H Metro

The rookie boss who changed everything

- — BBC Sport.

WIGAN. From the edge of oblivion following a summer of financial discontent to keeping his side in League One by the skin of their teeth, and now winning the title.

It has been some stint in charge of Wigan Athletic for Leam Richardson, who finally got over the line with his Latics side on Saturday after a poor run of form saw them forced to wait for their return to the Championsh­ip.

But, how did an assistant who was not even sure he wanted to be a manager, eventually get the job at the helm to lead the Latics back to English football’s second tier?

Richardson’s pathway into management began as he acted as caretaker manager of Accrington Stanley after John Coleman left for Rochdale in January 2012.

It was here that he linked up with Paul Cook for the first time after he was appointed Stanley’s manager the following month, but he eventually took over from Cook in October of that year when Cook departed for Chesterfie­ld.

Having originally led the club on a caretaker basis again, Richardson, then 32-years-old, was appointed on a two-and-a-half-year deal while still registered as a player.

Despite a torrid 2012-13 campaign which saw them bottom of the Football League by March, Richardson led Stanley to five wins from their final eight games to keep them in League Two.

He then left the club to rejoin Cook as his assistant at Chesterfie­ld, and then followed him to Portsmouth where they won promotion to League One in 2017.

That summer he arrived at the Latics, where he has been ever since.

In his first campaign at the club as Cook’s assistant, Wigan won promotion from League One and soon followed relative stability in the Championsh­ip.

That was, of course, until the summer of 2020.

Wigan may not have been at the top of people’s list of clubs which might enter financial trouble in light of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

However, when their then-Hong Kong owners pulled out of the club, administra­tion followed, and despite a valiant effort to remain in the Championsh­ip, the Latics suffered the drop at the end of the protracted 2019-20 season.

Cook left the club — along with much of the club’s squad — amid the financial turmoil and later joined Ipswich as their manager.

However, Richardson did not follow him to the Tractor Boys, instead opting to stay with the Latics initially in a caretaker role before John Sheridan took over for a short spell with the club.

Speaking to BBC Radio Manchester, Richardson said: “I don’t say this flippantly. I’ve been a member of staff at football clubs and I know how hard you’ve got to work to support the manager and I know you’ve got to work to be successful.

“The challenge we’ve had I’ve never had one like it. [During the pandemic] We were playing so many games in 60 to 90 days and had to regenerate and prepare.

“It was one of the toughest times I’ve had. We’ve had such a good group of staff who have challenged the players.”

When Sheridan left, Richardson steered the club to safety by just a point during a difficult campaign that saw them in among the drop zone for much of the season.

In March of 2021, Bahraini businessma­n Abdulrahma­n Al-Jasmi bought the club and so the upturn in fortunes began.

This season Richardson led the club to the FA Cup fourth round and the semi-final of the Papa Johns Trophy, in addition to promotion and the third tier title.

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