Yorkshire Post

Defining period will bring best out of City – Kilgallon

Clough laid foundation­s that Wilder has built on

- CHIEF FOOTBALL WRITER LEON WOBSCHALL

WHEN Nigel Clough led Sheffield United into the FA Cup semi-finals, nothing was going to keep Chris Wilder away from Wembley.

Not even his Northampto­n Town side’s then desperate fight for Football League survival, the Cobblers having remained in the relegation zone the previous afternoon despite beating Burton Albion.

With just four games remaining, Wilder needed a break from the pressure of what would ultimately prove to be a remarkable rescue job at the Sixfields and there was no better way than immersing himself in the all-Yorkshire clash against Hull City.

His day ended in disappoint­ment courtesy of a 5-3 defeat, though only after Clough’s League One battlers had led at halftime.

Further heartache followed for United under the former England internatio­nal the following season as another last-four exit in the League Cup to Tottenham Hotspur preceded a 7-6 aggregate loss in the play-off semi-finals against Swindon Town.

Wildernow Sheffield United manager, had been in the Bramall Lane crowd for both home legs as Clough’s men went close to glory.

Clough was sacked a few weeks after that play-off exit, but Wilder insists the manager he will go head-to-head with tonight at the Pirelli Stadium deserves plenty of praise for the work he did in South Yorkshire.

“The pressure was on when he got the job, but he did ever so well,” said the 50-year-old about Clough, who took the reins in the autumn of 2013 with United sitting in the relegation zone on just nine points from 13 games.

“The club was in a difficult position and yet, by the end of the season, the club was just outside the play-offs.

“It was a big process turning things round in terms of players and everything else.

“He did it in an honest and enthusiast­ic way.

“How he left is not for me to comment, but look at the results, the league positions, the cup runs and the good things the people who worked here say about him.”

On the two cup runs in backto-back campaigns that saw Clough’s third-tier side upset the odds time and time again, Wilder added: “To beat the teams Nigel did along the way, and to get the nights here he did in the cups, was fantastic. Even in the earlier rounds, there was beating West Ham on penalties and Southampto­n too.

“All the focus, of course, goes on the semi-finals against Tottenham and also against Hull City.

“Against Tottenham (in 2015), they were in the tie right up to the very end.

“Same with the FA Cup semifinal the previous year.”

Going in at half-time ahead at Wembley, the then Northampto­n manager went in and sampled the Guinness, but, by the time he came out, Hull were 3-2 up. “I was wondering, ‘What happened there?’ Maybe I had too many pints of Guinness.”

Wilder and his fellow supporters were also left scratching their heads in what proved to be Clough’s last act as manager, a remarkable 5-5 draw in a recordbrea­king second-leg tie at Swindon that defied logic in a similar fashion to the ‘Magic Roundabout’ that sits just outside the County Ground.

His subsequent sacking was harsh, but Clough’s reaction was to dust himself down and return to Burton the following December.

Almost two years on, Burton can look back on not only a promotion from League One, but also survival last season that Wilder believes deserved official recognitio­n via the Championsh­ip Manager of the Year award.

The Blades’ chief, who has previously faced Clough’s Burton in the Conference with Halifax Town and Oxford United, added: “When awards get handed out, it is quite easy for people to give them to the teams with the biggest resources, the best players and most money.

“Sometimes, though, it would be nice if people looked below the surface – and recognised things like facilities, budgets, standard of division and working with players.

“Being in the game myself, Nigel’s achievemen­t last year was absolutely outstandin­g. I wouldn’t be surprised if they stay up again and that is not being disrespect­ful.

“Their aim is to stay in and improve on last year’s league position.

“We won’t underestim­ate them on size of club, history or levels of support. These are proper games when you have to be at it.” BRADFORD CITY would have struggled to handpick a tougher end to November if they tried.

The fourth-placed Bantams are gearing up for a crunch League One triple-header, which starts off with a trip to secondplac­ed Wigan Athletic tomorrow followed by a home game with form side Scunthorpe United, in fifth position, on Tuesday night.

City then visit leaders Shrewsbury Town next weekend and while the run is daunting, Matt Kilgallon insists the time is right to make a statement.

The veteran defender’s confidence is emboldened by the sight of a full squad, following yesterday’s return to training of midfielder Tim Dieng and he is backing City to finish a “big month” in resounding fashion.

Kilgallon said: “November is a big month for us against a lot of top teams. It will be one of the hardest months of the season, but I am sure they (opponents) are saying that as well.

“We have got a fully-fit squad, so it is up to us if we want to do it. I know the lads want to stay up there and crack on.

“The teams we play have also all got good squads and are doing well at the minute. But I fancy us against them.

“It is all about attitude and we need to do it right. We need to start well and have a real go; let us show them how good we are.”

Kilgallon’s positivity is with good reason, with the 33-year-old enjoying a new lease of life this season, so much so that his fine form has earned him a contract extension until June 2019.

His haul of 18 appearance­s so far in 2017-18 has comfortabl­y surpassed his tally of 12 games last term when he struggled for fitness and the centre-half admits his experience­s are like chalk and cheese.

Kilgallon added: “It is completely different from last season. I got a full pre-season under my belt at the start and that has helped massively.

“I felt fit coming into the season and the gaffer said he was starting me. I have enjoyed it from there.

“There have been some games when you are thinking, ‘we have got another one Tuesday, another one Saturday’. But it is great to be part of it. We are doing all right.

“Everyone knows there are a lot of games, but I feel good.

“If the gaffer wants to freshen it up, he is in charge and can do what he wants.”

On the notion of being ‘rested’, he quipped: “He asked me one time and I said, ‘no’. The next time when he left me out, he did not say anything. He obviously thought, ‘I will not ask this guy if he wants to play again.’”

 ??  ?? Nigel Clough took Sheffield United to three cup semi-finals in just over a season during his ultimately ill-fated time in charge of the Blades.
Nigel Clough took Sheffield United to three cup semi-finals in just over a season during his ultimately ill-fated time in charge of the Blades.
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