Sunderland Echo

Barton reveals he was ‘powerless’ to stop Evans leaving if Sunderland had pressed home interest

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Joey Barton admits he wouldn’t have stood in the way of Ched Evans leaving Fleetwood Town if they could have replaced him, amid January interest from Sunderland and Bolton Wanderers.

In the end the Black Cats landed their No.1 target last month, prolific Wigan Athletic striker Will Grigg for a fee rising to £4million.

But Sunderland had considered Evans, until Jack Ross decided against a move.

The controvers­ial forward, who is on loan at Fleetwood Town from Sheffield United, was one of several back-up options Sunderland were considerin­g in case they couldn’t land Grigg.

Evans, who was imprisoned for rape in 2012 before the decision was quashed and he was found not guilty in a retrial in 2016, has scored 12 goals this season.

There was also deadline day interest from Bolton Wanderers in Evans but in the end he remained with Fleetwood.

Barton said: “A lot of credit goes to Andy Pilley and Steve Curwood (chief executive). The experience and knowledge of the chief executive and the chairman were paramount in us keeping hold of Ched Evans.

“When Sunderland were in for Ched, our hands were tied because he is not our player.

“You can understand the parent club wanting to sell the player; as difficult as that was, we were powerless over it.

“The aftermath – once that passed and Sunderland fell out of the race or decided not to go for him at 11pm that evening – is there was no recall option.

“It had gone, they had exhausted that. If anyone is at fault for it going wrong then it is not us.

“We did everything correctly as a football club and even then, at 6pm on deadline day, there was an attempt to get the player out.

“We spoke to the EFL, they confirmed Fleetwood were in the right legally as well as contractua­lly and thus, the madness descended.

“We attempted to get players in at late notice, even though everybody we had spoken about replacing Ched with the night before had signed for somebody or gone off the board.

“We get to Thursday and we did not want to keep a player that would be unhappy.

“So we said to Ched ‘if we find a suitable replacemen­t we will allow you to go.’ We tried to sign three different players.

“We were quoted a ridiculous amount of money for transfer fee and wages because they knew we were not in the best position. We spoke as a team and said ‘we are not prepared to pay over the odds.’

“We have an exceptiona­l chairman and an exceptiona­l chief executive, who have got a real strength and desire for Fleetwood to get better and a desire for us not to be pushed around and bullied by clubs that historical­ly are bigger than us.

“As a young manager my respect for them was already high; it is now tenfold having seeing them operate because most, under that pressure, could have made the wrong decision for the football club.”

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Ched Evansw.

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