Steven
Pressley blooded two more debutants on Tuesday night against Carlisle
United and has now used 30 players in all games this season, a high
number but still seven short of last season's total and well short of
the club record 44 used in the dire 2002-03 campaign. Loanees
Chuba Akpom & Michael Petrasso (the club's first ever Canadian)
became the 899th & 900th players to wear a Coventry City shirt in
a competitive game since the club joined the Football League in 1919.
It is less than seven years since Robbie Simpson became the 800th in
a League Cup tie at home to Aldershot and less than 12 years since
Steve Walsh (now he was one of our worst signings) became no. 700 at
Watford.
Paul
O'Connor has analysed the timescales of the 900 players and points
out that there is a clear correlation between performance on the
pitch and number of players used.
1-100
(1919-1925) 6 years – early days of struggle
101-200
(1925-1931) 6.5 years – more struggles
201-300
(1931-1950) 19 years – granted included the 6 years of WW2 but many
players came back to play – promotion and Div 2 consolidation.
301-400
(1950-1963) 11.5 years – not so settled and included the start of
the JH upheaval
401-500
(1963-1980) 17 years – promotion and consolidation in top flight
501-600
(1980-1993) 13 years – survival but tempered by the Bobby Gould
eras
601-700
(1993-2002) 9 years – survival but then relegation. (10% loans)
701-800
(2002-2007) 5 years – rudderless ship. (31 % loans)
800-900
(2007-2014) 6.5 years – continued decline and relegation (25 %
loans)
Paul's
analysis is spot-on and two other factors have influenced the modern
day turnover of players. Until the 1990s there were few loan players
but since the club's relegation in 2001 they have increasingly been
forced into the loan market, mainly because of the flexibility &
relatively low cost of taking loan players. In addition there has
been a far greater turnover of managers since Gordon Milne's long
reign ended in 1981. The greater turnover in managers, the greater
turnover in players as new managers insist on building their own
teams & often clear the decks of the old guard.
It
is no surprise that the periods in the club's history with the lowest
turnover of players, the 1930s and the 1960s, coincided with their
most successful eras. The main managers in those eras, Harry Storer
and Jimmy Hill, were both given time to build success & realised
the benefit of a low turnover of players.
The
death of the great Tom Finney last weekend prompted tributes at
football grounds across England. I never saw him play in the flesh
but have seen clips of him playing for Preston and England. Dean
Nelson asked if Finney ever played against Coventry City during his
long career. Preston did spend two seasons in the old Division Two
between 1949-51 and Finney, nicknamed the Preston plumber because of
his profession outside football, played in the two draws at Deepdale
but did not appear at Highfield Road. Preston were promoted back to
Division One in 1951 & with City relegated to Division Three the
following year it seemed unlikely that Tom would ever play in
Coventry. Then in January 1956 with both sides out of the FA Cup &
with a free Saturday, a friendly was arranged.
Finney
dazzled 13,000 rain-soaked spectators as Preston comfortably beat
City 4-1. The England winger bamboozled City’s left-back Charlie
Timmins so much that according to other City players Timmins pleaded
at half-time for manager George Raynor to switch him to right-back.
Raynor obliged, and Frank Austin faced 45 minutes of torment from
Finney.
Dan
Brown asked me for details of his first Coventry game which he thinks
was against Liverpool in February 1992. The game was during the brief
reign of Don Howe who had taken over a month earlier after Terry
Butcher's sacking. Howe had recorded his first victory, 1-0 at
Crystal Palace, a week earlier and a 0-0 with third-placed Liverpool
was seen as a good result. Kevin Gallacher gave the Reds defence an
uncomfortable afternoon & Grobbelar had to make three good saves
to foil City. Liverpool faded after this game & eventually
finished sixth whilst City were dragged into a relegation battle and
only survived on the final day after Notts County beat Luton to make
City's defeat at Villa Park immaterial.
The
gate was 21,547 and the City line-up was: Ogrizovic: McGrath, Sansom,
Robson, Billing, Atherton, Flynn, Emerson, Rosario, Gallacher, Smith
D.
Liverpool's line-up was: Grobbelar: Jones, Burrows, Marsh, Wright, Tanner, Saunders, Houghton, Walters, Redknapp, McManaman. subs: Harkness & Rosenthal.