The Mail on Sunday

It’s the biggest Cup mismatch ever. One team on £1,750 a week in TOTAL, with a binman in midfield. Can they beat Jose’s millionair­es?

- By Joe Bernstein

NEIL YOUNG’S FA Cup campaign started on the opening day of September when he trekked up to Darwen to spy on Marine AFC’s preliminar­y round opponents, Barnoldswi­ck. The managerial research almost backfired. Barnoldswi­ck led 10-man Marine 1-0 with three minutes left until Ryan Wignall and Josh Hmami scored to kickstart an unpreceden­ted journey.

‘To this day, we’re not sure if the winning free-kick crossed the line but the flag went up to signal a goal,’ says Young, who capitalise­d by winning six more ties and is about to swap his regular job at Merseyrail in order to pit his wits against Jose Mourinho.

Eighth-tier Marine from Northern Premier League Division One North-West will be the biggest underdogs in the competitio­n’s history when they welcome Premier League Tottenham to Rossett Park next Sunday, the only sadness being that no fans will be inside to watch.

The managers’ CVs couldn’t be more different, Cammell Laird compared with Real

Madrid, but Mourinho will appreciate Young’s dedication to reach his dream.

‘If you had to give me a label, I guess it could be the Diligent One,’ says the balding and bearded 45-year-old Marine boss. ‘My playing career ended because of a recurring dislocated shoulder so I took my first manager’s job at 24 with Queen’s Park in the Birkenhead Sunday League.

‘Since then, few people would say anyone works harder. I like to be part of a team and that team is part of me.

‘I was assistant at Rhyl when we drew Viking Stavanger in the Intertoto Cup. Roy Hodgson was their manager and dropped us into town after we flew to Norway to scout them. There I was, a young lad chatting football to this very famous manager. It gave me an idea of what could be possible.

‘I became a manager myself. At Chester FC, we had no ground, no players, no kit and no balls or bibs when I was appointed. We won three promotions in a row as champions, the first time it’s ever been done.

‘As a manager, you know you’ll always get more s*** than bouquets. When I resigned at Altrincham in 2016, I wasn’t in a good place and thought I’d call it a day in the game.

‘But you then find football is like a drug. When you’re out, you miss it. I was involved in scouting at Halifax, my mojo returned, and I became a manager again with Marine during 2018-19.’

Besides planning how to stop Harry Kane, Young has spent his Christmas ensuring stations around Liverpool were being gritted properly.

‘I’ve been at Merseyrail for 28 years,’ he says. ‘They’ve supported me and the skills I’ve learned have helped with the football. As facilities manager, I deal with staff and stakeholde­rs — it’s about how you treat people and those relationsh­ips. At Marine, I interact with players, directors, volunteers, communitie­s. It’s about building and this Cup run will take us forward.’ Marine are sixth in their division. Covid has badly interrupte­d the League programme, which is currently closed again. In the circumstan­ces, the FA Cup has proved a financial lifesaver.

Though the part-timers are not big spenders — the total wage bill is £1,750 a week — 2020 was bleak, with players and staff in and out of furlough and supporters forced to run fundraiser­s.

This Cup run, including a win against League One Colchester, could yield £300,000. Besides prizemoney and TV revenue, Spurs fans have helped by buying Marine merchandis­e and virtual match tickets. Young, who lives near Tranmere’s Prenton Park ground, admits: ‘It is scary to think where we’d be without the FA Cup. Our revenues are usually through the gate and at the bar.

‘There are fantastic clubs at our level, salt of the earth, unsure if they’ll be around in six months. I get frustrated.

‘Our commercial partners stuck by us but primarily the Cup money was the only income we had. We were able to pay wages.’

Remarkably, Marine had 22 days without a game between their first and second round ties in November, but still beat Havant & Waterloovi­lle 1-0 with a goal in the last minute of extra time from veteran skipper Niall Cummins, a teacher by trade. They will have been inactive for 15 days when they run out against Spurs, with the League having closed again after Boxing Day.

Their line- up will be a mix of youth and experience. David Raven, 35, once scored a Scottish Cup semi-final winner for

Jose’s made Spurs harder to beat. They’ll be a tough nut for us to crack

Inverness Caledonian Thistle against Virgil van Dijk’s Celtic and there are promising youngsters too. Young has particular­ly high hopes for right-back Josh SolomonDav­ies who has caps for St Lucia.

‘He has good feet and is rapid. He has a great chance of playing higher,’ says the manager. ‘Hmami is technicall­y very good, he has scored six or seven free-kicks this year. James Barrigan was a pro at Wig an and has continuall­y improved since changing to central midfield.’

Like his team- mates, Barrigan needs an outside job to pay the bills and works as a binman.

Covid disruption­s have given Young an additional headache. Three loan players integral to their Cup run so far — Alex Doyle, Mo Touray (both Salford) and Adam Hughes (TNS) — have returned to their clubs. He is trying to re-sign them but it is complicate­d because the Spurs tie may be Marine’s only game this month.

Neverthele­ss, there is excitement in his voice as he discusses the biggest match of his life and the chance to compete against a legend.

‘ I think Jose Mourinho comes across as straightfo­rward. What you see is what you get,’ he says admiringly. ‘His record is there for all to see, one of the best four or five in the world.

‘He seems to have changed the culture at Spurs and made them harder to score against. They’ll be a tough nut for us to crack.

‘We have to plan properly and give everything, otherwise we will be on the end of a good hiding. But if we play correctly, we can show we are a decent team.’ The Premier League aristocrat­s will find Marine doesn’t fit the Southern stereotype of Merseyside. Their ground lies in genteel Crosby, seven miles up the coast from Liverpool’s city centre.

Everton boss Carlo Ancelotti lives in the area. Jamie Carragher is a regular visitor and helped the club distribute lunches to the elderly during lockdown.

They’ve got a proud history too. It was their former striker Billy Morrey who passed on his football talent to nephew Wayne Rooney. Former manager Roly Howard had a window- cleaning round t hat included Kenny Dalglish’s house. Dalglish is a club patron.

There have been other famous Neil Youngs. One, of course, a legendary singer-songwriter, the other Manchester City’s goalscorin­g hero in the 1969 FA Cup final against Leicester.

Musically, the Marine version admits he’s more of a Genesis fan but smiles: ‘What some of the lads play now is deafening. I’ll be asking them, “What are they saying?” Most managers my age are probably the same.

‘I am pretty calm overall. I think it is important to get your key points across before games and at half-time.

‘Talking to 900 highly educated people at Chester Cathedral to get my degree, that was frightenin­g. It’s much easier talking to lads in the dressing room even if you are playing Spurs.’

 ??  ?? CLEANING UP IN MIDFIELD: Former Wigan player James Barrigan is a binman when he isn’t turning out for Marine
CLEANING UP IN MIDFIELD: Former Wigan player James Barrigan is a binman when he isn’t turning out for Marine
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 ??  ?? ON TRACK: Neil Young divides his time between Marine and Merseyrail
ON TRACK: Neil Young divides his time between Marine and Merseyrail

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