Prophet without honour in his own land

HE SAYS he doesn't care. But it must rankle. Injustice always does. A man recently described by Alex McLeish as something of a shop steward, he is the kind of guy who doesn't necessarily start a fight, regardless of what the rumour-mongers would have people believe, but he won't back down from one either if he thinks there is a cause worth fighting for.

Still only 45, Billy Davies is a manager who has achieved plenty. Twice he guided Preston North End into the promotion play-offs, he then took just 11 months to make his mark at Derby Country. He put in place a three-year plan to gain promotion but did it in a third of the time. And aspects of history are repeating themselves. A year into the job at Nottingham Forest, and having saved the club from relegation last season, he has now guided his young squad to second place in the Championship. Another shot at the Premier League beckons and there should be no doubting his credentials. Yet in his homeland he senses people have yet to buy into that.

North of the Border, big jobs have come and gone and although he was considered for the Scotland job when George Burley was appointed, his desire to have the kind of influence on the coaching structure which has this time around been granted Craig Levein proved a stumbling block back then. Since then he has rarely been mentioned in dispatches.

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