
RickG said | May 10th 2010 @ 10:58am | Report comment
I’ve actually taken quite a lot of notice of Fulham, and I’m about a green as you get when it comes to football:) I think Schwarzer being an Aussie has a lot to do with it but like most Australians i just can’t help but barrack for the underdog.
Good luck to them , they seem like a club with their feet firmly on the ground.
May 10th 2010 @ 1:59pm
Anne Tenna said | May 10th 2010 @ 1:59pm | Report comment
Agree with the sentiments but Roy Hodgson is far from a “journeyman” – he is a master. Journeyman is one of those words that is becoming misued.
For an explanation you can go to wikipedia:
“A journeyman is a trader or crafter who has completed an apprenticeship. A journeyman is a craftsman who had fully learned his trade and earned money but was not yet a master. To become a master, a journeyman had to submit a master work piece to a guild for judgment. If the work were deemed worthy, the journeyman would be admitted to the guild as a master.”
Can I suggest that the World Cup will show whether Pim Verbeek is a journeyman – some one well qualified but not expeciptional, going from place to place to ply his trade – or a master.
May 10th 2010 @ 5:24pm
Midfielder said | May 10th 2010 @ 5:24pm | Report comment
As an aside most in Europe have Mark Schwarzer in the top five keepers in the world … some are saying he is right now the best keeper in the world … YA YA huge tag …. but it is a long time since an Australian player is this highly rated … only Harry when he left Leeds had this kind of recognition…
So Mark has had a lot to do with Fulhams rise.
May 10th 2010 @ 7:56pm
Colin N said | May 10th 2010 @ 7:56pm | Report comment
Where has anyone said that Mark Schwarzer is the ‘best keeper in the world?’
I also don’t see many people in Europe putting him in their top five list.
May 10th 2010 @ 11:25pm
Midfielder said | May 10th 2010 @ 11:25pm | Report comment
HHMMMMMMMMMM let me see … starting off with Pim… maybe not that good … ABC offsiders on Sunday … doing the show from London they said many and quoted some saying it…
SBS mentioned … it at one stage…
Now for the real test name 5 better ….
May 11th 2010 @ 1:30am
Colin N said | May 11th 2010 @ 1:30am | Report comment
Buffon, Cech, Van Der Sar, Asenjo, Casillas, Reina, Friedal, Howard, Hart, Jaaskelainen, Julio Cesar, Lloris, Akinfeev – off the top of my head.
Don’t get me wrong, he is a very good keeper, but he is not a world class player.
May 10th 2010 @ 7:50pm
Dane said | May 10th 2010 @ 7:50pm | Report comment
I agree that you can’t underestimate Schwarzer’s role in their rise. When he left Middlesbrough, although Fulham guaranteed him 100% gametime in the EPL, I couldn’t help but wonder what could have been if he went to a bigger club. I think it was Bayern who were offering him the number 2 spot at the time? Looks like he definitely made the right choice in the end and the Socceroos will reep the benefits in South Africa!
May 11th 2010 @ 12:21am
Dimi said | May 11th 2010 @ 12:21am | Report comment
Simon Overall is the best football journalist
June 15th 2010 @ 9:23pm
Stoffy18 said | June 15th 2010 @ 9:23pm | Report comment
As a Fulham supporter i am so proud!!!