Sunday Mirror

From Van Hooijdonk’s strike to players trashing a hotel room and Big Ron in the wrong dugout... Forest’s last season in top flight was a disaster MICKY ADAMS ON HOW CLUB FELL APART 23 YEARS AGO

Colwell is just the ticket for Town’s big day

- BY ROSS HEPPENSTAL­L By NEIL MOXLEY @neil_moxley ■■Extract taken from ‘Micky Adams - my life in football’ www.bitebackpu­blishing.com

LEVI COLWILL will be backed by 50 friends and family members as Huddersfie­ld bid to complete their fairy-tale rise from no-hopers to the Premier League today.

The on-loan Chelsea defender, 19, has enjoyed an outstandin­g campaign with Carlos Corberan’s side and is set to start the

Championsh­ip Play-off Final against Nottingham Forest.

The Terriers finished 20th last term and were tipped for relegation this season, but Colwill always believed they were capable of something special.

When Huddersfie­ld courted him via several Zoom meetings during the summer, the centre-half opted to head north for a season in the

Championsh­ip.

Colwill (right) said:

“Chelsea gave me a bit of advice about how Huddersfie­ld play but it was down to me as the player to make my own choice. I had Zoom meetings with Huddersfie­ld. They were telling me how they play, how they see themselves as a team and a club, so that made me want to come here.”

Colwill, who has made 31 appearance­s this season, added: “At the start of the season, I saw an article predicting Huddersfie­ld to get relegated but now look at us. People who think Forest are favourites can think whatever they like. When we go on the pitch, we’ll show what we’ve got.

“I thrive under pressure and I like it when everyone is

doubting me.”

Colwill took squad number 26 – the same worn by Chelsea legend John Terry during his career – and can count on huge support from the stands today.

He said: “It’s a mixture of 50 family and friends, but my closest friends are more like family to me. They came to watch all my games so I had to get them a ticket.”

Colwill’s only previous trip to Wembley was to watch his uncle, Barry, play in an FA Vase final win for Sholing FC in 2014.

Colwill was a mascot and explained: “I walked out at Wembley with my uncle onto the pitch.

“I remember thinking he must be really nervous, so I don’t know how I’m going to feel.”

NOTTINGHAM FOREST are looking to end a 23-year absence from the top flight of English football today – and will be hoping their next stay in the Premier League will be better than the last one.

It looked so promising when Dave Bassett engineered a promotion from the Championsh­ip, but then it all kicked off when star man Pierre Van Hooijdonk (left) went on strike.

And then it descended into chaos after a 19-match winless streak. Bassett was canned for Ron Atkinson – who announced himself to the City Ground faithful by standing in the wrong dugout in his opening game against Arsenal.

Assistant boss Micky Adams watched on from the sidelines with a mixture of confusion, anger and frustratio­n as Forest dropped into the Championsh­ip with barely a whimper.

He said: “I arrived at the club one month after the club had been promoted but it wasn’t a happy place.

“Van Hooijdonk was causing problems – he hadn’t completed any pre-season training – but we thought we may have turned a corner when we went to Finland for a camp.

“Dave Bassett didn’t travel back with the team so it was left to assistant boss Mick Kelly and myself to bring them home.

“We were at the back of the plane – the lads were at the front. It was in the summer, it was full and they were noisy but not rowdy.

“We were about an hour into the journey when, all of a sudden, the intercom went off something like this: ‘Bing bong – Brace, brace, we’re going to crash, brace, brace.’

“Everyone started screaming, kids were crying. It was bedlam. The plane was in uproar. But I looked up and saw our left-back, Alan Rogers, nipping into the toilet. Mick looked at me and said: ‘That was Rogers.’

“He’d been watching the stewardess­es make their announceme­nts and thought he’d have some fun. It wasn’t fun for those on board, let me tell you. “The cabin crew were livid. I don’t know how charges weren’t brought. They would have been these days. To make matters worse, the chairman was on board.

“He gave us a monstrous dressing-down and the club was banned from flying with that company for years afterwards. And that little stunt cost Rogers two weeks’ wages.”

However, while the losses piled up, the decision was taken later that season to lift spirits with a warmweathe­r break in Portugal.

And it seems someone hadn’t learnt their lesson. “We were having dinner at the hotel,” added Adams (above). “And I saw Rogers steal my colleague’s room key.

“I told Mick, who replied: ‘Just leave it a couple of minutes, son.’

“Clearly, some of the players planned to trash his room.

“But we caught them in the act. Rogers, Ian Woan and a few others had turned his bed upside down, tying together the arms of his tracksuits, unplugging the television – the usual stuff.

“He burst into the room and ordered them out, saying he’d see them in the morning.

“The culprits were bang to rights and Mick said: ‘Last night, you, you and you were in my room. Forget my gear, you’ve broken the bed and the hotel aren’t happy about it – they want £1,500 for it. Get me that cash by tonight. And you can all take two weeks’ wages as well.’

“Unbeknown to the players, there was nothing wrong with the bed. They suffered a double training session and Rogers sheepishly walked over at the end of it and handed over £1,500.

“They headed up to their rooms and well out of earshot. Mick turned to me and started counting out the money, ‘One for you, one for me, another for you, another for me…’

“It was years before Rogers found out about it.”

Despite a change of manager – to Atkinson – relegation was inevitable. The schisms had turned into cracks too big to bridge for even the ex-Manchester United manager.

Adams said: “Even though it turned out to be such a disappoint­ment, it’s difficult for me to look back on my time with Forest with anything but fondness.

“It’s got all the ingredient­s to be successful and if they can return to the Premier League it will be long overdue. I’m sure it will turn out better in 2022 than it did when I was there.”

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 ?? ?? WRONG PLACE, WRONG TIME Ron Atkinson’s dugout gaffe
WRONG PLACE, WRONG TIME Ron Atkinson’s dugout gaffe

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