Mark Hughes was not ready for football to retire him after taking Bradford job
Mark Hughes has been appointed Bradford manager on a two-and-a-half-year contract (Mike Egerton/PA)
Mark Hughes always believed he would return to management after coming down the divisions to take over at Bradford on a two-and-a-half-year contract, saying: âI wasnât prepared for the game to retire me.â
Following a five-year stint at the helm of his native Wales, former Manchester United striker Hughes has had spells with Blackburn, Manchester City, Fulham, QPR, Stoke and Southampton, all of which have been in the Premier League.
Only six men have managed more top-flight games than Hughes but he will return to the dugout in more understated fashion after a surprising link up with League Two Bradford, who sacked Derek Adams last week.
Hughes, 58, who has been out of work since being axed by Southampton in December 2018, claimed he has had other offers in the interim and never doubted his time away would lead to him quietly slipping out of the game.
âItâs been longer than I anticipated, itâs fair to say that but itâs what I do,â he said. âI view myself still in football terms as a young man â I might not look it on occasions, but Iâve still got many years left in the game.
âI always felt I needed to take a break after my last position at Southampton. I was doing that at the time then Covid came for the last couple of years. The timetable of my return was skewed somewhat.
âIâve looked at certain opportunities, they werenât right just because of the timing of them but this feels right and gives me the opportunity to look at the squad from now until the end of the season.
âI wasnât prepared for the game to retire me, Iâd like to have the option to retire myself when I feel itâs ready, rather than the game retire me.â
Hughes, who won two Premier League titles with United and represented the likes of Chelsea and Barcelona in a glittering playing career, admitted he will be out of his comfort zone at a side currently 15th in the fourth tier.
Despite collecting four points from the last 21 available, Hughes is looking up the table ahead of taking training for the first time on Friday, 24 hours before his first game against Mansfield at the Utilita Energy Stadium.
âItâs a different sort of challenge,â Hughes said. âClearly itâs at a level Iâve not worked at before but Iâm of the view that my skills are transferable.
âIâve been in the game for a long time so I think Iâve got a good insight into what works and what doesnât.
âIâm looking forward to it, maybe we wonât have the resources that I possibly had at some of the clubs Iâve been involved with but that doesnât faze me at all.
âThe support Iâve had up to this point has been great and moving forward Iâm sure Iâll get all the resources that I need to make us successful.â
It is more than 20 years since Bradford were last in the Premier League while the Yorkshire club have been out of the top two divisions since the 2003-04 campaign, but Hughes is convinced they are a sleeping giant.
âWeâre one of the bigger clubs, in my view,â Hughes added. âProbably a club that other teams like to come to and see if they can overcome. To a certain extent weâve probably got a little bit of a target on our backs.â
Bradford chief executive officer Ryan Sparks views bringing Hughes to the club as a major coup.
âThis is without doubt one of the most significant appointments in the history of our football club,â Sparks said. âMark recognises our true potential â and has the desire to ensure we fulfil it.
âHis record and stature in the game speaks for itself, and he has achieved a great deal. To have him in our dugout is representative of the clubâs ambition and desire to be successful.â




