Gloucestershire Echo

Steve’s fit and raring to get back into the game

- Jon PALMER gloslivesp­ort@reachplc.com

STEVE Cotterill has fully recovered from a recent health scare and is ready to work again, provided it is for the right people.

The former Cheltenham Town manager has been out football management since leaving Birmingham City in March 2018.

Whether he is in full-time employment or not, Cotterill takes his health seriously, but he adopts a particular­ly stringent fitness regime between jobs.

His daily gym sessions were interrupte­d by a considerab­le pain in the neck and he soon realised it was not going to heal itself.

“I ruptured a disc in my neck and it set me back because I needed a period of rehabilita­tion,” he said.

“The pain was going through my shoulder, all the way down my arm and into my thumb and forefinger.”

“I wasn’t sleeping and I have never been one to take painkiller­s.

“The specialist went in through my throat, the thought of which made me panic a bit when he told me, and put a new disc in.

“He told me I’d need six weeks off from the gym, but I was back at it within two-and-a-half.”

Cotterill, 55, is feeling better than he has for many years.

“The discomfort had been there for a long time and then suddenly got worse, so I feel great now having had it repaired,” he said.

“It’s healed nicely and am getting stronger every day in the gym, with some definition back in my arms now.

“I am fit, healthy, strong and feeling absolutely great.”

Cotterill uses a static bike to raise his heart rate, combined with a thorough weights routine to maintain his strength and he has been swimming regularly during his recent rehabilita­tion.

“I used to run outdoors and do hundreds of push ups every day,” he said.

“Now it’s the Wattbike and I am not sure what’s worse really!

“It’s nice to still be able to get into your jeans, but keeping my weight down is mainly because I have a history in my family of losing people at an early age.

“I have health checks in Harley Street with the League Managers’ Associatio­n and I also make a conscious effort to eat healthily and limit my alcohol intake.

“The only time I’ll have a beer is when I am back in the boardroom at Cheltenham.”

With normal service resumed at his local David Lloyd fitness club in Bristol, Cotterill is itching for a return to the technical area.

“Now I am fit and healthy I want to get back in and work for the right people,” he said.

“I still have the energy and the hunger, which is why I am in the gym so much and I miss management.

“I am a football nut and the level doesn’t matter to me. I went to Notts County in League Two.

“When I went to Bristol City we were second from bottom of League One and actually went bottom after my first game (a 2-1 defeat at home to Rotherham United).

“I rarely apply for jobs because nine out of 10 of them may already be done and dusted these days and a lot goes on with agents having connection­s.

“I might be 55, but I feel quite young for it and as I said, I’ve been so lucky with my health.

“I wasn’t with my knees when I played, but since then I have been, so maybe that’s how it had to be.

“If the right job came up now to go back into work, I’d really look forward to it and I am hoping it’s a good one.”

As well as three promotions between 1997 and 2002 at Cheltenham and a League Two title success at Notts County in 2009/10, Cotterill led Bristol City to the League One title and EFL Trophy success in 2014/15.

“I want to add to my five promotions, but I also have a hunger for developing young players,” he said.

“I had that at Cheltenham because I was there for five-and-a-half years and I had it at Burnley because I was there for four.

“Should I have had longer than twoand-a-half at Bristol City? 100 per cent yes, without question.

“I see those players now and many didn’t have Championsh­ip experience when we first went up.

“But I always said they’d be good players at that level, so now you look at Luke Ayling, who has just signed a new contract at Leeds United.

“Aden Flint has been at Middlesbro­ugh and he’s now at Cardiff City, who I saw play QPR on Tuesday night and win 3-0, with Marlon Pack scoring.

“Derek Williams is at Blackburn Rovers and Luke Freeman at Sheffield United and we caught up and spent a morning together when we were on holiday in the same place.

“Jonathan Kodjia had nothing really going in France, but now he’s in the Premier League with Aston Villa, on his way back from injury.

“You also have Joe Bryan at Fulham, Bobby Reid at Cardiff, all those players. Aaron Wilbraham is about to turn 40 and what a great pro he’s been.

“I am sure there are some I’ve missed out, but when you have a long period somewhere, you help the lads and they help you.

“Those lads would run through a brick wall for you and I’d have done the same for them.

“I am looking forward to going somewhere and having that relationsh­ip with young players, helping them through problems they get from time to time in their lives.

“I had that at Birmingham, helping lads who trusted me and opened up to me with problems people will never know about.

“I am 100 per cent ready, focused and determined and nothing will change with that.”

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