Scott Brown: Former Celtic captain on hair, Ayr & choosing 'to be horrible'
- Published
Scottish Championship: Ayr United v Airdrieonians |
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Venue: Somerset Park, Ayr Date: Friday, 29 March Kick-off: 19:45 GMT |
Coverage: Watch on the BBC Scotland channel and follow live text commentary on the BBC Sport website & app |
"It was my identity - what I needed to be the best I could be."
Normally a player has hair and then loses it when he becomes a manager. Scott Brown did it the other way round.
For the best part of two decades, this shaven-skulled enforcer dominated the Scottish football landscape on a journey during which he would become one of the game's most decorated players.
These days, he can be spotted in the Somerset Park dugout with a thick thatch.
Turns out being bald was all part of the plan for the former Celtic and Scotland captain.
"I made a decision when I retired I would grow my hair for the kids and I do look like a more approachable person," the Ayr United head coach tells BBC Scotland.
At 38, the boots have been hung up for a while and Brown's focus is all about navigating the notoriously choppy waters of the "tightest division in the world".
'I did it to intimidate players'
Being bald was just part of Brown. It fed into the psychology of a player who would adopt an uncompromising attitude whenever he crossed that white line. A mindset suit of armour to improve the chance of victory.
"[I did it] just to intimidate people," he says. "I made that decision just to be horrible. Not really speaking to anybody on the park. If players tried, I would refuse to speak to them.
"Not being big time but just to make sure my head was focused and I was ready and organised, because if I had a laugh and a joke about stuff on the park, I probably would not have played as well as I could have.
"You can be whoever you want for 90 minutes on that pitch. You can be a winner, want to dictate games, be passionate, be louder than you normally are in the changing room. It worked really well for me."
It sure did. A deluge of silverware followed, including 10 Scottish Premiership titles, six Scottish Cups, seven League Cups, not to mention 55 Scotland caps.
"After the 90 minutes, I could go back to being Scott - sit down, chill and relax," Brown adds.
'It's about getting the balance right'
But age brings many gifts. Maybe a softening of attitudes in some aspects of life. And family has an impact too.
"During Covid, the kids asked if I had hair," he explains. "I wasn't 100% sure if I actually did."
It will be there for all to see on Friday night as BBC Scotland broadcasts Ayr's home game with high-flying Airdrieonians.
Rhys McCabe's SPFL Trust Trophy winners occupy fourth - the last of the promotion play-off places - while the hosts are eighth, just three points above the relegation play-off spot.
However, a win for Ayr would take them to just one point off Friday's visitors, such is the congested nature of the Championship.
"Two good weeks and you could be challenging for the top four - two bad weeks you could be challenging for the relegation zone," Brown admits.
When an Anton Dowds-inspired Ayr triumphed against Airdrie five games ago, it lifted them to fifth. Now, they're back looking over the shoulder.
However, Brown believes he has the players capable of the primary objective this season, which is staying in the division, and aims to harness the local passion for the club.
"[Former head coach] Lee [Bullen] brought in a good squad and I have got the benefit of the lads now," he says.
"We have a couple of experienced pros, but we are a very young team. It's about getting the balance right.
"There are young players coming through who have never been anywhere else, so we are lucky enough they understand the club and what it means to them.
"When Fraser Bryden, a lifelong Ayr fan, scored against Inverness Caledonian Thistle the other week, his mates were all in the crowd singing, cheering and chanting his name. When he does score those goals, it's emotional for everyone."
That emotional rollercoaster is full steam ahead as the campaign nears its end.
Brown knows what it takes at this stage of the season and, while the shaven head is no more, that driven, uncompromising attitude is going nowhere.