The Non-League Football Paper

Matt Badcock is invited into the Cowley family home

It started out as a street kickabout, now the Cowley brothers are about to make FA Cup history

- By MATT BADCOCK

THEY’RE the brothers who have mastermind­ed Lincoln City’s rise to the top of the National League and taken a Non-League club into the FA Cup quarter-finals for the first time in 103 years.

Ahead of the Imps’ game at Arsenal, The NLP took the famous trophy to the family home in Essex for a chat with the Cowleys – Danny, Nicky, mum Gill and dad Steve. Danny Cowley: Mum knows lots about football. You’d always read the programme front-to-back wouldn’t you? At Concord Rangers it was basically the same programme every week. Same adverts, the front page was different and you’d be lucky if one of the middle pages was different, but the rest was exactly the same. If you want to sign a centre forward, you can always ask mum on a Sunday and she’ll give you some names.

Gill Cowley: I always read The Non-League Paper. DC: You keep all the cuttings don’t you – it’s been a bit more of a challenge recently. It used to be just buying The Echo and The

Non-League Paper. When we were in the Essex Senior League you’d obviously get that little league round-up in The Non-League

Paper. You’d still buy it just to look. Then we were well pleased when we got promoted because we had a star man. Matt Badcock: It all began at Gidea Park Rangers with your dad as coach. Steve Cowley: The best they’ve ever had.

DC: Yeah, we were a good team. All kids from Harold Court School.

SC: There were about six kids from the primary school and we had some other boys in with you. We really did well because the teams we were up against…

DC: Senrab had a really rich history of bringing through players at that time. We used to beat them. We won The Echo League three years on the trot.

SC: We won the double three years on the trot.

DC: We had Mark Gower. Jeff Brazier. He was a good footballer and went to our school.

SC: The problem was they had a good Sunday team, a good district team and a good school team. So the amount of games they were playing – and then when they got involved with profession­al clubs – it was really difficult to keep on top of it all. Nicky Cowley: We’d play in the games room every night as well wouldn’t we? We had this little separate room that didn’t have much in there.

SC: Games room is probably a bit of an exaggerati­on, it was just a back room. DC: We used to play in there with a sponge ball and have some good games of one-v-one. I used to be in to writing all the leagues out so we’d have all the teams and do scenarios from bits in the games. You’d be the forward holding it up, backing in and I’d be trying to win the ball.

GC: It had wooden floorboard­s. The racket they used to make.

MB: So were you already coaching Steve?

SC: No, I used to play, but then they started playing. They used to go along to a scout hall where they’d run around and have about two touches with about 50 other kids. Whizzkid

DC: I remember our first ever training session at Harold Wood Park. We were looking forward to it all day. We had a game at the end and our team scored. I remember we all celebrated by bundling in the corner of the pitch. You were saying, ‘It’s only training, calm down!’ It was like the World Cup to us. SC: I did the FA Prelim coaching badge, as it was at the time, over five days. I was really lucky because Tim Burton was the coach – he went onto Arsenal and Aston Villa. He was such a good coach so I was really lucky to have him and, in just one week, I learnt so much in how to get the kids playing the right way with the right attitude.

DC: Mum used to do the oranges. My first ever game of football for dad, we won 9-0 and I scored six. That’s the most I’ve ever scored in a game. So basically my career went downhill from that moment, whereas Nicky was a whizz-kid weren’t you? You scored 21 goals in your first three games.

NC: Dan and his friends were three years older than me. They looked after me well, let me join in and helped me.

DC: Dad used to get loads and loads of scouts coming down, trying to give him tickets. They all wanted Mark Gower.

SC: Arsenal wanted him but he was a mad Tottenham supporter. I’d seen so many bad coaches. Cones everywhere, over complicati­ng it, stopping play all the time. Kids go to school every day. The last thing they want is to be lectured in the evening. So we basically played lots of small sided games and enjoyed it. MB: Steve, you were

telling me when we met up at Lincoln that league tables were the best way to get Danny interested in maths.

SC: Yeah, I remember talking to his teachers about that because all he was interested in was football.

DC: Nicky’s the one. You knew every ground in the whole League. All 92.

NC: Championsh­ip Manager. We would play a game on it, get a result and then go downstairs to the back room and re-enact the game.

MB: Is it true you used to build a dug-out in your bedroom while playing Championsh­ip Manager?

NC: I started with a briefcase, then I got a long, ankle length Ron Atkinson Umbro coat – then I decided to build a dug-out using the Z-bed. I was just trying to make it more realistic.

DC: We used to be called ‘DanNic Cowley’. We always started in the lower leagues and worked our way up.

NC: We used to go

around, say, Auntie Diane’s and Dan would have a pad in the back of the car. We’d talk about recruitmen­t, who we were going to sign. Mum was really supportive because we’d have to keep going to Lakeside to buy the game. We had an Amiga 500 and the floppy disk used to deteriorat­e, so we’d talk mum into driving us there to buy it.

DC: We used to do some crazy things. I can actually remember taking the lawnmower over to Harold Wood Park to mow a cricket strip. SC: I didn’t know about that! DC: We wanted to get a bounce on the ball when we were playing with our mates.

NC: We’d always be looking around for parks with goals. Goals

with nets. There’s a place called Hendersons near Harold Wood. We’d go over there with our friends and we’d literally hide in the forest, wait for the groundsman to go for his lunch, get on it and then we had an hour before he got back. You’d see him coming and we’d be off.

MB: Do you remember your first FA Cup game for Concord against Biggleswad­e Town?

DC: That’s right, it was a Sunday. Me and Nicky went to watch them on the Tuesday, got to the ground. Called off. In August. They’d had a torrential rainstorm and we’d got all the way there. MB: Those were the days when you’d start in August.

DC: The Extra Preliminar­y round. We reached the first round one year with Concord. We played Mansfield and thought we’d made it. How many games have we played in the FA Cup this year?

NC: Two against Guiseley, Altrincham, Oldham, two against Ipswich, Brighton and Burnley, so this will be our ninth.

Pressure

DC: To be in the last eight of the FA Cup .... it feels incredible. You have to say it out loud to believe it. NC: The players have all found unbelievab­le levels in all the matches. SC: Especially against teams like Oldham and Ipswich. Everyone forgets we played Oldham. NC: We got through the game 3-2, they came back at us really strong. We learnt a lot from that and how to deal with the pressure. DC: I think the great thing about the run we’ve been on is how much we’ve learnt and it’s fast-tracked our developmen­t as a group. GC: After the Oldham game there was probably a little bit of disappoint­ment with the fans that we drew Ipswich. Then the same when we drew Brighton. But I read someone saying, we’re taking small steps here. Oldham are League One, Ipswich middle of the Championsh­ip, Brighton top of the Championsh­ip, Burnley and now Arsenal. Progressio­n.

DC: I’ll look forward to Chelsea in the next round! Our secretary John Vickers showed me a picture of the Emirates Stadium and where all the Lincoln supporters will be. I had it at Ipswich, funnily enough, when I walked out at Portman Road. Our supporters were so noisy and the stand was so big it took my breath away.

NC: It was funny. I always go out before the warm-up to make sure the cones have been laid well and everything is there that we need. As I came out they all started clapping and cheering. I thought, ‘I’ve only come out to check the bibs!’

MB: You’ve always said how important your grounding in Non-League football has been.

DC: We’re Non-League boys. That’s why to get promoted out of the top division in Non-League football would feel to us like we’ve earned the right to be in the Football League.

NC: It’s good. The amount of people in Non-League who have contacted us and said they feel like it’s now possible for these types of stories to happen.

DC: It’s just a great level. It’s proper football. You look at the Premier League and the way it’s gone, I don’t know, it’s like a fantasy world. All the players are put on a pedestal, it’s not their own fault, but they’re kind of dehumanise­d because of the vast amount of money they’re on and all the things they’ve got. I don’t think the normal person gets the opportunit­y to relate to them because they can’t get close to them.

SC: They’re all different nationalit­ies and there’s no real connection to a club, is there. They kiss the badge, but they don’t know what it means.

GC: One thing that’s become really evident with Lincoln is the fans, their passion for the club and their history.

NC: Every fan says the same thing to me. ‘I’ve been a fan for 50 years’. How many fans have supported the club for 50 years? It’s incredible.

DC: In Essex, we support West Ham. Next door supports Arsenal, over the road supports Tottenham. Whereas in Lincoln there’s a real allegiance to the team. They’re really proud of where they live and that’s been evident to us. It means so much and we kind of wear that responsibi­lity. When I wake up I feel that on my shoulders.

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 ?? PICTURE: Daniel Chesterton & Action Images ?? FAMILY TIME: L-R: Dad Steve, Mum Gill, Danny and Nicky Cowley with the FA Cup trophy, before the brothers catch up with The NLP’s Matt Badcock, left. Insets: Sean Raggett scores Lincoln’s winner against Burnley, left, while Arsenal’s Theo Walcott nets...
PICTURE: Daniel Chesterton & Action Images FAMILY TIME: L-R: Dad Steve, Mum Gill, Danny and Nicky Cowley with the FA Cup trophy, before the brothers catch up with The NLP’s Matt Badcock, left. Insets: Sean Raggett scores Lincoln’s winner against Burnley, left, while Arsenal’s Theo Walcott nets...

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