The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Carson gets off roller coaster and becomes a star attraction

- JAMIE DURENT

It is not selling David Carson short to describe his performanc­es at Caley Thistle this season as revelatory.

A runaway favourite for the fans’ player-of-the-year award, Carson came back from injury to become an undroppabl­e figure and a key cog in the Highland club’s resurgence.

But for him it has not all been plain sailing. Spotted as a teenager playing for Northern League club Ashington, Carson was signed by English Championsh­ip side Blackburn Rovers in 2014 after impressing on trial.

Eric Kinder was the coach of Blackburn’s under-21s. An ardent Blackburn fan, who has also been a youth coach and academy manager at Ewood Park, Kinder wanted more grounded, hard-working players during the tumultuous time of Rovers’ ownership by Venky’s.

During Carson’s first season, Blackburn reached the final of the Under-21 Premier League Cup. Among his colleagues were David Raya, now the Brentford number one, Rovers regular Ryan Nyambe and Sheffield United defender Jack O’Connell. Carson later went on to captain the under-21 side.

Kinder, now academy manager at Carlisle United, said: “At the time the recruitmen­t at Blackburn was quite strange. There were a lot of foreign players who, in my opinion, weren’t good enough to represent Blackburn.

“We had to get some local/English players who would battle and fight for us. David was one of them. He was a tough Geordie who was Newcastle United mad.

“The Davey Carson that trained and the Davey Carson that played were the same person. He gave everything he had.

“I heard he was doing well in Scotland and it didn’t surprise me. He had a determinat­ion to be a profession­al footballer and he’s had a lot of setbacks.”

The biggest setback came in July 2014 when a then-18year-old Carson lost his elder brother, Karl.

“The circumstan­ces behind that were heartbreak­ing,” added Kinder. “He sat me down and told me all about it. It was a case of ‘you get home now and you come back when you’re ready to come back’.

“For him to come back and continue with his career – I think that spurred him on a little bit. If he can handle what he had to handle, a release from a football club is nothing.”

After his release from Rovers in 2016, Carson returned to the north-east of England and to nonleague football with South Shields.

However, he came to the attention of Caley Thistle while at Morpeth Town. Former Northern Ireland internatio­nal David McCreery runs a consultanc­y business which has Carson as a client and he recommende­d the midfielder to Inverness manager John Robertson, whom he played alongside for Newcastle United and Hearts. Nick Gray, the Morpeth manager who signed Carson in 2017, refined a player with unquestion­able energy levels into a match-winner.

Gray said: “I sometimes played him out wide in a front three and sometimes as a 10 in a free role. He preferred that. You could see from his body language at times he didn’t like playing out wide.

“He was fantastic here. He’s one of those players you let do what they want in the final third. Sometimes his decision-making was disappoint­ing but he improved a lot and worked damn hard, with and without the ball.

“He hates losing and that’s not a bad thing. I’ve not come across many footballer­s that work harder than Davey Carson.”

Morpeth achieved backto-back promotions during the two seasons Carson was at Craik Park, finishing runners-up in the Northern League Division One in 2018 and then winning the Northern Premier League Division One East a year later.

His final tally of 16 goals in 74 games from midfield earned him a league playerof-the-year award and a move back into full-time football.

“He’s one of these guys you will to do well as he’s had a couple of setbacks but kept knocking on the door,” added Gray.

“He gives loads of energy and was always in the team as long as he was injuryfree. A little bit of magic from him might win us the game.

“In a sad way, we were disappoint­ed to see him go but I didn’t think he would leave for another nonleague club. Some players wouldn’t have taken the chance, but credit to him.

“He doesn’t give up and is always a positive-thinker. He’s a very hungry, dedicated guy.”

Carson, who last month signed a new three-year deal with the Caley Jags, has become a firm favourite with the Inverness supporters since his arrival in the Highlands in 2019.

He fits the mould of the kind of player Inverness made a habit of picking up during their Premiershi­p heyday – a player who had a grounding in non-league football in England, with some senior-level experience, who had perhaps been overlooked by other clubs.

Danny Williams, Ross Draper and Carl Tremarco – Scottish Cup winners with Caley Thistle – all fit that profile and you can add Carson to the list.

Stevie Riley, a Caley Jags supporter and contributo­r to fan podcast The Wyness Shuffle, is one of many who have been won over.

Riley said: “His style suits a lot of fans. He’s tenacious, he’s a battler. I think he’s a future captain. He’s honest and a leader but doesn’t go above his station.

“Everyone loves a player who, even if they’ve not got the ball, is chasing down men, scurrying around trying to get the ball back. Fans love that.

“We had that with Shaun Rooney when he first came. He won the fans over with his work-rate and Davey has done that. He’s fallen in love with the city as well. He’s moved his Mrs up there, she’s got a job up there. He’s shown commitment to the city and fans love that more than someone who’s up for a quick pay-day.

“He wants to stay longterm and we embrace that as well.”

Carson’s contributi­ons to his team’s cause of late have come from right-back. Initially deployed there by interim manager Neil McCann after an injury to regular full-back Wallace Duffy, Carson has been a standout.

His performanc­es earned him March’s player-of-themonth award in the Championsh­ip, with his relentless, energetic style allowing him to contribute in defensive and attacking areas. It has also allowed McCann to pair Sean Walsh and Scott Allardice as an effective, combative pairing in midfield, retaining Carson’s pressing abilities.

“He wasn’t a standout for me last season,” Riley added. “He was a solid seven-out-of-10 guy. He wouldn’t mess up or set the heather alight. But this year he’s been a revelation.

“He’s my player of the season, just for his impact

playing in a position that’s not his favourite. He’s been that good at right-back – you feel sorry for Wallace Duffy, who’s a natural rightback and can’t get a sniff now.”

His long-term future at Inverness looks secure and, at 25, there is little reason why Carson cannot improve further and add another chapter to his story of perseveran­ce.

“Put it this way, I don’t think we’ve replaced him,” added Gray. “That’s no disrespect to the boys that are here, but he’s been away two years and it’s hard to find a player like that.”

 ??  ?? LEAP OF FAITH: David Carson in scoring form against Dunfermlin­e in March, although his versatilit­y has now seen him excel at right-back.
LEAP OF FAITH: David Carson in scoring form against Dunfermlin­e in March, although his versatilit­y has now seen him excel at right-back.
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 ??  ?? Carson in action for Northern Premier League Morpeth. Picture by George Davidson.
Carson in action for Northern Premier League Morpeth. Picture by George Davidson.

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