A Premier League legend has revealed he âwouldnât mindâ fighting Roy Keane.
Keane made a name for himself with his hard-man persona during his playing days, which saw him win countless accolades and captain Manchester United under Sir Alex Ferguson.
Since his retirement, he has dabbled in both coaching and punditry, and is currently known for telling it how he sees it on Sky Sportsâ Premier League coverage and on ITV.
Apparently, however, Keane is portraying himself as a âtoughâ man who isnât quite as hard as he thinks he is.
Thatâs according to former Premier League manager Harry Redknapp, who appears to have challenged Keane to a fight.Â
A Premier League legend has admitted he âwouldnât mindâ fighting Roy Keane (pictured)
Keane made a name for himself as a hard man during his playing days before going into coaching and punditry
Harry Redknapp (pictured), however, has insisted that Keane isnât âas tough as he makes outâ
âI donât think Roy Keaneâs as tough as he makes out,â Redknapp told Soccer PM. âItâs all bravado.
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âI wouldnât mind fighting Keane, actually.â
Redknapp, who took charge of the likes of West Ham, Portsmouth and Tottenham during his time as a top flight boss, is now 73 and hasnât managed in football since a brief role with Birmingham in 2017.
Keane, meanwhile, is 53 â 20 years Redknappâs junior â and was last involved with coaching when assistant manager of Nottingham Forest in 2019.
The duo crossed paths in the dugout on a number of occasions, notably when Keane managed Sunderland between 2006 and 2008, when Redknapp was in charge at Pompey.
But they could now be set to face off in a boxing ring or perhaps an octagon, if Keane is to respond to Redknappâs challenge.
Keane picked up 13 red cards during his playing career and was involved in a number of scuffles, while Redknapp was only sent packing once during his playing days.
Keane received 13 red cards in his career in comparison to Redknappâs one in his playing days
He has gained a reputation for saying it as it is during his career as a pundit in broadcast
Another hard man, however, Scott Brown, insisted that Keaneâs off-pitch persona is completely different to how he acts on-field.
âYou can be whoever you want to be on a football pitch but you need to make sure you are a winner,â he said, via The Sun. âYou can be the most hated guy in the world; or the nicest guy in the world.
âLook at Jamie Redknapp, the nicest man in football. And then you look at Keane, probably a horrible man when he played. I never played against him but I can imagine he was horrible.
âThen you go and meet both and Jamie is a lovely man and so is Roy so there is no right way or wrong way.â