Friday, 29 July 2011

The rise of AFC Wimbledon

Danny Kedwell and Terry Brown gave me their thoughts on the club's epic success.

It all has a sense of déjà vu to it. A South London club on a rise from the Southern

League into the football league with a unique brand of football that ensures the clubs

fortunes are always moving forward, on the pitch and off it.

Down at AFC Wimbledon they’re following a familiar SE19 blueprint that their namesake

Wimbledon FC drew up in the eighties under Dave ‘Harry’ Bassett and his Crazy Gang.

Heroes like Vinnie Jones and Dennis Wise fired the ‘old’ Wimbledon from the fourth

division all the way up to the first division in five seasons.

Fast forward 25 years and Terry Brown is the man in control of a new Crazy Gang. Formed

by the supporters from the ashes of Wimbledon, who were controversially relocated and

rebranded to become the Milton Keynes Dons, the AFC is said to be an acronym for ‘A fans’

club’.

Watched by an average crowd of 3,000 even on the bottom rung of the football pyramid, the

side have enjoyed a steady climb from the Combined Counties League and have celebrated

four promotions in eight years. Now AFC Wimbledon are three games away from a return to

the Football League.

The heroes of this story probably won’t go on to star in Hollywood movies or play in World

Cups, but under the leadership of captain Danny Kedwell and playing Brown’s attractive

passing football, this side can play their part one of the greatest underdog stories in football.

If they can progress in the Conference playoffs in the coming fortnight then they will write

the history books once again for this corner of London.

“It’s a peculiar club,” says manager Brown, “you don’t hear supporters massively dwelling

on the Selhurst Park days, you don’t even hear them dwelling on Harry Bassett’s phenomenal

success - nobody will ever do that again. But they’ll go back to Allen Batsford and what he

achieved taking us out of the Southern League, and into the Football League.

“If we can have a similar scenario,” he says, before pointing out they can never emulate

Batsford and what he did, “then we’ll have taken part in history.”

Kedwell leads the team from the front, scoring 15 goals in his debut season to get Wimbledon

out of the Conference South then a further 26 last term to ensure they finished in top half

of the Conference. This season’s tally of 23 has the fans dreaming of that all important

promotion.

“It’s very important, obviously for the fans.” he explains: “Because of what’s happened in

the past it’s very important to them and all the players know that - and what a thing to do -

to get this team here and get them back into the Football League. I don’t think we’d ever be

forgotten.”

It’s clear that promotion means as much to the players as it does for the fans, and with

Wimbledon amassing a colossal 90 points this season to secure second place, you get the

sense that Kedwell has his boys have earned the right to dream about taking this club over the

finish line.

“It’s massive for me. Obviously I’m captain of the club and I just can’t get it out of my mind.

I just sit there thinking, ‘I could be captain of the club getting them back to the Football

League and picking up that cup up for all of those fans, the true fans, the Wimbledon fans’ -

it would be amazing and never forgotten. It would be the highlight of my career.”

Kedwell’s goalscoring exploits haven’t gone unnoticed and larger clubs have expressed

interest in him before with the promise of higher level football and much better wages,

but Wimbledon’s number nine isn’t going anywhere until the job is done and his dream is

realised.

“It’s just the whole thing,” he tells me, when I ask what keeps him in the blue and yellow

shirt, “the players, the staff, the manager and the fans. It’s just the whole environment. The

whole club just makes you so welcome. I’m enjoying my football here and I don’t see why

I should move on and go somewhere where I might not. This is a place I love playing at and

turning up everyday training with the club I love.”

And is there still a hint of the former Wimbledon here, as the new club progresses like the

former?

“I think there is,” says Kedwell, “just the name and coming to play here - the fans are just

amazing. I think there is still a bit of a Crazy Gang mentality at this new Wimbledon.”

The setup at AFC is clearly an important factor, and he is quick to suggest that “unless it was

the Premier League” his feet are firmly rooted in Merton before laughing and conceding by

his own admission that he doubts he’ll ever get that far. His ambition is simple: “I’m here to

get AFC Wimbledon back into the Football League.”

If the side can dispatch of Fleetwood Town over two legs in the playoff semi-final next week

then the prospect of leading the team out at Manchester City’s Eastlands Stadium for the final

will become a reality for their captain, for whom nothing else but promotion matters.

“It would be emotional, obviously leading out the players and seeing the boy’s faces. It’s

another experience for us. It’s a bit nerve-racking going into these semi-finals thinking ‘I just

can’t imagine if it doesn’t happen.’ I don’t know what I’ll do if we don’t get through - I’ll

probably lose it!”

Former Aldershot manager Brown is equally keen to finally break a hoodoo that has seen

him agonisingly close to realising his own ambitions after missing out on promotion to the

Football League with his two former clubs.

“It’s been my own personal ambition to be a Football League manager.” He explains: “That’s

been my ambition since I started managing some 10-15 years ago at Hayes. I came

desperately close with them and Aldershot, so this is another opportunity to take that final

hurdle.”

Personal ambitions aside, Brown also throws light on the importance of the task in hand

with regards to Wimbledon’s supporters: “You have to see the bigger picture with this club.

It is real history. We celebrated the Blue Square South like we’d won the European cup

and everything about going back to the village to drink with the locals and going back to

Wimbledon to celebrate.

“Now if we win at Manchester, that’s if we get there for a start, we won’t actually be able to

drive back and celebrate in Wimbledon, but I’m sure during the next week we would party in

Wimbledon -the whole ethos about the club is that it wants to come back to Wimbledon and I

hope that the club do come back there someday.”

For now at least, Wimbledon play their home matches at the Kingsmeadow Stadium, or

The Fans’ Stadium in Kingston, and those fans that have stuck by the club are now being

rewarded with some fantastic football implemented by Brown who hopes it will bring the

club glory in the divisions above.

“We are a footballing side. I’m in a position now where I’ve earned the right to play a brand

of football that I enjoy. It’s very much based on the model of the Barcelona and Arsenal

game, with a bit more discipline. That’s the way I want to play my football.

“It can be successful.” He says, before condoning any naysayers: “Its rubbish to assume that

there’s only one way to play in League One and League Two, its absolute rubbish. I might

have egg on my face by saying that, but if we get there, we’ll play our football.”

Praised for this football finesse throughout the season, Brown’s side draw yet more

comparisons to Bassett’s team of the eighties, often in the press for their style of football,

although for very different reasons. The days of crude ‘Route One’ football - made famous

by the original Dons and lambasted in the press as unsophisticated have been banished to the

archives. The new philosophy here has the manager waxing lyrical about his squad’s ability

to outplay their opposition.

“We do religiously practise it and it becomes like second nature,” he says of the

system. “From the Cambridge game in the latter part of this season, it was like turning a

switch on and going ‘blimey, they’re doing that automatically, they’re not even looking up,’

- they were getting it and playing it, getting it forward, getting it back and that comes with

months and months of practise and it’s lovely when it comes into fruition and I think that

next year we’ll be a much better side than we are this year.”

With such belief from the fans, players and indeed the manager you might be wondering why

on 90 points, AFC Wimbledon didn’t win the Blue Square Bet Premier hands down. Instead,

that was done by the well-financed ‘Manchester City of the Conference’ Crawley Town,

who finished the season on 105 points via a rather well documented trip to the red side of

Manchester in the FA Cup.

The majority of Crawley’s goals were scored by frontman Matt Tubbs who cost the club

£250,000 - a staggering amount of money at this level, and a fee that could buy you the

whole Wimbledon squad (and a bit). So is there any animosity towards the champions at the

Kingsmeadow?

“Not really,” says Brown, “If I was given the finances that Crawley were given, would I have

gone and bought a load of youngsters in last year? Well, I wouldn’t have been able to afford

to, because with the money comes the pressure and Steve Evans (the Crawley manager)

handled that pressure all along - he said it was project promotion and he achieved that and did

it with some very good buys.

“The fact they got beaten 1-0 by Manchester United at Old Trafford tells you a heck of a lot

about that outfit and I think that they will romp through League Two.”

The league table is a testament to what Brown has achieved here on the limited budget that

the Dons have, something he says is “very satisfying” as he closes the chapter on the race

to the title with Crawley: “The truth is, we’re a good ten points plus behind Crawley, they

thoroughly deserved to win the league. They were the best team in at and as long as we’re the

best team in the playoffs, I’ll be the happiest man in the world.”

The playoffs are the main focus for AFC Wimbledon now, and that has been the case for a

number of weeks as the team gear up for one last push towards the Football League. One

thing they will be hoping to avoid is the playoff jinx that failed to get Wimbledon out of

the Conference South two years running under former manager Dave Anderson - and that

ironically led to Brown getting the job.

“I took over from Dave Anderson.” He recalls: “He was a fabulous bloke and he had a good

set of players – he was desperately unlucky two years on the trot. He went into his playoff

finals decimated with injury. Well, I’m going into these playoff finals with 22 fit players.”

Due to a fixture pileup in the season, AFC Wimbledon endured what Brown described as

a “torturous January and February”, where his side fulfilled eleven fixtures in January alone.

It caught up with them and the top spot that they had occupied was seized by Crawley,

something that Kedwell also recognises as the point where the season momentarily reached

breaking point.

“It absolutely took it out of us.” He says, “If the games hadn’t have been like that I think we

could have definitely pushed Crawley for the title.” In a twist of fate though, that same fixture

pileup has arrived more recently for the other playoff sides, much to the elation of everyone

at the club.

“The mood here couldn’t be more buoyant to be honest,” says Brown. “We come into the

final phase of the season in our best form. I’m sincerely hoping that same sort of fixture

pileup that the other teams in the playoffs are suffering will catch up with them because we

look fresh and some of them look a bit leggy. I know how that feels - it doesn’t matter how

much buoying you do and how much geeing up you do, if the legs are tired, they’re tired. We

go into it very fresh and playing some of our best football.”

Kedwell echoes the manager’s sentiments with regards the general vibe at the club it, and is

to be expected for any team facing the prospect of potential promotion.

“It’s absolutely buzzing at the minute round the camp.” Says the captain: “We’ve got a fit

squad and a full squad raring to go. We have the last game of the season tomorrow against

Grimsby, but really that’s just a little warm up for us. We’re all concentrating on the play-offs

next Friday.”

Although Luton and Wrexham will be considered hot favourites for promotion via the

playoffs, Brown is focusing on the task in hand which is the continued forward momentum

gained by seasons like this, and experience like the playoffs.

“I think it’s important that from our point of view the spectators see progression every year.

They’ve seen progression in the last nine years, and we’ve progressed again this year. If we

don’t get in to League Two this year, and get up next year then that would be fine. The club

has to keep driving forward, it can’t stand still. It has to keep going forward like it has done

over the last nine years.”

If the club is successful in the playoffs, it will be a remarkable achievement for a team

founded on a dream. Brown has his own dreams and he is currently visualising the future and

growth of Wimbledon regardless of the outcome of this campaign.

“I’m looking now at who we’re keeping and I’m looking to keep the vast majority of the

squad intact. That is extremely satisfying as a manager because the one thing you need to

build a side is continuity. It’s no good saying we’ve got a very good young side if we don’t

keep those boys on board and next season we’ll be able to keep the vast nucleus of our

squad together. If you’re trying to play the type of football that we’re playing then it’s really

important that you keep the bodies on board. I don’t have to go through the pattern and the

shape every game - everybody already knows what it is.”

The future looks exceptionally bright for Wimbledon regardless of promotion or not, but just

in case they did go up, would Brown look to ring the changes in the hope to keep pushing on?

“It would open up some better finances for us and we’d have more money to play with but I

would want to start with the nucleus of this squad, they’re the boys – if they’re good enough

to get us there this year, then they’ll be good enough to start next year.”

It’s a refreshing approach to see a manager have faith in his team’s ability to make the step up

and it smacks a little of Ian Holloway and his Football League dream team who are currently

doing battle with the big guns in the business end of the pyramid. I ask Brown how he thinks

his side might do if they get into League Two.

“I think we’d be okay.” he says. ”We’re a fantastic footballing side but that wouldn’t be

enough in League Two. We’d have to be a bit more physical as well. I don’t think we’re a

million miles off any of the clubs that have gone in there, and all acquitted themselves very

well with some aging, ailing rubbish up there that needs to come out and start again.”

It’s clear that young teams and attractive football are the order of the day for Brown, and

one genuinely hopes he will get a chance to show that “aging, ailing rubbish” how it’s done.

I’m told that anyone hoping to play for his side will need “a work ethic and they need to

train hard. It’s about working your balls off on the pitch. We don’t carry any passengers on a

Saturday.”

You can’t say fairer than that, and AFC Wimbledon certainly have worked their balls off to

get to the cusp of returning to the level that their ancestors played at, and the only passengers

they carry here are the fans who pack the ground out week-in week-out to watch the legacy of

their stolen club continue in astonishing fashion.

Kedwell can’t hide the excitement from his voice: “Everyone you talk to, they say ‘Just

imagine Wimbledon getting back in that Football League.’ Everybody wants it and we’re

here now and we have to make sure we do it.”

They might not win the FA Cup like the Crazy Gang of 1988, and it might be a while before

they’re mixing it with the Premier League teams like their predecessors, but one thing is

for certain - Wimbledon could be the talk of South London once again and based on the

evidence, would you bet against history repeating itself once again?

Gus Poyet May 2011

Gus Poyet was a top bloke.

If you had a look at the League One table for the majority of April, you may have noticed
the ‘P’ next to runaway leaders Brighton’s name. Well, it doesn’t stand for pavilion or even pier
because thanks to a well known Uruguayan manager and his positive footballing philosophy -
that ‘P’ ensures that the seaside town is synonymous with ‘promotion’ this season.

Last season, Gus Poyet inherited a squad that he managed to steer to safety in League One and at the
start of this term his side were 20/1 outsiders in a division peppered with big names like Southampton,
Sheffield Wednesday and Huddersfield - all financially superior to the Seagulls. So how did the
renaissance at the Withdean begin?

The former Chelsea and Spurs midfielder greets me with an enthusiastic “Hello, young sir!” and I
congratulate him on winning the title. We are sat in a canteen at Brighton’s training ground and the
South Downs are a sea of green in the early summer sun. I waste no time finding out just what the
fundamental factors of this emphatic success were.

“When we set things up at the beginning of the season, one was the club itself, and then the players,”
he starts, “Then how strong you need that group to be and convince them that it's possible. Second -
without any doubt - the style of play. We had a system of playing football and we had to make sure
the players understood that and the sooner we could convince them (that was the right way) we could
find the consistency which is needed to win the league.”

That consistency saw Brighton and Hove Albion romp the title in emphatic style four games from
the end of the season with a 4-3 win over Dagenham and Redbridge at the Withdean to maintain an
unbeaten home record all season. Poyet was given full control of the signings needed to implement
the playing style that he told the club would bring them success.

“I'm pleased that the chairman agreed with the system and gave me the chance to put it in to practise
because you can believe in things but after if you don't have the right players or the right place to
play, it's difficult,” he tells me, before explaining the main motivation behind the system... it almost
sounds simple – football.

“I'm a believer that this game, if you think about the name - it's called football,” he tells me: “That
means that if the game is called football then you need to have the ball with you as much as you can.
If you don't have it, if you kick it, if you play the 50-50 all the time or you're just running about then
maybe we should call it athletics or whatever you want to call it! The idea is to make sure you use the
name of the game to your advantage and we try to do that.”

Football is the name of the game in Brighton that’s for sure, and an extra incentive for promotion this
season was the notion that the Seagulls could potentially be playing Championship football in their
inaugural season at the city’s brand new American Express Community Stadium, and Poyet would
need to take the reins of a master plan to deliver the dream promotion.

“I think the idea was to get up, somehow. That's what the club wanted, that's what the chairman asked
me. When he told me I had a good budget, I said that it was up to me to make sure that we were one
of the three going up. I needed to improve three or four places to get promoted automatically or win
the play-offs but that was the idea all the time and we did it, so I cannot be more proud than that.”

Poyet’s Brighton went top of the league on the 25th September when Francisco Sandaza scored a 95th
minute winner against Oldham and at the top they have remained where recently they ensured it was
mathematically impossible for any of the chasing pack to catch them and were promoted four weeks
early. The risk factor has played a major part in their success this season, and not one of the players is
to blame if he makes an error on the pitch as Poyet explains.

“They know if they make a mistake then it's my responsibility. Sometimes the best thing for a player
is to know that the manager will take that responsibility for everything that happens on the pitch,
wherever he goes and that is something they understand because we take risks. There is no team in
this league that takes more risks than us,” he continues, “We need to because we want the ball and if
we don't want the ball then you don't take risk, you put the ball as long as possible and really far from
your goal and that is not a risk.”

He pauses momentarily before adding: “It's a way of playing football, it's not bad or good - it's just

another way of playing football. We have to take risks but we manage to play the ball into areas
that nobody else does and I know that sometimes that can bring some massive mistakes. When that
happens people will always assume it's the player but it's not. It's me, and the players know it's me.”

In one season, Poyet has schooled a division on the art of football, creating superiority not only on the
pitch but in the league table as well. The former Uruguay international and a European Cup winner
has brought his experience of football outside of England to the fore whilst bring a new level of
understanding to his liege on the south coast.

“I think the dream of every single player, and every single manager is to get close to Barcelona and
the top teams in England that pass the ball well – Arsenal, Manchester United and Chelsea. You
need to adapt to the level that you're at and utilise the players you've got. Not just to dream and be a
dreamer. The idea is to play like the teams that like to pass the ball and keep it, create superiority and
use that to understand the game. People only see where my full-backs are or how we are playing but
they don't see the understanding of the game that we're trying to achieve.”

Admittedly those who don’t see into the psyche of the squad could be forgiven as we have been
brought up to appreciate a very different style of football - the robust ‘England way’ that often leaves
us crying into our pints with a Union Jack around our shoulders every two summers. I ask Poyet
whether he has any idea why other teams in England aren’t utilising his title winning formula.

“I think it's something that is coming from the academies,” he says, “If you went to see any game
in the Sunday League or any game in the under ten, under 15 or even nine-year-olds and you saw a
defender kick the ball long and far from the goal, he's going to be told “well done” from the manager
or the parents next to the pitch.”

“So there is a kid who is nine, he kicks the ball and gets a well done. And when he is ten, he kicks the
ball long and gets a well done. And then when he is 12 and when he is 14 and when he is 16. So he's
going to come to my team and I'm going to say “No. Don't kick it. Keep it. Get it down.” That kid will
probably look at me and say ‘What is wrong? You've changed football, because I've been kicking it
long for ten years and every single person was telling me well done.’

“It's a way of understanding I think,” he concludes, before quickly refusing to condone that style
of football as good or bad: “Again, there is no right or wrong. Not everyone has to play my way!”
But I now have Poyet in his element, discussing the game he loves and the brand of football that has
brought him the success he deserves in his first full term as a manager. He continues to explain the
ideas behind his keep-ball philosophy as if it were a new world order.

“The same happens with the headers. In England when the ball is coming to a centre-half in our
division, the defender normally heads the ball as high as possible and as far away as possible. If you
are marking someone and it's a difficult header then that's okay, but if you're free, you can pass the
ball with the head... It's allowed! If you look at John Terry he even jumps on top of a player and
passes it to Ashley Cole with his head because they want to keep the ball. If you don't want to keep it,
for some reason, then you kick it.”

This season, Brighton fans were given a sign of things to come as bright new hopefuls Lewis Dunk
and Jamie Smith broke into the first team, well versed in the new style of play implemented here that
is now standard practise in the reserves, under 18’s. I’m given a further insight into the blossoming
future of youth here when I ask him about nurturing the youth at the club.

“That the best way. That's the best thing for the future. To make sure that we set it up this year for
the younger group, because they'll be the second group that are playing exactly the same way that we
play. We're convincing those players that are in-between the under 18's and the first team that this
is the way you are going to be playing if you make the first team. Now next year we need to go two
groups down, the new under 18's and the under 16's.”

There is a moments silence and then Poyet bursts into life, waxing lyrical about his football once
again. I suddenly feel like I am on the receiving end of a pre-training team talk from him, as he
becomes animated and starts to explain exactly how the players are drilled in the new system.

“It's not just about passing the ball, that's the main thing that it's very important you get. It's not

like ‘OK. From now on we're going to pass the ball, and we are not going to kick it anymore.’ It's
about when we want to kick it and when we want to pass it. Why we're going to pass it, in which
conditions, on which pitch - there are plenty of factors involved.”

I am transfixed by his arms and hands taking the role’s of full-backs, wingers, and centre backs as he
continues to go into depth about the Brighton way: “It's not just ‘you're here, you're here and you're
here.’ It's not chess. It's football, and in football you need to understand things. Who is playing next
to you? Who are you playing against? If you are a quick player and you're attacking me, who is slow,
go on, take me on, but if you're against Ashley Cole then it's not going to be as easy to go past him, so
you need to understand the game, when you need help and when you don't. One day, we'll try to go to
that level, it'll take time but we'll get there.”

Brighton’s test at the next level came this season at the Britannia stadium when they faced Stoke City
in the FA Cup fifth round. Having already dispatched of Portsmouth and Watford, the Seagulls would
have to face their footballing opposites in the form of Tony Pulis’ robust, physical side. It was the
ultimate test of the philosophy but Brighton slumped to a 3-0 defeat, in a clash of footballing style. It
would allow Poyet to focus his efforts on the League One title, but not without learning another lesson
in the process.

“We were not strong physically strong enough,” he recalls, “and that's another part of the game we
need to get better at. We thought that we prepared the game well, we trained the throw-ins, and we
trained the corners - everything you need to train before a game at Stoke but at the end of the day it's
on the pitch where you have to deal with that big, big throw in. We didn't have anyone to throw it in
training; we were throwing it one handed! But we learned we were not strong enough to deal with that
quality.”

At this stage, it’s hard not to believe that he is the man who can bring the glory days back to Brighton
as the new breed of young upstarts mix with the more experienced heads in an attempt to push the
club onwards to the Premier League. Poyet’s first signing last summer was Gordon Greer from
Swindon Town who he instantly gave captaincy to, before building the promotion winning side
around him.

“That's the way I like to make my team, to make sure there is a good mix of experience and youth, a
good mix of technical players and players that will work hard. You need a defender who likes to play
the ball like Gordon, and another centre-half who is going to defend more than pass it. So you need to
mix the game up. I had been watching Gordon for a while and he was my first signing and he's been a
key part of this.”

Greer certainly was a huge part in the team forming a backbone in the team along with experienced
goalkeeper Casper Ankergren who Poyet knew well from his Leeds days and Radostin Kishishev
running the centre of the park for his team alongside the young, hungry Liam Bridcutt. A fruitful
relationship at the business end of the pitch between Ashley Barnes and Glenn Murray gave Brighton
over half of their goals this season, but is the gaffer going to stick to his guns next season and ensure
they pass their way to success?

“Yes, no doubt.” Is the succinct answer from Poyet, who clearly has faith in the system. We talk about
the success of Norwich, on the cusp of back-to-back promotions and he ponders his own aspirations
for next season: “We'll try to keep going. I think it's interesting how Norwich have done because
they've shown you can keep the momentum going up to the next level, so I'm looking forward to
doing something similar to that.”

Key to their fortunes will be winning the first few games but Poyet is not fussy who the curtain raiser
is against: “To be honest I just want to win the first game so it doesn't matter who it’s against really.
The main thing will be the week before, when we play the opening of the Amex. The last friendly
before the season starts.”

Ah yes! The Amex Stadium, the new 22,500 capacity ground that will be blessed with Championship
football in its first season. Chairman and professional poker player Tony ‘The Lizard’ Bloom invested
a cool £90m into the project which has coincided perfectly with Brightons’ rise to prominence, but
how does Poyet plan to turn the Amex into a fortress like Withdean was this season?

“Training as much as we can in there.” Is the answer, “that is something I've already asked for, and
I know it's going to be difficult because they'll want to keep the pitch beautiful for the first game but
we need to get in and train there.” If the pitch does stay in top condition then Brighton fans can look
forward to seeing some beautiful football on the new surface, not least when the Championship’s
passing sides such as Swansea City and Doncaster Rovers come to visit – a prospect Poyet relishes.

“They're going to be great games. They're the games that are going to be the bigger challenges
because we are used to having the ball, and in those games we're going to share the ball with
somebody else and that means you're are going to have a feeling like ‘Whoa, what's going on? We
normally have the ball!’ - That's something we'll need to learn because we're going to another level
where there are better teams and better players. We won't have the ball as much as we have had this
year so we need to make sure we are more clinical and that we defend better. I think we need to
improve.”

There will be plenty of opportunity for improvement. Rumours are circulating on fan forums that
Bloom is planning to invest £10m into the squad for next season and that he has the top six in his
sights. With that sort of expectation comes the pressure on the manager to perform.

“I think that everything is looking up and it's going to get better. I think the future of Brighton is very
bright,” says Poyet, before delivering a bite of reality: “The only problem is that needs to come with
the results. It doesn't matter how many things you've got - any football team will fail if you don't get
the results, so I need to make sure we get the right results.”

Poyet certainly has a knack for finding the right results down here at Brighton and Hove Albion so
far and he cites the three away games at Plymouth, Charlton and Peterborough as the moments he
was proudest of this season, confirming what they had been working so hard on with 2-0, 4-0 and 3-
0 victories respectively. He also hails Sandaza’s 95th minute goal at the Withdean against Oldham as
a “great moment” as it saw his side move clear at the top.

The allotted time is almost up and the players pass us out onto the training ground in the morning sun
to prepare for the weekends’ fixture against Southampton, full of excitement and laughing with one
another. I ask Poyet to imagine, for a moment, that this season has been a holiday. If he was to send a
postcard to somebody, what might it say?

“Being totally honest?” he asks. Before stating quite simply: “We are the champions!”

John Ryan

Here is a sweet interview I did with John Ryan!

John Ryan walked solemnly behind the coffin as it made its way through the streets
of Doncaster. Wreaths were laid at the gates of Belle Vue stadium. Doncaster Rovers’
Football League status had died, and the club were not just on the brink of Conference
football - but extinction altogether.

Chairman Ken Richardson had bled the club dry. All but three professional players were left
on the books, but that wasn’t all. Two years previous, Richardson had paid some goons to
torch the main stand at Belle Vue in the hope the insurance money would cover the club’s
debt. An act he would later atone for at her Majesty’s pleasure.

In scenes reminiscent of a Robin Hood script, a teary eyed member of the procession begged
Ryan to save the club: “Is there anything you can do?” – twelve years on, and the man who
made a career enhancing assets in the cosmetic surgery business has clearly done more than a
bit of nip/tuck on Doncaster Rovers.

“It’s been a labour of love,” starts Ryan, “When I took the club over in '98 it was on its
knees. Richardson had been sent to prison, he'd burnt the stand down and we were in non-
league football so it's been a long journey back but I said I'd like to see the club back in the
Championship where I first watched them in the fifties and it's a great feeling to think that
we're back there now.”

I meet the outgoing and exceptionally friendly Ryan outside Bristol City’s Ashton Gate
ground, where despite losing 1-0, Championship football looks set to stay in Doncaster for
another season. We’re stood next to his monolithic Bentley with its personalised number
plate, and the sun shines down on the chairman and I, just like it has done for the Rovers for
the last decade.

A self-made millionaire and lifelong Doncaster Rovers fan, Ryan had long dreamt of
being involved with the club he had watched from the terraces from as young as seven. He
pioneered cosmetic surgery in Europe and turned a small 1970’s company called Transform
into a multi-million pound business within twenty years, before selling up and taking the lead
role in the Rovers’ incredible story.

“Well, I was a director from ‘89 to '94 and Ken Richardson came in and I couldn't stomach
him so I left. Then in '98, when the club was finished, I went to the last game against
Colchester at Belle Vue thinking that was the last game I'd ever see of Doncaster Rovers. As
things transpired, I managed to buy the club and the rest is history.”

Buying the club for £50,000 might be considered a steal, but the task that lay ahead for Ryan
and the Rovers was colossal. Starting the next season in the Conference, the team’s first
game was away at Dover Athletic, but the problem was, Doncaster didn’t have a team. After
picking up players at various lay-bys and service stations along the way, Ryan recalls seeing
his mercenaries beaten 1-0: “Well in a way we were pleased we got a team out. We lost 1-
0 but we were celebrating losing 1-0 because we didn't really have a team! I nearly had my
boots in the car myself!”

If the fans had thought Richardson was a madcap chairman, imagine the whispers around
South Yorkshire when Ryan told them that he would take the club not only back to the
Football League, but into the Championship within ten years. Not only that but he promised
them a trip to Wembley returning with the resulting silverware and a new stadium. It took
Rovers five years to crack the Conference, but League Two was won in their first season
back in the League, going up as champions. The trophy cabinet had a purpose once more.

As Ryan acknowledges some Rovers fans that walk past and say hello, I ask him if he was
surprised when his team won League Two more than convincingly. “No, I expected it!”

he exclaims, “I told everyone to get money on at 33/1! The outsiders for the League were
Carlisle, York and Doncaster. Carlisle and York went down to the Conference and Doncaster
won the League. I always thought we'd get promotion because we made some great signings.
We brought in Leo Fortune-West, Michael McIndoe and Greg Blundell and John Doolan. So
I always thought we were going to do well, and we did.”

Along the way, Ryan also managed to fulfil a childhood dream of his and broke a Guinness
World Record in the process when stepped out on the pitch as a player, a month shy of his
53rd birthday: “I am the oldest professional footballer. I played for Doncaster Rovers against
Hereford United, I started warming up and we were losing 2-0 and by the time I went on
it was 4-2 to Rovers. No one wanted to be subbed for me!” He smiles as he recounts the
memories of that day and his motivation for doing it: “I always wanted to play for Rovers
when I was young and I thought well... why not? I only had two or three minutes and I didn't
even touch the ball, but I can say I played!” And hastily adds: “With a hundred percent
record!”

The thing about John Ryan is that he isn’t looking to make a quick buck from a club like
so many in football at the moment. In fact he is quick to point out that “that was never the
intention. I doubt anyone will make any money out of Doncaster Rovers, I certainly haven't
and I don't know anyone else that has!” He just wants to see his hometown team back where
they should be. In 2008, after four seasons in League One and a trip to the Millennium
stadium where the club won the Johnstone’s Paint Trophy, the team found themselves facing
Yorkshire rivals Leeds United at Wembley. The trip to North London, as promised, ten
seasons after Ryan took them over.

When asked what his highlight of the last decade has been, Ryan instantly replies “Beating
Leeds at Wembley, I don't think anything can beat that.” For that was the game that saw his
beloved team finally take their spot back in Championship with a 1-0 win against all the
odds. So what is the secret behind this success?

“Stability,” he says, as if the answer is obvious, “In all that time we've had two managers.
Sean O'Driscoll's been with us five years and before that we had Dave Penney who was with
the club for about eight years. We've had a lot of stability on the management side and the
board of directors and also the players. Although we've had to turn players over as we go
up the leagues, a lot of the players have stayed with us for a period of time and I think that
stability means a lot in football.”

He is quick to add in that “It's the power of positive thinking,” before reiterating the
exceptionally ambitious ideas that probably caused a few to snigger in the bars around
Doncaster: “I thought we could do it. I said it right at the beginning that I would get the club
back in the Football League at that stage and not only do that, but I would get them back to
the second division which is now the Championship. I said we'd get a new stadium and that
we'd appear at Wembley and we've done all that... and Cardiff as well, just to top the lot.”

Positivity is the key at Doncaster and this is reflected in their beautiful style of football that
has won them many plaudits on the rise to the top. Dubbed ‘The Arsenal of League One’ at
one stage, Sean O’Driscoll has the Rovers passing the ball, moving it forward quickly and
that style has ultimately kept the team at this level, where they might not compete financially
with their peers but their on-pitch antics are described by their proud chairman as “a joy to
watch.”

As a new breed of youngsters are turned to the Keepmoat Stadium and attendances grow with
the Rovers’ reputation, Ryan has a huge amount of respect for the fans of this club who could
so easily go and watch other Yorkshire teams in the form of Leeds and the two Sheffields.

One set of fans, the Viking Supporters Co-operative help raise money for the club with raffles
and auctions and in return are offered a certain degree of transparency between the board and
themselves. Ryan attends regular AGM meetings in return and is well aware that many in his
position wouldn’t necessarily see it their duty to mix with the great unwashed, regardless of
the money the fans put into their clubs.

“I think it's very important,” he begins, although there are a few technicalities in the
relationship: “It's not always possible when you're going after players, because you don't
want it released on a message board that you're after so-and-so because you could lose the
player but the reality is that the fans have stuck with us over the years and I think they've
been incredibly well rewarded because we've had so much success.”

Possibly the greatest coup for the club was the signing of Billy Sharp from Sheffield United
last summer after a prolific spell on loan at the club. Ryan and the rest of the board dipped
into their own pockets to raise the club record £1.15m fee for the striker. Knowing Sharp
could be the difference in Rovers’ fortunes this season “JR”, as he is known by the fans,
lauds it as his best bit of business: “I persuaded my partners in the business to put the money
up to pay for Billy Sharp and it's been a great investment. 16 goals in 28 games,” before
adding: “If he'd been playing today we'd have won that game.”

Sharp’s omission today has been the icing on the cake for what has been a torturous
campaign for Donny, who had initially started so well and Ryan exudes further belief in his
side as he explains where it all went wrong: “If it wasn't for the chronic injury list I think
we'd have at least been in the top ten or maybe the top six. On New Year’s Day when we
beat Scunthorpe 3-0 we were looking good for the play-offs. Since then we've had 14 players
injured. You just can't legislate for that.”

So is John Ryan looking to re-evaluate his ambitions for Doncaster Rovers? After this
whirlwind decade, why should he stop now?

“I'd like to see us in the Premier League, obviously, but I wouldn't be so miffed if we were
still in the Championship because I think the Championship is a great league.” He says before
suggesting that Doncaster might have a couple of years at this level still, if the giants keep
crashing down from the Premier League: “It's difficult for us in the Championship because
our gates are relatively small but football is a difficult game and it's a very competitive
business, especially in the Championship.”

One thing is for sure, with Ryan’s past record, you wouldn’t want to rule out the Rovers in
the race for the Premiership under the guidance of a man who is just giving something back
to the club he has loved since childhood on what he tells me is: “One of the most incredible
journies in football”. I ask for his thoughts are on chairmen who want to try and turn a club
into something they can profit from: “Good luck to them,” he says “Some of them do it but
the vast majority don’t.”

And what of someone trying to do another Donny? To emulate the success of John Ryan
and take over a team on the brink of extinction and to turn them into a respectable club, run
without debt with a trophy cabinet glimmering with the bounty of twelve prosperous years.

Ryans advice is simple: “Don’t!” He chuckles, “Lightning doesn’t strike twice!”

Wednesday, 2 December 2009

Aswad Thomas - Woking FC


Okay. So I've been awful at updating this thing... I hung out with Woking left-back Aswad Thomas at the weekend and we spoke about his release from Charlton and bouncing back to the Football League. Enjoy!

“It was my birthday and it didn’t start off too well. I gave away a penalty!” Three minutes into the first day of the season, and Aswad Thomas’s Woking debut wasn’t quite the dream he had in mind, let alone his 20th birthday.

Having just been released in the summer from Charlton Athletic, Thomas knew he had to muck in and help the team get a result against Welling. “I was taught well (at Charlton). They always pressed you to keep going and dig in, and luckily I came up with a goal and we won the game.”

A Charlton career limited to one appearance on the bench in a Carling Cup game has meant that Thomas’s release from SE7 is not so much heartbreak, but more of a big break and something that the youngster is more than prepared for.

The Westminster born left-back spent the majority of last season on loan with Blue Square South side Lewes, helping them from the bottom of the table. Spells in League Two with Barnet and Accrington Stanley also helped shape his game, including a memorable two goals in one game against Chester City with the latter.

With the Addicks heading for League One, and their financial problems all too public, Thomas had a feeling that his days at The Valley were numbered; “Charlton were going down, and I hadn’t played much at all. I knew they weren’t financially secure and I had to be realistic. I hadn’t played at Championship level so getting a new contract wasn’t really going to happen”

Many of the second year scholars released by Charlton into the ‘real’ world this summer have now fallen out of professional football and into everyday work, but one of those who didn’t was centre midfielder Harry Arter, who signed with Woking upon his release.

It was Arter who convinced Thomas to scout the setup at Kingfield, and also told him that the Blue Square South side were looking for a left back. “I didn’t have an agent,” explains Thomas, “I came down by myself and spoke to the management and I was convinced with their proposal for the team and for myself.”

Woking soon had themselves two former Charlton trainees, eager to link up and play together. Something that Thomas thinks brings a new dimension to the style of play that big spending Woking employ.

“There are different qualities that we’ve brought down from Charlton. Harry likes to get the ball down and play, and I’m quick down the left, so we can link up. When he’s at centre midfield he can open out and hit me.”

Since his birthday debut, Thomas has made a total of 14 appearances for the Cardinals, and two as a sub, as his first full season in football helps shape his game; “Playing first team football helps so much as well as knowing you’re going to play every game because when I was at Charlton I was in the reserves.

The pacy defender did have other options in the summer, but based purely on footballing reasons, decided that a move to the Cards was the perfect way to kick start his fledging career, and hopefully work his way back into the Football League.

“I wouldn’t have joined Woking if I didn’t think it would shape me and help me on my way back up. I could have gone to league clubs on trial and seen how it went from there but I felt I hadn’t ever played men’s football and I needed to get a season under my belt.”

His willingness to go and find a club this summer is now paying dividends, as are his extracurricular activities which keep him in top condition for the rigours of life at this level. “When I’m not playing I go to the park, I do extra training and I go to the gym.”

Alongside Arter, the pair are now involved with a Woking side that find themselves serious play-off contenders at this stage of the season, thanks to a new style of football implemented by manager Graham Baker.

“We’re a new team. We’ve changed our style of play recently which started with a 6-0 win last week over St. Albans City and we’ve started picking up results at home now which you need to do if you want to be in and around the play-off spots.”

As long as the wins keep coming, then this could be a fantastic season for Thomas, who is learning more and more about the game with every appearance he makes. “There are highs and lows, but it builds you as a player.”

Sunday, 9 August 2009

Well that was fun wasn't it!?


From the stalemate at the Riverside on Friday night to this afternoons shock result at the Ricoh arena (via a number of goals in Norfolk), the Football League has kicked off!

I travelled to the Valley to see my team Charlton kick off their first campaign at this level since the 1980/81 season and we got exactly what we wanted. Goals. Five to be precise, and a sterling performance from League One new boys, Wycombe Wanderers.

The nature of League One this year means that teams like the Chairboys will have nothing to lose against the fallen giants of Charlton, Norwich and Southampton and results elsewhere hinted that it could be a long season for the league's latest acquisitions. Saints were held to a draw by Millwall, who after losing out in the play-offs last time out, will certainly be aiming for automatic promotion this year. Norwich, on the other hand, were welcomed into the third tier of British football by Colchester who administered a 7-1 spanking on Norfolk soil. Not the start Delia Smith, and indeed 'Club Legend'/manager Bryan Gunn had in mind.

Whilst the wily Addicks were playing some rather nice football and taking a two goal lead against Wycombe my phone didn't stop. I had the BBC goal updates on, and texts from various friends around the country, one of whom was watching the new look Notts County take on Bradford. Needless to say, one Lee Hughes hat-trick and a Sven inspired drubbing later and it was apparently "good to be back" at Meadow Lane!

I had added interest in the day, when I paid a visit to Ladbrokes prior to kick-off. Last year I delved into 1st goalscorer multiple bets (as if it isn't hard enough to pick out one!), and this year was no different. I chose four, in the shape of Nick Bailey (Charlton), James Hayter (Doncaster), Brett Pitman (Bournemouth) and Rickie Lambert (Bristol Rovers).

Now to my credit, all four of my runners scored! Only the 'Hitman' Pitman grabbing the games first though, but I feel this bodes well for my season again and Ladbrokes, if you're reading this, I will seek revenge via a first goalscorer Yankee/L15.

Distractions aside and back to Block P of the West stand, and Miguel Angel Llera, bandage and all, has just put us 3-1 up, and the crowd are loving it. A respectable turnout of 16,500 at the Valley ensured that despite a tense final fifteen minutes (no thanks to Zebroski's second goal of the game giving the Chairboys hopes of an upset), we held on to record our first win at this level in almost thirty years, and with any luck, we can find the winning ways that can, for now, get us back into the Championship.

Where next for me? Well, it's not officially Football League, but I am heading to Eastbourne Borough vs AFC Wimbledon on Tuesday night to see the Dons continue their destruction of the lesser tiers of the pyramid re-write history which in fact, the original Wimbledon wrote. It's all very poignant, but for now they have a job to do in the Conference National and with Luton, Mansfield and Wrexham all hoping to reclaim the prize that is the football league, it'll certainly be a bumpy ride. Anyway, I'll be loving life at Priory Lane on Tuesday, and I might even try and get a few cheeky words with John Main after the game.

Love, Goals and Lee Hughes,

JC

Wednesday, 17 June 2009

James Coppinger: Profile Piece

Here is some coursework I did a little while ago for my degree. It was my first attempt at such a piece. The interview was conducted after Doncaster had beaten Southampton 2-1. Coppinger's follow-up to Martin Woods' opener proved decisive and started the climb up the league. I spoke to a pretty chuffed Copps after, and this is the result of our conversation. Enjoy!

James Coppinger fancied the free kick from the moment he was fouled on the edge of the box. Having already scored two goals in front of the packed Keepmoat Stadium, he now had the chance to send Doncaster Rovers into the League One play-off final and complete a stunning hat-trick.

“Paul Green said 'tap it to me and change the 'keepers angle'... So I tapped it, hit it, and the rest is history. It was a massive goal for the club and a massive high in my football career.”

Life just keeps getting better and better for James Coppinger. This season has seen the attacking midfielder and the 'Rovers side making a name for themselves in the Coca Cola Championship with their unique brand of passing football masterminded by manager Sean O'Driscoll.

When we meet in Southampton's press lounge mid-January, Coppinger's winner has just given Doncaster their third win in four matches to lift them above the Saints in the Championship relegation zone.

On the back of three straight victories, there is a real sense that this could be the turning point in the Rover's season, and although he had to wait until the new year to find the mark against Burnley, Copps – as he is known – is now riding on a wave of confidence that he feels is shared by the rest of the team.

“We've found it quite hard, we've not scored many goals but I think we've turned it round at the right time, and for me to get the my first goal this season against Burnley was a massive weight off of my shoulders. My confidence is high now, and it was good to get on the score sheet and get the lads three points today.”

The Woods/Wellens/Stock/Coppinger midfield combination has stifled some of the biggest names in the Championship this season, and although the goals haven't quite started accumulating yet, Doncaster have surprised everyone with their famous football this season, and a knack for holding onto their slender leads, making every goal count.

“It's good to receive praise, but it's not good when you're playing well and getting beaten every week” he says, talking of the accolades O'Driscoll and his men receive weekly, “We've got a lot of good players at this football club and the results have started coming with the performances now. Hopefully that'll be an ongoing thing and we can stay in this division.”

Regular football in the Championship might well have been the last thing on Coppinger's mind five years ago when he found himself relegated to the Conference with Exeter City. “When I fell out of the Football League with Exeter, there was a point when I decided to pack in it. I'd had enough of football.”

Off the pitch matters also had a hand to play in a pivotal time in his career. “It was the worst time. I was in a funny place when we were relegated. My granddad had died a year previous and it was the icing on the cake really.” Eventually, and fortunately he was talked around to continuing his career and the rise to the cusp of the Premiership begun.

Strangely, it was the Premiership where Coppinger's professional career begun. Signed on deadline day by Kenny Dalglish for £250,000, the starry eyed 17-year-old went from training with the Darlington youth team to training with the likes of John Barnes, Ian Rush, Stuart Pearce and Alan Shearer.

“He (Dalglish) showed great faith in signing me. We got the call, my dad picked up my suit and we went up to Newcastle and signed on the day.” he recalls, “I was a young lad from a small town, signing for Newcastle. It was surreal. I was overwhelmed for a while, training with these people, it was ridiculous.”

Two successful loan spells with Hartlepool United helped the young attacker develop his game, something, which he feels shaped him into the person he is today.

“It was a massive taste for me, and every time I went back to Newcastle I didn't want to play in the reserves, I always wanted to play in the first team,” he remembers, after twice helping Hartlepool into the play-offs. First team chances didn't come along and despite coming on as a substitute for his Newcastle debut in August 2000, he had to start thinking about his future, and ended up taking a huge gamble on his career.

“I decided to make a massive, massive step and move away from my family. I'd never left really left Guisborough and Middlesbrough. I was a very family orientated person but I made one of the biggest decisions of my life and moved 360 miles down to Exeter.”

Cementing a reputation in Division Three with Exeter City, his five goals in the 2002/03 season were not enough to stave off relegation to the Conference, although now talked back into football a newly rejuvenated Coppinger thrived at this level, scoring eight more goals the following season to aid his clubs bid to make an instant return to the Football League.

The return wasn't to be, but the diminutive attackers talents hadn't gone unnoticed. Doncaster Rovers were a team that had made a league return and they'd also gone one better, securing back-to-back promotions - meaning they would start the 2004/05 season in the newly named League One. The manager behind these exploits was Dave Penney, and when he came calling in the summer of 2004, Copps was ready to make the step up.

“I wasn't really nervous about stepping up. Donny showed great faith in signing me. I was an understudy to Jermain McSporran who signed at exactly the same time as me, and a lot of people had heard of him. I went in with no pressure on me and enjoyed getting in there and making a reputation for myself.”

He knew how important reputation was. In the mid 90's the Coppinger family were all Middlesbrough season ticket holders, and a wide-eyed James watched in awe as a series of International stars captured the hearts of Teesside.

“I used to watch Juninho, Emerson and Ravanelli when they were there, and that's what got me to play in the position I play in, and the way I play. Juninho was my idol when I grew up.”

Despite missing the first two games of the season, due to a ban picked up at the end of the 2003/04 season with Exeter City, the young winger made an impressive 27 appearances in the red and white hoops and helped his side to a respectable 10th place in the final league standings, and things were about to get even better for the Rovers.

A League Cup run in 2005/06 saw Doncaster host every round at their ailing Belle Vue ground. Wrexham, Manchester City, Gillingham and Aston Villa were all unsuccessful in their attempts to advance in the competition.

Arsenal were the next visitors to Doncaster's fortress, and the home side were moments away from claiming another scalp, but it wasn't to be. Gilberto Silva bundled the ball into the net in the 121st minute and Rovers lost the resulting shoot-out, but Coppinger believes the cup run galvanised the team.

“Beating Aston Villa was massive, and being so close to beating Arsenal gave the side so much confidence. It was the stepping stone to bigger things.”

And bigger things came. Firstly there was a brand new stadium – The £32m Keepmoat Stadium to be precise, and a new manager in the shape of Sean O'Driscoll who replaced Penney in the summer of 2006. Branded by club chairman John Ryan as the “Arsene Wenger of League One”, O'Driscoll led the Rovers to eighth place in the league and also secured them their first major trophy.

“The Chairman has always wanted success. He brought O'Driscoll in and he did really well. He blended a lot of good players together. When we won the Johnstone's Paint Trophy, the eye was initially on promotion and although we didn't do that, we won the trophy and it was a brilliant day.”

With silverware in the cabinet at a fantastic new ground, there was a positive vibe at the club. Now Doncaster set themselves up for a fourth crack at promotion from League One with their slick passing football masterminded by the gaffer, but the team weren't just going to pass their way into the Championship that easily, as James explains; “People would come to the Keepmoat, they obviously knew what we were about and got 10 men behind the ball, and it was difficult, but we were successful and it showed in the play-off games.”

Starting the last day of the season in second place, a win at Cheltenham would see Doncaster automatically promoted, but as any Rovers fan will tell you, life is never that easy. A 2-1 loss consigned them to the play-offs, where they would meet Southend United in a two-legged semi final.

A stalemate at Roots Hall set the teams up for an encounter at the Keepmoat seven days later, where Doncaster would have to justify their season in just one match. “The 0-0 at Southend was a resolute performance, but we used the loss at Cheltenham as a catalyst in the second leg, and we showed some balls, if you like.”

Balls indeed, were shown, as the hosts were 2-0 up inside twenty minutes, but not content to sit back, Coppinger took it upon himself to destroy Southend completely. His two fantastic solo efforts put Rovers 4-0 up, and then he won the free kick that would show the world how far this small club had come.

“The confidence from scoring one goal, never mind two goals was massive,” he remembers, and with one kick of the ball he completed his first ever career hat-trick with a sublime free-kick that doubled his goal tally for the whole season - in one game.

The win sent former Conference side Doncaster Rovers to Wembley to meet Leeds, in a game they would win 1-0, sending them to the Championship, where we find Coppinger today.

From the Conference to the Championship in five years is some mean feat, especially for a man that almost gave it all up - “I'm proof you can come out of the other side and go from that, to where I am today and I'm glad of that.”

“When I got relegated to the Conference, normal people would say that you'd never dream of playing in the Championship, but it was something that I did dream of. I wanted to get back up there, and I wanted to prove people that had doubted me at Newcastle and Hartlepool wrong, and it's something that I'm taking with two hands. I take every positive out of every game, we all do, and the more the games come, the more positive we remain.”

And scoring today in a six-pointer relegation battle against Southampton?

“It feels great, but it'd feel even better if were safe.” Remarks Copps, and it is at this point I notice that his hands are shaking ever so slightly. I find out that he doesn't eat anything before the game, and he runs purely on the adrenaline and energy that he finds in his pace and trickery that has turned hundreds of left-backs inside out over the years, even if it does leave him a little on edge after the games.

As I listen back to the interview, 'On edge' appears to be a metaphor for James Coppinger's career.

From when he was on the edge of his seat watching the Brazilian revolution sweep through Middlesbrough, or when he lived his life on the edge - leaving his family to travel the length of the country for first team football.

And of course, five years after returning from the brink of giving it all up, where he was stood on the edge of the box at the Keepmoat about to tuck away 'that' free-kick to mark a fantastic high in his, and Doncaster Rovers history.