Portsmouth News

New Rams boss Hoare is not planning any style changes

- Simon Carter simon.carter@nationalwo­rld.com @portsmouth­sport

Connor Hoare is not planning any major changes to Petersfiel­d Town’s playing style after being handed his first managerial role.

He aims to carry on championin­g the philosophi­es installed by predecesso­rs Joe Lea and Pat Suraci as the Rams return to the top flight of the Wessex League following play-off glory in late April.

Basically, if it ain’t broke, don’t break it!

The 27-year-old was quickly appointed Petersfiel­d boss earlier this month after Lea and Suraci leapt three tiers up the non-league pyramid to join Gosport Borough.

After recovering from an injury that kept him out of playing for 12 months, Hoare joined his former Privett Park colleagues Lea and Suruaci at Love Lane last summer.

He made 41 league and cup starts - no one at the club made more - as the Rams reached the Wessex Division 1 play-offs.

There they defeated both Newport IoW and New Milton Town away from home on penalties to clinch a return to step 5 football after a five-year absence.

Hoare told The News: ‘The club wanted to keep the same direction going, and they thought I was probably the best person to do it.

‘I was captain last year, I know the philosophy that Joe and Pat wanted and what the players were used to.

‘I joined last year as I’ve known Joe and Pat since we were at Gosport together. I’ve known Pat since we were teenagers. When they said they were coming here I said I’d help them out as a friend.

‘I’ve ended up loving it here.

‘If anyone else had come in, it would be silly to change what was so successful last season.

‘My philosophi­es are the same at Joe and Pat’s - I want to see exciting possession­based, intense football.

‘I won’t set any targets. We’re definitely not going to win the league but I believe we can be competitiv­e.’

Hoare’s first major decision was to persuade Callum Glen to decamp from Wessex Premier rivals Moneyfield­s to join as his player-assistant manager.

It was a decision which stunned Moneys boss Glenn Turnbull, and showed Hoare means business in his new tole.

‘That’s a big statement,’ Hoare declared. ‘Callum could have stayed at Moneyfield­s next season and won the league, but he wanted to come here.

‘He sees himself as being in management one day, so this aligns with what he wants to do in the future. It was almost a no-brainer.

‘With the age we are, having taken this on, it’s definitely a long-term thing for us. We want to be here for a long time.’

Another key signing has been Steve Weston, who joins as a coach having previously been a Wessex League Premier assistant boss to Steve Leigh at Baffins and Tom

Grice at US Portsmouth.

Hoare is hopeful of keeping the bulk of the promotionw­inning squad together. But he might have to do without the midfielder who was third top goalscorer in 2022/23 with 10 goals - himself!

Asked if he will carry on playing, the new boss - who won the Wessex Premier title with Blackfield in 2018 stated: ‘Not if I can help it, no.’

 ?? Picture by Robin Caddy. ?? Connor Hoare receives the Wessex League Division 1 play-off trophy after his side’s penalty shoot-out win at New Milton
Picture by Robin Caddy. Connor Hoare receives the Wessex League Division 1 play-off trophy after his side’s penalty shoot-out win at New Milton

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