Western Mail

Flynn ready for the next level, says Lawrence

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LENNIE Lawrence used to sit just behind Michael Flynn in the Newport County dug-out and offer pearls of wisdom as and when required, writes ROB COLE.

But on Bank Holiday Monday he will be sitting in the posh seats at Wembley with the club’s directors casting an admiring eye over the work of a manager he has grown to admire

With more than 1,000 games in management under his belt at eight different clubs, Lawrence was one of the first men Flynn turned to when he was appointed as caretaker boss at Rodney Parade back in 2017.

The Exiles were 11 points adrift at the time with 12 games to play. The trap door beckoned, yet Flynn and his assistant Wayne Hatswell somehow managed to galvanise the players to perform what has gone down in Welsh sporting history as ‘The Great Escape’.

Lawrence was there as well, providing a shoulder to both lean and cry on as Flynn cut his teeth in crisis management, not merely football management.

“Four years ago when he asked me to join him the club was in a nearly impossible position. But Michael assured me he had a plan,” said Lawrence.

“He asked me to offer advice to him on a parttime basis. I told him our relationsh­ip would only work if he listened and, to be fair to him, he did that and then made up his mind on what to do.

“He conjured up the Great Escape in his first season, but he would never have been able to do that if he hadn’t been at the club in the first place. He knew the players and was able to get on with the job straight away.

“Anyone else would have taken a couple of weeks to bed in, but Michael started with two big away wins. Nobody else could have done that, or kept Newport up, and he and Wayne have just grown from there.

“When he first called me he said he wanted to develop as a manager and he has certainly done that. He is on his third contract at the club and is now one of the longest-serving managers in the division.

“He’s had a really good start in management and now he’s ready for the next level. Hopefully, that can be with Newport in League 1 next season.

“He needs a promotion on his CV and Monday would be perfect timing. But even if Newport don’t go up I think he is good enough to move up to a Championsh­ip club when the time is right.”

Monday will see a return to the League 2 play-off final for a second time in three seasons and Lawrence’s role on the big day will be as a spectator rather than mentor. He can’t wait to see how the biggest game in Flynn’s managerial career pans out.

“The thing with Michael is that he is an intelligen­t boy, he’s passed all his coaching badges and he has a huge work ethic. He’s dedicated, determined and Newport to his core,” added Lawrence.

“He’s also recruited well and he’s used the loan system superbly. Just look at the leg-up he gave to Ben White who this week got picked in the provisiona­l England squad for the Euros.

“The fact the season got curtailed last year probably helped him. Newport were mid-table and he needed a break to re-charge his batteries. When he came back he decided to change the playing style, which was a really brave move.

“Before that Newport were always fairly direct in their approach, but to his credit he tried a different tack and took his team to the top of the league.”

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