The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Strachan grateful to Blue Toon boss

- JAMIE DURENT

Ryan Strachan was ever-present at Peterhead under Jim McInally. Strachan experience­d the highs and lows of part-time football during an eightyear spell with the Blue Toon, winning promotion, suffering relegation and playing in a cup final at Hampden Park.

A mutual decision to part ways in 2017, on the back of a debilitati­ng play- off defeat to Forfar which saw Peterhead relegated to League 2, saw Strachan pick up his career with Cove Rangers.

He missed out on the Betfred Cup meeting between the two sides at Balmoor last season through injury, but now is part of a Cove side on an even league- footing with Peterhead, despite entering the SPFL 19 years apart.

“Consistenc­y has been key ( for McInally),” said Strachan. “The board at Peterhead have backed him for so many years and it’s a bit of a dying art in football

– if managers don’t do well, then they get sacked.

“He’s had the chance to build a team, he’s lost a team, rebuilt a team. They keep backing him and for his time there he’s got a high success rate.

“Jim was nothing but good to me. I was on the periphery when I went there but I was still only 19. John Sheran had his time and it didn’t go so well then Mc In a l l y took o v e r. I basically played e ver y minute for him for five years, got a few player of the year awards.

“It never ended how anybody would have wanted, but the majority of the time we had a really successful team. We had one bad season and the entire squad basically depar ted. T here’s still Hoggy (Stuart Hogg, fitness coach), Davie Nicholls (assistant) and the manager there, who I’ve got good relations with.

“We’ve got four or five ex- Peterhead boys, so it should be a good game. ”

Five ex-Blue Toon players could well be in the Cove squad for the visit to Balmoor t o m o r r o w. Strachan, long-time defensive partner Scott Ross, Jordon Brown, Rory McAllister and Leighton McIntosh all turned out under McInally in the SPFL.

His understand­ing with Ross is one that has been built over time, having spent six seasons together at Peterhead and another three at Cove, on top of their youth days with Aberdeen.

Strachan said: “Everyone knows we’ve played for the best part of 10-15 years together, even at youth. If you didn’t know someone’s game after that amount of time, you never will.”

Ultimately their moves have all been vindicated and Cove marked their first game as a League One club with a 3-1 victory over East Fife six days ago.

They’ve also have the benefit of playing together for much of their footballin­g lives, whether at Peterhead, the youth system at Aberdeen or the growing number of ex-Motherwell youngsters who have wound their way north.

Strachan added: “A few boys have left on the basis of trying something new and the Cove project has worked.

“Tw o years in the Highland League. I think we would have got out in the first if we had a full squad for the play-offs, and we just kicked on again last season in League Two.

“We enjoy playing together and we’re getting better. It’s a good time to be at Cove.

“I was speaking to the chairman last season and said to him ‘ while you’ve got it, keep it, because it won’t come round again’. All local boys, of a similar age that have been together for so long.

“It’s quite freaky how we’ve all tried different things and we’ve all found our way back at Cove.”

 ??  ?? MEMORIES: Ryan Strachan, left, playing for Peterhead against Rangers in the 2016 Challenge Cup Final at Hampden.
MEMORIES: Ryan Strachan, left, playing for Peterhead against Rangers in the 2016 Challenge Cup Final at Hampden.

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