Patrick Vieira believes Tottenham academy coach Yaya Toure can "easily" become a successful manager.
The 39-year-old has made a good impression at the north London club and after working part-time at Spurs was placed in charge of their U16s after earning his UEFA A coaching qualification last June. This week, the former Manchester City and Barcelona midfielder was honoured with a Football Writers' Association tribute award and his former team-mate Patrick Vieira admitted at the event that he believes Toure will become a top coach.
"I think he’s someone who can make the step into management easily,” the Crystal Palace boss told William Hill. "I really like the path he’s decided to take with Spurs. I follow him, I’ve spoken to him and I know he’s enjoying himself very much at Spurs.
READ MORE: The two things Cristian Romero did to Emerson after his goal and Destiny Udogie's low key visit
"That was his first step and he’s going to grow. When you have so much to give to the game, it’s important for these players to get some experience, and this is what Yaya is doing at Tottenham.
"He doesn’t need my advice! He’s smart enough to get to where he wants to go. He’s someone that doesn’t make so much noise, but he’s there developing and growing as a manager to be, and he will get there because he’s an ambitious person that commands respect - the way that he played and how he conducted himself on and off the field."
On Toure as a player, Vieira added: "I played against him and with him. I remember him as a shy person off the field and a really strong character and personality on the field. I remember him when he came and spent a couple of days at Arsenal, and I remember him when he was at Manchester City.
"He was an exceptional midfield player, he could do everything – scoring goals, defending on the transition. He was a complete midfielder. He could score more goals than me!
"He had the engine to change gear, to get inside the box and he was such a powerful player, but at the same time tactically he was really good and at understanding the game really well. That’s why he was at Barcelona as well and did really well there.
"He transcended club rivalries because he was the type of player that fans loved to watch, the type of profile that fans would pay to watch.
"He could score goals from anywhere and he had this quality to make an impact on a game. He was a really important player for Manchester City."
READ NEXT:
Tottenham's takeover valuation, Eric Dier's Son anger and what Harry Kane did before Milan loss
- Daniel Levy admits transfer mistakes as Tottenham reveal financial results
- Tottenham injury woe for yet another summer signing as well as Yves Bissouma news
- Tottenham's £150m ENIC capital increase explained, how much has been taken and what happens next
- Antonio Conte sending hints about his Tottenham future, chaos in Milan and Spurs' stability woes