MX23RW : Tuesday, February 11 02:02:48| >> :120:61143:61143:

Frank Lampard does not believe spying was going on during his time at Chelsea

Southampton boss Ralph Hasenhuttl admitted watching the opposition train was a regular occurrence in Germany.

Frank Lampard "does not believe" spying tactics were employed during his time at Chelsea.

Speaking three days after reacting furiously to Leeds manager Marcelo Bielsa employing someone to watch Derby's training session ahead of their game, Lampard said he would leave it to the authorities to decide if any action would be taken.

Shortly after the Leeds game, a 2011 Telegraph interview with Andre Villas-Boas resurfaced, during which he admitted that while working under Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho he would "travel to training grounds, often incognito" to secretly watch opposition in training to illicit further information.

Lampard was a player in that Chelsea side, but said on Monday: "There's been talk about Chelsea used to do this years ago. I certainly wasn't aware of it and I don't believe it at all. Certainly not in the form that it happened this time.

"Amongst managers, and I haven't canvassed opinion, but going on my time at Chelsea and my year at Manchester City and seeing how protective top managers are over their work, I would expect them to be of the same thinking as myself.

"Pundits or ex-players who say 'well it always used to happen 20 years ago', well it's not 20 years ago, it's the modern day."

All that said, Lampard wants to move on from the incident.

"It is now a conversation between the FA and EFL and for them to decide if it is worthy of a punishment," said Lampard, speaking ahead of his side's FA Cup third-round replay at Southampton.

"I don't think offering my opinion now on what should happen is the right thing to do. I think I made my feelings quite clear after the Leeds game.

"It's up to how much the FA and EFL want to stop what happened happening again, or whether they don't.

"This will be the last time I speak about it. I certainly don't want to be the person who keeps speaking about an issue when it's gone. It's for the authorities to deal with and now we must focus on what we are doing, which is preparing for the Southampton game."

Southampton are now managed by Ralph Hasenhuttl, who has spent large spells of his coaching career in Germany.

For him, watching opposition training is nothing new.

"I know this from Germany – in Germany it's a little bit easier because there are a lot of public training sessions, so it's not a problem really to spy on such training sessions," he said.

"But there are still a few training sessions that are without public and there it also happens that you pick one (a spy) out of the woods behind the pitch.

"It's good that in England they try to maybe put now a signal that it is unsporting or unfair, then this will not happen again in the future.

"If the fine is high you will see it doesn't make any sense to take this risk. I know it, I also had sessions that were spied on by other clubs.

"If they send a signal that it is unfair and unsporting it will be something I can agree with, absolutely."

Asked if he, like Bielsa, had ever sent someone to watch an opponent train, he added: "Yes. We could because it was public and then you send the guy, you see who is training or who is not and, if there is a new coach, what does he do at the beginning.

"But it was always open so everyone could do it. I wasn't standing there myself but I was also sending 'spies' there – or normal visitors. It's normal in Germany."

ga('create', 'UA-72310761-1', 'auto', {'name': 'pacontentapi'});
ga('pacontentapi.set', 'referrer', location.origin);
ga('pacontentapi.set', 'dimension1', 'By Sean Taylor and Ed Elliot, Press Association Sport');
ga('pacontentapi.set', 'dimension2', '697282af-e036-4e7d-b245-192d60270bb2');
ga('pacontentapi.set', 'dimension3', 'paservice:sport,paservice:sport:football,paservice:sport:uk');
ga('pacontentapi.set', 'dimension6', 'story');
ga('pacontentapi.set', 'dimension7', 'composite');
ga('pacontentapi.set', 'dimension8', null);
ga('pacontentapi.set', 'dimension9', 'sport:football');
ga('pacontentapi.send', 'pageview', { 'location': location.href, 'page': (location.pathname + location.search + location.hash), 'title': 'Frank Lampard does not believe spying was going on during his time at Chelsea'});

ID:346823: cacheID:346823:1false2false3false:QQ:: from db desktop :LenBod:restore:5860:
Written by
P A
Restore Data
Share this article now:
Leeds striker Phil Masinga
Read Next:
Former Leeds striker Phil Masinga dies aged 49
>
Read more about Frank Lampard Football
rhs 2.0
Today's games header
Tables header RHS
TeamPWDLFAGDPTS
1Leeds UnitedLeeds31199362194366
2Sheffield UnitedSheff Utd31206543222164
3Burnley31161323792861
4Sunderland311611447281959
5West Bromwich AlbionWest Brom311114641281347
6Blackburn RoversBlackburn31136123531445
7Middlesbrough301281049391044
8Norwich CityNorwich311110105043743
9Bristol City31101293836242
10Watford31126134244-242
11Sheffield WednesdaySheff Weds31119114448-442
12Coventry CityCoventry31118124140141
13Queens Park RangersQPR311011103540-541
14Millwall301010103027340
15Preston North EndPreston3081393338-537
16Swansea CitySwansea31107143342-937
17Oxford UnitedOxford Utd31910123445-1137
18Stoke CityStoke30711122837-932
19Cardiff CityCardiff30710133351-1831
20Portsmouth3179153754-1730
21Hull City3078153140-929
22Derby CountyDerby3177173342-928
23Luton TownLuton3076173049-1927
24Plymouth ArgylePlymouth30510152963-3425


Sports Mole provides in-depth previews and predictions for every match from the biggest leagues and competitions in world football.
Argentina's Lionel Messi kisses the World Cup trophy after collecting the Golden Ball award on December 18, 2022Sign up for our FREE daily preview newsletter direct to your inbox!