The Football League Paper

Welsh spark hasn’t reached the Exiles

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EIGHTH in the FIFA rankings, the most expensive player on the planet, qualificat­ion (almost) for next summer’s European Championsh­ips – Welsh football is booming. Well, try telling that to Newport County. Twenty-four hours before Gareth Bale and co had to settle for a draw against Israel in Cardiff, the Exiles were slinking out of Rodney Parade having performed with all the sparkle of flat lager.

Beaten 3-0 by York, Terry Butcher’s boys sank to the foot of League Two with a miserable tally of one point from six games.

Takeover

Lottery winner Les Scadding, the man whose Euromillio­ns mastermind­ed promotion from the Conference in 2013, has withdrawn his backing.

Tired of covering monthly losses in the region of £40,000, the former truck driver has now handed responsibi­lity for keeping County running to the Supporters’Trust.

They in turn have until the end of September to raise the £225,000 required to repay creditors and complete their takeover. A healthy playing budget of £1.4m has been slashed to barely £900,000.

To put that into context, it’s what Bale earns for three weeks’ work at Real Madrid. What Grimsby spent in the Conference last year. And what Accrington Stanley’s thenmanage­r John Coleman described as the lowest in League Two – way back in 2009.

It’s why manager Justin Edinburgh jumped ship for Gillingham in February.Why his assistant, Jimmy Dack – who was offered the role – chose unemployme­nt over a job in the Football League.

It’s why stars like Max Porter and Lee Minshull dropped into NonLeague where they could still command £1,000 a week. In total, some 16 players scrambled for the exits, forcing Butcher to rebuild from scratch.

“It is like a snake shedding its skin,” said the former England skipper. “Now we will see what comes out on the other side – a cobra, an anaconda or a grass snake.”

Sadly, early indication­s suggest something more akin to an earthworm. Skint and injury-hit, any lingering scraps of pre-season optimism have now been trodden brutally into the Severnside sludge.

Rebuild

Usually, clubs in crisis have a pantomime villain – a Ken Richardson, a Peter Ridsdale or a Spencer Trethewy.

The Exiles know all about that. In 1986, American chancer Jerry Sherman took advantage of their desperatio­n by offering fabulous wealth and a spanking new stadium. Nobody realised he came with a string of failed business and fraud conviction­s longer than the Severn Crossing. The club went bust and have spent 25 gruelling years crawling back. This time, however, there is no bad guy. No mismanagem­ent, no eye-popping debts. Just a small club struggling to compete in a sport where wages rise by the week – a grim knock-on effect of the billions pouring into the Premiershi­p.

The Trust have 16 days to raise the remaining £120,000. If successful, they have pledged to “get away” from a culture of relying on individual­s to cover losses.

It’s an admirable aim, but would it solve anything?

Yes, Swansea rose from the depths of Division Four on the back of fan ownership, but they had a large, slumbering fan-base.

Even in the glory days at Somerton Park, the Exiles rarely scraped above 6,000. These days, their average attendance is half that of landlords Newport Gwent Dragons and not even a hundredth of the town’s population.

Meanwhile, wages continue to rise. Agents take chunkier cuts. Non-League sides with aspiration­al owners roar past.

Until that changes, it is difficult to see how any club of Newport’s means – however well run – can aspire to anything more than

struggle without someone picking up the tab. I really hope they prove me wrong.

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