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Craig Bellamy Shuts Down Lunatic Fringe In Six Games With No Defeats And One Promotion

Craig Bellamy with his shirt

Craig Bellamy with his shirt

Craig Bellamy hopes his success in leading Wales to Nations League promotion will convince his doubters he is not “the lunatic” some of them believe. The Wales boss – in as forthright and free-flowing a mood as his players had been – extended his unbeaten run to six games to make it the best start by a Wales manager as his side recovered from conceding an early goal to beat Iceland 4-1 in Cardiff.

By Gareth James

Craig Bellamy hopes his success in leading Wales to Nations League promotion will convince his doubters he is not “the lunatic” some of them believe.

The Wales boss – in as forthright and free-flowing a mood as his players had been – extended his unbeaten run to six games to make it the best start by a Wales manager as his side recovered from conceding an early goal to beat Iceland 4-1 in Cardiff.

Turkey’s shock 3-1 defeat in Montenegro saw Wales leapfrog them at the top of Group B4 and boost their 2026 World Cup qualification hopes.

“I probably feel it was important to show people I am not a lunatic, I’m quite sane,” said Bellamy, whose temperament during a colourful playing career at the top level often got him into trouble.

“People thought I was going to be running on the pitch and pushing the ref and stuff, getting sent off.

“I probably felt more pushed into management to show I am not like that. People used to bring temperament up. ‘Oh yeah, but his temperament.’ I was like: ‘Really?’ Now you get to see this side of me.

“But you (media) were concerned, you were thinking: ‘I wonder what he’s going to be like?’ I understand that as well.

“You’ll see me even calmer and kinder, when it goes wrong … now is the worst period you can get me in, because my emotions are everywhere.

“Trust me, you get nowhere being that way. I’m not naive enough to know those moments aren’t coming.

“I don’t know when but it’s going to happen. I feel like some are waiting for it to happen. I know that and I have to stay calm with that.”

Craig Bellamy says he wanted to show people he wasn’t “a lunatic” by moving into management as Wales head coach ⚽#BBCFootball pic.twitter.com/XEYLBI4dpG

— BBC Sport Wales (@BBCSportWales) November 19, 2024

Bellamy said he was unaware of Wales leading the group until the Cardiff City Stadium crowd began singing ‘we are the top of the league’ and ‘Montenegro’.

“I heard the fans and thought this could actually be a good night,” said Bellamy.

“What I liked was when we went 1-0 down we were able to play and we moved the ball.

“The crowd got a little bit edgy, it’s not normal here to be playing that way. That was the most important thing, we were able to play chests out.

“Maybe we’re not a team that can keep the ball but we were. We believe we’re able to carve our way open in the game. When you look at the mentality of the players, they deserved to finish top.”

Promotion was achieved the hard way following Andri Gudjohnsen’s early strike, and for 25 minutes Wales were staring at a relegation play-off against a League C runner-up.

But Swansea striker Cullen, winning his seventh cap, turned the tide with a first-half double before Brennan Johnson and Harry Wilson crowned victory with wonderful strikes.

It was Wilson’s fourth goal in this Nations League campaign and his 12th in total for Wales.

Iceland must have felt at home in chilly Cardiff with snow showers during the day and temperatures just above freezing.

Bellamy had not been afraid to make changes for the second game of these double-headers, making five alterations in September and seven in October.

On this occasion, following Saturday’s creditable 0-0 draw in Turkey, Bellamy made four changes with Karl Darlow, Connor Roberts, Jordan James and Sorba Thomas making way.

In came Danny Ward, Ben Cabango, Cullen and Daniel James as Mark Harris, forced off at half-time in Kayseri following a nasty clash of heads with team-mate Joe Rodon, retained his place in the line-up. Rodon also started to win his 50th cap.

Iceland made a fast start with Ward tipping over Isak Bergmann Johannesson’s drive and were ahead after seven minutes.

Orri Oskarsson stole behind Cabango to meet Johann Berg Gudmundsson’s cross and force a fine save from Ward.

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