Daily Star

I’m an expert at winning desperate battles

COTTERILL MISSION TO RESCUE FOREST GREEN

- EXCLUSIVE by MIKE WALTERS

STEVE COTTERILL will never be daunted by the battle to keep Forest Green in the Football League after spending seven weeks in intensive care fighting Covid.

If you watched ‘Breathtaki­ng,’ the harrowing ITV drama on the NHS frontline during the pandemic, you wouldn’t have seen any patients pedalling an exercise bike or doing step-ups on the windowsill while plugged into the oxygen supply.

And none of the characters was conducting half-time pep talks via a laptop with the sats machine (measuring oxygen saturation in the bloodstrea­m) beeping away at his bedside.

Cotterill, 59, effectivel­y turned his isolation room at Bristol Royal Infirmary into a gym to fight the virus.

Now he’s bringing his “ultracompe­titive” nature to a hilltop in sleepy Nailsworth and he’s restored to rude health after steroids designed to combat the plague left his face swollen.

But if Cotterill performed miracles in Salop to keep Shrewsbury safe in mid-table from his Intensive Therapy Unit bed, now he needs another one at vegan warriors Forest Green, six points adrift of safety in League Two. Don’t write them off: He has been an able troublesho­oter at Portsmouth, Nottingham Forest, Bristol City and as Harry Redknapp’s sidekick at Birmingham.

“I would be interested to watch that series (Breathtaki­ng) because of the experience­s I had in hospital,” he said.

“But I’ve had my head buried in a laptop studying Tranmere before we play them this weekend.

“I had it bad with Covid

– you don’t end up in intensive care a couple of times (33 days first time, 15 days with complicati­ons arising from it) if it’s not bad – but I was one of the lucky ones.

“I was in isolation, in a room by myself, and I spent something like 80 out of 89 days in bed. When I was in hospital, I kept having discussion­s with the nurses and doctors about what comes first – your breathing or your strength.

“To get up and go to the toilet was nigh-on impossible because I didn’t have the strength to get out of bed. “I felt I needed to get stronger to help my breathing so I could cut my oxygen dependence, so I wrote an exercise programme that I had to commit to every day.

“I had a massive window in my room, but it only looked out on to a brick wall, which wasn’t very inspiring, so I used to do step-ups on the windowsill and dips off it – all the while I was plugged into the oxygen supply. “And I asked for an exercise bike to be brought up into my room with a portable oxygen tank.

“They had to turn the oxygen up when I got on the bike, and then I used to do press-ups on my bed because I was determined to get stronger and I needed some focus.

“I was also writing up training plans for Aaron Wilbraham, my assistant at Shrewsbury, and trying to watch their games.

“When I was out of intensive care, and off the critical list, I was allowed to watch the games on a laptop and speak to the players before kick-off and at half-time.

“I had plenty to focus on – football and family gave me plenty to fight for.

“Even though it’s been tough, I’ve really enjoyed my time at Forest Green so far – I work for some really good, generous people and staff.

“And I’ve inherited a group of players who have maybe lost their way a bit and are better than the table shows, so I feel very happy coming into work every day – and very thankful as well.”

Rovers are on their fifth manager in eight months. Cotterill is a safe pair of hands but a fierce adversary, as that killer virus found out.

He said: “I am ultra-competitiv­e, in the nicest possible way, and three points could put us within touching distance of the pack.”

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