The Non-League Football Paper

READY TO KITT START AGAIN!

- By Matt Badcock

STEVE KITTRICK says his fire for management is still burning with the former Matlock Town boss looking for a quick return to the dug-out.

Experience­d manager Kittrick left the Gladiators last month and has since been replaced by Paul Phillips.

Having only take over in the summer and recently seen his side run National League Eastleigh close in the FA Trophy, Kittrick admits he was frustrated to leave the BetVictor NPL Premier division club.

But with a fine CV and silverware under his belt with the likes of Guiseley and Scarboroug­h Athletic – winning promotions with both – the 61-year-old is determined to get success elsewhere.

“I won’t lose my fire for football – I love it,” said Kittrick, the former Ossett Town boss, who had a spell in Non-League’s top-flight with AFC Telford United.

“I’ve been managing 30 years, a lot of games, but when you look at it I haven’t been to loads of clubs. I haven’t gone from club to club.

Overreacte­d

“I’m looking forward to getting back. I want somebody with a plan to get from A to B and not think it will happen in six months. “Managing is about managing people. I like to have a good dressing room, I like people to come with a smile on their face, play football and enjoy it win, lose or draw. That’s what it’s about. Success comes from that. I think Matlock were hasty, I think they will finish in mid-table with a trophy. “I’m keen and eager to get back in as soon as I can but it’s got to be the right thing.” Kittrick says he felt sure he was building for the long-term at Matlock and was convinced a fully fit squad would have quickly climbed the table.

“I’ve been quite lucky to be successful in a lot of things I’ve done,” he said. “I feel I’ve left every club in a better place than I found them.

“That’s the way you’ve got to look at it but some clubs are short-minded in what they’re wanting. Football is not a quick-fix.

“Where I’ve just been, I had a long-term plan but they had a short-term plan to push the button if it wasn’t going right.

“I think they’ve overreacte­d. We had a great FA Cup run, a great FA Trophy run and they’re still in a couple of cups.

Buzz

“But football is circumstan­ces. At the end of the day – injuries, suspension­s. Jack Rea was injured long-term, Spencer Harris, Dwayne Riley got injured, Adam Yates. It’s a lot of things, which is football, and people don’t see that. They get very impatient.

“It’s alright when things are going good, when you’re putting money in the till from FA Cup games and FA Trophy games.

“But once things start falling off in the league, and, to be fair, it didn’t make for good reading. But once we got everybody back fit – some games I only had two subs because there’s no point spending the club’s money when you’ve got players waiting in the wings – you could see it turning a corner.”

Kittrick has been out watching games but it doesn’t quite have the same buzz.

“Usually on a Saturday my day starts at 10am and you don’t get home until, eight, nine, ten o’clock,” Kittrick said. “You miss that and you miss the phone calls.

“There isn’t such a thing as a part-time manager. You take calls, you make calls, speak to players, the chairman – it takes a lot of your time up.

“I miss all that and hopefully it will come back soon.”

 ?? PICTURE: Richard Parkes ?? FALLOUT: Steve Kittrick says Matlock Town chiefs were ‘hasty’ to let him go
PICTURE: Richard Parkes FALLOUT: Steve Kittrick says Matlock Town chiefs were ‘hasty’ to let him go

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