Bristol Post

Wael hails ‘Joe’ a ‘footballin­g genius’ After remarkable promotion clincher

- James PIERCY james.piercy@reachplc.com

WAEL Al-Qadi hailed Joey Barton as a “genius” and insisted he was the calmest man inside the Memorial Stadium as Bristol Rovers pulled off one of the most unlikely promotions in their own and, most likely, English football history.

The Bristol Rovers owner watched on from his box in the centre of the West Stand as the Gas delivered, in his words, a “football miracle” to overtake Northampto­n Town on goals scored and claim third place and the final automatic path into League One on the final day of the season.

It concluded a stunning run of 16 wins from 25 matches in 2022 after a first half of the season in which Rovers plummeted as low as 22nd in the table and Barton verbally tendered his resignatio­n following the 3-1 defeat to Leyton Orient on September 18. But Wael Al-Qadi, pictured, stuck by the man he appointed in February 2021 to stick a rocket up the football club and reset a culture he felt had become too passive and conditione­d away from being a “winning side”.

Speaking before he joined the players in the dressing room, atop Alfie Kilgour’s shoulders chanting, “we are going up”, the Jordanian insisted he never had any doubt in this group and promised that Rovers were only going to get better as they now prepare for League One.

“I just witnessed a footballin­g miracle,” said Al-Qadi, as the players took part in a rousing edition of ‘Goodnight Irene.’ “I never doubted this from the beginning of the season, I always had faith in this group,

Joe, his staff and everybody that works in there, the fans, the players - they never had doubt in what they could achieve. It took a bit of time but we got there in the end.

“Honestly, I was calm throughout. I never doubted this team. Last week, for example, coming back from 3-1 down and winning 4-3. I just had complete faith and trust in these guys.

“If it wasn’t automatics, I was very confident we’d go through the play-offs with these guys. I was calm, I was honestly calm and it was lovely to see how it transpired.

“You can see what it means for the fans, it’s just an incredible feeling, this winning feeling to see everybody happy. After the relegation last season, we owed it to our fans and it means a lot but we’re only going to get better.

“I’ve always admired Joe. He’s a footballin­g genius and this is just the beginning with him.”

The president played his own part in the remarkable scenes in north Bristol. After Elliot Anderson headed in the seventh goal, several hundred fans poured on to the pitch from the Thatchers terrace forcing the players off the field and referee Charles Breakspear to threaten abandoning the fixture due to concerns around the welfare of the players, particular­ly the Scunthorpe United team.

However, Wael Al-Qadi and Barton were both passed the microphone by matchday announcer Lance Cook to explain the situation to the delirious Gasheads to ensure a safe conclusion to a truly unique 90 minutes of football that eventually ran well past the 100-minute mark.

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 ?? ?? Joey Barton is carried on the shoulders of a Rovers fan following the promotion-clinching win against Scunthorpe
Joey Barton is carried on the shoulders of a Rovers fan following the promotion-clinching win against Scunthorpe
 ?? Picture: Alex James/JMP ?? at the Memorial Stadium on Saturday
Picture: Alex James/JMP at the Memorial Stadium on Saturday
 ?? ?? Antony Evans and Elliot Anderson celebrate promotion
Picture: Bradley Collyer/PA
Antony Evans and Elliot Anderson celebrate promotion Picture: Bradley Collyer/PA

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