Published Date:
29 September 2008

IT'S the job no one wanted.
And Joe Kinnear – the most unlikely appointment in football since Brenford owner Ron Noades installed himself as the club's manager more than a decade ago – started work at Newcastle United today.
To say his arrival underwhelmed fans is an understatement. A massive one at that.
However, as United's shell-shocked fans have quickly found out, one thing Kinnear has got going for him, in an era where few people in the game speak their minds, is his remarkable honesty.
The 61-year-old hasn't pulled any punches since his arrival, and his colourful interviews before and after Saturday's 2-1 home defeat to Blackburn Rovers proved a bigger talking point than the game itself.
Kinnear had to cut short his media commitments to catch a flight back to London, and I spoke to him early yesterday for his post-match reaction.
Kinnear – clearly reeling from that morning's headlines, with the Sunday papers having further ridiculed his appointment after it emerged he had a two-match touchline ban to serve – was on the phone for the best part of an hour, candidly answering each and every question.
His reign might well prove a short one, but it's going to be anything but uneventful.
However, the question is can Kinnear – who led Wimbledon's Crazy Gang in the 1990s – get anything more out of the club's demoralised players than Chris Hughton?
The next few games will effectively decide whether second-from-bottom Newcastle face a relegation battle this season.
And whether supporters like it or not, United's fate is in the hands of the one man crazy enough to take on the craziest job in football.
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Last Updated:
29 September 2008 12:40 PM
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Source:
n/a
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Location:
South Shields