He was a bit of a tactical upstart when he started in management at Rochdale five years ago. His Total Football, the relentless pursuit of dominating possession, was so startling in League One that his team went viral across social media, heightened by romantic cup runs, including a draw at Old Trafford.
Barry Murphy briefly became one of the most talked-about young coaches in the game, and the Cork lads saw it. The Irish way is to playfully nip any thoughts of grandiose in the bud, and so the texts rained down.
They mocked him for producing fashionable displays but not winning points and joked he would be âback homeâ soon enough with a tail between legs. They were half-rightâaa youthful Rochdale suffered relegation.
Then there was another claimâ'you've been too busy watching your man at Manchester City.â
Yer man would become Barry Murphyâs boss soon enough. From 2021, he worked for Pep Guardiola until leaving City this summer. As Under-21 head coach, he helped with first team training, studying Guardiola and taking notes.
It was a front-row seat for the greatest spell of superiority the English game has seen in a long while and was also integral in the growth of Cole Palmer, Oscar Bobb, and Rico Lewis.
Barry Murphy would never say this himself, but the man looking after the kids saw his role within Guardiolaâs inner circle grow. He became more hands-on and involved every week.
Guardiola heavily leans on him for character references for the teenagers coming through, much like he did with his predecessor, Enzo Maresca. That guy has done all right for himself since, and Barry-Murphy fancies a piece of it on his own now too.
Engaging, a 100mph conversationalist, he doesnât really delve into the tactical genius of City as he reflects on a period that likely defines his future career.
âIâve got a theory that I recently explained to my wife (TV presenter Sarah-Jane Crawford),â he says. âPepâs got this unbelievable ability to make you want to please him. I see it with my children; you know when youâre looking for the attention of your mother or father?
âHeâs got this amazing personal touch, which makes you feel incredible. Itâs linked to how good he is. You want to feel youâre contributing to what heâs doing. He might ask you to do the simplest thing and if you do it well and he goes âperfectâ, you feel your life is complete.
âThen there are other days when he doesnât quite get what he wants and you feel like youâve failed him. You might not deserve praise, and in that moment he can appear like heâs not valuing what youâre doing, but he does it in a wayâaand I donât know whether this is conscious or notâtthat you then want to go back the next day and do it perfectly.
âThere were a couple of days where I was doing practice with them and my service just wasnât right. When itâs not perfect, he gives you the look. He doesnât say anything. It lives with you until you can put it right.
âI reckon thatâs what it must be like for the players. He is patient with the ones who have good attitudes, but if he sees you receiving the ball with the wrong body shape, thatâs when you see him at his most intense. Heâll show you.
âIf there is something he doesnât like in an action designed to replicate the game, heâll jump in. Thatâs it in a nutshell. Heâs mind-blowing. However good you think he is, heâs better.â
This is a fascinating hour in Barry Murphyâs company. He has closely watched Marescaâs rise, first at Leicester and now at Chelsea. He is also aware of what Mikel Arteta picked up from Guardiola and took into reawakening Arsenal.
Vincent Kompanyâs trajectory is slightly different in that Bayern Munichâs manager never coached at City, yet it does make you sit and wonder. So many of those who are in close contact with Guardiola achieve success.
There is no reason why Barry-Murphy cannot replicate that. He wants a challenge and has set no geographical limits.
âAnywhere in the world,â he says. âIf I see it and like it, Iâll go. I fell into management. I became Rochdale manager because my friend Keith Hill got sacked. I had a clear idea of playing. I knew what I wanted to do, but I didnât always know how to do it.
âI remember Txiki (Begiristain, Cityâs sporting director) saying to me that you end up talking so much about what you do and how you do it that people donât want to hear it.
âIf you keep talking about the way you play, then when you go on a losing run, nobody cares. I felt sometimes at Rochdale; when I look back, I spent too much time talking about style.
âYou never see a manager say, âWell, I donât want the ball, and I donât want to press." Everyone wants that, but they donât always know how, do they? Iâve learned how to attack more efficiently. Iâve evolved to make sure the football you see when I go back isnât boring.â
Begiristain became an unforeseen mentor for Barry Murphy. In 2023, after the Under-21s lifted a third straight league title, he asked him to stay for 12 more months and then promised the club would set him free.
It was an inspired decision, given how Guardiola continued to gravitate towards the Irishman. He got an extra few months to soak up the magic of Cityâs fourth-league title on the spin.
âWhen I joined I instinctively, 100 percent, knew it was the right decision,â he says. âThe club said Iâd have the chance to work with Pep every day. I thought, âIâll never get this opportunity again.â.
âHeâs got an unbelievable aura, a presence. He can be really sensitive and have that empathy when you might not be expecting it. Thatâs why he has got so much credit when he demands so much from you. It is unbelievable.
âWeâd had a baby after having a miscarriage. How he interacted with me and my wife was incredible.
âHe barely knew me; it was when I first went there. When I rocked up, I was an ex-manager from Rochdale whoâd taken them down. He made me feel integralâhe and Manel (Estiarte, head of player support) were like that from the first day.â
It is easy to surmise that any coach can take away plenty from three years next to Guardiola, but, practically, what does that look like?
As Barry-Murphy reasons, you cannot get inside the manâs head, so there has to be something visibly tangible. The Sunday Sessions offer that.
âThe ones who didnât play for the seniors and under-21s would always come together for a session on the Sunday,â he says. âItâs quite an individual thing for Pep; itâs brilliant. Iâve heard of clubs where the younger players provide opposition, but never when itâs so entwined and so involved.
âHeâs always there on a Sunday, always. He wants to see them and how they react. He doesnât miss a trick. The way he works is classy. This way of training that he does is liberating and empowering. It gives you belief that what he is asking of you, youâve trained it over and over again. There is so much tactical innovation, an obsession with tactics.
âWhat people donât see is that from day one of pre-season, Pep is working on the simplest technical action from scratch. Iâve seen players think pre-season is relatively easy, and thatâs interesting to me. Itâs just his way; he builds.
âItâs that attention to repetition of the simple things. When Rico Lewis plays inside, heâs done a million passing drills, so he has that repetition. When he gets possession in drills, itâs exactly the same position as in a game.
âItâs like golf. You get that swing from hours on the range.â
Ready to tee off himself, Barry-Murphy now has a few additional clubs in his bag.
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