THE ARCHIVE
Managers
Fiddler on the hoof | Fiddler on the hoof |
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Moments after the end of the televised Conference-clinching win at Hayes in 2002, Boston United manager Steve Evans grinned into the Sky cameras, surrounded by champagne-soaked players and disbelieving fans. “Laps of honour are for champions,” he gloated, making reference to Dagenham boss Garry Hill, who had led his players on a premature lap of glory two months earlier. The slogan assumed instant cult status back in Boston, the club even plastering it on T-shirts in the official shop. Four years later, the phrase has a new twist on fans’ message boards: “Laps of honour are for champions, guilty pleas are for cheats.” For Boston fans, the embarrassingly public conclusion of Evans’ trial for conspiring to defraud the public revenue was not, as they had hoped, the end of a truly surreal eight-year period of wild peaks and troughs. Although no one wished a custodial sentence upon him, the majority of fans wanted Evans out. To their dismay, and the palpable amazement of a national press pack unfamiliar with how Boston operate, chairman Jim Rodwell emerged from Southwark Crown Court to give Evans his full and absolute backing. “He deserves a second chance,” Rodwell told the journalists. “We want to judge him on results.”
Yet for most supporters the results no longer matter. It’s the principle of having a convicted fraudster and exposed cheat in the dugout they find most abhorrent. In the grand tradition of lower-league protest, the issue has caused an exodus from the terraces of York Street. One fan refusing to attend games on principle is Mick Taylor. “The actions of the manager and those of the owners are sending out the wrong messages to fans old and young,” he says. “I don’t want to associate myself and my children with a so-called community football club that seems to promote cheating.” From WSC 239 January 2007. What was happening this month On the subject...
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