
Chelsea
legend Frank Lampard spoke to Monday Night Football on his future, England
regret, John Terry's longevity and more...
Lampard, currently playing in MLS with New York City FC, scored 211 goals
for Chelsea, winning three league titles, as well as earning 106 caps for
England.
Here, he speaks with Gary Neville, Jamie Carragher and Ed Chamberlin on
topics, past, present and future...
@George7Watts: Any chance of a loan move back to the Premier League?
LAMPARD: No - not as it stands. I've had a very long season-and-a-half
almost. I didn't get much of a break this year. Before that I was at the
World Cup where I didn't play much but during that time I've played a lot of
football. It's very important for me, particularly at this stage of my
career, to have a bit of a rest. It will be nice to have a bit of family
time over Christmas and then have a good pre-season. When I arrived at New
York I didn't have a good pre-season behind me. I tried to rush it and got
injured. Next year it's important I prepare well.
@williamson_euan: Will you finish your career at NYCFC?
LAMPARD: I would think so. When you go past 30 I've always taken it year by
year. You see how you feel and how your body feels. You see how you are
playing and whether you are enjoying it. I'm certainly enjoying it at the
minute but I would never start thinking about the next year at this point.
I'm looking forward to next year and I will evaluate that one as I go as to
whether I am still contributing. The last thing I want to do is carry on
playing when I feel like my level is not where I want it to be. That's the
day I will say I've had enough.
@Joe_1408_: Winning the UCL in 2012 or breaking the CFC goalscoring record.
Which was better?
LAMPARD: The Champions League without a doubt. I only won it once and I'm
sort of happy in a way it was that way because it was so special. For me
it's such an elite competition and when we won it, it had been so many years
where we had tried and failed. We almost thought, and I personally thought,
that if we didn't win it that year we might never have won it. I found it
getting harder every year. The standard of Real Madrid and Barcelona was
improving so if we hadn't of won it that season I don't think we would have
won it in my era. It was a special night.
Ed Chamberlin: But that goalscoring record, 211 goals for Chelsea, is
something you can be very proud of?
LAMPARD: That was a special thing for me and I didn't realise until I did it
how happy I was with it personally. It is a cliche but team wins are better,
particularly in the Champions League. It was something the club had never
won and we were in Munich against Bayern Munich. There were a lot of special
moments in the run to the final. It was the best night of my footballing
career by some distance.
@BubbaLoo87: Frank, how do you feel about West Ham moving to the Olympic
stadium from Upton Park?
LAMPARD: I think it's a good thing. The stadium is sitting there, what were
they going to do with it? For West Ham it's local, in a very West Ham
fan-based area. It remains to be seen whether it suits them as a team and a
club. Moving to a new stadium sounds great. We all know the atmosphere at
Upton Park at times helps the team massively, whether they lose something
there remains to be seen.
Chamberlin: Have West Ham surprised you so far this season?
LAMPARD: [Appointing Slaven Bilic] was no risk to me, I know him pretty
well, played with him for a couple of years there and we've crossed paths
since. He's a very smart bloke with huge charisma, a perfect fit for the
club. I really like Slaven personally, and I wasn't surprised, I expected
him to do well there.
@KieranBeales15: Best player you've ever played against?
LAMPARD: Messi. By a considerable distance. Ronaldo and Messi are the
standouts, but I think Messi for his individual ability when he was at the
top. You couldn't get near him at his best, for me he's the best of all
time.
Chamberlin: What about this country, directly, in midfield?
LAMPARD: Steven Gerrard, Roy Keane, Scholes, Patrick Vieira. I was young
when I played Patrick and Roy Keane, they bossed me. I really admired them
when I was coming through. But I think over the period of my career, playing
against Stevie, you knew when he was on top of his game he was a force. We
had great battles and I really respect him as a player.
Chamberlin: What about playing with?
LAMPARD: Didier [Drogba] and John Terry. They were complete symbols of
Chelsea. Especially John and the captain role he plays, he's huge for the
club and I hope he stays beyond this year. John is so big, and he'll be a
big point to them turning this corner, because he'll be the one in that
dressing room, and he's had that throughout his career. I still think he's
still got a few years in him. The thing with John is, five months ago we
were all saying he's the best centre-half in the country. Now all of a
sudden people are asking questions. It's not easy for John. I know, and
Carra will tell you, when you get to an older stage of your career, you're
not playing as much and you try to get back in the team, everyone analyses
every move you make.
Gary Neville: How did you feel when coming to the end of your career, going
from being a certain starter to accepting that there was a change?
LAMPARD: I didn't like it at first, I think we all had that reaction. You
don't understand it, you probably don't agree with it, whether you're right
or wrong, and then you have to make a decision and say: "What are the
benefits of it?" I was lucky enough to be part of a great club, so was
Carra, so was Scholes, and Giggsy. The most important thing for me was
managing myself, so if I wasn't playing I had to train at the right level,
had to train less. It's the intelligence of the player to adapt the way they
play and what they do in between.
Neville: Were you communicated to? Did the manager say to you: "I'm leaving
you out this week but I'll play you next week"?
LAMPARD: Some do, some don't. Certain managers I had later in my career
didn't. Ancelotti would be the type that spoke to you before games, Jose
Mourinho did too the year he came back, giving me a bit of insight. Which is
nice, because no matter whether you've played 500 games for a club or 10
games, you want to be told when the manager doesn't want to play you, to
give you a nudge. The manager has to have the personality to deal with
players, but maybe some don't want to. Especially when managers come into
clubs, maybe they don't want to front that conversation up, but I think they
have to say it.
@ArvidNordin: Who is the best midfielder you played alongside? Pirlo?
LAMPARD: I really enjoyed playing alongside Pirlo. I had such an admiration
for him from afar, his ability on the ball, his passing. I played games
against him when he was at Juventus, England v Italy, he's a class act. His
passing, his appreciation is second to none, he's a pleasure to train with
and he's a really nice fella. Very humble, does his little thing off the
pitch, and he's a huge name. Everywhere we go in America there are people
outside with their Italian shirt on. The rest of us get ignored!
Carragher: There was always that talk with England, can Stevie Gerrard and
Frank play together. What was your take on it? Could you have changed it, or
could the manager have done something different with you?
LAMPARD: There were times when he could have done something different. I
certainly will take personal responsibility if ever I don't reach levels and
at certain times, at World Cups, England games, it's difficult, it's high
level, I'll be honest enough to say personally. I don't want to talk for
Stevie but I think there were definitely times we could have been managed
better, when we were both in our prime for Liverpool and Chelsea, scoring
goals, being involved. We went away with England sometimes, playing in a
4-4-2, and Stevie was sometimes asked to sit, or asked to play on the left.
Carragher: Do you think a lot of it was formation?
LAMPARD: I think a little bit. I played with Capello for two or three years
in the holding role, as a two, so a little bit of a chance to go forward.
But I never played that for Chelsea, ever. So there was a little bit of
that. But it was always more of a team thing. There was something missing
when I look back at my England career, maybe we play against each other
every week and there were little groups, Man Utd, Liverpool, Chelsea. And
probably when you're, I don't know, Argentine, and they're all playing all
over the world, they come home and there's a big family, a different spirit,
and I'm not sure we always managed to get that together.