He told TNT Sports: "When I was quite young I trained under-sevens, under-eights, under-nines from my former amateur club. My father was also a manager at amateur level, but he also worked in a school. He was a teacher, and the good thing about being a teacher is you get lots of holidays. And when he was on holiday, he asked, ‘can you replace me as a manager at my amateur club'? Already at 21, 22, I was doing these kinds of things, and all my team-mates from my club would probably say they were not surprised I became a manager. So probably from quite a young age.”
Slot added: “That’s not how it works. If you play football you don’t look up to other players, you can enjoy what they do and how well they play, and that’s the same for managers. In modern football, there are many managers whose teams they are leading play really good football, and we can all name [them]. I don’t look up to anyone in particular because I’m not in that position. It would be a bit strange as well. That’s not to say you can’t learn, as well, or enjoy other teams, and then it’s not a bad idea to steal a few things once in a while, and that’s why we watch a lot of football.”