Portsmouth News

Nuclear spending and concerns for terrain Pompey now inhabit

- With News sports writer Jordan Cross jordan.cross@thenews.co.uk

Danny Cowley is the type of person more interested in finding solutions than fretting about problems.

The Pompey head coach is the kind of clear thinker whose currency is delivering answers over posing interminab­le questions.

But there’s no hiding from the fact the man charged with injecting life into this club on the pitch has a lot of problems and unanswered questions to deal with right now.

For a man who energises, the Blues boss is having a tough task radiating an air of positivity at present with the new League One season now just nine days away.

Because, on the pitch, this doesn’t look like a club remotely ready for the challenges which lie ahead.

Before we get into that, we should take a moment to be thankful for what we do have.

There’s little doubt that since the Cowleys have come into PO4 they’ve invigorate­d a stagnant football club, who had seen a toxic malaise take root under Kenny Jackett. Pompey have the right men at the helm.

And, in terms of the business actually conducted this summer, there’s a very sturdy look to the eight new additions to arrive.

The likes of Clark Robertson, Shaun Williams, Ryan Tunnicliff­e, Kieron Freeman and Gavin Bazunu have impressed in pre-season – and then there is Gassan Ahadme's potential and eight pre-season goals to date.

But there are a lot of buts. The first is where things stand inside the building, as we count down to the trip to Fleetwood Town a week on Saturday.

Cowley currently has a squad of 20 players at his disposal.

That in isolation sounds a promising number, but grant some closer inspection and the holes quickly begin to appear.

To begin with, a trio of those players - Haji Mnoga, Liam Vincent and Jayden Reid are viewed as future prospects and were earmarked for potential loans. That, of course, before news of Reid’s serious knee injury broke on Tuesday evening.

In wide areas, two of those in the squad have their futures in doubt, with Ronan Curtis seeking Championsh­ip employment and Ipswich Town chasing Michael Jacobs.

A third, Reeco HackettFai­rchild, was part of a side relegated to the National League in his loan with Southend last term.

Then drink in the hugely worrying fact Cowley can call on two central midfielder­s at present. Yes, two.

At 34, Shaun Williams makes up one of those options along with Ryan Tunnicliff­e. It’s a glaringly obvious concern.

Then there’s the attacking roster of Ellis Harrison, John Marquis and Gassan Ahadme: two strikers who’ve failed to fire consistent­ly, and a promising but untried prospect.

By Cowley’s own estimation, Pompey need a keeper, left-back, central defender, two midfielder­s withdrawn attacker and out-and-out striker.

So, let's not hide from the fact the vast amount of work still to do is now a real and legitimate cause of disquiet.

For such diligent operators, it also has an obvious knock-on effect for the management group in trying to relay very defined game ideas to the team.

With holes to fill, the Cowleys are being forced to use triallists who realistica­lly have little chance of earning long-term deals, and should really be long gone by now.

Yet, they are a necessary evil at present.

Then we get on the thorny issue of finances and the envious glances being cast around the division, as spending reaches levels few would ever have anticipate­d earlier in the summer.

Even accounting for takeovers among rivals, did we see £500,000 signingon fees, wages regularly reaching more than £10,000 per week, seven-figure signings and offers of £1.3m tabled by rivals.

The truth is Pompey didn’t, with it catching a man well versed in League

One levels of spending in Cowley on the hop.

Talk of the Blues being a top-six budget has now gone quiet as a result. As, crucially, has the transfer trail on a number of players.

Rangers defender George Edmundson was one of them, while The News understand­s a return loan move for Conor Chaplin has been mooted this summer. Both are now Ipswich Town players.

That’s before we even get on to Ben Thompson, who again has been under considerat­ion.

Wages believed to be in the region of £9,000 per week could not be accommodat­ed without some serious help from Millwall, however.

At this moment, that doesn’t look on the cards with the Lions having their own bills to balance.

Perhaps Luton can be more accommodat­ing when it comes to Joe Morrell, but, as we've seen, it would only take interest from a certain few to violently change that picture. All the while, Pompey wait for a stagnant Championsh­ip market to spring to life, and knock down the opening domino in the recruitmen­t rally they're watching with intent.

So Cowley finds himself in a situation where he has to temper his own chagrin at putting in the miles on deals, only to be ‘blown out of the water’ by those he will vie with for League One supremacy.

He’s in a position that when he talks he doesn’t want to sound bitter about the spending power of his rivals, nor the financial conditions he’s working to - which he is genuinely understand­ing of.

Yet, it’s hard not come up short on both fronts when speaking of the terrain he currently inhabits.

Those moments have bubbled to the surface a couple of times over the past week, for the first time since Cowley’s April arrival.

But then the reset button is pressed and the Londoner’s default setting found again.

That was seen at Kenilworth Road on

Saturday, as the reality of transfer difficulti­es ebbed away in the face of realisatio­n virtually all of Cowley’s career successes have come against foes with superior financial conditions. The brothers found a way to triumph.

Yet, perhaps the time is now to temper expectatio­ns and realise where things stand.

For the first time in five League One seasons, Pompey are not being seen as favourites to reach the Championsh­ip by the bookies.

The oddsmakers have the Blues as low as sixth behind Ipswich Town, Sunderland, Sheffield Wednesday, Charlton and Wigan to be celebratin­g promotion next May.

Of course, it’s the birthright of every football fan to enter a new season with hope. Yet, as we stand here today looking at Cowley’s burgeoning to-do list, even that ranking perhaps feels a tad optimistic.

For the first time in five seasons, Pompey are not being seen as favourites

 ??  ?? TOUGH TASK Pompey head coach Danny Cowley has a burgeoning to-do list before the transfer window closes next month
TOUGH TASK Pompey head coach Danny Cowley has a burgeoning to-do list before the transfer window closes next month
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