Irish Daily Star

NOT’ UP TO THE MARK..

- ■ Jamie GARDNER

MARK Clattenbur­g has stood down from his role as a referee analyst at Nottingham Forest, admitting he had become “more of a hindrance than a help”.

Clattenbur­g has been at the centre of two major controvers­ies involving the club since he took on the advisory role in February, first speaking out over a drop ball incident in a match against Liverpool and then criticisin­g the officiatin­g in Forest’s game against Everton on April 21.

The former Premier League official issued a statement via the club’s official website, saying that providing services to the east midlands side had caused “unintended friction” with other clubs.

Defeat

Last month the Football Associatio­n asked Daily Mail columnist Clattenbur­g for his observatio­ns on the comments he made about the officials in the 2-0 defeat to Everton last month.

Clattenbur­g, who is also now well known as a referee on the reboot of the Gladiators television series, said: “Since February, I’ve been proud to have done so under a consultanc­y agreement between NFFC and Referee Consultant Ltd.

“I performed my services under the agreement in good faith, to the best of my abilities and in the hope of using my extensive experience as a match official to help NFFC understand how decisions in relation to key match incidents are made amid the workings of VAR.

“However, it is now clear that the existence and performanc­e of these consultanc­y services has caused unintended friction between NFFC and other participan­ts, to the extent that it has become more of a hindrance than help to NFFC.”

IT’S 20 years since Dubliner Alan Dunne was a wide-eyed young man sharing an FA Cup final stage with Roy Keane and Cristiano Ronaldo.

Dunne was raised on stories of dad Paul playing on the same northside streets as future stars such as Liam Brady, Frank Stapleton and David O’Leary. He dreamed of being a profession­al footballer like his heroes.

And there he was, May 22, 2004, the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff, Manchester United versus Millwall.

“I was going to ask Roy Keane for his shirt him being a fellow Irishman,” he recalls, “but I never had it in me in case he said no. So I didn’t ask him.

“But you got to see what the players were like, the likes of Ronaldo, Ruud van Nistelrooy, Roy Keane, Paul Scholes.

“You got to experience the build-up. Everything was brilliant. The semi-final (against Sunderland) was at Old Trafford, so you even got a taste of that.

“We qualified for Europe, so we got a two-legged game in that, which we lost in Hungary (to Ferencvaro­s).

“That was crazy, a crazy experience. They had flares, cages, you were getting darts thrown at you. It was one of the most hostile places I’ve ever been. Crazy place.

“They were passionate about their football. It was very hostile, but a great atmosphere. I was only a young kid then.”

Playing

Dunne was just 21 at the time and had only made a handful of first-team appearance­s for Millwall.

To find himself on the bench for an FA Cup final against Manchester United was a dizzying high for the kid from Coolock.

“We all grew up playing on the streets in Dublin,” he says. “My dad played with Liam Brady many years ago.

“My dad played for Home Farm. He loves his football. Frank Stapleton, Liam Brady, David O’Leary; he played with a few of them. They used to muck about together.”

That Dunne has now spent more of his life in London than Dublin is evident when he speaks.

“The accent is gone, but I still call it home,” he says of the Fair City.

Twenty years later and he is preparing for another big final tomorrow.

This time it’s a cross-London trip to Wembley, rather than the Millennium Stadium, which hosted FA Cup finals during Wembley’s redevelopm­ent.

Bromley FC, a club from the east of London, not far from Millwall, are up against Solihull Moors in the National League Promotion Final.

A place in League Two is at stake.

Bromley finished two places and five points ahead of Solihull over a gruelling 46-game season.

Dunne is assistant manager to Andy Woodman at Hayes Lane, having moved there from Leyton Orient as a player in 2017.

Anyone who has watched Welcome to Wrexham will know what an achievemen­t it is to get out of the National League.

Budget

“It’s brutal. It is a brutal league,” he says.

“There are a lot of ex-League clubs in there, big clubs that have been in the Football League for years.

“It would be nice for a town like Bromley, never been in the League, to get there.

“We’re a small club in this league, small budget, haven’t got the resources of most clubs, but we have a chance of getting into the EFL. It would be remarkable for the town.

“Last year we got to the semifinals and lost out to Chesterfie­ld in extra-time, so we wanted to go one better this year.

“Last Sunday we had Altrincham, the team that finished fourth, and we got the job done.

“Now we are one game from the English Football League and creating history for the club.”

In the 20 years between the 2004 FA Cup final and this weekend, he has visited Wembley as a player and a coach.

“I played there for Millwall in the FA Cup semi-final against Wigan (in 2013),” he says.

 ?? ?? MAIN MEN: Bromley boss Andy Woodman with assistant gaffer Alan Dunne
IRISH PRIDE:
Alan Dunne taking on Kevin Kilbane back in 2006
MAIN MEN: Bromley boss Andy Woodman with assistant gaffer Alan Dunne IRISH PRIDE: Alan Dunne taking on Kevin Kilbane back in 2006
 ?? ?? QUIT: Mark Clattenbur­g
QUIT: Mark Clattenbur­g

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