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Monday, 9 April 2012

The Season To Forget


Eleven years as a season ticket holder. Three promotions; One league title; One National Cup Win; One League Cup Quarter Final; Two Sheffield Cups; One ‘Great Escape’; Two very successful managers; One Willie McKay, and now, one imminent relegation.

The writing’s been on the wall for a while. Rovers first fell into the drop zone on the 16th August, and bar two weeks at the start of October have remained there ever since.

The season did change in September however, despite similar results regularly since. Sean O’Driscoll, who established the club in the Championship after winning the Johnstone’s Paint Trophy and League One play-off final, was dismissed with a club on the slide.

No doubt a huge injury crisis that swamped the club last season played it’s part, even as players became fit, form and confidence remained unchangeable, and ‘King Sean’ was dismissed on the 23rd September, just days after the owner, John Ryan has hailed him ‘the best manager in the Championship’. He didn’t have many fans on his back- with the exception of those fans ‘who wouldn’t be satisfied if we won the European Cup’ (he later proclaimed). But with his earlier statement, it begs the question, was it a dramatic U-turn, or was his hands forced, by difficult directors, who later left the club.

What happened next was equally astounding. Before proven successors could be linked, presumably the likes of Paul Ince and Roy Keane would have been linked, both up-and-coming managers with a fight, and a proven instant impact in the football league in recent years. Who knows what would have happened if the directors had opted for this path. Instead a quite different approach was taken, and the same news bulletin that announced SO’D’s sacking declared Dean Saunders had abandoned Wrexham’s title challenge, to take up a challenge at the opposite end of the table, three tiers higher.


How quickly Saunders was appointed poses suspicious, as does why a man with no football league managerial experience was handed the role at a club desperate for results. Yes, it was a clear, decisive decision that had been made to benefit the club, but was there surely no tapping up? Could a deal have been really done that soon? I trust the club’s judgement as I always have.

Saunders was no stranger to relegation battles, as no fewer than eight times he faced the dreaded drop during his illustrious career, which also saw him feature for Liverpool during the 1990s.

Things started off brightly, Rovers collected seven points from the first three games with impressive wins over Crystal Palace and Peterborough along with a draw with Hull, but things turned ugly when Sky Sports and Leeds United came to town.

Things had changed. It wasn’t just a case of the new manager’s ‘honeymoon period’ was over. It was more than that. Rovers, regarded by many, as a team with very limited finance, had somehow been able to start an England International, in the form of Chris Kirkland, and French International Pascal Chimbonda, famously regarded as a disruptive influence on the bench. That week was the start of the Willie McKay era. That week, many months ago, back in October, was the week the relegated Rovers. As for the Leeds match, the club were embarrassed. They were destroyed 3-0.

That was the start of a bad run of form. A 2-1 defeat to Blackpool, 3-1 to Portsmouth, a 1-1 draw with bottom-of-the-table Coventry City, 3-1 against Middlesbrough, 2-0 at Barnsley, 0-0 with Watford, 3-2 at Millwall were results that followed, only with a rare victory over Ipswich the only glimmer of hope during the autumn.

During this spell results dwindled, from 12,000 down to 8,300. But importantly, there was one more significant viewer. Willie McKay.

His wikipedia, openly states Mr McKay (an ironic contrast to the Porridge character of the same name) as a criminal. Banned by the FA in 2008 for his involvement in the transfer of Benjani. McKay arrived at Doncaster with the ambition to ‘make serious money’ out of the club, through the form of player progression, whilst clearly alienated the club’s supporters.

Under normal circumstances, signings such as El-Hadji Diouf, who made his debut against Middlesbrough on November 1st may have been praised by supporters, but McKays crazy intention to use our beloved club for his savage, selfish ambitions, as a stepping-stone was met with justified anger. No fewer than an incredible seventeen loans and free transfer have been made by McKay. These clearly disrupted team spirit, with players such as Chimbonda also being played when a better player (James O’Connor) was available. A clear division between the old guard and the egos were formed. Diouf often refused to pass too, stopping Rovers from capitalising on fantastic opportunities.

Prize-asset Billy Sharp was sold, Wales midfielder Brian Stock got injured, John Oster hit a poor run of form and was banished to the bench, all perhaps contributed to a miserable season, but McKay’s scheming is the undoubtedly factor. Having said that, had Habib Beye not formed a magnificent partnership with Sam Hird, the club would have conceded for fun, and presumably been relegated much earlier. This rare discovery was perhaps the highlight of a poor season. We also seemed to improve against higher placed teams, as the experienced Premiership superstars, ouced Southampton and Leicester in December and holding West Ham at Upton Park, a stark contrast to being demolished away at Watford, against Notts County in the cup, and at home to Millwall, the latter a 3-0 thrashing.

Dean Saunders was unfortunate enough to be stuck in the middle. With the lack of job security a managers job was difficult at the best of times, but with a desperate need of a goalscorer and a hard-tackling defensive midfielder, and due to the position of McKay being landed with half a dozen target man unaccustomed to English football instead, he has my dearest sympathy, and I’ve seen enough quality from the Welshman that I’d like to see him stick around. His tactics are often shrewd, his substations (I highlight the West Ham away match as an example) are good. The trouble is, he’s let down by those ‘too big for the club egos’ that show much more willingness to party in Bournemouth instead of produce the goods against Millwall and Barnsley, and as a fan of a club, I find these menaces a disgrace to football, especially my club.

Like I say, I hope Dean Saunders can show more consistency, and be allowed to sign his own players in the positions that need strengthening. We can bounce back, but the next few months are crucial.

Rovers Till I Die.

Saturday, 22 October 2011

One Nasty Experiment: An Incredibly Risky Solution Downgrading The Ethics Of A Club



The sacking of Sean O’Driscoll caused uproar in Doncaster. ‘Noisy’ was highly regarded in bustling South Yorkshire town, as the club’s greatest ever manager. In his first season he guided Rovers to success at the Millennium Stadium in the Johnstone’s Paint Trophy. The following campaign the club won promotion to the Championship, via an illustrious play-off final victory at Wembley, when they impeccably beat the much-fancied Leeds United by a goal to nil.

O’Driscoll then kept the limited-resourced club in the division, performing the miracle of the great escape in 2008-09, despite sitting bottom at Christmas. The red and white wizards also mounted a promotion campaign in 2009-10, but faded their form faded towards the end of the season.

But, disaster struck in November 2010, with the club 7th in the Championship. The squad was swamped with a mammoth injury crisis, which they never recovered from, and with three wins in the whole of 2011, the former-Bournemouth manager was expelled from the Doncaster hot seat on 23rd September.

The sacking caused displeasure to say the least amongst the Doncaster fan base, with the majority of supports in awe of their quiet messiah. There were no ‘O’Driscoll Out’ calls at matches, but the man, who was also publicly backed by his chairman, John Ryan, just a handful of days earlier

What came of even more a surprise was the arrival of his immediate successor. Wrexham manager Dean Saunders was appointed- not on a caretaker basis- but on three-year deal, at the time of the appointment, the Welsh club sat behind Gateshead in the Conference, three tiers below his new side.

But Rovers aren’t a club with a fan base capable of jumping on the ‘Sack the board’ bandwagon, after John Ryan saved the club from the verge of bankruptcy before his tenure lead to two Conference Cups, Promotion from The Conference and From League One through the play-offs, The Division Three Title at the first attempt, The Carling Cup Quarter-Finals, The JPT and establishing the club in the Second Tier of English Football in just a 13-year stint. The fans remain greatful for these honours under Ian Snodin, Dave Penney and O’Driscoll (along with the less successful Steve Wignall).

The unrest was temporarily forgotten however with wins over Crystal Palace and Peterborough, and a draw with Hull in Saunders’ first three games. But, could this prove to be just a honeymoon period, as the club was then hammered by Leeds United on live television and also suffered defeat at the hands of Blackpool and Portsmouth following the international break.

There was also another factor that eased the doubters following “Deano’s” arrival. Saunders suddenly appeared capable of attracting many high-profile names to the club. El-Hadji Diouf was immediately linked as was former Real Madrid star Mahamadou Diarra. Then out of the club confirmed the signings of Pascal Chimbonda, Henrita Ilunga and finally the loan of England goalkeeper Chris Kirkland to the Keepmoat Stadium. How could a club whose record transfer in 2009 was the tiny £300,000 deal that brought Matthew Mills from Manchester City, suddenly be able to afford the wages of such established Premier League and La Liga stars?

The answer to this question was revealed on Thursday, with the sceptics again coming out in force to criticise a scheme that could easily result in the demise of the club quicker than their turn in fortune since the revival in the late 90’s.

As on Thursday, the ‘Director of Football’ role, which has created huge controversy before steered its ugly head again, as football agent Willie McKay was appointed Doncaster Rovers’ transfer dealer, with any signings the club makes to be going through him, with manager (or should that be ‘Head Coach’?) Dean Saunders having the potential to veto.

It’s unclear how long this deal has been in the pipeline, however it is unlikely the philosophical O’Driscoll would have agreed to a great lack of freedom that the new regime limits the ‘Head Coach’ or ‘Manager’ of.

An McKay’s interview with the Daily Mail, he also made some unfriendly statements about the club’s supporters, potentially causing unrest with the fans at such an early stage, such as ‘My valuation of Donny was nothing. They have no fan base and everyone in Doncaster supports Leeds, Sheffield United or Sheffield Wednesday, who can all get 30,000 in their stadiums.’ Although he may be right in hinting the club has a significantly less fan base than its Yorkshire rivals, I am aware from my experiences in the Doncaster school system that we are by far the most supported team in the town compared with others, with probably the unmentioned Manchester United sitting 2nd. The problem with the people of Doncaster is many people in the district do not like football, perhaps caused by the embarrassment caused by the team unattractive history in the forth division during the 80’s and 90’s. Calling a club that has achieved so much in their recent history ‘nothing’ is a huge stab at the ambitious club.

McKay’s plan will see the club attempt to reduce the wage bill- therefore promote uncertainty on the side’s highest earning current stars. The likes of Billy Sharp, John Oster and Brian Stock apparently have no future at the club under the new regime. Which considering the nearest transfer window is three months away how will that act towards motivation of such individuals?

Instead of these long-term solutions the club will opt for quick fixes ranging from high-profile free agents and loans, which has seen the club linked from anyone from Diarra to Michael Owen to Carlos Tevez in recent weeks. Through the new agent-system, the club will attempt to put players in the shop window. Obviously downsides to this is everyone playing for themselves rather than as a team, and a lack of team spirit and gelling which will make Dean Saunders’ position practically impossible. The style of play cannot be perfected to one concentrated in training sessions over a long period of time, but must be one people can fit into automatically. This is obviously one opposition managers can stop with ease. How does that boost results for a team deep in the relegation battle?

Perhaps it will boost attendances with famous, international names joining the club. But I think most fans prefer to see winning games, supporting a group ethic that they can be proud of; not a bunch of arrogant individuals who believe they are bigger than the club and will leave at the first opportunity. The stars linked also have attitude problems, which will also create problems within the patient culture of the club. The attendances will dwindle again if the results do not match the names on the team sheet.

For me this is a recipe for disaster, and if the result is what I’m expecting. It won’t be the stars ‘of Lorient’ at the Keepmoat Stadium next season, but our own unwanted internationals gracing the turf at L. Orient in League One in 2012.

McKay out.

Wednesday, 1 June 2011

A slide of the times?

Written 23rd May-2nd June

As the final day of the Premier League once again adds a nervous twist, the tightest relegation scramble in recent history saw Blackburn, Wigan and Wolves, all with their stories of worry throughout the season, before pride prevailed with effective performances and triumph on survival Sunday.

It was not so happy a story at White Heart Lane or Old Trafford for the visiting clubs. West Ham’s sorrow had already been drained, thus their horrendous horror show at home to Sunderland is irrelevant in many senses. It merely ruled Kevin Keen, surely, out of the running to become the new permanent manager at Upton Park. Consequently the biggest question in the country was not a lot to do with the Hammers, but who would join the London club in the Championship. The subjects were unfortunately Blackpool and Birmingham who would subsequently suffer the pains of Millwall, Barnsley and Doncaster next term.

On December 31st, Blackpool sat in a very comfortable 9th in the Premier League, with games in hand on all of their opponents, at that point it looked like the Seasiders were more destined for the likes of sunny skies of Portugal and Cyprus in the Europa League, than the West Yorkshire clouds of Huddersfield and Leeds in the Championship. The club had picked up 25 points from their opening 17 games at that point. They went on to claim just 14 more, from their final 21 matches, finishing rocked in 19th place on 39 points.

Birmingham on-the-other-hand did make it to Europe after beating Arsenal at Wembley on 27th February. However a fear of relegation had been a threat rather than a certainty for most of the season, as they spent much of the campaign outside the bottom three. However injuries came at a cost, and one win in the clubs last eight games saw the club slip below Wigan and Wolves and into the Championship. And thus, the Championship beckons.

The English top flight, however is not the only league with freefall on the cards, as for Birmingham and Blackpool a trip to Doncaster is due, who themselves saw a drop from 14th to 21st since the turn of the year, coupled with just three wins against Scunthorpe, Derby and Burley as the worst injury crisis imaginable hit the South Yorkshire club.

(League Position at the end of each month)

The low point of Rovers’ season was a 6-0 drubbing to Ipswich. The Reds fielded a severely under-strength team, which included a rookie goalkeeper, no established centre backs, a defender in midfield, the absence of their skipper and no fit centre forwards. Perhaps it should have been anticipated that the score line was to be as atrocious as it was.

It could be argued that the 2010-11 season has been on the cards for numerous years, as the club’s strength in depth has been a concern ever since Rovers’ Wembley triumph in 2008, but never has it been exploited to this great a degree.

For me, however, the problem arose last summer. I took the trip to Blackpool in April 2010, with Rovers still having a slim chance of entering the Play-offs. Rovers welcomed back Paul Heffernan who returned from his loan spell at Bristol Rovers. He had only returned to the club the previous morning, but it showed the lack of strength in depth in strikers over a year ago. Blackpool was victorious by two goals to nil, and went on to win promotion. Rovers then released Heffs and Lewis Guy, who joined League One clubs which left Rovers with an ageing James Hayter and injury prone Steve Brooker as the only established strikers at the club.

The two most defining moments of the season arguably happened last summer, as Jason Shackell signed for Barnsley ahead of Rovers, creating a void at centre half that was never properly filled. Also the record signing of Billy Sharp from Sheffield United, although adding to the worryingly low list of strikers, meant that the club had effectively spent its transfer budget.

During the summer of 2009, Rovers had sold two items instrumental to their promotion to the Championship and remaining there in their first full campaign. Richie Wellens departed for Leicester City, and Matthew Mills exited south to Reading. Rovers filled these voids by signing John Oster on a free transfer following his release from Crystal Palace and Shackell on loan from Wolverhampton Wanderers. Both signings were mammoth successes, as the club drove from relegation candidates in their first season to Play-off contenders the next.

Shackell subsequently opted to move to Barnsley last May, and Rovers were forced to shift their attention to a host of replacements. They signed Shelton Martis, Wayne Thomas and George Friend.

At full strength Rovers are a decent acquisition. This was proved when the club’s early season form took them to what looked originally like play-off contention. Rovers’ fans did have their concerns though; in particular George Friend looked a long way off the pace at left back and was subsequently dropped. James Chambers remained sidelined throughout the season, bar unsuccessful spell in the side in January, as Rovers opted to sign Joseph Mills on loan to fill the void, first in October before returning in January.

Rovers were in fact 7th when they drew with to-be-promoted Swansea City on 20th November, they went on to record just four more victories in the entire campaign, of which only Derby County were beaten elsewhere than the Keepmoat Stadium. However the start was also less than perfect, with the wins prior to this point merely coming over the three relegated sides, along with Portsmouth and Hull who were still in disarray following relegation from the Premier League, just adding to the small pride of beating Premiership-bound Norwich and Millwall on South Yorkshire turf.

The defensive crisis that followed after Christmas staggers belief. As Thomas and Martis battled with injuries following the victory over Scunthorpe on January 1st, Rovers switched their attentions to signing Dennis Souza and Matt Killagallon, who were both reported as established championship defenders. Rovers failed to keep a clean sheet with Killgallon in the side as they slumped to 16th in the Championship table prior to the Burnley tie on 1st February, as the Middlesbrough defender formed an unstable partnership with Adam Lockwood.

Rovers kept three clean sheets following 2nd January, at home to Burnley (O’Connor, Hird, Friend, Chambers), away at Nottingham Forest (Martis, Hird, Friend, Mills) and at home to Crystal Palace (Dumbuya, Thomas, Friend, O’Connor). Therefore, as you can see, to a certain extent the revival of George Friend at the heart of Doncaster’s defence paid dividends, with Sam Hird also a key player on occasion as the young defender staked a claim for first team pride when often hope was a lost cause.

It’s hard to judge whether, therefore it was the lack of the settled team or the quality of the team that stumbled upon. I think both need to be blamed unfortunately targeted.

As Rovers therefore switch their attentions to the future the strength in depth of the squad has been thoroughly tested and questioned, and not just in defence.

Rovers’ record in the absence of Billy Sharp is atrocious, with Dean Sheils often deputising. With Rovers claiming only two wins in the record-signing’s absence. Sheils is supposed to be an international footballer, however inadequate displays and this appalling record as the former-Hibernian star has tarnished, unrecognisable undoubtedly to his former followers.

Sharp’s record, does go to show exactly why Ipswich Town made such a substantial bid to lure the former-Sheffield United forward to Portman Road.

It therefore remains key for Rovers, perhaps more than usual this year, that any deadwood is removed from the club, but key, quality players remain, while new players are purchased to push the club back towards the Play-off places & the promises of the Premier League.

Sunday, 17 April 2011

Civil War At Anfield

It’s been a traumatic twelve months for football. Last summer the sport gasped as Real Madrid and Manchester City spent excessive amounts to entice the best players to their magnificent stadiums. We saw prize-asset Cristiano Ronaldo depart the Premiership for sunnier climates, before the division was thrown into the public eye for the wrong reasons, as the credit crunch hit hard and Portsmouth became the first team in English top flight history to enter administration. But nothing could really have foreseen the fiasco that has taken centre stage in the North West, as Liverpool’s internal hierarchy hit boiling point, and fuelled a bitter conflict as the club was divided.

Although the top story on the news this week stresses the magnificent survival of those miners who luckily escaped from deep depths in Chile, it is the chilly scene at Anfield that is attracting as much outside interest, and how a club with its terrific stature can be throw in equally as deep problems.

As recently as 2007, football’s European governing body, UEFA, slandered Liverpool’s fans as ‘the worse in Europe’, but surely even those supporters merit sympathy for the sudden downfall of their famous side. The crisis, although it was obviously not labelled as such way back then, began in the same year as the governing body’s evil words; as during 2007 Tom Hicks and George Gillett, two American businessmen with sporting backgrounds, became owners of the club.

Rick Parry’s sale to the ambitious Texans was made because he believed the move would take the club to the next level. Three months after the takeover- and following no concrete financial support, as there was no transfer window in this time- the club reached the final of Champions League, a feat that was never matched during Hicks and Gillett’s less than fruitful reign.

The club purchased striker Fernando Torres from Athletico Madrid for an audacious fee around £30million in summer 2007 to demonstrate their ambitious intentions; incidentally the club hasn’t won a major trophy since this purchase, despite Torres setting the world alight on many occasions with his vast goal scoring tally. The huge fee of the transfer has certainly placed a nail in the Americans’ coffin, but the Spanish magician is not the main culprit in the demise of the illustrious club.

As the recession hit numerous businesses hard throughout the world, Liverpool too began to mourn a sudden loss of finance, and during 2010 Hicks and Gillett were pushed towards the exit door. The club agreed a deal which would refinance the side, but it pushed Royal Bank of Scotland into the driving seat, at which point- Hicks and Gillett will argue- things subsequently took a turn for the worse.

June 2010 saw the first major twist in the ongoing saga following Martin Broughton and his team’s arrival, Hicks and Gillett continued to battle with financial strain along with added pressure, and once again attempted to refinance the deal they had with the club. The Royal Bank of Scotland squadron, which slightly outnumbered the pairing of the Americans, blocked the deal. The global recession showing its effects, Hicks and Gillett were in financial ruin and the bank was showing no sympathy.

A change of manager could have prompted a revival; it merely showed deeper problems as Rafa Benitez was dismissed after the owners had their own revolt against the Spaniard. The current Inter boss said in September, "The last year at Liverpool I had directors who knew nothing about soccer and you couldn't talk about soccer with them." A fierce critic who is unlikely to shy away from media frenzy, Benitez was forced to assemble what has been regarded as the two-man team at Anfield with Steven Gerrard and Torres the only prize assets. Fulham boss Roy Hodgson replaced Benitez, despite the imminent sale of the club. He was a manager with no previous experience of getting a club into the ‘top four’. He also had to contend with the previous boss’s stars returning from awful performances at the World Cup.

The sacking of Benitez and hiring of Hodgson no doubt took another chunk from the American owners’ wallets, another flawed decision, as the new owners may not have their style of football on the pitch, and therefore Hodgson’s job clearly not stable. Hodgson was immediately under pressure to deliver instant results, which with another man’s squad was far from a given.

As the takeover edged closer to its epic climax, October saw the evil Hicks and Gillett attempting to be very counter-productive and difficult to RBS’ plan to sell the club, yet the business was still edging closer to a sale.

October 6th brought change. Royal Bank Of Scotland, and subsequently Liverpool FC, had found a buyer. New England Sports Ventures, the owner of the Boston Red Sox baseball team had agreed a deal. Martin Broughton then stated a disapproving view on Hicks and Gillett: “I am only disappointed that the owners have tried everything to prevent the deal from happening and that we need to go through legal proceedings in order to complete the sale,”. The quotes coming out of the football club as the sale became concluded were more of relief than looking to the future. The loyal Liverpool defender Jamie Carragher said: “"Everyone knows it'll be a good thing for the club," James McKenna, who runs Spirit of Shankly boldly stated: "We need to rid the club of Gillett and Hicks. It does not matter where they come from as long as they understand Liverpool Football Club. That was the problem with Gillett and Hick, they never really got Liverpool.”

It proved that the owners did more harm than good. But unfortunately for Liverpool’s supporters this wasn’t the end of the tale. On October 7th the sale- believed to be in the region of £300 million- was sent to the courts to decide whether Hicks and Gillett had the grounds to sack Royal Bank of Scotland’s Purslow and Ayre. The court case was due to take place the following Tuesday. This brought with it the very real threat of administration, despite this Purslow stated: "I'm completely focused on making sure the sale completes. I'm not contemplating administration and nobody should be."

By Friday 15th Hicks and Gillett were gone. John Henry had become the new owner of the North West giants. A new era dawned. But a week of anti-climaxes and an embarrassing public affair left red faces by the Mersey. Roy Hodgson spoke of how a cloud had been lifted above the Anfield Kop. “"It's a very good day for the club," Hodgson said just before the deal was confirmed. "It's a relief...it's been a very difficult couple of weeks. There's no doubt a cloud has been lifted from the football club today."

As for the former owners, they wouldn’t die down. Tom Hicks stated the deal was an “epic swindle”. They even tried taking the club to court again, this time in Texas, but the English court stated whatever the outcome was of that case, the ruling wouldn’t over rule the decisions made in London. The Americans had been foolish not only with their ruling of the club during their tenure, but their actions during the sale prospect. It’s safe to say it’s not just a relief to Liverpool Football Club that they are now away from the club, but also away from the beautiful game as a whole.

Sunday, 29 August 2010

A Villa Thriller



Written on 14th August

Aston Villa supporters are not unused to strange weeks by any stretch of the imagination over the course of their long, illustrious history, but the strangest week since Randy Lerner’s takeover has certainly grabbed the attention of the football world.

Earlier this summer, Villa’s England star James Milner stated he wished to leave the Midlands club, and there were echoes of Gareth Barry’s demanding move to Liverpool, haunting Villa’s faithful fans that once again their club were only a stepping stone between the rest of the Premier League and the infamous ‘big six’; Manchester United and City, Arsenal, Chelsea, Tottenham and the Merseyside Reds, who finished below Villa last season.

Barry’s switch to the North West’s former European Cup Winners eventually fell through, and the midfield dynamo opted for the ambitious, money-wrapped Manchester City, and it is City which looks the likely destination for his former partner Milner.

City have become villains in the Premier League over recent years, does that make the Birmingham club, the more famous owners of that particularly nickname, the victims?

The Eastland’s side have already lost respect from Everton and specifically David Moyes over their pursuit of Joleon Lescott, who took the short drive to switch for £25million in a very public debacle. Also Carlos Tevez’s switch to the club from Manchester United, despite the Argentine stating he ‘wouldn’t join a rival’ when he opted against switching to Liverpool. And Arsene Wenger was less than flattered when Emmanuel Adebayor joined the cast of stars which is still yet to break into a Champions League place.

Back to the Midlands it looks as though Milner has a £30million asking price, surely an overrated place for a midfielder who has only been known as an England regular since the last World Cup, when his nation famously flopped on the largest stage.

I’m not suggesting players are wrong to switch to the team, now managed by Roberto Mancini, but the club are clearly unprofessional in their transfer movements to land their big names to the club.

And it looks like this might have been the cause for perhaps the biggest twist of the Milner saga, the departure of manager Martin O’Neill. A instrumental part of Nottingham Forest’s dominance at the top during his playing career, it looks like the former Celtic boss finally lost his rag on the situation. Randy Lerner, who announced his ambitions to make Villa a force in the top flight during his takeover, thoughts echoed by O’Neill in his first press conference. But O’Neill sighted a change in ambitions with his boss, and it is believed that Milner was sold below the valuation set by O’Neill.

It wasn’t the build up to the season that Villa were on the lookout for. Their manager gone, and most influential player on the exit path. Surely it was inevitable that the their match against West Ham, aided by Graham MacDonald as caretaker manager was destined for defeat?

No such story. An unlikely ending to Villa’s gloomy week as the Midlander’s sailed to a convincing victory, perhaps making neutrals thinking the problems were at opposition West Ham rather than for the hosts.

The goalscorer of the third goal? The ‘unsettled’ midfielder Milner, booed onto the field because of the actions of the last days and weeks, exited to a standing ovation. The jeerers were silenced by a splendid display, Milner now may leave for Lancashire with the backing of his current club’s fans, although the general complexity of his switch will leave a sour taste in their fan’s mouthes.

It could yet turn to be an inspired move for all parties, City could have found money well spent with a switch that could lead them to Premiership glories, the Villa become a lot richer and can maybe smile at the move providing they find an adequate replacement, James Milner arguably has a greater oppitunity to win trophies and also finds his pocket increased with more money, and Martin O’Neill may find himself a better club, with his successful CV still intact, before it turned sour in the first place.

But it is severely risky. Villa lost a manager who took them from the lower reaches of the Premier League into Europe. They also are destined to lose a fantastic player. And it also gives those in this world who have a dislike to the beautiful game yet another opportunity to slam the game which continues to fail to fund itself. Is it in disrepute? Or is it not football at fault? Is it more a case of the ‘ruiners’ of the modern game are Manchester City!?

Dream On, Doncaster


Written on July 27th

The summer rain has begun to poor in South Yorkshire today, after a mostly bright last few weeks. Glum clouds hover in the skies, and there’s a cold breeze that echoes from the trees. Maybe today is the day that Doncaster Rovers realise that this season will be the hardest in the Championship to date, as the new found optimism from the record signing of Billy Sharp begins to wear off, and Rovers fans start to realise still how very little strength in depth they have and begin to doubt their promotion credentials.

As someone who always looks at the bigger picture, and therefore sees the glass as half full more than half empty more the most, I possess a dream. A dream similar to that of Doncaster Rovers’ famous chairman, John Ryan, who has tipped the club for Premier League football. Ryan wishes Rovers to complete the final hurdle of his mammoth dream, which thus far has seen the club win three promotions during his tenure; reach the quarter finals of the Carling Cup and win the Football League Trophy- but is this dream nearing its completion? Or are we still far adrift from the ‘Promised Land’? I’m going to review the facts, but even the most optimistic of fan should be able to spot the difference between impossible, unlikely and believable. Which one does Rovers’ dream fit into this season?

Last summer Doncaster sold midfielder Richie Wellens to Leicester City. Richie was a huge player in our team that claimed promotion from League One via the Play-offs in 2007-08 and also helped us achieve the ‘great escape’ following being bottom at Christmas in the Championship in 2008. At his sale Rovers fans contemplated the worse, the former Blackpool and Oldham midfielder may have said that his time at the Keepmoat Stadium was the ‘best of his career’ but many saw Leicester as a step down, as they had just won promotion from League One themselves in 2008-09, and there were fears amidst that Rovers had become a sinking ship. Fans dreams were put on hold even further when Matthew Mills left for Reading FC, the Englishman is regarded in many people’s eyes to be the best centre back in the division, so this switch undoubtedly should have proved a huge blow to Sean O’Driscoll’s men.


Neither star was replaced by a big money purchase. John Oster, himself formerly at Reading, arrived from Crystal Palace on a free transfer in midfield. And Jason Shackell, transfer listed at Wolverhampton Wanderers and relegated with Norwich City in 08-09 arrived on loan in the centre of defence. What was our manager playing at? Particularly with Rovers still owning no recognised striker, as Steve Brooker remained on the sidelines with injury, where he was to stay for the rest of the season. Along with doubts over the striking ability of Paul Heffernan, James Hayter and Lewis Guy as Rovers had been the lowest scorers in the country for much of the previous campaign.

It was difficult to believe back then that our magnificent manager, who had been at the helm since 2006 was completely capable of keeping us in the division. The squad looked a weak shadow of its former self, and somehow we had to keep our status in the second tier of English football. O’Driscoll, not only kept us up, but did it in such style that the football world sat up and took notice, and Premier League side Burnley even made an audacious attempt to steal our beloved messiah. We must have done something right!

After an inconsistent start, Rovers solved their problematic striker crisis, by taking Billy Sharp on a seasons long loan from Sheffield United. Billy was an unpopular choice at the Blades, failing to live up to high expectations placed upon him from his amazing tally at Scunthorpe United previously in his career, neither had he shown any signs of adapting to Kevin Blackwell’s much more direct tactics. The 11th hour move, as the loan window neared closure, looked a shrewd move for all parties; Rovers found a prolific goalscorer capable of fitting the final piece of the jigsaw, Sharp found another chance to prove he can find the net at this level rather than in the lower depths of gloomy 3rd and 4th tiers of the English game, and Sheffield United remove an unwanted squad member from the wage bill? Everyone was happy and Rovers, with Sharp netting 15 goals before he picked up an injury near the end of the campaign, not only starved off relegation but also came within a whisker from the Play-off places.

Its strange how things can change in twelve months. The credit must go to the manager for his inspired, shrewd, bargain purchases. Rovers had finished in the top half of the Championship table without spending more than £500,000 on any one player. Its no wonder Burnley came knocking, but due to the financial stability Rovers had installed, the Lancashire side backed away and Rovers went on to continue their to-be-unsuccessful promotion push, as Burnley were relegated with Brian Laws at the helm.

Its not just the manager which makes my club so special. The dreams of the chairman and the fans, who often get realism and optimism confused within one another have to be given credit. And so the club’s rise shows no signs of slowing.

Rovers were so confident enough in their ability to maintain a challenge for promotion to the next level in the coming season that the club broke their transfer record to make Billy Sharp the highest paid player in the clubs history, fighting off Leeds United and Burley to do this. Who are both arguably bigger clubs. Sharp is no doubt confident in Rovers ambitions, and the club believe they can continue their drive on their quest for even greater glories.

But not everyone is an optimist in Donny, and it’s easy to see exactly why. Despite Rovers proving their squad last season had the ability to battle with the majority of the division, the club has noted an absence of some key players.

These began towards the end of last season. Rovers had a mini crisis in the centre of defence. Jason Shackell sustained an injury, which was to rule him out of the rest of the campaign, coupled with Sam Hird’s inexperience, and Adam Lockwood’s inconsistency resulted in James O’Connor being forced to deputise outside of his regular right back position, partnering Sheldon Martis.

With the end of Shackell’s loan spell, and him subsequently departing the Midlands for Barnsley, Rovers still have to endure the same problem that was created back then. O’Connor, despite providing excellent cover, is not being used to the best of his ability if he is in the wrong position.

Fans have also expressed concern that one of the clubs three summer signings this summer was a defensive midfielder. Rovers already have Wales international Brian Stock and ex-Manchester United and Middlesborough midfielder Mark Wilson occupying this position, so why have the club bothered to purchase Simon Gillett from Southampton, a man very highly rated on the south coast, who will no doubt demand first team football.

Rovers still have a striker crisis of sorts too. Steve Brooker’s fitness continues to be a major talking point from the Viking faithful. Added to this release of strikers Paul Heffernan and Lewis Guy, leaving just Sharp, James Hayter and Waide Fairhurst at the club. Fairhurst has just nine Rovers appearances to his name having graduated from the youth setup, meanwhile Hayter looks a depleted, old version of the prolific goalscorer once seen at Bournemouth early on in his career, and whether he can still cut the mustard in the Championship remains in doubt. O’Driscoll also sees Hayter as more of a midfielder.

So it looks like Rovers’ strength in depth could prove a stumbling block. You cannot have a promotion fight which is relying on the club’s season being injury free. At this point because of this, even I think promotion is beyond the club. But with the right individuals added it could provide the talent to really kick on this season, and not just finish in the top half again next season. But it could see us matching or bettering many people’s predictions that Doncaster Rovers could be the Championship’s dark horses in 2010-2011. ‘Dream On, Doncaster’ I say!

Friday, 8 January 2010

Bolton & Owen Coyle

It’s been a difficult week for most people in this country, as the cold, frosty conditions have marred the week for young, old, cheerful and miserable. Yes, snow has dared to rear its often ugly head to see Great Britain again, but certainly for me that has become distasteful and boring after a while.

If you think you week hasn’t been the most enduring of weeks, then perhaps you are showing jealousy to fans of Burnley, Bolton and Preston; who have been busy creating atmosphere in the Lancastrian air, to mare Mark Hughes’ exit from Manchester City and has even made people forget about Premier League champions Manchester United.

I rate Coyle highly, just like Phil Brown at Hull he has made fantastic strides with a club that I expected to rot at the wrong end of the second tier, taking the side to the gloss and glamour of the Premiership.

I thought Coyle had done so well at Burnley that when Gary Megson was dismissed as the gaffer of their local rivals, Bolton, that Wanderers wouldn’t bother looking to their former centre forward, and Coyle would not be interested in a switch to the Reebok. For me it is certainly a sideward step, and it is potentially a backwards step.

It is an opinion of many, Bolton fans and neutral alike, that Wanderers have failed to adequately replace Sam Allardyce; who after guiding Bolton back to the Premier League, established the side in the division and lead them into Europe, abandoned ship for Newcastle United in 2007. During his time at Bolton, “Big Sam” was also strongly linked with the England National Team coach in 2006, before the football association eventually plumped with Steve McClaren.

Although Coyle is the third successor to Allardyce’s throne the pressure is still heavily on the former Republic of Ireland international, to keep the Trotters in the top flight. Big Sam created an ethos for Bolton fans that they can believe that success is easily achievable, but his successors have proved that path to be very difficult indeed.

Thinking back to 2007 I believed that the appointment of Sammy Lee as Big Sam’s successor to be a shrewd move. You often are unaware at football clubs how much of an influence the assistant manager has. This has been shown at Leeds United, as when assistant manager Gus Poyet left Elland Road in October 2007, when Dennis Wise’s team slowly began to look a poorer side despite the same manager still being at the helm. Incidentally earlier that October, Lee was dismissed as Bolton manager after a dismal run of form has seen them struggle in the division. Lee still remains a popular character because of his time as Allardyce’s assistant, but it is a poor example when we talk about assistant managers taking full control of the senior side.

Bolton had then become the latest club to attempt to the ‘promote from within’ technique that has been so successful at Liverpool when Bill Shankly had be succeeded by Bob Paisley. But on this occasion, at Bolton, it had failed and Bolton’s pride had been dinted.

But it wasn’t damaged too badly. Bolton were still a good side, and Phil Gartside, the Bolton chairman was expected to appoint a good new manager. I think the nation gasped when it was named who it was going to be. Gary Megson. He wasn’t number one choice however approaches for Steve Bruce and Chris Coleman were turned down. It wasn’t that Megson was particularly the cheap option either. He was struggling to revamp a sinking ship at Leicester City, and he was freshly appointed, which to me says that compensation may have been expensive. Megson’s previous position had been at Nottingham Forest, where despite, by League One standards, over-spending, he had failed to win promotion. Previously to this he had succeeded in winning promotion to the Premier League, at West Brom, however he was dismissed following disagreements with the board. So it was a risky decision to say the least.

So this proved to be the case, as Bolton chanted calls for the manager and his chairman to be removed from their positions from a very early stage. Megson had an unattractive and largely unsuccessful style of management, and the fans were bemused. In the football club’s best interests, sacking Megson was the right decision as a business and its customers shouldn’t be forced to co-operate together with the problems that Megson put upon himself.

This time the appointment process has been often a farce. Bolton’s pursuit of Owen Coyle has been very public and events have been visible to the public. Yes it made it more intriguing but it hasn’t reflected well for Burnley or Bolton. Now-Blackburn manager, Allardyce has also stated this opinion claiming that he wouldn’t like being in Owen Coyle’s position, with the entire world airing its opinion on whether Coyle is making the right move.

It makes you wonder what Bolton’s aims are. They have signed someone with just a few months of Premier League experience and yet have poached a manager from a similar sized club, which shows ambition. Yet Bolton’s aim in the near future is survival, Coyle has to quickly thrust players together who are off form, despite a thin history of this feat. Does this move suggest that Bolton want to be back in Europe in the short term, despite Coyle hardly knowing the division?

For me, Coyle is a very good manager but there’s a right place at the right time scenario, and for me Coyle is a few years too late. I can only see this switch being a poor move for him, he has a brilliant reputation at the moment with a club he already knows well, and he’s dived head first into the unknown. If it works, however, it is a masterstroke.