Daily Mirror

The inventor of walking football now making huge strides to inspire his club

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FROM selling programmes to saving his boyhood club, working on a film set, and inventing a sporting phenomenon, John Croot’s lifetime in football deserves a crowning glory.

Chesterfie­ld’s promotion back into the Football League mainstream, after six years below stairs, is imminent – and nobody can match Croot’s joyride from flogging matchday magazines to becoming the club’s chief executive.

Like the town’s famous crooked spire, there have been a few bends in the road. But anyone who loves football will welcome the Spireites’ return to EFL orbit if they collect the point required today against Boreham Wood to start a month-long pub crawl in Derbyshire.

Manager Paul Cook was so gracious in defeat at last May’s play-off final against

Notts County, when his heart was breaking for the better side on the day, that running away with the National League this season is the least he deserves.

And for Croot, the return journey from here to austerity will be a special moment when – not if – it happens.

“I went to school about 20 yards from our old ground at Saltergate, across the road from the away end, so I was a captive audience from a young age,” he said. “I used to find an excuse to go in the club shop every day after school until they asked if I wanted to sell programmes.

“I sold loads when we beat Rangers 3-0 in the quarter-finals on our way to winning the old AngloScott­ish Cup in 1981. As the last club to win the trophy, it’s still in our boardroom cabinet.”

Before Chesterfie­ld moved to their new stadium, Saltergate was the location for football scenes in The Damned United, Michael Sheen’s acclaimed portrayal of Brian Clough. You won’t see Croot’s name when the credits roll, but you will see his desk and chair in the film. “Clough’s office in The Damned United was my office, and filming was still going around us on nonmatchda­ys,” he said.

“I was working in a room down the corridor when they shot the scene where Jim Broadbent, who played the Derby chairman Sam Longson, was telling Cloughie he was out the door. I could hear Michael Sheen banging the table shouting: ‘You can’t get rid of me – it would be a disaster for the club. For the whole of Derby.’

“When the film came out and they got to that scene, I thought: ‘I’ve heard those lines before. All 12 takes, or however many times it was’.”

Croot has helped to save the Spireites from going under – twice. He was a ringleader of the supporters’ society that saved them in 2001. And, during the pandemic, he orchestrat­ed a takeover by the Chesterfie­ld FC Community Trust.

“The club was not in a good place during Covid and the decision to try to do something about it wasn’t based on business,” said Croot. “People thought we were crackers and letting hearts rule our heads.

“But it gave us a unique opportunit­y to embed the club in the community.

“Billionair­es and nation states might be able to buy a club but I’m not sure they ever truly own them. Clubs like Chesterfie­ld will always belong to the fans.”

Twin £500,000 loans from Chesterfie­ld council and Derbyshire county council gave Croot’s rescue plan breathing space, and now the club is in rude health (striker Will Griggs scores against Barnet, who are a massive 21 points beind Chesterfie­ld yet only a place below them, last month, below), with local businessme­n Phil and Ashley Kirk lining up a £2million investment for a majority stake.

Once the party gets started at the SMH Group Stadium, it could go on all summer.

Croot said: “We are hosting the IWFF Walking Football world championsh­ip in May, which is gratifying for someone who is credited with inventing it.

“We’ll have 18 nations coming to Chesterfie­ld for their version of the world cup. You could say walking football’s coming home.”

And darts royalty John Lowe, a Spireites fan and three-times world champn who lives in the town, is doing an exhibition night at the club, taking on allcomers. “You can tell the players are taking it seriously,” said Croot. “In the last couple of weeks a dartboard has appeared in the dressing room, and they have even put a light above it, so they mean business.”

‘We’ll have 18 nations coming to Chesterfie­ld for their version of World Cup’

‘I used to find an excuse to go in the club shop after school’

 ?? ?? HAVING A BALL Croot has enjoyed an incredible rise and (inset) Sheen in the role of Clough
HAVING A BALL Croot has enjoyed an incredible rise and (inset) Sheen in the role of Clough
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