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An upbringing spent in and around the highest tiers of English football gave Owen Coyle Jr a rare edge in pursuing his own coaching career – but he's by no means riding on his dad's coattails. <\/p>\n
The namesake son of the former Burnley and Bolton manager had unfettered access to his dad's teams at a time when he was just discovering his own passion for the sport. And two decades later, that education is now starting to crystallise – despite the fact he already has close to a decade of coaching experience already under his belt.<\/p>\n
While his dad is now in his 20th year as a first-team manager having rejoined Indian Premier League side Chennaiyin earlier this summer, Coyle Jr has one record under his belt his pa is unlikely to match. That's after spending eight years as first-team coach of England's amputee national team – a role he took on at just 18 years of age – and helping to promote a variation of the sport that deserves a bigger piece of the spotlight.<\/p>\n
"I think there\u2019s probably a lot of misunderstanding in the mainstream game, like women\u2019s football, 10 years ago nobody gave it a chance or wanted to spend [the sufficient] time on it," he told Daily Star Sport<\/b>. "Whereas if you actually invest five, 10 minutes of your time to look [at amputee football] and understand the rules, it\u2019s fascinating. It\u2019s phenomenal within its own right.<\/p>\n
READ MORE: <\/b>Suspended Spanish FA chief Luis Rubiales hit with sexual assault complaint by prosecutor<\/b><\/p>\n
\u201cIs it directly correlated to a male Premier League game? No, it\u2019s not. But there are some similarities and is it amazing in its own right? Absolutely yes, it is."<\/p>\n
Amputee football has numerous distinctions from its mainstream cousin, the main ones being that it's only seven-a-side and has 25-minute halves – not to mention the fact every outfielder will have only one lower limb fully intact. Pete Wild – current manager of Barrow – introduced Coyle Jr to the sport while he himself was coaching the team, and the Scot eventually succeeded his mentor in 2014.<\/p>\n
Coyle Jr left the role in the summer of 2022 after eight years in charge but still holds a place on the team's committee, a position he'll keep "as long as they\u2019ll have me" and is still adding something to the sport. And while some may feel the game doesn't have the transferrable skills needed to thrive in its 11-a-side counterpart, he couldn't disagree more.<\/span><\/p>\nWhat's your favourite memory from Owen Coyle's spell in the Premier League? Let us know in the comments section below.<\/i><\/b><\/p>\n
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\u201cThat opportunity to be involved in amputee football for 10 years, to lead people for six or seven years – particularly when I was 19, 20, 21 – it\u2019s invaluable," he continued. "Because I sit here now at 27, but I\u2019ve actually been a leader for 10 years in a high-performance setting.<\/p>\n
\u201cAnd I feel very confident within my ability and skill sets, and if you were to say to me, \u2018Owen, tomorrow you\u2019re the head coach of a team\u2019 at any level, I\u2019d be confident I could go and deliver on that really, really well.\u201d<\/p>\n
It's not all positive being so closely associated with a man made famous after firing an unlikely Burnley team to the Premier League in his first full season at Turf Moor. While that experience undoubtedly yielded benefits for the emerging talent, he goes on to explain how perceptions of his dad and his coaching methods may unfairly influence opinions of him as he makes his way in the sport.<\/p>\n
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There's an unprecedented platform for young coaches to make their mark in the game, with the likes of Julian Nagelsmann, Will Still and Domenico Tedesco among those examples who have made waves in management without playing to a high level. Asked whether there are advantages to be had from being younger and more adaptive in one's coaching, Coyle Jr replied it "helps in parts" to stay current in an ever-evolving sport, adding he boasts both great differences and similarities to his dad in terms of approach.<\/span><\/p>\nCurrently studying to gain his UEFA Pro Licence, Coyle Jr is taking the steps necessary to make more of an impact in the mainstream game. He spent last season studying under dad Owen at Queen's Park, where they finished third in the Scottish Championship before just<\/i> missing out on promotion via a 4-3 play-off final defeat to Partick Thistle.<\/p>\n
The 27-year-old was also promoted to the role of reserves coach after impressing early on with the club's youth teams. And there was a period where he and his dad were quite literally eating, sleeping and breathing football as cohabitants in his home city of Glasgow.<\/p>\n
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\u201cMe and my dad genuinely are the best of friends," Said Coyle with an undeniable admiration. "So living together was very much just speaking, talking, watching football regularly. We\u2019d get up and travel to training together, have dinner, sit and watch a game, potentially go play five-a-side, then come back and repeat the next day.<\/p>\n
\u201cSo it was football 24\/7, but it was brilliant.\u201d<\/p>\n
There are certainly worse jobs out there, though he did clarify they weren't left completely to their own devices: \u201cMum came up every now and then to keep us in check, make sure we\u2019re still living and breathing!\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<\/p>\n
It was under Coyle Sr that Burnley made their way back to the top tier of English football for the first time in 33 years, while his son was in his early teenage years and had regular contact with the squad. However, it was a much grander name of the coaching industry whom Coyle Jr had an unexpected brush with in August 2009 after Robbie Blake's famous free-kick downed Sir Alex Ferguson's Manchester United in their first Premier League outing at Turf Moor.<\/p>\n
"[After full-time] my dad said, \u2018Go in the office, there\u2019s too much going on here,'" recalled Coyle. "So I\u2019m sat there watching Sky Sports News, just replays of the game with a can of Irn Bru, obviously chuffed to bits but probably hiding it a little bit. My dad said he\u2019s going to do the media, so I\u2019m sat in this room. Next minute the door knocks, and Sir Alex walks in. <\/p>\n
"And I\u2019m only 13 or 14, not really knowing how to respond. Knowing his team\u2019s just been beat 1-0, knowing he\u2019s quite a fiery character. So I\u2019m looking at him eyes wide open, and you can clearly tell I was young and in shock. And he asked, \u201cDo you know where the manager is, son?\u2019 And I was stumbling and stuttering and said, \u2018My dad\u2019s just up doing the media.\u2019<\/p>\n
\u201cAnd he said, \u2018Your dad\u2019s the manager?\u2019 I said, \u2018Yeah, yeah.\u2019 Next minute he comes in and plonks himself on the seat. He said, \u2018He\u2019ll only be five minutes, I\u2019ll just wait right here.'"<\/p>\n
Famous for his hairdryer treatment of players and officials alike, one might have forgiven Ferguson for feeling somewhat frosty after suffering a surprise loss at lowly Burnley. But Coyle Jr's experience couldn't have been more different.<\/p>\n
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He added: \u201cSo I\u2019m sat there in silence watching Sky Sports News, Robbie Blake\u2019s free-kick is flying into the top corner on the screen. And he turned around to me and asked, \u2018What did you think of the game?\u2019 That just put me in a whole world of problems. I\u2019ve had the best experience of my life, seeing my dad\u2019s team beat Manchester United!<\/p>\n
\u201cI just kind of mumbled, I don\u2019t even know what I said to him. And he just sat there and spoke to me: \u2018What a team your dad\u2019s got, what a team Burnley are, delighted for how he\u2019s done, obviously not happy with my boys.\u2019 And he just really made me feel at ease and comfortable. My dad came in, and as soon as he saw I was sat with him, he told me, \u2018Right, you, out the door.\u2019\u201d<\/p>\n
As far as footballing educations go, learning how to conduct one's self in defeat doesn't get a lot better. And although Coyle Jr is taking a very unique path into the sport, those lessons may yet produce an academic mind ready to make use of an already impressive r\u00e9sum\u00e9.<\/p>\n