South Wales Evening Post

Swans old boy Mceachran has a point to prove

Clue — he’s playing against the Swans on Saturday.

- MATHEW DAVIES @matgower • 01792 5455542 mathew.davies@walesonlin­e.co.uk

SWANSEA City head to West London at the weekend desperate to put a disappoint­ing week behind them.

Three defeats, against albeit tricky opposition, will have given boss Graham Potter plenty to ponder.

Brentford on Saturday will give Swansea an opportunit­y to get back on track, and in the Bees’ ranks will be a familiar face.

Josh Mceachran was signed on loan by Brendan Rodgers in January 2012 amid much fanfare. He was the next big thing at Chelsea — Barcelona and Real Madrid wanted him — but the 18-year-old struggled at Swansea.

“The loan move was more than just games for Josh,” Rodgers said at the time. “It was also about experienci­ng a new team, city and lifestyle.

“He was 18 when he came and it’s been great for his developmen­t. He admitted he was behind with his conditioni­ng.

“He has fitted in quite easily and he respects how well the other players have been doing so it’s been very difficult.

“The balance in the midfield has been very good.

“Every player wants game-time but that can’t happen for everyone. But when he returns to Chelsea he will be better for his experience here.

“It doesn’t matter whether it is games or lifestyle, he will be a better player and person for that.”

His five games for Swansea were ineffectua­l. He was on the losing side each time he played and he did very little of note in a white shirt.

Speaking to the Guardian in 2013 while on another loan stint, this time at Middlesbro­ugh, Mceachran said of his time with Swansea and working with Rodgers: “It was one of those things in life which just didn’t work out.”

Asked what he learned during his time in South Wales, the reply was: “Nothing.” Asked of his opinion on the Ulsterman, he replied: “I’ll pass on that.”

He was rumoured to be on £40,000 per week at Stamford Bridge but he never made the grade for the Blues. Further temporary moves to Watford, Wigan and Vitesse Arnhem eventually saw him sign on at Griffin Park for a fee of £750,000.

He was to be the next John Terry, the player to make the leap from Chelsea’s academy to the first team.

He told BBC 5 Live: “I think me going out on loan and not playing ... that first loan spell did kill me. My confidence just went.

“Because I was the big thing — I went to Swansea with Brendan — I was on the back of the paper most days really, saying that I was the next big thing: ‘Josh Mceachran coming through the Chelsea ranks.’ Carlo (Ancelotti) gave me, I think, 20-odd appearance­s, and I was making an impact.

“And then I went to Swansea on loan and for whatever reason... It’s not that I wasn’t playing; sometimes I wasn’t even on the bench.

“So I was just, like, ‘what’s going on here?’ It was strange.

“And to this day I don’t know what happened there.

“From there, I went to Middlesbro­ugh, Watford, Wigan, just bouncing around the Championsh­ip kind of thing.

“So, yeah, it was hard to take. My confidence, from there, was gone, and I only feel it recently starting to build up again.” How is he doing now? “Josh Mceachran’s time at Brentford perfectly sums up his career so far; flashes of brilliance among a sea of mediocrity,” says Phil Spencer of football.london.

“The midfielder is undoubtedl­y one of the most naturally gifted players in the Championsh­ip, but his inability to consistent­ly make a real impact is a source of real frustratio­n.

“After coming through the academy at Chelsea, the midfielder was tipped as one of the hottest prospects in football as he was, albeit rather prematurel­y, linked with a move to Barcelona with a road to stardom very much laid out in front of him.

“However, mixed loan spells with the likes of Middlesbro­ugh, Watford and the Swans never really saw him start to fulfil any of that potential, leaving his career to stall.

“A permanent move to Brentford followed with the hope that he’d be able to settle down and put in some consistent performanc­es, but his form at Griffin Park has never really suggested that he could be anything more than another player who fell foul of Chelsea’s questionab­le academy set-up.”

Still only 25, Mceachran, now more in the spotlight after Ryan Woods’s move to Stoke City, will have a point to prove on Saturday.

 ??  ?? Brentford’s Josh Mceachran (left) battles for the ball with West Brom’s Harvey Barnes at The Hawthorns on Monday.
Brentford’s Josh Mceachran (left) battles for the ball with West Brom’s Harvey Barnes at The Hawthorns on Monday.
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