Bristol Post

Football We need to sign at least 12 players, says Rovers manager Barton

- Sam FROST sam.frost@reachplc.com

I think we need to sign at least 12 players, that’s the reality

JOEY Barton believes Bristol Rovers need to make in the region of 12 summer signings in order to mount a challenge in League One this season, with eyes on a number of players already in the dressing room.

There is set to be the typically high turnover of players for a club at this level in the summer with the expiry of five loans - Ellery Balcombe, Jarell Quansah, Lewis Gibson, Lamare Bogarde and Josh Coburn - as well as the likely exits of out-of-contract players, meaning areas of Barton’s squad are likely to be much-changed on the opening day in August.

The likes of Aaron Collins, Antony Evans, James Belshaw, James Connolly, Sam Finley and Luca Hoole are all tied down to multi-year contracts and they are set to form the core of Barton’s resources, but the manager is aware he needs to make upgrades across the squad - particular­ly in defence with Rovers shipping 68 goals in 43 games - if they are to emulate Plymouth Argyle after Tuesday’s 2-0 defeat at Home Park and mount a challenge for a place near the top of the division in 2023-24.

Recruitmen­t will largely focus on bringing new faces and some “nous and experience”, as Barton described it after Saturday’s defeat at Port Vale, but there are also players in the squad the manager would be eager to keep hold of beyond the expiry of their terms in a few weeks time. He has previously stated his desire to see Everton loanee Gibson return, given the influence the centre-half has had on the team’s success (Rovers have won just 13 per cent of games he has not played) when he has been fit and available. The 22-year-old is out of contract at Goodison Park this summer and he appears likely to depart, but Rovers may not be at the front of the queue for the leftsided defender who has Championsh­ip and high-end League One experience with Reading and Sheffield Wednesday, respective­ly.

After Tuesday’s loss in Devon which saw 10-man Rovers lose out to title-chasing Argyle, Barton indicated he would like to see Grant Ward, Bogarde and Coburn also in a Rovers shirt next season.

Midfielder Ward has been outstandin­g since signing a short-term deal in January, offering a wellrounde­d skillset in the centre of the park. Bogarde, another January signing, has enormous potential in midfield and he has played a critical role in Rovers’ best performanc­es in the run-in.

Coburn, meanwhile, has had a difficult second half of the season, but he was the league’s best striker leading up to the midway point in terms of his conversion rate. With nine goals in 31 appearance­s, it has still been a successful loan for the Middlesbro­ugh talent, and with Michael Carrick’s side possibly playing Premier League football next term, perhaps there is scope for another temporary stay in BS7.

Regardless of whether Barton is successful in getting any of those deals done, he says he is “crystal clear” about what it will take to help Rovers reach the next level next season.

“I think we need to sign at least 12 players, that’s the reality,” he said. “We’re going to lose a few and, obviously, loans are going to be included in that.

“I think some of those players are in that dressing room for sure. Some of the performanc­es tonight, certainly Grant Ward. He’s been exceptiona­l. Can we get a couple of the lads back? Lamare on loan? Maybe, possibly. Josh Coburn? Maybe, I don’t know.

“But we are going to have to recruit and I think it’s evident in the past few games, we’ve taken on the bigger and better teams at the top of the division.

“I think I am crystal clear on what type of group I want to build next year and we’ve got some really good components in that dressing room, young lads who are still learning, but we just keep improving it incrementa­lly and it won’t be long until, hopefully, as a football club, we’re in a position to challenge for the Championsh­ip.”

Plymouth deserve huge credit for their response to relegation in 2019,

bouncing back at the first attempt and laying solid foundation­s in League One before gradually becoming promotion contenders. Several windows of excellent recruitmen­t coupled with infrastruc­ture improvemen­ts off the pitch have put the club in a great position to realise its potential.

With safety secured, Rovers have made a commendabl­e return to the third tier after spending last season in League Two. Barton says they have “mirrored” Plymouth’s early steps on their journey to the Championsh­ip and they could do worse than to follow their lead.

Rovers, too, have stadium ambitions, both for the Memorial Stadium in the shape of a new South Stand, and a developmen­t at the fruit market in St Philips Marsh in years to come and Barton believes

Plymouth are an example of what is possible for clubs of a similar size, like Rovers, if they get their investment right on and off the field.

“Their budget will be about £4.5 million, not one of the bigger budgets in the division,” Barton added. “They went for it in January and there was a big play from them; they went and spent a load of money for a League One club, similar to Ipswich. It is no coincidenc­e, look at the results they have got. You need to incrementa­lly improve your team. It’s coaches, stats, all that, but people forget it’s about football players. If you have got good players like they have got and you keep getting good players and your bench starts to be filled with good players, lo and behold you usually get results and climb up the table.”

 ?? Picture: Will Cooper/JMP ?? On-loan midfielder Lamare Bogarde
Picture: Will Cooper/JMP On-loan midfielder Lamare Bogarde

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