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Part 2
***
Rocky! I did not know that you embraced the Total Football philosophy. Your
team it is very good at the system. My players, they are not up to it yet. Tell me,
after so many years at Alkhoven, I have somewhat forgotten how long it will take
them to adapt. Please share with me your ideas.
Well, Johan, it was Dad really who helped me with the tactics, he got them
ticking when I was suspended. What Dad noticed was that the players suited the
system. I had them playing the Melchester Rovers way, in a 4-3-3, but it just did
not work. Since weve moved to 3-4-3 and Total Football, were unbeaten and
completely dominating teams. Our opponents have no answer to our fluidity, our
movement, our gear-shifts. We can overrun teams who, on paper, are technically
superior to us! But the key, was getting the right man in the deep-lying
playmaker position. I wanted Carlos Figueroa to play in the Number 10 role, but
Dad saw he was perfect as our midfield general. Carlos is our captain and leader,
once he was happy and controlling our tempo, the others just followed.
Rocky Race, the manager of MLS Champions Baltimore Bullets and Johan
Seegrun the new manager of Melchester Rovers were sharing a bottle of
Californian Red, in the executive lounge of Bullets Stadium. Although only a
friendly and Rovers first of the pre-season, the Bullets had comprehensively
dismantled a confused Melchester side. Humbled 3-0, the Dutchman was
impressed with the young Races tactics and the way his athletic side had
mastered Total Football, the system originally built for Seegrun the player at
Alkhoven in the mid-70s. The greats, like Roy Race or Seegrun, always sought
out new information or advice from any source they deemed worthy. Rocky
Races record as a manager in the MLS was exceptional and his side played in a
style so similar to Seegrun the players Alkhoven and Seegrun the managers
Netherlands. Although a young and inexperienced manager, Johan could see just
from the way Baltimore played that he was certainly a source of information
worth exploring.
I see, who in the Rovers team do you think can be my Figueroa? Drew Powell?
Danny Luik? Jake Cheetham? No-one else has the range of passing. Perhaps I will
have to go into the transfer market. Rocky believed that only Powell or
Cheetham had the ability to control the game from deep, Luiks passing game
was too limited and he was not as mobile. Playing Cheetham so deep would be
a waste, hes added goals to his game now. But Powell could certainly play there.
He can pass, both long and short, can run with the ball and he doesnt mind
getting stuck in. In fact, when he first came into the side he was seen as a
defensive midfielder. It was only when Cheetham was injured towards the end of
the 13/14 season that he added some attacking flair to his game.
Johan Seegrun had made up his mind, Drew Powell would be the lynch pin of his
Total Football system. He knew he had the wide forwards in Harry Jacobs and
new signing Marco De Loon to stretch even the tightest of defences. Richie Lyons
and Jake Cheetham would rotate in the false nine and attacking midfield position.
The string of friendlies that followed the Bullets defeat would be used to drill the
players in their new system. But Seegrun knew already that it would be the end
of the road for some of the players he had inherited. Nick Batty for example was
far too limited to fit into any of the midfield slots, every player had to be able to
play with adventure. He would be allowed to find a new club, as would Steve
Daley, the veteran centre-back. In training the big defender had struggled with
expectations. He was an old-fashioned defender, he could tackle and head, but
would never be effective in a system where he had to get his head up and make
Johan was nodding away, I agree, I see it now. At the back, even in Total
Football, it is the defenders main duty to defend. An error there can cost a goal
a lot more easily than a nice pass create one! There is one man, who I played
against who had this great skill to balance being a stopper and an extra
midfielder: Kurt Gruber. You know him, he played for West Germany and in
England for Carford City? Rocky knew who Gruber was, he had marked his
father in the early 80s during a brief stay at Carford, Rocky was only young, but
he could always remember great players. Kurt Gruber was great, but what about
Karl Bruckner? Hes one of my heroes, he helped me so much when I first got
into the Rovers team. Again Seegrun agreed, Bruckner yes, was a great player.
But, and you may not like this, he became worse playing in England. He replaced
a lot of his technical skill with brute force. In Germany he was the libero, as soon
as he went to Rovers, he became the stopper. In England there has never been
room for flair and defence. I hope to change that.
Do you think James Carruthers can be that man, the first Englishman to play
sweeper in the continental style? I think hes got the natural talent for it, but
youll be changing his whole approach to football!
But he has developed so much in just one year. You say you found him in nonleague football, an amateur and now he is playing for England! That is what the
press here call Roy of the Rovers stuff, no?
The two managers laughed away, for both, a simple chat over a glass of wine
had been so productive. Football men love nothing more than talking football, it
was when this passion fades that it is time to walk away from the game. Roy
Race had done so on two occasions, once after Pennys death in 1995 and again
in 2002 after Rovers narrowly missed out on the Premier League title. At this
stage of his career Johan Seegrun still had the desire to make a difference to the
football world and he wondered about his old friend, Rocky, tell me, how is your
father? I feel so bad that I have not had the chance to meet with him since I have
been at Melchester. Tell me he is in good spirits and that he will still be in the
stands at Mel Park this year!
Rocky really did not know how to answer, but thought to humour the Dutchman,
Dads great, you know him, always talking football and nothing else! Hes so
excited that youre the Rovers new boss, he knows that youll do a great job and
get Rovers back where they belong! But the reality was somewhat different. Roy
Race was still angry and bitter at the way he had been treated by the Basranian
owners of Melchester Rovers. Their public refusal of his job application after
Vernon Eliot had been sacked and the constant reminders once he had been
made manager, that his role was only temporary, that he would be replaced no
matter what he achieved. Roy felt let down by his club, by David Roth, the
chairman and by his friend Johan. All he wanted was a simple statement, just
once, from Johan stating that he supported his position and wanted success for
the team. Johan had not shown this support for his long-term friend, his
responses to questions on his forthcoming job, were met with no comment at
this time or a series of excuses saying he was fully focused on his job as
manager of the Netherlands. Although seemingly simple and not important, to
Roy it was a small betrayal. Seegrun had not once sought his advice or opinion
on taking over at the club that Roy Race had built, the club where his legacy ran
deep. Rocky now knew that Johan had every intention of ignoring the great Race
dominated history of the great club, while Roy Race firmly believed that to be
successful at such a club it was of extreme importance to become a part of the
history. But as Johan had made clear, he intended for a revolution to take place
behind the doors at Mel Park and on the famous pitch. He wanted to change the
very fabric of what made Melchester Rovers the biggest and most successful
club in the land in order to make them successful again.
I know I am taking some big risks coming here to Melchester, Rocky, but I need
one last challenge. I know it will be hard and that many Melchester men will not
like my plans. But Rovers are not that great now, before your father, they were
not that great either. He made big changes and Im sure he upset some of the
old men, but it worked, and I will make sure that what I do, I do for the right
reasons and that the end result will be Melchester Rovers winning the Premier
League and being a force in Europe!
***
The little white house at the top of the hill where former Eastgate forward John
Rogers had made his hideout was beginning to look more like the home of an
elite English footballer. A framed white and green hooped Eastgate shirt from
1977 hung alongside a team photo from the start of the 1976/77 season when
Rogers had made his debut as a raw sixteen year-old. Rogers was adding to his
football memorabilia collection - the printer whirred and chugged as it spat out
an old newspaper article. John read it again, perhaps for the hundredth time.
SUNDAY GAZETTE, April 24, 1977
JOHN ROGERS couldn't have timed his first goal for Eastgate more
perfectly five minutes from the end of one of the most pulsating and
exciting semi-finals of modern times.
Nor was it more desperately needed for it gave Eastgate a replay chance that was really scant reward
for their magnificent performance.
Carford, who had hardly played at all to the pattern we had come to expect were incredibly in front,
scoring twice from only three shots.
But Eastgate, a new and exciting Eastgate full of spirit and character, were hitting back. They pulled
off Rankin who had injured his groin and on came Greaves and they immediately equalised.
Williams, chief tormentor of an uncertain Carford defence, went wide to the right and although he
miscued his shot, the ball deceived Jackson and rolled to Rogers, who tapped it home from two yards.
The white and green colours that suddenly turned Burnham Park into a carnival also seemed to be a
colourful shroud to Carfords hopes of silverware.
And still Eastgate werent finished. A Telford cross was headed goalwards by Williams and Greaves
rushed it in off his hip. But it was disallowed by Welsh referee Dai Jenkins, presumably for offside.
So they go back to Burnham Park on Wednesday for a second chance to settle it.
A torrential rainstorm turned the pitch into a watersheet and it robbed Foulkes of a goal after a 40yard run past four defenders until he completely missed his kick in a puddle of water.
Command
Eastgate, in almost total command, went behind to a magnificent goal from Hunt. But they battled on
with Knott, playing his first full game of the season dominating midfield.
And the action was all among the Carford goalmouth. As Archie Miller said later: We didnt play in
the first half. When the superb Williams scored from one of the many chances Eastgate had, it seemed
they would win.
But Carford City, built up over the years to live with such pressure did not cave in. Instead Weston,
the man whose goals won City the Cup Winners Cup in 74, headed them into the lead and an almost
certain place at Wembley.
But young Rogers, in his debut season, denied Carford late on to earn Eastgate the replay, which was
the least they deserved.
FORM REPORT
EASTGATE: Bowker 7 Barnes 7, Buchanan 7, Gregson 7, Jeffords 7 Knott 8,
Rankin (inj) 7, Merrit 7 Telford 7, WILLIAMS 9, Rogers 8. Sub: Greaves.
CARFORD CITY: Jackson 7 Turner 7, Johnson 7, Gladwin 6, Foster 6 - HUNT 8,
Daley 7, Harrison 6 Weston 7, Lewis 6, Foulkes 7. Sub: Henderson.
REF: D Jenkins (Barmouth) 9.
As the report said, it was Johns first senior goal and what an important one. It
was the moment of his career that all Eastgate fans remembered. He would
score better goals, but for a small club, over-shadowed by the more successful
London sides, it had become part of folklore. Eastgate would lose the replay, a
one-nil win for Carford earning them the right to face Gatesfield at Wembley. But
the semi-final is still recalled as one of the very best.
Rogers fixed a cheap frame around the newspaper article and placed it on the
wall to the left of the shirt. His display was now symmetrical, the shirt in the
centre, team photograph on the right and article on the left. Anyone who entered
would have no doubt as to the resident of this small white-washed house. It felt
more like home and if the news from England was anything to go by, Rogers
would be calling this place home indefinitely.
Storky Knight
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