Brighton Up
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About this ebook
The book explains how the Seagulls, written off as certainties for relegation to League One before the 2015-16 season, overcame the loss of one of their own in the Shoreham Air Show tragedy to go on a record unbeaten run. But although top scorers in the Championship, they fell agonisingly short of their target of automatic promotion by a single goal, then lost out again in the lottery of the play-offs.
The football world expected them to be crushed by disappointment and outspent by the big guns of Newcastle, Norwich and Aston Villa, but instead they regrouped and came back stronger in 2016-17.
Led by experienced and inscrutable manager Chris Hughton and backed by owner Tony Bloom - the world-class poker player nicknamed 'The Lizard' for his ice-cold blood - they played with a determination not to let the heartbreak happen again.
Nick Szczepanik
Nick Szczepanik is a freelance sports journalist and writes for The Independent and Independent on Sunday as well as The Guardian.
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Brighton Up - Nick Szczepanik
To Nigel Beal, Roy Chuter, Sarah Watts, Paul Whelch and all dedicated fans of Brighton & Hove Albion who never got to read the next chapter.
CONTENTS
Title Page
Dedication
Foreword by Chris Hughton
Preface
Acknowledgements
Introduction 16 May 2016
Chapter 1 Summer 2015
Chapter 2 Shoreham
Chapter 3 Undefeated
Chapter 4 The Blip
Chapter 5 New Year 2016
Chapter 6 The Spring Offensive
Chapter 7 House of Cards
Chapter 8 Summer 2016
Chapter 9 Reinforcements
Chapter 10 Back on the Horse
Chapter 11 Together
Chapter 12 New Year 2017
Chapter 13 On Our Way
Chapter 14 The Home Straight
Chapter 15 Up
Chapter 16 Celebration Time
Appendix 1
Appendix 2
Index
Plates
Copyright
FOREWORD
When I became the manager of Brighton & Hove Albion in January 2015, my immediate task was to steer the club away from the wrong end of the Championship.
But it was clear that the long-term goal at Brighton was to reach the Premier League, and I could tell that everything was in place at the club for that to happen.
We nearly managed to realise that dream the following season, but as everybody knows, we fell just that little bit short.
However, we had proved that we had a team with potential and I knew that the players were motivated to go one step further.
The fans had given us fantastic support that we knew would continue the next season.
And the club had shown its true quality as the whole community came together after the tragedy of the Shoreham airshow crash in August 2015.
Thankfully, with great efforts from everyone on and off the field, and that little bit of luck that you always need, we were able to achieve our ambition in 2017, and the scenes after we beat Wigan to clinch promotion will live long in the memory.
This book is the inside story of those two seasons, the lows as well as the highs, told by an experienced journalist and lifelong Albion fan. I hope you enjoy reliving them.
Chris Hughton
Lancing, May 2017
PREFACE
When I began thinking about writing this book, I could have decided to concentrate on the 2016/17 season alone, or to go back as far as 1997 or beyond; either would have had merit. But I opted for a tale of two seasons and the contrast of the glorious failure of 2015/16 with the success of a year later.
I had two main reasons: first, because they were Chris Hughton’s first full seasons in charge; and second, because the Shoreham air crash and the games against Middlesbrough and Sheffield Wednesday affected the club and the players so much that what promotion meant can only be fully explained by understanding what came before.
Naturally, any attempt to build up suspense would be doomed to failure, because everyone knows that the story has a happy ending. And if it had not, the book would not have been written – few publishers would have held out much hope of selling a story of two successive seasons that ended badly.
Instead I have tried to take you inside the club as Chris Hughton and his players pushed to reach the Premier League by, as far as possible, letting the people most closely involved put into their own words their tales of despair and triumph.
Nick Szczepanik
Brighton, May 2017
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This book could not have been attempted without the assistance of Brighton & Hove Albion, who allowed me generous access to players, staff and coaches. Thanks to Paul Camillin and his media team, Tony Bloom, Paul Barber, Chris Hughton, Dick Knight, Alan Mullery, Bruno Saltor, Sam Baldock, Lewis Dunk, Anthony Knockaert,
Solly March, Glenn Murray, Liam Rosenior, Steve Sidwell, David Stockdale, Íñigo Calderón, Ben Roberts, Colin Calderwood, Paul Trollope and Paul Winstanley. Also to Brian Horton, John Baine, Paul Samrah and Alan Wares.
Special appreciation to club historian Tim Carder for access to his invaluable and exhaustive Albion Almanac. Thanks also to local and nationally based colleagues in the football media including Andy Naylor, Steve Bailey, Paul Hayward, Ian Winrow, Tony Banks and Mike Walters.
Pictures: BHAFC/Paul Hazlewood
INTRODUCTION
16 MAY 2016
As the final whistle blew on Brighton & Hove Albion’s 2015/16 season, some players dropped to the turf of the American Express Community Stadium. Others stood, heads bowed and hands on hips. Grown men cried like children, on the field as well as in the stands.
Eventually, those on the ground dragged themselves to their feet for a weary lap of the pitch, acknowledging the applause of the home crowd, most of whom had stayed to cheer a team who had come so close to delivering so much yet fallen so agonisingly short.
Away to their left as they trudged off the field, they could hear Sheffield Wednesday and their fans celebrating their 3–1 aggregate win in the Championship play-off semi-finals, gleefully anticipating the Wembley final – the £100 million match, as the media called it, reflecting the riches on offer in the Premier League to the winner. Riches that Brighton would have to wait at least another year to claim, if they would ever manage it.
As the Brighton players slumped in the dressing room, it was no consolation to reflect that almost no other team had ever amassed so many points without achieving automatic promotion. Or that they themselves, tipped for relegation before the season, had shocked much of the football world by beginning the campaign with a twenty-one-match unbeaten run and coming so very close to reaching the Premier League.
Tony Bloom, the chairman, came down from the directors’ box to thank the players and coaching staff for their efforts, but his words must have sounded hollow.
The received wisdom is that the team fell short of promotion by two goals, but actually it was one.
One more goal, one single, solitary goal, either in the 3–0 home defeat by Middlesbrough that ended that run of invincibility, or in the 1–1 draw in the final game of the regular season, away to the same opponents; a wrongly disallowed goal at home to Ipswich correctly given or one kept out in games where leads were surrendered late on at Bolton, Derby or QPR – and it would all have been different.
Eleven months later, it was.
CHAPTER 1
SUMMER 2015
As most Brighton & Hove Albion fans know only too well, there are far worse things in football than losing play-off finals.
In spring 1997, Brighton were at the lowest point of their history.
Chairman Bill Archer, a Blackburn-based businessman with no historic connection to the Albion, had sold the Goldstone Ground, the club’s traditional home, to property developers. Supporters had fought a long battle to oust him and his chief executive, David Bellotti. A new board of directors led by advertising man Dick Knight, a lifelong supporter, had now taken over, but too late to save the crumbling stadium.
On Saturday 26 April, the team played the last game there, beating Doncaster Rovers 1–0. The following season, the fans and directors faced a groundshare with Gillingham, seventy miles away, and knew that they would have to fight again to bring the team home to Sussex.
But that was not the worst of it. The team had to play one more game that season, away to Hereford United, and defeat would mean relegation from the Football League. If that happened, would there be the appetite among enough fans to keep battling? To save a homeless non-League club?
This was the level to which a proud club had sunk, a club that had played four seasons in the top flight, regularly attracted crowds of 30,000-plus and come within one kick of winning the FA Cup. The game at Hereford finished in a draw, but the jubilation and relief at staying in the League was quickly tempered by the sobering certainty of tough times ahead.
At times like these, losing a Championship play-off semi-final would have sounded more like an aspiration than a disappointment. Back then, as the few thousand fans who still cared enough set off the following season on those 140-mile round trips to watch their team play dreadful fourth-tier home games in north Kent, the prospect of getting within two games of the glamour of the Premier League was beyond some fantastic and distant horizon.
Dick Knight and the fans persuaded Brighton & Hove City Council to let the club come home in 1999 and play at Withdean Stadium, a converted athletics venue with a fraction of the Goldstone’s capacity. And for the next decade they lobbied local and national government for permission to build a proper, permanent stadium.
Somehow the team won four promotions (and suffered two relegations) while at their cramped temporary accommodation. Even on the best of those days, the idea of watching the team play for a place in the big league in a sold-out, world-class 30,000-capacity stadium would have represented luxury beyond expectation.
But a sense of historical perspective only helps so much the morning after defeat in a play-off semi-final. The victors are the ones talking about Wembley on the back pages. The losers can only think about the summer holidays, then possibly rebuilding and going one or two better next time.
That empty feeling in 2016 was nothing new for Brighton. They had known it in 2013 and in 2014 too. On each occasion they had had to dust themselves down and go again, with the added complication of having to bed in a new manager.
Gustavo Poyet, the former Uruguay, Chelsea and Tottenham Hotspur midfield player, had been in charge when they had lost to Crystal Palace, their greatest rivals, in 2013. He left in controversial circumstances within weeks. He was replaced by Óscar García, once Barcelona’s B team head coach, who worked wonders in taking a less talented squad to the same stage in 2014 but saw his men outclassed by Derby County. García surprised the club by resigning soon afterwards, and the club surprised everyone else by appointing Sami Hyypiä, the former Liverpool and Finland defender, to replace him.
If defeat in the play-offs is painful, then fighting a relegation battle is worse, and that was where Hyypiä’s team found themselves. He walked away in December 2014 and was replaced by Chris Hughton, who had been out of management since being sacked by Norwich City five games from the end of the previous season. It was seen as a good omen that he was a former Spurs player, like Poyet – who had masterminded the club’s previous promotion, from League One in 2011 – and Alan Mullery, the only man who had previously led Brighton to the top flight, in 1979.
Hughton, then fifty-six, was a highly respected figure in the game. He also had an excellent record at Championship level. He had led Newcastle United to the division title in the 2009/10 season and taken Birmingham City into the play-offs in 2011/12 despite the enormous distraction of a Europa League campaign.
His immediate priority at Brighton was very different. He was forced to grind out results over the remainder of the 2014/15 season and do enough to get the points required for safety. It was not pretty, it was seldom entertaining, and there were few indications that any renaissance was over the horizon.
Perhaps it was hardly surprising in the circumstances that expectations for Brighton as they prepared for the 2015/16 season were not high. FourFourTwo magazine, in fact, predicted relegation in twenty-third place for the Seagulls – and Wolves to go up as champions.
Hughton thought differently.
‘When I first came, we were in the bottom three and there is always a reason for that,’ he said.
‘The team was very different from the team that Óscar or Gus had. A new manager can always come in and add something different, so I was always confident that we would get out of the bottom three and stay out, and then it was a question of the summer. The only way the team was going to improve that next season was for us to recruit well. I also wanted to play a completely different way to the way that Sami did. It was a question of simplifying the roles they had and getting them to do things a different way.’
The second half of the 2014/15 season had largely been a question of making the most of the squad he had inherited. ‘I hadn’t expected to change everything immediately,’ he said.
‘Although I came in on the first of January and we would work hard to see what we could possibly bring in during the transfer window, I don’t think many managers take a job thinking they are going to sign lots of players to make a team better. You think you will get more out of the players you have got. That has to be the first principle.
‘Sami played 4–3–3 and we still had to play it at times after he went because of the players we had. We didn’t have the wide players we have now – Kazenga LuaLua was very much in and out with injuries, and we had to use Sam Baldock on the left. I very much wanted some consistency and it was really just getting the best out of the players we had. Sometimes I look back and the team is almost unrecognisable.’
As he set about the task of transforming Brighton from strugglers to challengers, Hughton knew he could salvage the nucleus of a new team from the squad that had struggled.
David Stockdale, the goalkeeper, had played in the Premier League with Fulham and been called into the full England squad by manager Fabio Capello. Bruno, the right-back, had played in La Liga and the Champions League with Valencia, and his understudy, Íñigo Calderón, was a popular and whole-hearted performer. In the centre of defence, club captain Gordon Greer brought experience, and local boy and youth team product Lewis Dunk immense promise.
In midfield, dynamic Israel international Beram Kayal and Dale Stephens, a talented ball-player who was now fully recovered from a long-term ankle injury sustained a few months after his transfer from Charlton Athletic in January 2014, looked a promising pairing, with England under-21 prospect Jake Forster-Caskey, raw youngster Rohan Ince and experienced Andrew Crofts as back-ups. Wide men Kazenga LuaLua and Solly March could unlock any defence on their day. And forward Sam Baldock had proved that he could score goals, albeit mainly at League One level.
The gaps were obvious. For several seasons, the club had not had a first-team left-back, relying instead on a series of loan signings, including former England star Wayne Bridge, to fill in. Cover in defence and on the wings was thin. But the most glaring absence was a proper, line-leading, goal-scoring centre forward.
After losing out in the 2014 play-offs, the club had sold the big, mobile Argentinian Leonardo Ulloa to Leicester City, and his nominal replacement, Chris O’Grady, although a hard worker, had fallen short of requirements. He would be sent out on loan.
Hughton needed to fill those gaps with players who were good enough to allow his team to compete in one of the toughest and most competitive leagues in world football.
The Championship is a gruelling marathon in which twenty-four clubs battle their way through forty-six games knowing that finishing first or second will put them literally in a different league. The Premier League is arguably the most glamorous domestic competition in sport, attracting star players from every nation, all bankrolled by television deals that alone guarantee each of the twenty clubs a minimum of £100 million.
But what made it harder for Brighton to get there was that clubs relegated into the Championship from the Premier League received parachute payments to soften the financial impact of going down. For Burnley, Hull City and Queens Park Rangers, the three clubs coming down that summer, the payments amounted to £64 million over four years, with £24 million of that up front. So Hughton’s men were competing against wealthier clubs with Premier League-quality players.
And a final unfair twist was Financial Fair Play (FFP), a system devised with the best of intentions, to ensure that clubs did not risk bankruptcy by spending beyond their means. Clubs were not allowed to spend more than a certain percentage of their revenue on transfer fees and wages, or they would face fines and transfer embargoes. The rules had been widely ignored and then watered down, but even if Brighton owner Tony Bloom, who had taken over from Knight in 2009, had wanted to splash out an unlimited amount of cash on big-money signings, he would have been prevented from doing so.
Nevertheless, Bloom made available the largest playing budget in its history for the coming season. ‘The previous season was my biggest disappointment as chairman,’ Bloom said.
‘It didn’t work out for Sami Hyypiä, some players we thought were coming fell through, we were a bit unlucky at times. These things happen. Chris came in and kept us up, but our points total was very poor. I knew it would be different the next season, we’d have a better squad and promotion was the aim, although it wouldn’t be easy.
‘In the Championship, if you want a team that has a realistic chance, you have to spend a lot of money. Every team, apart from perhaps those with parachute payments and the odd club that sells a player for a lot of money, will make significant losses – the Championship losses are huge and they’re only going to go up now the FFP rules have been relaxed. The reason that people spend so much is because the rewards of being in the Premier League and the TV revenues are so large, and everyone wants to get there. The reality is that, if you want a team that has a realistic chance of going up to the Premier League, it will cost you at least £10 million a year unless you’ve got parachute payments.’
However, the club did have considerable other assets when it came to attracting players. Bloom had funded not only the award-winning 30,000-capacity American Express Community Stadium (usually known as the Amex) at Falmer, on the northeastern outskirts of Brighton, at an estimated cost of £93 million, but also a new training headquarters at Lancing, a few miles west of the city of Brighton & Hove and a long goal kick away from the sea, which cost a further £30 million.
Stadiums catch the eye of the general public and the fans who pay to watch games, but training grounds are footballers’ workplaces, and the facilities there matter to prospective new signings. ‘We went to look at training grounds at Arsenal, Manchester United, Tottenham and Chelsea and the FA headquarters at St George’s Park, so you can tell where we set our sights,’ Martin Perry, the managing director, who oversaw the project, said. ‘We think it’s up there with them. The level of provision and facilities is the equal of anything you’d see in the Premier League, if not better. It is a statement of the club’s ambition.’
The players had previously been used to sharing breezeblock changing rooms and muddy pitches with students at the University of Sussex sports centre, also at Falmer, not far from the Amex. For them, moving into the American Express Elite Football Performance Centre – to give the training ground and academy headquarters its full title – in summer 2014 was like being taken from a squat into a five-star hotel.
‘I couldn’t quite believe it, to be honest,’ Lewis Dunk said. ‘Growing up and doing my scholarship at Falmer, coming from there with the Portakabins and coming to this humungous training ground with everything you could possibly want to be the best you can be, I couldn’t quite believe it that we had come this far as a club.’
He remembered the surreal sight of Vicente Rodríguez, a former Spain international winger who had played in the Champions League with Valencia, experiencing a type of injury treatment facility at Falmer that was very different from what he had been used to at one of the leading clubs in La Liga.
‘Vicente was in one of the cabins getting his physio and his rubs – that was a bit of a change for him, from Valencia in the sunshine to a cold, wet winter in a Portakabin,’ Dunk said. ‘It could get breezy, although it gets chilly at Lancing too with the wind coming straight off the sea, but you don’t mind when it’s such a nice place.’
Lancing has thirteen pitches, including two that are identical to the stadium’s in size and turf quality, and a half-size indoor surface. The Y-shaped two-storey main building houses changing rooms, gyms, pools, medical and physiotherapy facilities, video rooms, a media centre and offices for the staff. The first team are based in the west wing, the academy in the east.
It is regarded as one of the best training facilities anywhere in the country and was praised by Gareth Southgate, the England head coach, who used it when manager of the England under-21 squad. ‘You only have to walk around to see how carefully everything has been thought through,’ he said. ‘You couldn’t want for anything more really and it is obvious the club is really geared up to be successful.’
‘The day I walked in I’d been told of the set-up here,’ Hughton said.
‘The training ground is now three years old but the players still feel grateful to be working at such a good facility. So the chairman feels that there has been a reason why he’s paid for it. It’s an exciting place to come and work, and the players are highly motivated. It’s our responsibility as a staff to keep that going.’
The first floor of the west wing at Lancing is a long, airy corridor flanked by glass-fronted offices. One of these on the north side, overlooking the South Downs and the Gothic chapel of Lancing College, is the base of Paul Winstanley, the club’s head of recruitment. He had worked as an analyst under Paul Jewell at Wigan Athletic and Derby County, staying on at Pride Park under Nigel Clough and Steve McClaren, before being head-hunted by the Albion in September 2014. By the time Hughton arrived, Winstanley had established the processes that enabled him to present the manager with potential transfer targets.
‘We have a master list and Chris only sees the top end of it, although he sees the process,’ Winstanley explained. Targets are identified by combining statistical research with traditional methods.
‘Master list names will always be covered by every aspect of scouting. We will have ticked every box in terms of objective and subjective reports.
‘Players work their way up the stages for him to be aware of, but we’re covering 200 players a week, so it’s impossible for him to be aware of all of them as well as focusing on the first team. Some we eliminate and the better ones move up – the ones that are gettable. But we’re constantly talking and I’ll let him know when one of them is on TV, for example, so he can check on them.’
‘The problem with being a manager in the Championship is that there are so many games to play and that has to be your focus,’ agreed Hughton.
‘But I am kept in the loop of players that we like or are monitoring that little bit more carefully. I will get involved, or I will say these are the positions that we are looking for and this is the type of player that I would like. And there isn’t anybody who comes in that I don’t sanction.
‘There might be some that I haven’t seen as much of as some of the other recruitment people, but that’s only because it’s impossible to see them live. After the season you use the opportunity to go out and watch players. But during the season it’s very difficult. Then I’m watching a lot of video. But trying to reach the Premier League is so important that you have to put so much of your efforts into getting there that you don’t have time to do everything you would like to.’
When a target is identified and permission is received from the selling club to speak to the player, Hughton and Bloom will sell Brighton to him. ‘It is massive to have Chris and the chairman personally involved, in Europe especially,’ Winstanley said. ‘We have a good reputation at the minute and everyone knows that the chairman is a lifelong fan and in Europe they are very passionate about that. Players love that story rather than foreign investors coming in and it helps massively.’
Winstanley and Hughton would have a busy summer.
• • •
The need to strengthen the squad after such a disappointing 2014/15 season was obvious, and the most glaring requirement for a team that had averaged fewer than one goal a game was a striker. The top scorer had been Portugal under-21 midfield player João Teixeira, on loan from Liverpool and now back on Merseyside, with six goals. Central defender Dunk was second with five. Forwards Baldock, Adrián Colunga and O’Grady had only seven between them.
But quality defensive cover was also needed, and the first arrival reflected that, as Albion captured Liam Rosenior, an experienced and versatile player who had been released by Hull City on their relegation from the Premier League and whose father, Leroy, had, coincidentally, once been interviewed for the Albion manager’s job that eventually went to Mark McGhee in October 2003.
Rosenior was nominally a right-back, but could also play in midfield or at left-back. ‘When I came, I expected to be the best right-back in the division,’ he said later. ‘Then I saw Bruno at close quarters and I realised I wasn’t even the best right-back in the club.’
The fans noted with interest that their counterparts in Hull were shocked and outraged by their club’s decision to let the player go, and were also impressed that Rosenior wrote an open letter to those fans in the Hull Daily Mail telling them how much he had enjoyed his time by the banks of the Humber and valued their support. This spoke of a man of character, and everything the articulate and intelligent Rosenior said on his arrival reinforced that early impression.
He revealed that his father bore no grudges about being turned down for the job that Hughton now held. ‘As soon as I found out about Brighton’s interest, I called my dad,’ Rosenior told Sky Sports.
‘He told me to drive down now.
‘I’m quite lucky that my dad played with Chris Hughton before at West Ham. Chris is just a good man and an honest man. Also, his record as a coach and a manager speaks for itself. He’s someone that I’ve always wanted to play for and I’m just pleased it’s happened now.’
After five years in Hull, Rosenior was ready for a change of scenery. ‘It’s like being in a different country down here – nice and hot,’ he said.
‘There were clubs who called my agent and told me to hold off and not sign so early in the window. But when I came down to Brighton, it just felt right.
‘I brought my wife along and she loved it. That made my decision because it’s not just me that signs for a football club. I’ve got four children and a family too. As soon as I stepped into the club and spoke to the manager, I knew this was the perfect place for me.
‘The stadium is fantastic. I’m not sure everyone has seen the training facility here but it’s up there with the best in the country. I’m talking Champions League standard. Now it’s about making sure we fulfil our potential on the pitch. Hopefully I can be a