In the 70's there were a group of highly skilful , free spirited footballers such as Bowles,Marsh,Worthington, Hudson , George etc. - Brian Clough is their managerial equivalent. Like these players Clough was anti-establishment , conceited and individualistic and these traits undoubtedly cost him the Big Jobs which his talents warranted , such as the England post which Cloughie laments in this book. "Walking on Water" is a somewhat disjointed mixture of history and opinion which doesnt read particularly smoothly, but there are many interesting insights into Cloughie's career and plenty of regrets about missed and lost opportunities (early end to playing career,walking out on Derby,the England job , falling out with Peter Taylor etc.).I remember Cloughie most for his remarkable achievements in the 1977-1980 period with Nottingham Forest. He built up a nothing club of journeymen players into European Champions within two years , replacing Liverpool in their prime as the top club domestically and internationally. The modern day equivalent would be a manager taking over at , say, Coventry City and taking the Title off Man United the season after getting promoted ! Cloughie was a miracle worker back then. After 1980 Forest never reached these heady heights again, but Clough's Forest always played good passing football , developed many talented international players and won several Cups.They also played football in a disciplined , honest way and didnt systematically harass referees (Arsenal under Wenger take note !). Cloughies Forest from 1988-1992 at times reached the heights of his great 70's teams - with his son Nigel playing an important role in this success.
As a person Brian Clough was in your face ,opinionated and called a spade a spade. His views always entertaining and informed. "Walking on Water" is not as exciting as one of his famous TV interviews, but there are plenty of memorable moments . One of my favourites was the pre-season team photo of Clough as a player at Sunderland with a pipe in his mouth for which he incurred the wrath of his manager. That sums up Brian Clough . Another favourite part was when he mocks the modern day self-appointed TV experts with all their earnest match and formation analysis and talk of "diagonal runs and spinning off the shoulder of the last defender". "What the hell they're on about is beyond me ! " says Clough.
Cloughie did it His Way, rubbed countless numbers of people up the wrong way and as a result had to make do with managing smaller clubs when his talents deserved a bigger stage. "Walking on Water" has a wistful air about it , a lot of "what ifs" and "if onlys" permeate it , but there are plenty of references to Cloughies remarkable successes which far outweigh his failures."Brian Clough's a Football Genius" the fans used to chant - this book will tell you why.