I was in my first or second year at Manchester United when Roy Keane got word that my family had gone back to the United States for a week. He invited me round for dinner with his wife Theresa and the kids.
I was a young, foreign player but he knew everything that was going on within the club. He knew my family had gone home. He knew I was on my own. No one sees that side of Roy – he is very much a gentleman in so many ways.
I didn't go in the end - I was too scared! I just remember thinking: I am so deathly afraid to sit across from Roy in his own house and have dinner. He was Manchester United at that time - and he was far more fearsome in person. But the sentiment was there.
Never a moment went by that Roy didn't feel contributed to a winning mentality: turning up on time, what you look like in your suit or tracksuit. Everything mattered. He was a master winner.
The special thing I took from Roy was that sometimes leaders slip - they say one thing and then do another. Roy was never, ever caught slipping.
It was incredible, impeccable leadership - even if I didn't love it at times because I was a young player and I was scared to death of him. But when you hold people to a higher standard - and you're able to maintain that - it's pretty special.
If one moment summed him up it was at Highbury in 2005. Arsenal vs Manchester United, the night Roy confronted Patrick Vieira in the tunnel.
What I can tell you from being in the dressing room? None of that was an act. There had been a coming together after warm-ups between Gary Neville and Patrick. And something was brewing. There was talk about it in the dressing room. But none it came from Roy.
So many people get caught up in the hooting and hollering in the dressing room – ‘I'm
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