Added to top post, thanksBen Wilson was on 5 live last night. About 20:10ish
Link now in original postHas he been on talksport yet?
Look at BBC Sport Championship page … 1 article on us and about 6 focusing on Luton.. love it if we win and piss these numptys off
That’s a great interview. Maybe it’s the occasion talking but probably the best interview I’ve ever seen MR give. Don’t he look calm too.ESPN - 25th May - Robins interview
Copied and pasted 1/3 - PUSBAnother Athletic article today
How Coventry City rose from the rubble: ‘We’re one game away from a dream’
A club that helped found the Premier League have endured dark days in recent years but are now on the brink of a top-flight returntheathletic.com
Hopefully 12ft – Hop any paywall can remove the paywall.
The fact that some players had been out drinking before that Yeovil game explains a lot!Copied and pasted 1/3 - PUSB
It is Easter Monday in 2018 and Coventry City are at home to Yeovil Town. Coventry are sixth in League Two, English football’s fourth tier, 12 points behind leaders Accrington Stanley. They are in the play-off places but staying in them is not guaranteed. They have just drawn 1-1 away to Newport County. This is the company Coventry keep.
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Yeovil, meanwhile, are 18th. They are punching above their weight simply by being in the EFL. Coventry, alas, are not.
The attendance is 8,787. The expectation is of a home win and at half-time the score is 3-0. However, it is 3-0 to Yeovil, and although Coventry score twice in the second half, the visitors get another three. When the whistle blows on a 6-2 home defeat, it is impossible to see the Premier League on the sky-blue horizon.
But five years and one month on, Coventry stand on the brink of a third promotion in that time and a place in the richest league in the world. “One game away from a dream,” as Mark Robins puts it.
Robins was the manager then, and Robins is the manager now. The scale of the rise he has overseen is mountainous.
“That was really disappointing,” he says, recalling that Yeovil game clearly. “One or two of the players had been out for a snifter or two (drinking) before that game and when I found out, it didn’t happen again. I wasn’t best pleased.
How Coventry home games used to look (Photo: Tom Dulat/Getty Images)
“I went up into the boardroom after and Tommy Widdrington, who was head of recruitment, let me know he was off to Bristol Rovers.
“So it wasn’t the best of days. Ultimately, we got over that bump in the road.”
Bumps in the road, potholes, diversions and breakdowns have been part of the Coventry City travelogue since Robins drove back into the club in March 2017.
He had been there briefly once before, in 2012, when they were in the third tier for the first time since 1964. That was daunting, yet in 2017, the destination was League Two and, with a fanbase disconnected from the club’s ownership and the players, it felt like Coventry, members of the inaugural Premier League in 1992, had run out of road.
“It was done, it was done. You could feel everybody had given up. It was as bad as any club I’d ever worked at. Terrible.”
Robins, 53, said that in the wake of Coventry’s 1-0 win at Middlesbrough in the second leg of the Championship play-off semi-final a week ago, and was reflecting on what the club were and where they had been compared to where they are and could go.
The fact that some players had been out drinking before that Yeovil game explains a lot!
Can relate, I scored the goal of my life on a stinking hangover. Couldn't be arsed to run with it anymore so just gave it a wallop.Explains a lot about that Yeovil game … one of the most bizarre performances I’ve ever seen.
Max definitely steaming trying that half volley (and it coming off) from 40 yards
Apparently Mike Bushall did something on us this morning on BBC breakfast, anyone got a link
The fact that some players had been out drinking before that Yeovil game explains a lot!
BBC link!
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