Has Blackpool ever been so beautiful?

Policeman enjoying Wigan beat Blackpool

Policeman enjoying Wigan beat Blackpool

We arrived in Blackpool a couple of hours early, under grey skies and feeling somewhat nervous. As we walked around the streets near Bloomfield Road and then onto the promenade it is clear to see that the town has seen better days. Bed & Breakfasts, fast food and tacky gift shops proliferate. A banner outside one B & B proudly states ‘Refurbished for 1974’ – you certainly need a sense of humour in Blackpool.

As we entered the ground at about 2.45pm and took our seats I checked my Twitter feed  – someone is saying they’ve been showing the 4-0 Blackpool win at Wigan on the big screen. It seemed the Seasiders are getting a bit too cocky, shouldn’t they show a bit more respect for their opponents.

As we are about to start there is a feeling of nervousness amongst the Wigan fans, most feel it is win or bust. The game kicks off under clear blue skies, the morning clouds have dispersed but is it going to be a new dawn for Wigan. We start briskly and some sloppy Blackpool defending by Cathcart lets in Rodallega who finishes expertly after only two and a half minutes. The Wigan fans go crazy, some are ecstatically punching the air, others are hugging the person nearest to them. Everyone feels that we are in this together. It is a dream start for the Latics, but can they maintain it?

Diame and McCarthy are combative in the midfield but it seems that Referee Peter Walton is giving most decisions to the home side, a couple of obvious fouls on James McCarthy are waved away by Walton much to the disbelief of the Wigan fans. But despite Walton’s apparent bias Wigan are winning the battle for possession and are clearly the better of the two sides. Charlie Adam Blackpool’s talisman is subdued and is struggling to make his mark. Ben Watson  is predominant in the centre of midfield and is having his best game of the season, it is to become a Man of the Match performance, he wins nearly every tackle and distributes the ball with precision.

Just before the interval Wigan grab a second, Diame makes a good interception and passes to N’Zogbia who dribbles his way into the Blackpool box and angles his shot past Gilks who seems rooted to the spot. Two nil to the Latics at half time and the atmosphere amongst the Wigan fans is buoyant.

The second half starts in much the same way as the first with Wigan producing some slick passing and  N’Zogbia terrorising the Blackpool defenders with his mazy dribbles. With thirty minutes remaining Holloway makes a triple substitution but almost immediately it is game over as Blackpool concede a third as Diame’s shot is deflected past Gilks by Eardley. The Wigan fans are jubilant but also incredulous – when was the last time we were winning 3-0 away in such a crucial game?

It look as though Wigan will go onto get a fourth, but then we would surely be dreaming. In the dying minutes DJ Campbell grabs a consolation for Blackpool and restores some kind of reality. But Wigan have been dominant throughout and thoroughly deserve the victory.

As the jubilant Wigan fans leave the ground news starts to emerge about the other results Birmingham have won 2-0 against Sunderland, but Blackburn have lost 2-0 at Everton and a late goal for Aston Villa beats West Ham. Wigan are out of the bottom three for the first time in months. Has Blackpool ever been so beautiful?

Posted in Ben Watson, Blackpool, Charles N'Zogbia, Wigan Athletic | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

A tale of two managers – Blackpool V Wigan preview

Roberto Martinez

Ian Holloway

Latics travel to Blackpool on Saturday for what is the most important game of the season as a win could take Wigan out of the relegation zone and above Blackpool. The pressure on the two managers Roberto Martinez and Ian Holloway will be intense.

Superficially, it would seem that the two men have very different personalities and the teams have different styles of play. Martinez is the stylish Catalan, a scholar of the game whose team play a patient passing game. Holloway is the eccentric who is renowned for his comical outbursts. His team attack in numbers and create many chances but they have also conceded the highest number of goals in the league.

Roberto prefers the Spanish style so successfully employed by Barcelona, possession of the ball is everything, even if it means playing the ball sideways or backwards. His team usually plays a 4-5-1 which means there is rarely more than one player in the opponent’s penalty area.

Ian Holloway’s team play an attacking and fluid 4-3-3, against Wigan at the DW Stadium earlier in the season his players rampaged forward and overcame an inept Wigan 4-0.

Martinez is a thinker he is well-educated and cultured, with a degree in physiotherapy and a postgraduate degree in business management.

He is generally very controlled about what he says in front the media. Although he is not renowned for his controversial quotes, he was fined for his comments about referee Stuart Attwell and he recently said on Match of the Day that the foul by Chelsea’s Fernando Torres on Ali Al Habsi and the subsequent goal was a ‘football crime’.

Holloway is never far from the media spotlight and his quotes are never less than entertaining.

“Apparently it’s my fault that the Titanic sank. On criticism from Plymouth Argyle fans during Leicester City’s match against Plymouth Argyle”.

“I love Blackpool. We’re very similar. We both look better in the dark.”

“If you’re a burglar, it’s no good poncing about outside somebody’s house, looking good with your swag bag ready. Just get in there, burgle them and come out. I don’t advocate that obviously, it’s just an analogy”.

However, as well as these extreme outpourings Ian Holloway has stated that he has been influenced by Martinez. Before he joined Blackpool Holloway played long ball, 4-4-2, his press conferences were often more entertaining than the matches.

Then he had an epiphany on a gantry. He wanted to reinvent himself he wanted to be Roberto Martínez.

“I looked at what I was doing and there was fear behind every move I made, and I don’t want my players to play like that,” Holloway went on to say “I want to be free and attack. I don’t want to bore my way to a 1-0 win. “What made me realise was the year I had last year, when I was paid to watch other teams of a higher level that I’d managed in — not that I’d played in. I was sat above it and I could see the overall picture and pattern. There were people doing things that I didn’t do. I looked at why they were doing it and it was because of the space. I thought I’d rather be like that. I watched what Swansea did four or five times under Martínez and it was different”.

“He’s Spanish, his whole culture is different. I watched Spain play England and we were embarrassing. Spain were little and they kept the ball and they passed around us for fun, and I think that’s what it is all about — to inspire someone to get in the game with movement and understanding, to keep the ball and cherish it.”

So although Martinez and Holloway might seem quite different, they actually both aspire to the same style of football.

Although in public Holloway is regarded as outspoken and even eccentric, his private life shows a more sensitive side. Holloway met his future wife Kim when she was aged 14, and after marrying nursed her through lymphatic cancer. The couple have four children but three of them are profoundly deaf. He has worked tirelessly to give his three girls a good education.

He states,“We have been labelled as bolshie parents. My view is that every child in the world has the right to be educated properly and whether your eyes or ears don’t work is irrelevant. But the system at the moment makes if difficult.”

For the last three years of his QPR career, Holloway commuted daily from Bristol to London, a 250 mile round trip, so the children could attend a deaf school in Bristol. As a result he developed severe sciatica. They then moved to St Albans when the children were of secondary school age, for the same reason. Holloway has learned sign language, and his quirky media-loving quotes have made him a high-profile campaigner on deaf issues and concerns.

So Holloway is not so easy to pigeonhole, he is a more complex character than on first impressions. Martinez is often portrayed as calm and controlled but this does not mean that he is any less committed to the Wigan cause than Holloway is to Blackpool.

Holloway has assembled a team of attacking journeymen who are seemingly punching above their weight, Martinez has some of the best young players in the top flight but struggle to score goals, only time will tell who will triumph.

Posted in Blackpool, Ian Holloway, Roberto Martinez, Wigan Athletic | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

The disparity league – Chelsea V Wigan preview

Roman Abramovich

Wigan go to Chelsea on Saturday in a match of the unequals. Chelsea are currently fourth in the Premier League and still in the Champions League and the Latics still occupy the bottom spot despite some good recent performances.

The Chelsea line-up will contain some of the biggest stars in world football, Torres, Drogba, Luiz, Anelka, Ramires, Essien, Czech, Lampard, Terry, Cole and the list goes on. The gap in ‘star’ terms is immense. Wigan’s modestly assembled team will have to perform at their very best if they are to get anything out of the game.

This match brings into sharp focus the disparity in resources available to the two teams. While researching the game I came across some very revealing statistics on the Transfer League website. Most people will be aware of the wealth available to Chelsea from their owner Roman Abramovich, but the size of the gap between the Premier League’s richest and many of the other teams is something to behold.

The Transfer League have produced a table that shows the clubs per season spend on purchasing players from the beginning of the Premier League in 1992. Up to 2010 Chelsea had a net per season expenditure on players of over £24 million while Wigan’s net expenditure on players per season was only £274,868.

The figures are broken down as follows: Purchases = Money spent on Players, Sold = Money received from Players sold, Net Per Season = Purchased minus Sold. This gives an indication of new investment on players. The per season column gives an average of the money spend per season since 1992.

Net Spend 92-2010 Purchased Gross Sold Net Per Season

1 Chelsea £661,640,000 £203,875,000 £457,765,000 £24,092,895
2 Manchester City £573,180,000 £138,303,000 £434,877,000 £22,888,263
3 Tottenham £399,050,000 £201,717,500 £197,332,500 £10,385,921
4 Liverpool £495,805,000 £304,920,000 £190,885,000 £10,046,579
5 Manchester United £430,250,000 £291,090,000 £139,160,000 £7,324,211
6 Aston Villa £281,740,000 £144,325,000 £137,415,000 £7,232,368
7 Sunderland £199,465,000 £107,530,000 £91,935,000 £4,838,684
8 Newcastle £321,945,000 £235,725,000 £86,220,000 £4,537,895
9 Fulham £133,281,000 £52,895,000 £80,386,000 £4,230,842
10 Birmingham City £135,545,000 £58,575,000 £76,970,000 £4,051,053
11 Everton £218,245,500 £165,270,000 £52,975,500 £2,788,184
12 Wolves £85,419,000 £39,045,000 £46,374,000 £2,440,737
13 West Bromwich Albion £93,880,000 £52,367,501 £41,512,499 £2,184,868
14 Stoke City £61,615,000 £24,030,000 £37,585,000 £1,978,158
15 Arsenal £273,440,000 £237,574,000 £35,866,000 £1,887,684
16 Bolton £91,970,000 £65,270,000 £26,700,000 £1,405,263
17 Blackburn Rovers £189,162,000 £176,185,000 £12,977,000 £683,000
18 Wigan £82,965,000 £77,742,500 £5,222,500 £274,868
19 West Ham £189,082,000 £184,782,000 £4,300,000 £226,316
20 Blackpool £7,002,500 £4,785,000 £2,217,500 £116,711

Middlesbrough £193,985,000 £120,670,000 £73,315,000 £3,858,684
Hull £25,470,000 £11,980,000 £13,490,000 £710,000
Burnley £22,900,000 £18,170,000 £4,730,000 £248,947
Leeds United £145,780,000 £141,945,000 £3,835,000 £201,842
Portsmouth £115,100,000 £136,645,000 -£21,545,000 -£1,133,947

The discrepancy in net expenditure is stark and this season’s discrepancy between the two sides is even greater. Chelsea have a net expenditure of over £87 million following the purchases of Torres, Ramires, Luiz and Benayoun . Wigan’s net expenditure is a more modest £7.3 million, the majority of which went on the purchase of Mauro Boselli.

So there you have it, the gap between the Premier League’s rich and not so rich teams is vast and increasing. If Wigan pull off a result against Chelsea it will be against a financial back drop which is increasingly unsustainable and in the current age of austerity erring on the obscene.

Posted in Chelsea, Roman Abramovich, Wigan Athletic | Tagged , , , , | 4 Comments

Give credit where credit is due

Wigan Athletic onwards and upwards

It was another great performance from the Latics in their draw with Spurs on Saturday. Roberto Martinez’s team are now playing some of their best football of the season, recent games have seen them dominate against Man City and overcome Birmingham 2-1, and this 0-0 draw showed Wigan in the ascendancy. The Latics created the more clear-cut opportunities and it was only some top class saves from the Spurs keeper Gomes that prevented them from taking all three points.

BBC pundit Mark Lawrenson had once again tipped Wigan to lose (some people might call this a vendetta) and Spurs had come with their big guns (apart from the injured Bale). The focus was on the ‘Big Team’ and ‘Arry’s Boys’ attempt to get a Champions League slot for next season and their quarter-final game against Real Madrid on Tuesday night. Little Wigan were once again the bit players in the Big Boys Fantasy League.

Wigan showed tremendous determination and competed for every ball, they matched and often exceeded the skill levels of their highly rated counterparts. Latics took control of the game and dominated possession. They out-passed and out-manoeuvred one of the most expensively assembled teams in the league – some achievement for a team currently bottom of the league and put together for a relative pittance.

In performance terms Wigan had excelled, yet all the Match of the Day ‘so called experts’ and Sunday newspaper journalists could talk about was Spurs. Wigan barely got a mention in the MOTD post match summing up. Such is the obsession with the mega-rich teams and the hype that surrounds them.

The Wigan Athletic players and Roberto Martinez deserve plaudits for their performance but apart from the home fans and some of the local media they do not receive national recognition or get the credit they deserve.  Perhaps if we pull off the great escape and survive in the Premier League we will get some credit, but somehow I doubt it.

Posted in Match of the day, Roberto Martinez, Spurs, Wigan Athletic | Tagged , , | 3 Comments

Keep Calm and Eat More Pies – The Spurs Preview

Keep Calm and Eat More Pies

The tension is mounting and Wiganers will be needing something to calm our nerves, as always pies will be on the menu, as we look to take three points at home to Spurs. It is bound to be another pressurised encounter with Spurs looking to cement a place in the top four and Wigan desperate to get away from the foot of the table.

Many Wigan fans have been calling for Roberto to start with Rodallega and Sammon upfront in a 4-4-2 formation. We will certainly need to have a positive approach, but I think the Manager may start cautiously, initially retaining his 4-5-1 system.

Spurs have some exceptional attacking players in Bale, Lennon, Defoe, Van der Vaart, Pavlyuchenko and Crouch, and if these players are given the freedom to attack we could be in for a high scoring fixture.

A significant threat comes from the wings and if Bale and Lennon are given the freedom run at our full backs we will be in for a very difficult afternoon. However, I think Martinez will try to ensure that his full backs are protected by our midfielders and we will try to restrict Spurs attacking options.

If we can blunt the Spurs attack and take control of the midfield we can then progress to posing a threat going forward. The Wigan formation may have to change to a more attacking 4-4-2 with the introduction of either Sammon or Rodallega depending on who starts the game.

Spurs have a Champions League quarter-final against Real Madrid on Tuesday night so I’m hoping they are preoccupied with this fixture, they may even decide to rest key players like Bale, Lennon and Van der Vaart. Spurs have been less than convincing prior to Champions League fixtures, and don’t forget Wigan beat Spurs at White Hart Lane earlier in the season.  It’s going to be another nervous encounter, but I’m going to predict another home win and to celebrate I may have a pie or two.

Posted in Spurs, Wigan Athletic | Tagged , , | 2 Comments

City defeat and nine cup finals ahead

Alcaraz goes close for Wigan

Another Wigan chance goes abegging

Wigan deserved at least a point from Saturday’s game at Manchester City, but yet again it ended in heroic defeat for the Latics. Wigan matched their wealthy neighbours throughout and if it was not for an uncharacteristic goalkeeping error by Ali Al Habsi we would all be celebrating.

The first half was fairly even, with City probably creating the greater number of chances although James McCarthy had an excellent opportunity to score for Wigan. The City goal came as a result of some indecisive defending. Wigan backed off David Silva and as he moved towards goal Lopez slipped allowing him the freedom to get in his shot, Al Habsi was in a good position but inexplicably let the ball through his hands, legs and over the line.

The second half was all Wigan and even the most biased City supporters would accept that City had a lucky escape. Wigan dominated possession for long periods and expertly moved the ball from side to side alternating the point of attack and creating numerous chances. Alcaraz struck a post from Watson’s corner, Hart made a smart save from McCarthy’s piledriver and Rodallega shot tamely from an excellent scoring position. Then in the final seconds substitute Conor Sammon making his debut shot wide when he looked odds-on to score. The sense of frustration from the Wigan supporters behind the goal was all too evident.

Nine Cup Finals

Wigan still sit bottom of the league and now have nine ‘cup finals’ to redeem themselves. Four home games against Birmingham, Tottenham, Everton and West Ham and five away games at Chelsea, Blackpool, Sunderland, Aston Villa and Stoke, does not look an easy run in. Many pundits have speculated about the number of points required to stay up this season. Four wins and a draw from the remaining games would take us to 40 points, but this may not be enough and a target of 41 or even 42 may be required.

Wigan are currently in a training camp at La Manga in Spain and have two weeks rest and recuperation before the Birmingham game, this period could be crucial for Roberto Martinez to gather his troops and prepare his strategy for staying up.

Will he adjust his formation for the remaining games and adopt a more positive approach, for example 4-4-2 with possibly Rodallega teaming up with Sammon, or will he persist with his current approach of one central attacker? I personally would like to see him use Sammon and Rodallega against Birmingham, although I would not necessarily expect the same formation against Spurs. Whatever team he selects it is certainly a time for all of us, the Manager, the team and the supporters to be brave. As Roberto says ‘Sin Miedo’ (Without Fear).

Posted in Manchester City, Wigan Athletic | 1 Comment

Whelan makes pledge for the future

Wigan Athletic owner Dave Whelan

Wigan Athletic chairman Dave Whelan has spoken about the clubs finances following the audit report this week that revealed an operating loss of £4 million, with the auditors suggesting that the club could go under without his financial backing, Whelan says that he will ensure that the Latics will survive.

At 74 Whelan realises that he won`t be around forever to keep the club afloat, speaking to ESPN, he says that he will pass the club on but only to the right person.

Whelan states that he loves football and he loves the Latics and that`s why he will keep funding the club up as long as possible.

Whelan said: “There are no worries about the club surviving while I’m around’

‘The trouble is I might not be around for much longer, as I’m pushing 75. If it means being around to prop up the club for the next three to five years, then so be it, but I am looking to pass the club on.

‘When I say pass it on, I mean give it away, yes. But I will only give it away to the right person. I remember when Sir Jack Hayward gave away his beloved Wolves for £50, and I will do the same with Wigan, but the right person would have to love this club and keep it going and show me that he can do that.

‘As it stands, there is no danger to this club, I’ll see to that, but we cannot post losses – it has to run on business lines, it has to live within its means. The bottom line though is that, while I cannot go on forever, there is no chance of this club being sold to just anybody. It will have to be the right person for the right reasons.

‘The accounts say that I am propping up the club personally and they are probably right! Why do I continue to do this? Well, I love football, and I love this club.

‘I earned my first pound note playing football, and I owe it to football to keep Wigan alive.’

Whatever league Wigan are in next season, Whelan’s reign can only be regarded as a major success, promotion to the Premier League seemed an impossible dream when he took over in 1995. A long stay in the Prem and a 25,000 capacity seater seemed like a fantasy scenario back then.

Whelan has sometimes been criticised by the fans for his motives, but Wiganers cannot deny that he massively contributed to the Wigan Athletic success story. When he leaves the club he will have left the club with a great legacy and the fans should thank him for that.

Posted in Dave Whelan, Wigan Athletic | Leave a comment

Shaun Goater’s handball and our friend Stuart Attwell

Shaun Goater

Stuart Attwell

 

 

 

 

 

Latics visit Eastlands on Saturday evening for a high-profile fixture against one of the wealthiest clubs in world football. Manchester City currently lie third in the table and Wigan are now rock bottom. City’s lavishly assembled team of superstars will make it difficult for us, but there may also be other factors that come into play.

Back in May 1999 Wigan lost to Manchester City in the Second Division play-offs due to a poor refereeing decision – a blatant handball by the City striker Shaun Goater.  The reason I mention this is that after the Rooney/Clattenburg fiasco last week we now have to contend with another referee with a reputation for making bizarre decisions.

Stuart Attwell is refereeing the game despite controversy in the fixture last year. Last season’s fixture resulted in Roberto Martinez being fined and warned as to his future conduct after criticising Attwell’s performance in Latics’ 3-0 defeat. Roberto was incensed by the second-half sending off of Gary Caldwell for a tackle on Carlos Tevez and later accused Attwell of lying over the reasons for the dismissal.

Martinez commented at the time, “We are all human beings and we all make mistakes, but to give a decision after something you don’t see, that is lying, you are making it up,”

“He said he saw Gary Caldwell with both feet off the ground. That’s why he gave the red  card. But Gary Caldwell only went with one foot. That is a real injustice.”

It was a rare outburst from Martinez and it cost him £2,250 as the FA hit him with a fine.

Attwell was also involved in the famous ghost goal, when he awarded a goal to Reading against Watford, despite the ball being four yards wide of the goal post.

Wigan didn’t have any luck in the 1999 play off semi final when Goater handled the ball, so maybe it is time for fortune to favour us and a certain Mr. Attwell to perform his duties impeccably.

Posted in Manchester City, Wigan Athletic | 2 Comments

Rooney’s elbow

Rooney's elbow on James McCarthy

Football matches are rarely short of talking points but Saturday’s match against Manchester United had more than most. United are probably the best team in England at the moment and look likely to win the Premier league title, but the game highlighted some disturbing decision-making by the match officials, the United staff and subsequently by the FA.

Wigan started the game briskly and put United on the back foot. Only eight minutes into the game and the petulant Wayne Rooney committed a very serious offence. James McCarthy stepped into Rooney’s path and as he did so Rooney lashed out with his elbow into the side of McCarthy’s head.

The Referee Mark Clattenburg saw the offence and those who had seen it expected Rooney to be sent off. However Clattenburg inexplicably, did not send off or even book Rooney, but just put his arm around him and said some ‘kind’ words.

If Clattenburg really saw ‘Rooney’s elbow’ then under the rules of the game it is a straight red card offence. If he didn’t see it, he should have consulted his linesman or the fourth official, and if no official saw it he should have re-started the game with a drop ball.

Subsequent TV and photographic evidence clearly shows the incident and Rooney clearly commits a red card offence. Most independent viewers have agreed that Rooney should have been sent off. However, following the game Mike Phelan was interviewed on Match of the Day and refused to accept that Rooney had dangerously used his elbow. He even suggested that there was a witch hunt against Rooney by the media. When will managers and their assistants admit that there players have committed serious offences especially when they can be as dangerous as the Rooney’s assault on James McCarthy? Why do they defend the indefensible?

The incident wasn’t the only time that the referee protected Manchester United, there were several fouls that Clattenburg preferred to ignore and one in particular by Paul Scholes, once again on James McCarthy, that deserved at least a booking. From my seat in the centre of the West Stand it seemed to me that Clattenburg was constantly looking to the United bench and Alex Ferguson in particular for approval of his decisions. I’m not one for conspiracy theories, but it did seem that Clattenburg was very concerned not to upset Fergy. 

The final frustration in this affair is that the FA have subsequently failed to punish Rooney with a ban. All the TV and photographic evidence shows that Rooney was guilty. Roberto Martinez has said, if it was a Wigan player he would have been sent off and facing a long suspension.  What message does this send to the other clubs, supporters and the public at large? 

By the way, United went on to win the game 4-0, Rooney created the first two goals and scored the third.

Posted in Manchester United, Wayne Rooney, Wigan Athletic | Leave a comment

Big day, big team, big result?

Phoenix Stand by Stuart Roy Clarke

Another massive game tomorrow – Wigan Athletic v Manchester United – one of the biggest teams in world football against little Wigan.

United are as usual the big favourites, our form against United since getting into the Prem is less than impressive. They have won all 12 games against Wigan in all competitions scoring 37 goals & conceding just 4. Oh dear, it doesn’t look very promising for us. However, despite Man Utd’s incredible history, players, and of course money – I’m ‘stupidly’ going to go for a Wigan win.

Perhaps it’s just the desperation of a fan who wants his team to continue to compete with the big boys in the big league, but I honestly think that we can spring a surprise tomorrow. Roberto Martinez is a hard-working manager who has always has been positive in his approach and he deserves to be rewarded for his endeavours. With a bit of luck, the new pitch and a ‘fair’ referee we can do it.

Posted in Roberto Martinez, Wigan Athletic | Tagged | Leave a comment