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Author Topic: The Ex Swindon Town Player Where Are They Now Thread  (Read 5205061 times)
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« Reply #19320 on: Wednesday, May 14, 2025, 08:37:46 »

I wonder what odds you can get on Leeds, Burnley & Sheffield United / Sunderland to be relegated

&

Leicester, Ipswich & Southampton to be promoted next season…
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« Reply #19321 on: Wednesday, May 14, 2025, 08:42:29 »

I’ve seen all the POs. Sheff Utd are nailed on to beat Sunderland - they were awful yesterday.

None of the promoted teams have a cats chance in hell of staying up. The gap just gets wider and wider.
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« Reply #19322 on: Wednesday, May 14, 2025, 08:44:31 »

Sunderland finished closer in points to Swansea in 11th than Sheffield United in one spot higher in third. It'll be quite funny if they win.
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« Reply #19323 on: Wednesday, May 14, 2025, 10:24:00 »

Nice interview with Matt Richie in The Guardian today. I can't do links but it's available online.
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« Reply #19324 on: Wednesday, May 14, 2025, 12:20:19 »

Nice interview with Matt Richie in The Guardian today. I can't do links but it's available online.

Quote
Matt Ritchie: ‘My dream is coming to an end. You have to reinvent yourself’

The former Newcastle stalwart on his admiration for Eddie Howe, a brutal pre-season with Paolo Di Canio and a fairytale finish to his career captaining Portsmouth

It is not the first time Matt Ritchie has heard the line suggesting he should have been driving Newcastle’s open-top bus when the squad paraded the Carabao Cup before 300,000 supporters between St James’ Park and the Town Moor. “I’m not sure I could because I think it’s a different licence for commercial use,” he says, smiling, alluding to the LGV Category C one he obtained in the last of his eight seasons at the club.

There is no haulage sideline but rather he and his wife, Emma, who enjoys equestrian and showjumping, took the tests so they could drive a horsebox. “It is easy … you just have to take the corners a bit wider. I loved doing it because it was out of my comfort zone. The theory test was the hardest, hazard perception … there are tricks in there. It was like being a kid again: ‘I want to get this right.’”

Ritchie passed first time and this month he begins another qualification on more familiar ground, in the game he has dedicated his life, enrolling on the Uefa A licence coaching course. The 35-year-old, whose contract at boyhood club Portsmouth runs until the end of next season, is weighing up which move he will make when he does call time on a career that has taken him from Privett Park, home to his first club, Gosport Borough, to the Premier League. “My dream now is coming to an end,” he says. “You have to reinvent yourself. I’m starting to take the blinkers off, opening my eyes. What can I learn?”

On a sunny day in the New Forest, Ritchie is reflecting on almost two decades as a professional, from his debut on loan at Dagenham & Redbridge as a teenager and lessons from Paolo Di Canio at Swindon to scaling new heights with Bournemouth under Eddie Howe, Rafael Benítez’s tactical methods and marvelling at Elliot Anderson during seven-a-side at Newcastle training. But he is looking forward, too, his appetite to explore fresh challenges and different worlds clear.

“I listen to Chris Voss, the famous [FBI] negotiator,” he says. “It makes you curious and I think if you act on curiosity, you can grow. We can all talk about doing this and that, but you have to take action.”
Matt Ritchie is given special attention from his former mentor Eddie Howe in training with Newcastle
Matt Ritchie is given special attention from his former mentor Eddie Howe in training with Newcastle. Photograph: Serena Taylor/Newcastle United/Getty Images

Ritchie is thinking about management but, for now, it is small steps, occasionally coaching Bournemouth’s under-15s and under-16s. Ten years ago this month Ritchie enjoyed one of his greatest days with Bournemouth, winning promotion to the top flight as champions. Ritchie jests he needs 10 days to discuss what he learned from playing under Howe at Bournemouth and, more recently, Newcastle, comparing the way he has developed scores of players to pruning roses.

Ritchie has witnessed first-hand the hours Howe and his coaches have invested down the years. “I travelled back and forth from Newcastle to Bournemouth with JT [Jason Tindall] and Purchey [Stephen Purches] for two years. You’d get on the plane: they’d be on the laptop. In the airport, on the laptop, phone. ‘Have you seen this, Purch?’ You can’t switch off. They are constantly thinking about the next game. ‘How can we improve?’ I am thankful for those experiences, I’ve sucked it all up. It has given me a picture of what management might look like.”

Ritchie remembers a team meeting in which Howe stated his desire to win silverware. “We stayed up [in 2021-22] and the next season, prior to the first League Cup game, he said: ‘I don’t know how you’ve treated this competition before, but we’re here to win. There may be rotation, but I believe we can win.’ We got to the final [in 2023], lost on penalties to Chelsea [in 2024], and then this year, they won it. The journey to winning started in 2021, because he changed the mentality of the group to say: it is unacceptable for this club, because we were knocked out in the second round in four of the previous five years. It was pure leadership. What I love about him is that the sky’s the limit.

“I have loved seeing the success he and the club has had, winning the Cup. He is a hero in Newcastle for ever. I know how Sir Bobby Robson is thought of in Newcastle. After a week there, I was like: ‘Wow, they love Sir Bobby here.’ After a year, I understood it was more than love. Eddie Howe will, in my opinion, be up there with Sir Bobby Robson, and deservedly so. Newcastle were in a real pickle when the gaffer came in. He and his staff created this synergy: it’s us against the world and together anything is possible, which is the club motto at Bournemouth.”

Ritchie can vouch for that. He acknowledges Di Canio is a more Marmite character but looks back fondly on his time with the Italian; even 54 straight days of double or triple sessions in pre-season but, particularly, his approach to nutrition. Di Canio banned butter, sauces, sugary drinks – and ice cubes, to minimise the spread of bacteria. “He made me aware that if you want to be a top player, you need to know what you’re eating and why you’re eating it. It made me inquisitive … so rather than eating Skittles on the way to a game, I changed to having a bowl of porridge. He got me as fit as I’ve ever been. I didn’t know my body could push itself so far. Without that experience and the pre-season I had with Paolo Di Canio, I wouldn’t have had the career I’ve had.”

Ritchie always wanted to return to Portsmouth. He made his Premier League debut as a substitute in 2010, at the end of a season in which they entered administration. “The emotion of playing at Fratton Park was something I never really conquered, because I played with so much fear when I was there,” he says of his first spell, recalling a League Cup home defeat by Leicester.

“I remember the moment like yesterday. I cut inside, right foot, and I should’ve taken another touch and I would’ve been inside the 18-yard box. But I shot from about 22 yards … I thought: ‘What am I doing?’ If that was in a youth-team game or on loan at Dagenham, you would’ve driven at the defender, got in the box.’ But I tensed up. I feel passionate about passing that on to young players. I was living my dream and I didn’t fully grasp it. You don’t lose, you learn – a famous Simon Weatherstone, ‘Tinners’ [Newcastle first-team coach] saying – and it’s so true.”

Ritchie was Portsmouth captain when they secured their Championship status on Easter Monday, his nine-year-old son, Harry, and six-year-old daughter, Olivia, walking out with him as mascots. A longtime friend, a Pompey fan, messaged Ritchie expressing pride in the journey of a boy who always bled blue.

“It made me take a step back and think: ‘You know what? He’s right.’ Imagine if someone had said to me at 16, when I was training with the first team – with Papa Bouba Diop, Kevin-Prince Boateng, David James, Sol Campbell, these players I grew up watching – that one day you’re going to be the captain at Fratton Park and having what is regarded as relative success.”

On his return to the south coast last summer, his career coming full circle, he walked into a loft full of old boots. It is not something Ritchie volunteers but he decided to donate several pairs to Bournemouth’s women’s team, recently promoted to the third tier. “I certainly don’t want any thanks,” he says. “Being given boots for free, I kept them all. A boy from Gosport, you don’t expect to be given anything. If you want something, you go and work for it. If I can give a little back to the game that has given me so much, it’s the least I can do. I’m really thankful for all of the experiences I’ve had – I’ve travelled the world playing the game I love.”
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From the station at Colchester
To the cells of Warrington
From the services at Leicester
To the slums of Northampton

We travel over England
And one day Europe too

Cos we all follow the Swindon
We're the famous Town End crew.
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« Reply #19325 on: Wednesday, May 14, 2025, 19:18:18 »


Feel a bit for Coventry, they should've won it. Most awkward looking header ever from
Ballard but they all count, he was brilliant.


He made his first pro appearance for Town and scored his first pro goal for us. I hope he knows where his bread is buttered  Cheesy
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« Reply #19326 on: Wednesday, May 14, 2025, 21:20:29 »

Knoyle playing in the League Un Play-Off Semi for Stockport County, as REG comes off for Leyton Orient. I think there are some other Town links in there - Wellens of course. I still think Town should have gone for Dave Challinor as manager several years ago.

Quiet reflection in lazily watching this game tells me, that both the Hatters and Orient give Town glimmers of hope - hope that even clubs who have been shitly ran, can eventually punch amongst the top echelons of League One again; a place I truly believe is where Town should comfortably be and has the deservingly loyal supporter base to do so. It should be the bare minimum, although I'd take getting out of League Two {in he correct upward direction} as a nice consolation right now.
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'Incessant Nonsense'

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'I'm gonna tell you the secret.
There's a threat, you end it and you don't feel ashamed about enjoying it.
You smell the gunpowder and you see the blood, you know what that means?
It means you're alive. You've won.
You take the heads so that you don't ever forget.'
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« Reply #19327 on: Wednesday, May 14, 2025, 21:37:52 »

A little bad sad whenever watching a Richie Wellens team do well. What could have been here
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« Reply #19328 on: Wednesday, May 14, 2025, 21:43:13 »


I wonder what odds you can get on Leeds, Burnley & Sheffield United / Sunderland to be relegated


I reckon Leeds spoil your coupon
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'Incessant Nonsense'

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'I'm gonna tell you the secret.
There's a threat, you end it and you don't feel ashamed about enjoying it.
You smell the gunpowder and you see the blood, you know what that means?
It means you're alive. You've won.
You take the heads so that you don't ever forget.'
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« Reply #19329 on: Wednesday, May 14, 2025, 21:52:53 »


A little bad sad whenever watching a Richie Wellens team do well. What could have been here


Feels Hmmm... When they also have Martin Ling as DoF and Alan McCormack as First Team Coach too  Sad

Forget they also have Jaiyesimi there too 
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'Incessant Nonsense'

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'I'm gonna tell you the secret.
There's a threat, you end it and you don't feel ashamed about enjoying it.
You smell the gunpowder and you see the blood, you know what that means?
It means you're alive. You've won.
You take the heads so that you don't ever forget.'
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« Reply #19330 on: Wednesday, May 14, 2025, 22:56:56 »

And Mark Devlin as CEO
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« Reply #19331 on: Thursday, May 15, 2025, 00:10:18 »


And Mark Devlin as CEO



Oh how the beads of the abacus have shifted  Crying

A quick type on a search engine of choice, told me that Devlin recently won CEO of the year at the Football Business Awards. I guess what you {AFH} don't know, doesn't hurt...

https://footballbusinessawards.com/winners-2025/
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'Incessant Nonsense'

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'I'm gonna tell you the secret.
There's a threat, you end it and you don't feel ashamed about enjoying it.
You smell the gunpowder and you see the blood, you know what that means?
It means you're alive. You've won.
You take the heads so that you don't ever forget.'
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« Reply #19332 on: Friday, May 16, 2025, 06:01:21 »

Knoyle playing in the League Un Play-Off Semi for Stockport County, as REG comes off for Leyton Orient. I think there are some other Town links in there - Wellens of course. I still think Town should have gone for Dave Challinor as manager several years ago.


Challinor is frightened of going south so not sure it would have ever happened.
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« Reply #19333 on: Friday, May 16, 2025, 08:21:59 »

A little bad sad whenever watching a Richie Wellens team do well. What could have been here

I must confess to have not taken much notice, would be interesting to see how Wellens talks to the media at Orient and whether he still has a massive 'I’m doing your little club a massive favour managing them' vibe like he had here?
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« Reply #19334 on: Friday, May 16, 2025, 09:12:53 »

I must confess to have not taken much notice, would be interesting to see how Wellens talks to the media at Orient and whether he still has a massive 'I’m doing your little club a massive favour managing them' vibe like he had here?

I'm sure if you were really that bothered, there would be a very simple way to find out you tube.
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