The Non-League Football Paper

Gary McCann on life after Hendon and his latest assault on the play-offs

GARY McCANN ON LIFE AT HAMPTON & RICHMOND

- By DAVID RICHARDSON

GARY McCann began to feel a different emotion as the Dulwich Hamlet players and supporters celebrated their play-off final victory on penalties.

A 12-and-a-half-year stint as manager at Hendon had led him to this cruel, season-defining moment and ultimately his final game in charge of the club he first joined as a goalkeeper in 1997.

“From the minute the game was over, I thought did I have it in me to do it again, were there going to be other options out there?” McCann told The NLP of the 2018 summer. “I thought about my own selfish situation which I’d never done in management, I’d always thought about the club first. Maybe it was time to think about myself.”

Two days later, McCann was told by Alan Dowson, who was set to leave Hampton & Richmond and become Woking’s new manager, that he was the Beavers’ number one target.

Loyalty

“I felt straight away it would be a difficult decision for me but one I was going to make profession­ally rather than emotionall­y,” the 47-yearold explained.

“It’s been well-documented I made a lot of dutiful decisions at Hendon and maybe damaged my own long-term career, who knows the damage I may have done. Emotionall­y, I stayed the right amount of time, profession­ally maybe seven or eight years longer than I should have.

“Four or five different options became available but I never felt a burning desire to go. It just didn’t feel right, Hendon needed me more. We were very much in turmoil for a while. We should have been relegated with the budget we had, I’m not exaggerati­ng, it’s the truth. I felt a duty to see them through some dark years.”

The McCann Stand now sits proudly at Hendon’s Silver Jubilee Park, the ground the club waited eight years to move into after Claremont Road was sold to a property developer.

McCann, along with the Greens’ volunteers, was a driving force in keeping the club going during that time, working on very limited resources but in three-year cycles, twice built sides that reached the Isthmian League play-offs and, in-between, once his talented players had been picked up by other clubs, kept them in Step 3.

“There was a period that was really dark,” McCann recalled. “I relied solely on my management team and my family. There are periods where you question your involvemen­t, your ability, even your sanity, at times. You question it all. Criticism is the nosiest and loudest it can be and the praise is the littlest guy in the corner whispering. You feel like it’s a thankless task.

“The two clubs I’ve been at they’ve appreciate­d the work I’ve done, how hard-working, how knowledgea­ble and passionate I am. That rubs off on your teams. My wife was a real motivator in it all, asking me where I would be if I wasn’t going off to football on Tuesday?

“I’ve had some difficulty off the field. Losing my brother three years before leaving Hendon, anxiety took over, I struggled to do team talks and I’m not convinced the changing room knew how difficult it was for me to stand there. They’re things supporters and people don’t see. But you get through the other side of it and here we are now. It was tough at Hendon, a really good learning curve for me as a manager.”

Hampton and Hendon have their similariti­es. Two community clubs with volunteers at the core and both considered among the smaller fish in their respective divisions.

It’s tough on the pitch too with budgets twice if not three times less than their rivals which often results in summers of endless phone calls and negotiatio­ns to hone and rebuild a squad.

But McCann, managing at Step 2 for the first time, has forged an impressive reputation for his recruitmen­t and network of contacts in the game.

“It’s all about recruitmen­t and we can sit here and portray as managers that we’re wonderful coaches, tacticians, motivators but it’s the team you can put together,” he said.

Motivators

“If you get your recruitmen­t right within the restraints of the budget you tend to be competitiv­e. Mis-management of your budget is normally the downfall of your results and performanc­es.

“I had an empty changing room when I took over [at Hamp“muc ton]. I had to assemble a whole new squad, sign 17 or 18 players. I had a similar scenario this summer for different reasons. What I’m hoping for is to go into year three with at least nine or ten players from this season and if we can do that then we’ll be well-served for a real push again next year.”

McCann admits his time at Hampton so far has been a rollercoas­ter, finishing 15th last season, at times flirting with relegation, reaching the FA Cup first round where they beaten on TV by Oldham Athletic before chairman Graham Wood resigned at the end of the season.

The club announced a

"much-reduced” budget for this campaign but McCann remained determined to continue, signing a new two-year contract. However, eight defeats in their first 11 games signalled a tough season but a sell-on fee from Jamal Lowe’s transfer to Wigan from Portsmouth provided some much-needed financial backing which McCann has used wisely. Now they’re in playoff contention from a run of 11 wins in their last 18, which includes just five defeats.

"We’ve recovered brilliantl­y but that’s not just through management and coaching, that’s from recruitmen­t,” said McCann, who has tied down centre-back Charlie Wassmer, winger Ryan Hill and midfielder Wadah Ahmidi for next season.

“The chairman [Jacques Le Bars] has supported and backed us. I feel we’ve got one of the stronger squads now. We’ve proved that in the last three months. We’re still huge outsiders but we’ve definitely given ourselves a chance.

“The chairman has given me the indication he will support us if we really need it going into March and the home run. This year was very much about stabilisin­g and progressin­g. We’ve done that.

“One more win will starve off relegation. I don’t think many after 18 games truly felt we had that in us.”

 ?? PICTURE: Jon Barmby / @j.barmby PICTURE: Jon Barmby / @j.barmby PICTURE: Neil Hood ?? HISTORY: Hampton’s new mural paid for by sponsors FotMob
THE MAN WHO McCANN: Gary McCann is firing Hampton & Richmond Borough towards a late play-off assault in National League South
PICTURE: Jon Barmby / @j.barmby PICTURE: Jon Barmby / @j.barmby PICTURE: Neil Hood HISTORY: Hampton’s new mural paid for by sponsors FotMob THE MAN WHO McCANN: Gary McCann is firing Hampton & Richmond Borough towards a late play-off assault in National League South
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 ?? PICTURE: Duncan Palmer ?? HEARTACHE: McCann’s Hendon lost to Dulwich in the play-off final
PICTURE: Duncan Palmer HEARTACHE: McCann’s Hendon lost to Dulwich in the play-off final

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