THE ARCHIVE
Season reviews
Mind the gap? | Mind the gap? |
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As a follower of a newly promoted club who just achieved their highest league placing in 94 years of grim struggle, it’s tempting to view the Second Division through heavily rose-tinted specs. To me it seems a delightful, cheerful and friendly division which all clubs should visit regularly. A survey of the changes in the division since Hartlepool’s last visit in 1991 shows that rigorous asset-stripping of promoted teams seems to have fallen out of fashion. In 1991 the winners of the old Fourth Division were gleefully dismantled by middle-aged men in sheepskin coats – any promoted side would lose three or four key players to big clubs (defined as anyone who was in the First Division, had ever won a major trophy, or just had a big ground). This year all three upwardly mobile arrivals retained nine or ten of their first-choice promotion team. The high stakes attached to failure in the higher divisions have frightened managers into looking for “proven” recruits from abroad or from relegated clubs – few look below them. In 1991 Chelsea bought Hartlepool’s top scorer Joe Allon; in 2004 Eifion Williams’ prospects of boarding the gravy train to Stamford Bridge seem remote. Paul Hall, one of the best attacking wing-backs I’ve seen, remains at Rushden. Bristol City’s superb goalkeeper Steve Phillips and dynamic midfielder Tom Doherty almost made it up through the play-offs, but a few years ago neither would have been with the club at the beginning of the season. The number of foreign players in the Premier League and, to a lesser extent, the First Division has combined with nervous management and the academies to all but end the concept of buying “prospects” and bringing them on; building a reputation strong enough to secure a major move up can now take three years rather than three months. The same situation seems to apply to managers, where only Paul Sturrock’s move from Plymouth to Southampton fitted the old pattern of cherry-picking managers from below. To the national media this seems a bad thing and there is much wringing of hands at the lack of opportunities being afforded to young British players and managers. It is deemed damaging to the national interest, but I don’t care about that. In fact I’m delighted to see smaller clubs retain good young players for longer, hang on to managers for a reasonable length of time and pick up out-of-contract higher-division players on shorter contracts by paying sensible wages. From WSC 209 July 2004. What was happening this month On the subject...
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