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23rd February 2018
05:46pm GMT

“Peter was horrible to me when I broke into the team, he was,” Neville said. “Probably more to me than anybody. He had a back four of Parker, Irwin, Bruce and Pallister. It was a great back four for about three or four years, it won leagues, won the double. “I was breaking into it and he told me on a Christmas day out about three or four years after I broke in, he said ‘I genuinely didn’t think you were good enough and I thought you were a risk to us winning the league and conceding goals. “‘I didn’t think you were good enough’. We used to have crossing practice at the end of training. He used to come out to stand on the penalty spot to catch my crosses and tell me that they were crap. Every time a ball went in the back of his net during training, he was annoyed. “More than annoyed. He couldn’t have a ball in his net. Anytime a goal went in during training, he’d batter a defender if they’d made a mistake, so the standard every day was high. It wasn’t just a question of turning up on Saturday – and they were all like that. Bruce was like that, Keane, Ince, Sparky.”Neville presumably put his notorious appetite for work to good use on his crossing skills as the former England international is renowned for having mastered the full-back overlap and crossing combination, forming that notoriously potent understanding with David Beckham. Then again, you have to start somewhere and it seems Schmeichel was unmoved by Neville's emergence. It's a good thing Neville didn't let the Dane's harsh words deter him. But they must have still left a lasting impression on Neville, who seemed frightened of Schmeichel when they met in the tunnel after the keeper had joined City. Then again, Schmeichel can be quite scary. Just ask that pitch invader guy. You can listen to Neville on Joey Barton's The Edge podcast here. It's rather good.
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