I think he would be more worried at having to sit next to Doug.
i would like Houllier to stay on, but no one can gurantee his health, and no matter what happens you will always have it in the back of your mind, so i think he should quit and enjoy life, unfortunatley people who have spent their lives in football just cant give it up, its the only thing they know, to turn away from being involved in football is to turn away from life,and thats the problem , they just cant see life without football thats worth living, its sad but a lot of football peope are very limited, they just cant see anything else
Quote from: john e on May 23, 2011, 04:57:49 PMi would like Houllier to stay on, but no one can gurantee his health, and no matter what happens you will always have it in the back of your mind, so i think he should quit and enjoy life, unfortunatley people who have spent their lives in football just cant give it up, its the only thing they know, to turn away from being involved in football is to turn away from life,and thats the problem , they just cant see life without football thats worth living, its sad but a lot of football peope are very limited, they just cant see anything else The problem is that for many people in his position, quitting would mean that he no longer enjoyed life to the same extent as he does now and I don't think this phenomenon is unique to football. If you have a job you love, then why should you be forced to stop doing it in favour of something you don't enjoy doing, just because you hit a randomly selected age limit? In fact, by this time next year it will be illegal to force anyone to retire just because they are 65.
Needs to go regardless of his health