The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Critchley raises hopes of brighter future for born-again Blackpool

Former Liverpool youth coach has inspired a play-off push as the club finally recover from the reviled Oyston regime

- By James Ducker NORTHERN FOOTBALL CORRESPOND­ENT

‘You come to Blackpool for excitement, for entertainm­ent, so you want the team to reflect the area and people of the town. That’s what we’re trying to do here.”

Neil Critchley is discussing the rebirth of Blackpool Football Club and, while owner Simon Sadler is working his magic off the pitch despite the crippling effects of the pandemic, the manager he appointed to help usher in a bright new era is doing likewise on it.

Unbeaten in 15 matches, Blackpool will move to within three points of third-placed Sunderland, with a game in hand, if they beat the Wearside club at Bloomfield Road tomorrow and boost their hopes of promotion from League One.

Not bad for a team that were hovering above the relegation zone in late October, even if a slow start to the campaign seemed inevitable after a turnover of 34 players in the summer. “It would be massive to get this club back into the Championsh­ip,” Critchley says. “The biggest thing is giving the people of this town their club back.”

One of Critchley’s predecesso­rs as Blackpool manager, Terry Mcphillips, once suggested there was no better metaphor for the reviled 31-year reign of the Oyston family than a dead seagull that was left decomposin­g for six months on botched paving by the foot of the statue of club legend Jimmy Armfield outside the ground.

It is more than two years now since a High Court-appointed receiver removed the Oystons and, slowly but surely, Blackpool have been reclaiming their identity and reconnecti­ng with a fan base who, for four years, protested by staging boycotts on match days.

Those same supporters are now shut out of Bloomfield Road due to the coronaviru­s crisis, but feelings of deep frustratio­n are at least tempered by the knowledge that Blackpool are again going places.

Sadler and his team, led by chief executive Ben Mansford, have overhauled the Squires Gate training ground while they search for a site to house a new base to rival Fleetwood’s Poolfoot Farm and also serve the local community. And there are plans to redevelop the East Stand of Bloomfield Road.

Yet the most immediate signs of revival are on the pitch where the former Liverpool Under-18 and Under-23 manager Critchley – the man who helped to shape the early careers of Trent Alexander-arnold, Curtis Jones and Neco Williams at Anfield – is teaching old dogs new tricks on the Fylde Coast at the same time as cultivatin­g younger talents such as top scorer Jerry Yates.

You only need to listen to what goalkeeper Chris Maxwell and striker Gary Madine, both 30 and between them veterans of 840 games spanning 18 clubs, have to say about Critchley to appreciate the influence he is wielding.

“The way he does things has been completely different to everything I have experience­d,” Maxwell said. “I go back to a conversati­on I had with Gary, and we said we feel like we’ve been taught how to play football wrong for the whole of our careers.”

A modest man who has little interest in the limelight, Critchley almost seems faintly embarrasse­d when Maxwell’s remarks are put to him, but he is pleased to see his message is getting through.

“I think a lot of players play the game but don’t know how to play the game, and that’s a big difference,” Critchley, 42, says. “It’s uncomforta­ble because it sounds like I’m talking about myself, but it’s the way I’ve been educated as a coach. But you need players who are open-minded to that. If not, it doesn’t work. It certainly helps when you’ve got senior players who believe in what you do because they can be a big influence on the other people in the dressing room.”

Critchley’s impact is all the more impressive given that he was appointed just 11 days before the pandemic ended Blackpool’s season. It would be another five months before he got to work with his players, but it was time he put to good use. “I was watching loads of football every day,” he recalled. “Some days I was watching six or seven games. I was able to go back right to the start of the season. I was able to build up a picture of the experience­s

the players had to get an understand­ing of what they were thinking. Maybe some were surprised by how much I knew about them.”

What did Critchley’s wife, Janine, say? “Not a lot, because I didn’t see her!” he says, chuckling. “I’d occasional­ly pop downstairs for a cup of tea, mumble a few words and then quickly scarper back upstairs before she gave me any jobs to do!”

Danny Murphy, Robbie Savage and Neil Lennon were some of Critchley’s contempora­ries as he rose through the ranks at Crewe Alexandra. But he demonstrat­ed a natural aptitude for coaching and, in 2013, was brought to Liverpool by Brendan Rodgers, spending four years as the club’s Under-18 coach before taking over the Under-23s, and having the benefit of learning from another top manager in Jurgen Klopp. As a friend of Mcphillips and another former Blackpool manager, Gary Bowyer, Critchley had heard plenty of stories about the Oyston regime from afar and counts himself fortunate to be working under a new owner in Sadler, a Blackpool fan and local boy done good, who shares his vision for the club.

“Some situations people were put in and the decisions they had to make, it must have been soulsearch­ing for them,” Critchley says. “Things have changed now because Simon’s sole interest is making the club better. That’s so inspiring. It makes you feel like you’re part of something special. It gives me an enormous sense of pride and a feeling of great responsibi­lity.”

Mansford, formerly chief executive at Barnsley and Leeds United, gave up a job with then Israeli champions Maccabi Tel Aviv to join Sadler’s revolution.

“For the first year, Simon must have dreaded another call from me because it was one issue after another,” Mansford says. Plans are starting to take shape now, though, despite the financial challenges presented by the pandemic.

“There was this view that Blackpool was the last club you’d go to – you’ll get rubbish money, you won’t get paid what you’re owed, you won’t get your kit washed or any lunch,” Mansford says. “Now we have two physios, two sports scientists, the latest GPS. Instead of being the last place people wanted to go, Simon wants Blackpool to become a destinatio­n again.”

“The difference in the club is extraordin­ary – we’ve literally gone from one extreme to the other,” says Christine Seddon, of the Blackpool Supporters’ Trust, who was instrument­al in the “Not A Penny More” boycott, but now has regular dialogue with Sadler and the club. Being unable to watch the team in person has, Seddon says, been agonising, but she is one of 4,000 fans who have bought season tickets despite games being played behind closed doors.

“We’ve made a good start, but there’s still so much to do,” Mansford says. “We lost a generation of fans that we must engage with.”

Occasional­ly, Critchley will go for a run along Blackpool’s beachfront and longs for the day when the town, not just the football club, is a hive of activity again. “It’s a surreal atmosphere sometimes,” he says.

“It’s normally hustle and bustle, but it’s been like a ghost town. It’s not the Blackpool that everyone visualises. Hopefully we can come through this period and if we do, the supporters will be back here in their thousands. It will be an emotional moment when that time comes.”

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 ??  ?? New Tangerine era: Manager Neil Critchley (far left) used lockdown to study his squad, which has helped produce a 15-match unbeaten run including Saturday’s 2-2 draw at Lincoln (left). Defender Luke Garbutt (right) has joined from Everton
New Tangerine era: Manager Neil Critchley (far left) used lockdown to study his squad, which has helped produce a 15-match unbeaten run including Saturday’s 2-2 draw at Lincoln (left). Defender Luke Garbutt (right) has joined from Everton
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