Graeme Souness admits he has big regrets over his time as Liverpool manager.
He admits he made big mistakes as he tried to stamp his authority on the Liverpool dressing room, as he left his post in 1994.
"That was a job that I was always going to be offered and I took it at the wrong time, there is no doubt about it," he told Sky Sports.
"I got the Liverpool job when I was 38. I had five years at Rangers that had gone really well, I had tremendous support from David Holmes and then David Murray, and I was running the show there and it went very well.
"I was offered the Liverpool job twice and said no twice, and then ultimately said yes. I thought I would go in there and change it. The one thing I learnt going to Italy was there's no real change in how the game should be played, but how players look after themselves. I was one of the chaps when it came to enjoying myself, and I tried to change that, and it was very easy when I went to Rangers to change that because that was a team that hadn't won the league in nine years.
"I was saying 'this is what we are going to do and this is what we will do after the game'. At Rangers they bought into it because they were young boys, so then when I go to Liverpool and say I don't want to see fish and chips after the game and I don't want to see lager under the seats on the bus for the way back, the response you would get would be 'we have always done that'. It was very hard for me to argue that because I had been part of that culture."