Uxbridge Gazette

Sport urged not to forget clubless teens

- By GAVIN MCCAFFERTY

FOOTBALL has been urged to reintegrat­e “hundreds” of talented young players who were left in limbo because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

While restrictio­ns on some sporting activities have eased in England, there remain fears some teenagers will slip through the net 12 months on. A number of scholars who turned 18 last season and would normally have been offered profession­al contracts found themselves the victims of cutbacks, and many have struggled to get back into the game amid the difficulty in arranging trials and ongoing financial uncertaint­y.

Scotland youth internatio­nal Liam Miller is a prime example. The 19-year-old has 15 internatio­nal caps but has been without a club since Sunderland released their under-18s squad en masse around the start of the first lockdown.

Miller has been training with the under-19 squad of Northern Premier League side South Shields and working four times a week with a performanc­e coach set up through his agent.

“After the first lockdown, even if you managed to get a trial, it was difficult when you had been off for three or four months,” Miller told the PA news agency.

“I was in at Forest and Brentford but they were looking for someone older, someone who can break into the first team right away.”

Miller’s agent, Dave Gordon, is concerned that teenagers who found themselves without clubs because of the extraordin­ary circumstan­ces will not get left behind.

“A lot of these lads were getting released because of Covid,” said Gordon, group CEO at Deluxe Sports Group. “What was really frustratin­g was that some clubs were saying, ordinarily we wouldn’t need to look at him, we would offer him a contract, but we haven’t got the money to invest, we don’t know if we can sign new players. Clubs at the lower end of the pyramid were furloughin­g players. A lot of scouts and heads of recruitmen­t have been furloughed.

“We can’t even set up trials for a lot of these lads because of Covid rules. Hotels are closed too.

“Clubs have had to do what they have had to do. It’s been a really testing time for everybody, but we seem to be through the worst of it and hopefully these lads are ready to go now. The testing we have done with them shows that, but even now trying to get players on trial is tricky.

“Some of the lads went out to play men’s football, that could have been Northern League, National League North and South, and their seasons were curtailed.

“We had a goalkeeper who left Middlesbro­ugh and has been training with York this season, and he has been called in by a Championsh­ip club. So hopefully we are seeing this cycle come to an end, with Covid tests helping. Some lads will have got lucky but some lads will have slipped through the net.

“I hope that the lads who were out of contract last summer and have been grafting don’t get forgotten about, that we make sure we work hard for them. I would say there are hundreds of them.”

Gordon’s firm restructur­ed its business to help the young players.

“We had to bring in a full-time head of performanc­e who is setting them nutritiona­l plans and training plans and, when it’s safe and Covidcompl­iant, been doing sessions, whether it’s outdoors or on Zoom, and doing testing,” he added. “Fortunatel­y, these are young fit lads.

“One of our agents has come from a teaching background and has rejigged half of his duties so he is head of education and welfare. One of the main things he is doing is warming them up for life after football and usually that doesn’t really happen until they are 32 or 33. These are 18 and 19-year-old lads.

“We have a mental health nurse the lads can reach out to and we make sure we keep in regular contact. The best thing we can do is support them in every way we can.

“These young lads have had everything taken away from them and we have to help them build everything back up.”

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