Sunday 28 February 2021

Atletico Madrid 7-1 Granada (2016)

Atletico Madrid 7-1 Granada
Estadio Vicente Calderon
Saturday 15th October 2016

Back in the days before Atletico decided that playing home games at the Wanda Metropolitano was the way forward, their home ground was the brilliant 'Estadio Vicente Calderon' in downtown Madrid.

Located on the banks of the River Manzanares right in the heart of the city, the stadium and the neighbourhood surrounding it oozed charm, though it was in something of a dilapidated state having barely seen any improvements since it was constructed in the 1960s. 

Panoramic view from underneath the overhang (sadly from my crap old phone).


Like Villa Park in England, where part of the road runs underneath the Trinity Road stand, the Vicente Calderon offered pretty much the same with the busy M30 Motorway running underneath the Main Stand which was, incidentally, the only side with a roof - testament to just how few improvements there'd been over the previous half a century.

Despite the rest of the ground being open to the elements, there was a close-to-capacity, fervent crowd for this game who got to witness what turned out to be Atletico's biggest victory of the 2016/17 season in all competitions.

At the time, they were flying high and very much 'up there' with perennial giants Barcelona and Real Madrid competing for trophies on all fronts. Under Diego Simeone's leadership and with Antoine Griezmann as their star man, they'd only missed out on clinching their first ever UEFA Champions League title a few months earlier - losing on penalties to their city rivals in the 2016 Final.

I'd flew into Madrid following an early-morning flight from Manchester Airport, kipping down in the airport the previous night where, by chance, a drunken Ricky Hatton caused a racket just past midnight in Terminal 3 (near the SPAR) having arrived back in the country from wherever.

The lack of decent 'shut eye' almost proved costly as, once I'd got to my accommodation in Madrid, I fell asleep and woke up around an hour-and-a-half before kick-off which resulted in a mad dash to get dressed and head to 'Piramides' which was the nearest metro station to the Vicente Calderon.

From there, it was a straightforward 10-minute walk from the busy and bustling neighbourhoods adjacent to the stadium with street vendors aplenty, music blaring loudly from everywhere and hundreds and hundreds of folk wearing their red and white Atletico Madrid colours with pride.

Once inside, I was located close to the back row near an overhang section which meant, had it rained, then I might have potentially avoided being drenched. Thankfully, as to be expected in Spain, it didn't rain and paved the way for a pleasant enough experience.

Atletico's opponents for this contest were Granada - no, not a team representing the TV company from Greater Manchester, but a yo-yo club from Andalusia who've spent much of their existence flitting between Spanish football's divisions. Stuck in the fourth tier just 10 years earlier, they'd worked their way up to La Liga by 2011-12 but poor form in the weeks going into this meeting with Atletico meant they were cut adrift at the bottom of the table with their top flight future already looking precarious.

Later in this season, they infamously turned to Tony Adams in their efforts to beat the drop. It didn't work; they were relegated weeks before the season finale and his days in Spain are best remembered for a viral remix video of his dance moves during a training session!

Whilst it's easy to batter 'Donkey' for his 0% win ratio, it was a near impossible task to keep them up, and the way they were mercilessly ripped to shreds in this game highlighted how bad they were!



Though Granada did actually have the lead for around a quarter-of-an-hour thanks to a dipping half-volley by Isaac Cuenca, from the moment Yannick Carrasco fired home an equaliser on 34 minutes, it seemed that there was only ever going to be one outcome.

Carrasco bagged a crucial second goal on the stroke of half-time to ensure Atletico were 2-1 up at the break and thereafter, it was one-way traffic. The Belgian international completed his hat-trick on the hour mark and more flaws in Granada's backline were exposed when Nicolas Gaitan then made it 4-1 only a couple of minutes later.

As the sunset began to go down on another day in Madrid, it wasn't quite 'ole' football at this point but an already joyful crowd were on their feet in celebration three more times as the floodgates well and truly opened during the closing stages with Gaitan, Angel Correa and Tiago Mendes all grabbing a goal apiece to emphatically boost the scoreline to 7-1.

The win kept 'Atleti' top of the La Liga table but it was a position they relinquished in the next match-week - usurped once again by bitter rivals Real Madrid who went on to win the title. Their Champions League campaign (which included a Quarter-Final win over Leicester City) also ended in all too familiar fashion as they were beaten, this time at the Semi-Final stage, by guess who? Real Madrid!

Estadio Vicente Calderon has now fallen victim to bulldozers and is expected to be replaced by apartment blocks and a public park over the next decade or so and home games nowadays are played at the plush, purpose-built, ultra-modern Estadio Wanda Metropolitano which is very close to Madrid Barajas Airport.

However, there's no doubt the spiritual 'home' for thousands of Atletico supporters will always be this brilliant, somewhat ramshackle old stadium which was right in the heart of the city.















Wednesday 24 February 2021

Mark Weaver on his time at Doncaster Rovers (Part 3)

He is the second-most despised figure to have ever been associated with Doncaster Rovers.

Hated by supporters of all ages, Mark Weaver, second-in-command to the even more reviled former owner Ken Richardson, presided over the ultimate nadir in Rovers’ 142-year history as the club lost their Football League status in 1998 amidst a putrid stench of chaos, scandal and corruption.

In an acrimonious Belle Vue campaign during which the club was brought to its knees under the controversial ownership, there was farce upon farce (on and off the pitch), death threats, administration, pitch invasions and protests aplenty. Unsurprisingly, the eventual record of ‘Won 4, Drew 8, Lost 34’ remains the worst ever recorded by a Football League club to this day.

It's a far cry from the present time with Rovers flying high in League One and in with a very realistic chance of achieving automatic promotion come the end of this season with home nowadays being the plush 15,000-capacity Keepmoat Stadium.

After Mr Weaver's recent re-emergence on Twitter under the username @MWeaver72139842 following years out of the public eye, it provided an opportunity to put forward many pertinent questions which many fans have wondered in the time which has elapsed since that fateful period - primarily, how could an ownership deliberately attempt to rip away the heart and soul of a community and purposely destroy a football club?

There's certainly every reason to be sceptical about anything which Mark says though his acceptance of my request for an interview at least allowed the chance for many pertinent and forthright questions to be asked over the course of what turned out to be a three-hour conversation.

In the last of a three-part instalment, the former General Manager discusses his controversial and infamous appearance at the Colchester United game, the prolonged summer takeover that followed and his motives in choosing to stay put despite such ferocious abuse.

Belle Vue in a worn down condition during the 1990s (Photo: Unknown).





Weaver's appearance against Colchester

Arguably the single, solitary action which consigned Mark to being the second-most despised figure in Doncaster Rovers history happened on the final day of the 1997/98 campaign.

With emotions running higher than ever previously, a 5,000-strong crowd was expected at Belle Vue for what would be Rovers' final fixture in the Football League against Colchester United - opponents who, by contrast, were in with a chance of winning automatic promotion.

Undoubtedly the defining images of the day came several hours earlier as a funeral cortege which included several hundred fans made its way down Carr House Road towards the old ground - with many amongst that number pondering whether this would be the last time they'd ever get to see their team in action. Would Doncaster Rovers soon cease to exist? Would more clubs follow the same path due to bad ownership?

Passions and tensions were running high yet the situation was completely inflamed when Weaver, who throughout the week had explicitly stated in the press that he wouldn't be in attendance because 'it would be like a murderer attending his victim's funeral' very visibly showed up - albeit flanked by more minders and bodyguards than ever before.

His presence was perceived as insulting and provocative and after many threats of violence, a pitch invasion and significant protests, he was forced to leave Belle Vue for his own safety at the advice of South Yorkshire Police who were trying their best to prevent a riot!

I press Mark sternly on why he felt it necessary to turn up - given what he'd publicly said beforehand. Surely, even he could realise that by doing so would only cause problems and appear to be the actions of a mindless moron intent on causing problems and suffering to others?

Nonetheless, he claims his presence was necessary due to Football League rules and that, if he hadn't done so, the league monies would have been withheld and the club would have ceased to exist - an idea that would seem largely incredulous to most people!

"I told the whole of the Doncaster and the press that I wasn't going to turn up for the last game against Colchester and I wasn't going to," commented Weaver. 

"Colchester's position needed to be decided - they could have been in the play-offs or gone up directly, so the game needed to be played. It was a full house, which the league didn't want - they would have preferred it to be played behind closed doors because they thought there would be a pitch invasion.

"I got a phone at four o'clock on the Friday before the game and they [the Football League] wanted to know which director would be present at the game. I told them 'none' and they asked me who would be in charge? I was told that I must be present at the ground. 

"I also got told to bring in another full set of goal nets, which I got from Sheffield United or Sheffield Wednesday, and they brought free of charge on one of their own vehicles. We put them at the Rossington End of the ground and hid them. If anyone came on [to the pitch] and broke the crossbars, the plan was that the game would be abandoned, the ground would be emptied and then it would be played.

"I told the police what the Football League had said and they told me 'Don't worry, leave it with us because we have the final say. Pop your head out, let them [the fans] see that you're here and we'll tell you to leave!' They put me in a police car, took me away to a hotel and I just stayed on my mobile phone in case there were any problems."

He continued: "Had that game not been played, the league monies wouldn't have come because the play-offs wouldn't have been able to be completed, the administration wouldn't have been done and that meant Doncaster Rovers would have been kicked out of football."

Unsatisfied with this response, I interject to press more sternly on why, for this one game, somebody else - whether it be a known individual like Joan Oldale (former club secretary) or an anonymous figure, couldn't have been appointed as a director or designated to oversee events.

I put it to Mark that this alleged Football League rule didn't even need to be public knowledge and surely, any alternative had to be better than him showing his face to already irate fans. Did he just turn up for his own warped satisfaction or to deliberately cause problems?

"Joan Oldale was frightened for her life. She'd had been a director and she wouldn't have been one again and I wouldn't have put her through that anyway," expressed Weaver.

"It wasn't so much a director [the Football League wanted to be there] but somebody had to be in charge. The named people at The FA were me, Julie Richardson and Ken Haran. I think Reg Ashworth might have been a director, maybe Lisa Mabbutt and I hadn't seen any of them for a year.

"So we had no directors, no chairman and the only person named in the Football League handbook was me (as manager) - not even Joan though I don't think she'd have been suffice anyway. They told me 'You've got to be there because you're the person running that football club.'"

Despite the fact that almost a quarter of a century has elapsed since this fateful era, Weaver is adamant in his opinion that fans halting games was counter-productive and their actions could have brought about the end of the football club.

"The Doncaster fans just didn't realise it was a Catch 22 situation," he added.

"They were trying to destroy games but what they were doing was destroying their own club because if they hadn't completed that last game, Doncaster Rovers wouldn't be there [in existence] now - they'd never have come back from the Northern Counties East League because they wouldn't have had a ground.

"It would still have been sold to Dennis O'Brien and he'd still own Doncaster Rovers Football Club Limited like he does to this day. All the money people would have gone but they'd have been no new ground built - it was John Ryan who did that because he got hold of the football club."

Action from the final game against Colchester (Photo: Unknown).




The 1998 takeover

Within days of Doncaster Rovers completing their final Football League fixture, negotiations over a takeover reached an advanced stage though it wouldn't be until Tuesday 18th August - some three months later, that everything was finalised.

The new ownership would be Westferry Limited - but even then it was a deal mired in controversy with the club's name featuring heavily in the subsequent Moriarty Tribunal. 

Westferry, through Kevin Phelan and Denis O'Brien (the Irish billionaire behind the takeover) stated quite openly that they were only interested in the redevelopment value of the land where Belle Vue was located. John Ryan was eventually handed the football side of things.

Mark describes the takeover as yet another 'nightmare' period and one where the club was just a matter of hours away from ceasing to exist altogether.

He said: "On the Monday after the Colchester game, they put in a deposit of £750,000 to buy the club and complete the takeover by June 1st.

"It got to June 1st and they wanted to see certain things. I told them the club was in administration and the minute they bought it, it would be out of administration and they didn't need to see the books - the administrators had them and there couldn't be any debt as it wasn't allowed. There was no better time to buy a football club.

"They were waiting on a letter from the council to say there would be a deal [on the Belle Vue land] so I told them they might as well wait forever and take their £750k back.

"It went on and on. Kevin Phelan got Ian McMahon in and I told him he needed John Ryan because he had money, he loves the club but he didn't want to buy it. He just wanted to help the club and that he'd get Ian Snodin and all the others in."

Mark continued: "It got to the Friday before the first day of the season against Dover and they hadn't paid. Ken phoned me and said the solicitor had told him the money hadn't been received. Snodin was ringing asking what was happening and the league was ringing me asking what was happening. 

"They were about three hours away from being kicked out of the league because nobody was in charge and I convinced and begged Ken to let that game be played.

"He said 'No! They haven't paid. They've been given extra-time and gone past that deadline so f**k them' and that he'd keep the deposit. I begged and begged and begged Dinard Trading, a company based in Switzerland, and Ken to give them [Westferry] until Tuesday and let them play the game and we got an assurance from the solicitor that they were acting to sort a deal out!

"I brokered that allowance. Ken, rightly so, thought they could be being horrible and not travel to Dover and play the game, or that someone might be behind it. He asked 'If they've got all that money on the Tuesday, why won't they have it today?' - quite normal questions to ask really. 

"I spoke to Kevin Phelan and he asked to meet me at the Four Seasons Hotel near Manchester Airport. He spent £18 on a little mouthful of whisky, showing off, and put my hand on the table and said 'We've got a deal. Let my lads go to Dover tomorrow and I promise I'll pay you on Tuesday'.

"I rung Ken, told him I'd done a lot for him, begged him and he said they could play, but they had to play in an East Riding Sacks kit. 'Snods' was ringing me asking what was going to happen and I told him that they still hadn't paid so I didn't know, but they paid the money on Tuesday and that was it!"

Shaun Goodwin leads out the team at Dover Athletic in August 1998 (Photo: Unknown)





Mark's real motives!

In the relatively early stages of our interview, Mark admits it was 'financial gain' from the sale of the shares in Doncaster Rovers, of which he'd negotiated his own cut, that made him stay put at Belle Vue for the full duration of the 1997/98 campaign.

Though he wouldn't specify a precise amount, he did state it was 'a good six figure fee' which he pocketed.

He also believes it was necessary for him to look after his own interests because his reputation had been 'destroyed beyond repair' due to events during his two-year tenure as General Manager which meant he'd never get another job in football.

"As it was getting towards the 1997/98 season I was thinking that if things went right and I could do what the administrators wanted me to do, which was virtually impossible, then I could earn a nice few quid," explained Mark.

"Ken was valuing the club at less than it actually was so I saw an opportunity.

"It could have been a Bury [ceased to exist]. The council wanted it to be a Bury. Ken wanted it to be a Bury. At times I think some of the fans were misled by other people involved, stoking them up, who wanted it to be a Bury and who would have been happy to see Doncaster go.

"I made for myself, I'm not denying that, but I also kept the football club alive because nobody else really gave a shit. I was determined that I'd get the club through administration, which I was commended for in Leeds County Court. They couldn't believe I'd done it on so little money."

Mark also states it was prospective new owners contacting him directly during the year-long administration process which strengthened his desire to profit from the situation.

"I knew I could get a good deal and I knew I was going to sell the club in November 1997," he recalled.

"Ken, and the other shareholders in Switzerland who weren't putting anymore money in, were asking for two-and-a-half to three million pounds. What I knew was that I could get more because what were people doing? They were ringing me! There were plenty of people who didn't have a pot to p*ss in but I knew there was one person waiting in the wings who was willing to pay a lot of money!"

Mark then used an analogy to illustrate how he brought interested parties together before using skulduggery to negotiate his own cut from any future deal.

"If you were selling your house tomorrow for £200,000 but your neighbour says 'I can get you £350,000' what would you say?," he asked.

"Would you tell your neighbour 'If you can do that, I don't mind giving you £75,000 of that?' Would your neighbour say 'I'm only going to tell you who the buyer is if you give me so much of that money?' So, in other words, your neighbour is the only person who knows the one willing person who'll buy it. You don't and they won't come to you - and they came to me!

"They wanted things doing properly, they wanted everyone out of the club. They didn't want the football. I knew John Ryan did want the football but didn't want to buy it so bring the two parties together and what have you got?

"I had Kevin Phelan to do that. They [Westferry] only wanted the lease of the club. I brought them forward and they didn't want to invest in the football club because he, Denis O'Brien, couldn't as he owned shares in Celtic at the time which he'd bought from Martin O'Neill, but I knew somebody who would take the football club on in John Ryan. 

"So I got Kevin in touch with John Ryan and said 'Offer it in!'"

When I put it to Mark that several fans may interpret the contents of this interview as him 'passing the buck' and trying to rid himself of blame for what happened during the late 1990s, he scoffs at the suggestion and is very forthright in his reply.

"I relegated them and I've got no problem with that!," he commented. "There's no buck passing. Ken Richardson wasn't there after October and we weren't relegated then. 

"I take full responsibility and it isn't a case of me blaming anyone else. I was convinced from the Brighton game onwards, it was only going one way and there was nothing else anyone could do to stop that. If that's called 'deliberately relegating' then so be it.

"If there'd been £100,000 per week coming in, they wouldn't have been relegated but if you've got only £2,000 per week coming in then you're only going one place!"

Mark Weaver at a meeting with supporters (Photo: Doncaster Free Press).





Threats and intimidation

With Mark mentioning that people 'turned up at his home address' and alleging he received bullets through the post when discussing how Dave Smith came to play for Doncaster Rovers, I use this answer as the perfect time to challenge him on what knowledge he had about the threats and intimidation which many prominent figures involved in the 'Save The Rovers' campaign claim to have received along with others who were protesting independently.

Allegations of car tyres being let down, receiving threatening phone calls, discovering paint daubed across their property or being followed home, amongst many other things, have long since existed and it's a subject we come back to at various points as I press inquisitively and persistently for answers. 

Nevertheless, Weaver is defiant and vehement in his response: "I honestly don't know where it [the allegations] came from. I've got a clean record and I've never done anything. I didn't even nick apples as a kid and I've never let anyone's tyres down."

Asked who exactly he believes could have been responsible, he stated: "To point the finger is wrong. I know it wasn't me. What I would say is anyone who had an interest in the profit of the ground had an interest in what was going on and I soon realised that it wasn't just about the football."

We come back to the subject once more when discussing Ken Richardson's court case where it's alleged, again, that several fans who travelled to Sheffield Crown Court for the trial were intimidated and had the tyres of their vehicles purposely let down or slashed in car parks close to the venue.

Mark again rubbishes the suggestions, claiming them to be 'glorified' before adding: "Let me tell you there were enough people [in court] who were more than capable of threatening the people there because Ken knew some proper lads and he was well liked in racing circles. He had some powerful friends, but nobody threatened them. I was there and they couldn't - they just kept their counsel and just let things go. What would have been the point?"

Fans protests at Belle Vue (Photo: Doncaster Free Press).





Life after Doncaster Rovers

After his conviction for his part in the Belle Vue arson attack, Richardson served his prison sentence at HMP Thorpe Arch where, somewhat ironically, he shared a cell with convicted rapist Owen Oyston - the same controversial figure who was caught up in several ownership issues during his family's reign at Blackpool FC.

Mark says that he visited his former acquaintance in prison on some occasions and that, once released, Richardson relocated back to the Isle Of Man. The pair haven't spoken for around a year but it's believed that Ken, nowadays aged 83, is in good health amidst the Covid-19 pandemic.

Though neither man has been involved in a professional football club environment in the years which have elapsed since this acrimonious era, Mark has worked at grassroots level - running a Sunday League side in the Stockport area called Cale Green FC.

I quiz Mark on whether he's been recognised at any point by Doncaster Rovers supporters in the years since and he admits there have been a couple of occasions - both times, coincidentally, in Blackpool.

"The first one was just after I left in 1998," he said. "I went to the illuminations with my kids in the September and I'd come out of Blackpool Tower at about six o'clock. It was windy and wet and we were walking down the sea front and I heard a voice say 'That's f**king him!' It's Weaver!'

"I went 'Oh my God' and told the kids and the missus to stay where they were. They chased me towards Coral Island. I jumped in there, went into the market and then hid in the car park."

He continued: "About two years afterwards, it was a lovely day in November and I was driving down the seafront going towards Fleetwood. 

"There was a pedestrian crossing and a guy started walking across and he had a Doncaster Rovers shirt on. He was looking at my car, then stopped in the middle of the road, looked straight at me, stared for ages, and started pointing his finger.

"The lights changed and I carried on but put my thumbs up and said 'Yes it is!'"





If you missed Part 2, where Mark discussed the 1997/98 season, click here.
If you missed Part 1, where Mark discussed how he came to meet Ken Richardson, click here.

Tuesday 23 February 2021

Mark Weaver on his time at Doncaster Rovers (Part 2)

He is the second-most despised figure to have ever been associated with Doncaster Rovers.

Hated by supporters of all ages, Mark Weaver, second-in-command to the even more reviled former owner Ken Richardson, presided over the ultimate nadir in Rovers’ 142-year history as the club lost their Football League status in 1998 amidst a putrid stench of chaos, scandal and corruption.

In an acrimonious Belle Vue campaign during which the club was brought to its knees under the controversial ownership, there was farce upon farce (on and off the pitch), death threats, administration, pitch invasions and protests aplenty. Unsurprisingly, the eventual record of ‘Won 4, Drew 8, Lost 34’ remains the worst ever recorded by a Football League club to this day.

It's a far cry from the present time with Rovers flying high in League One and in with a very realistic chance of achieving automatic promotion come the end of this season with home nowadays being the plush 15,000-capacity Keepmoat Stadium.

After Mr Weaver's recent re-emergence on Twitter under the username @MWeaver72139842 following years out of the public eye, it provided an opportunity to put forward many pertinent questions which many fans have wondered in the time which has elapsed since that fateful period - primarily, how could an ownership deliberately attempt to rip away the heart and soul of a community and purposely destroy a football club?

There's certainly every reason to be sceptical about anything which Mark says though his acceptance of my request for an interview at least allowed the chance for many pertinent and forthright questions to be asked over the course of what turned out to be a three-hour conversation.

In the second of a three-part instalment, the former General Manager discusses the tumultuous 1997/98 season which saw a fat 'keeper from the Stockport Sunday League join the club, Danny Bergara, takeover speculation involving Anton Johnson and chaos on the team bus at Leyton Orient.






A fat 'keeper from the Stockport Sunday League

With Kerry Dixon out of the picture and a multitude of off-field issues caused by Ken Richardson completely withdrawing his financial support, things rapidly unravelled as Doncaster Rovers plunged to the foot of Division Three - a position where they'd stay for the entirety of the 1997/98 season.

Protests against Uncle Ken's unpopular ownership were growing by the week - both in terms of the numbers involved and the ferocity of the protests, thus resulting in a poisonous atmosphere around Belle Vue.

By October, Rovers were still winless, hopeless and largely clueless on the pitch. 

Richardson attended a game for the last time as Hartlepool United were surprisingly held to a 2-2 draw on Saturday 11th October, with fans' protests overshadowing the football action. It was after this point that Weaver, still the General Manager, solely bore the forefront of supporters' ire because he was perceived as a 'mouthpiece' and 'puppet' who was destroying the football club.

The best example of just how shambolic things had become perhaps occurred a week earlier when Dave Smith, a 'larger than average' goalkeeper who lived on the same street as Mark Weaver, was recruited from the Stockport Sunday League and featured in a 3-1 home defeat to Brighton & Hove Albion. 

Only days later, Rovers were reported to the Football League for deliberately fielding a weakened side.

When I ask Mark what exactly he believed a player from such a ridiculously low level could bring to the world of professional football, the story was explained of how his neighbour ended up in goal.

"On the [previous] Tuesday night, we were playing away against Wigan at Springfield Park with the reserves," he said. "We had a goalkeeper called Gary Ingham. He couldn't play because he was working - they [his employer] would let him have time off for league games but not the reserves and he had a good job and didn't want to give it up. We only had him on a part-time contract.

"Ken rung me and told me that he was coming to watch because we had a few kids and trialists playing, but I told him that we didn't have a goalkeeper. He asked 'What's that 'keeper like at your club, Bramhall?' I was still involved there but someone else was running it for me by then.

"I told him 'He's not bad and that he used to be at [Stockport] County as an apprentice but had put a bit of weight on. Ken told me to get him in. It wasn't unusual for a reserve game.

"Now Dave was six foot, had a belly, but used to be a very good outfield player so he had a good foot on him. Ken watches him take his first goal-kick and he went 'F**king hell. What the f**k is that?' Did you see how he picked that lad out on the wing?

"Two minutes later, he pulls off a 'worldie' save from a corner, then starts kicking out of his hands, which he could do well, and Ken turns round and says 'You c**t. We've not had a goalkeeper all season yet he's got one at his own football club!', then he starts telling others.

"We won, Dave didn't concede and played well. Ken wanted him in and I told him that he couldn't play [for Doncaster Rovers] and that playing in a reserve game at Wigan wasn't the same as the Football League, but he still wanted him in anyway.

"Ken then starts getting the rumour around the club that I want him for myself and that I was letting the club down and asked if he could speak to the lad direct. He lived three doors away from me so I went round and told him that Ken wanted him to play on Saturday against Brighton. He said 'You're joking!' but then five minutes later he knocks on the door, said he'd spoken to his dad and this was his one chance to play in the Football League, so why not?

"Well let me tell you he f**king regretted that!," laughed Weaver. "One of the lads who knew me and who regularly turned up at my house to give me grief, had recognised him as my neighbour because he'd come out one night when they'd turned up and ran away. Word got round quickly and the rest is history!"

Mark states that it was in the aftermath of this episode where, for the only time he seriously contemplated walking away from the club altogether but felt doing so would have been a cowards way out.

He added: "The good thing about it was it put an end to Ken because he never turned up again. On the Sunday morning, after that had been done to me and after seeing the kid in tears because he was a neighbour and a good lad, I really did think 'F**k you!'. I didn't turn up on the Monday or Tuesday, but then the administrators started ringing me asking what was happening and I felt I was letting people down [at the club] who'd been good to me and that quitting was the cowards way out."

Nowadays, it's believed Dave Smith is married and works in the Greater Manchester area providing support and assistance to disadvantaged children and vulnerable young adults - however, he's no longer in contact with his former neighbour-cum-manager.

The goalmouth which Dave Smith filled at Belle Vue (Photo: Doncaster Free Press).





Anton Johnson's potential takeover

As autumn turned to winter in 1997 and with Ken Richardson no longer on the scene on matchdays, rumours of a potential takeover were rife.

Rovers had long since been in administration and one person who was consistently linked with buying the club was Anton Johnson - a controversial self-made millionaire with a less than re-assuring past. 

The Essex nightclub owner who, apparently, had 'shook hands with Ken Richardson on a deal' had been banned from all football involvement following a scandal at Southend United over a decade earlier and at any other time supporters would have been disgusted to see such a figure wanting to become their new owner. However, such was the apathy, hatred and bitterness towards Richardson's ownership and Weaver's day-to-day involvement, the flamboyant Johnson was perceived as a potential saviour.

His regular appearances on matchdays in both October and November 1997 - including at a home fixture against Cardiff City where he was accompanied by both Kerry Dixon (who he planned to re-install as manager) and the Sky Sports cameras, led many to believe that a takeover deal was imminent but Weaver says this was never the case because Johnson hadn't proved that he had funds for the takeover.

"What I did, like any businessman would do, was ask for proof of funding from a solicitor," recollected Mark. "I said I wouldn't talk to anyone until proof of funds was shown and he couldn't do it. Three million pounds was the starting point and he didn't even have that money.

"He also broke the rules. He came in to the dressing room at the Colchester away game. We were losing 1-0 and he said to the players that if they turned things around then he'd give everyone £200 but it was breaking league rules. You can't just offer professional footballers extra money to win a game because it has to be in the contract. I went 'What the f**k?' and went mental at him, threw him out and told the players to ignore what he'd said because he had no authority and shouldn't have even been in there. 

"If that story had got out, there would have been 'hell on'. The FA hated Ken so if that had got out, I'd have been blamed because I was the official that was in the dressing room, not Anton Johnson. He got told where to go that night!"

News of Mr Johnson's dressing room appearance did, nonetheless, filter back to the Football League headquarters and it's alleged they quickly informed Weaver that the future of the club would be in jeopardy if it was sold to the Essex businessman - by coincidence, this happened on the same day that Johnson was interviewed on Sky Sports' Soccer AM programme claiming that he'd be the new owner.

"They [the Football League] came to see me at Barnet away and told me that if he took over, the club was finished because he was banned," added Mark.

"The guy didn't have a pot to p*ss in. He was driving around in a Porsche which he had on lease and living in a shanty. All he did was waste our time!"






Danny Bergara's ill-fated tenure

With Anton Johnson's prospective takeover ultimately failing to materialise, one catastrophe after another continued to follow on the pitch and results meant Rovers remained rooted to the foot of the Division Three table as the season meandered towards its halfway point.

The manager's position was a poisoned chalice with Colin Richardson (no relation to Uncle Ken) in charge for a short time following Kerry Dixon's resignation before the strongly-principled Dave Cowling lasted only a number of days before he too decided that he couldn't put up with interference from above and opted to step away from the hot-seat.

Ultimately, the next incumbent was former Stockport supremo Danny Bergara.

Quizzed about how the Uruguayan ended up at Doncaster Rovers, Mark replied: "Purely and simply, we needed a UEFA qualified coach so we got the money for the kids. He'd done an absolutely unbelievable job at Stockport where he took them to Wembley four or five times and got them promoted. Players spoke highly of his coaching and he lived in Sheffield which was only half-an-hour away. 

"He was prepared to work for f**k all as well - that was a big help!"

Described as 'the nicest man you could ever wish to meet' it didn't take long for Bergara to realise the gravity of the situation which he'd stepped into and the hassle and aggravation was just too much for him to cope with - something which prompted Weaver to make the bold choice to name himself as the next manager at the end of November.

He continued: "That dugout at the old ground was a lonely place with the paddock behind for everyone to give you grief and they shouted all sorts at Danny. He just couldn't understand why he was getting such grief. He came to me [after a home defeat to Rochdale] and said 'I just can't take anymore!'.

"We were playing Hull away in the next game and I went in the press and said 'Either leave him alone or it'll be your worst nightmare and I'll be manager of this football club until the end'. We went to Hull and it was typical red rag to a bull and all they [the fans] sang throughout the game was 'Bergara Out, Bergara Out!' instead of 'Weaver Out' so I went in the press the following Monday and said that Danny had resigned and I was now the manager.

"As everyone knows, Danny stayed and coached the team until the end. He picked the team, did everything. I didn't have the time to do that as I was too busy saving the finances, but my name was put on it as 'Manager' and to be fair nobody else's name deserved to be put to it because it was a joke."

Bizarrely, as fate would have it, Weaver somehow won his first match as 'manager' as Chester City were beaten 2-1 infront of just 824 spectators at Belle Vue. Mike Smith scored the winner in the 83rd minute and it was Rovers' first three points since the last day of the previous campaign.

"It's actually the only game I did run the football club," he joked.

"Danny Bergara had said they [the players] were like donkeys on a beach so I pinned it up on the wall and told them 'That's what your own boss f**king thinks of you' and they weren't half fired up.

"We only beat Chester because they were playing Wrexham on the following Friday night in the FA Cup, so they didn't want to know, the pitch was quite hard and the lads were fired up because of what I'd pinned up on the wall. 

"We just happened to fluke a win - anything we did win that season was a fluke!"

One point which I raise with Mark is that if, as he claims, Bergara was the manager 'to all intents and purposes' then why was there footage on the They Think It's All Rovers! documentary of him in the dressing room dishing out instructions and team talks at various games?

He answered: "It was once or twice when I said something. The games I was in there were Swansea away where we drew 0-0; Cambridge, which was on the documentary, and Peterborough away where we won 1-0 when they were virtually top of the league at the time. 

"I didn't do it every week and it was because some of them said 'We just don't understand Danny'.

"But it wasn't just a one man job to be in the dressing room. Nobody wanted to put their name to it [as manager] so I had to go in there, fill the team sheets in and sign them. I had to make sure that was right and, it might sound paranoid, but it came to a point where I didn't trust anyone to do what was right if I wasn't there."

Danny Bergara on the sidelines (Photo: LMA).





A shambles at Leyton Orient

Arguably Rovers' lowest ebb, at least on the pitch, in what was already a torturous and traumatic season came just after Christmas when they were stuffed 8-0 at Leyton Orient.

It was a game where Mark openly admits the scoreline could have been '22-0' as opposed to only an eight-goal defeat and he expressed gratitude to O's boss Tommy Taylor who withdrew both of his strikers despite the fact there was around 30 minutes left on the clock and his team were chasing a club record win. If his counterpart in the opposite dugout hadn't made those substitutions purely out of sympathy, there's every likelihood Orient would have hit double figures.

The former General Manager also strongly feared it could be Rovers' last ever outing - something which was primarily due to the financial impact caused by the 'joke' postponement of the Boxing Day home fixture against Mansfield Town.

Even still, the game at Brisbane Road, two days later, almost didn't take place.

In what must have been a farcical situation, even though the Rovers squad had arrived safely in East London, players were reluctant to get off the team coach. Why? Incredibly, the driver was threatening to return to Doncaster without them unless he was paid the money owed to him.

The farcical fiasco prompted Weaver, who'd made his own way to the capital from Stockport, into impromptu 'mad dash' visits to several cash points around Brisbane Road in the run up to kick-off in order to get the money to pay the ransom demand. 

If anyone thought things couldn't get more utterly ridiculous then they were wrong. 

Once the no doubt already seriously-disillusioned players were actually inside the dressing room, they were quickly informed that they were going to be made 'part-time' with immediate affect - this discussion, anything but motivational, taking place during the pre-match team talk!

No wonder they lost 8-0!

"The Mansfield game was called off and it was a joke," explained Mark. "There was a hole about the size of a fifty pence coin in the roof and they said it was dangerous. 

"Our intelligence told us that Mansfield were bringing 4,000 fans - they were riding quite high at the time and that crowd paying £5 each would have been £20,000. We expected a few more home fans because it was Boxing Day so that was another £20,000 which we were relying on and we'd brought programmes in for the game, food as well, which were a league requirement and we lost the lot. 

"Instead of making money, it [the postponement] cost us money. It nearly bankrupted us. It cost us money which would have kept us going for another month."

On the fateful Leyton Orient trip, he continued: "I got a phone call [from the administrators] telling me that I had to play all the kids. I couldn't play anyone who was on appearance money, and most of them were, and I couldn't play anyone who wasn't a kid.

"I drove there in my car from Manchester, went into the ground and spoke to Barry Hearn (former O's chairman) and I asked him 'Where's the team? Where's the players? Where's Danny?' He told me they were on the bus and wouldn't come in.

"I went on the bus and they said the bus driver was going home because there wasn't a cheque for him at the ground [when they set off from Belle Vue]. The driver said 'I've driven down because I've been told you'll pay me. It's £900 and I want it now!'

"I ran round London with my cash card, my wife's cash card and a friend's cash card. Barry said he'd help us if it came to it but I went out, got the cash myself and paid the coach driver to stay there otherwise he was taking the team straight back. The lads had told him they wouldn't get off the bus, otherwise they'd have had no way of getting back home!"

Discussing the enforced decision to go part-time, he added: "A lot of the players were getting expenses for travelling to Doncaster for training and I couldn't afford to give them that any more. I had to make every cut there was to be made."






Plunging towards the inevitable

Despite a surprise 1-0 win over Shrewsbury Town in early January 1998, the writing had long-since been on the wall in terms of the direction which the club was heading.

It wasn't a case of 'if' Doncaster Rovers would be relegated; instead it was a case of when the inevitable would happen. Far more pertinent, however, was the question of whether the club would actually be able fulfil their remaining fixtures and stave off the grim prospect of going out of existence altogether.

By this point, Ken Richardson was now in America and had zero involvement, with football matters having been left to his General Manager. Protests against the ownership regime continued to be just as vociferous as previously with 'Richardson Out!' being daubed on the exit gates from the Popular Stand.

Speculation regarding potential takeover deals continued to dominate column inches in both the Free Press and The Doncaster Star newspapers, before inspiration was offered from an unlikely source with Uri Geller wanting to help the players with some 'brain training' exercises!

Famed for his spoon-bending lunacy, the psychic's offer was met with disgust by the remaining players in Rovers' ever-diminishing squad who felt this was yet another p*ss take at their expense. They subsequently went to the Professional Footballers Association (PFA) to complain.

"The Daily Star said they'd give us money if we did it," commented Weaver. "Bearing everything in mind, I was desperate for the money so I thought it was brilliant and we were looking at £20,000 - even Uri Geller was willing to pay some!

"All the lads would have got to go and stay in his house overnight and everything but the players went to the PFA and said they didn't want to do it. Exeter did it instead and got the money!"

Having escaped the chance to witness some spoon-bending shenanigans, Rovers' threadbare squad instead found hope from a new recruit in the shape of Padi Wilson - someone who'd previously been on the books at Plymouth Argyle in the division above.

The striker was on target in a defeat at Cambridge United before playing his part as the team, somehow, won 1-0 in a midweek match at Peterborough United. Nevertheless, the new recruit wasn't available for selection for much longer afterwards because he'd been imprisoned for driving whilst disqualified.

The surprise win at Peterborough was followed up with a point in a 0-0 draw at Brighton & Hove Albion on a Heart Of Football 'love in' Valentines Day where supporters of both clubs stood together to highlight their respective plights caused by poor ownership.

"I still speak to Brian Horton who was Brighton's manager on that day in February and he reminds me that there was only three points in it at that time and he put his reputation on the line," reminisced Mark

"Even after all our crap results, they were only just above us in the table but I knew there was only ever going to be one outcome.

"I was being told that I had to get rid of more players. I had Tony Parks, the ex-Tottenham 'keeper in the nets and Danny George from Nottingham Forest in midfield, so at least had some experienced players, but as soon as February ended, the administrators told me they had to go and we were left with the kids.

"There was only one way the club was going and that was down!"

Rovers' results quickly went awry again after the enforced cuts and on Saturday 14th March future manager Dave Penney was on the score-sheet for Cardiff City in a 7-1 hammering at Ninian Park.

Recalling events, Weaver said: "The 'keeper (Craig Davis) got sent-off at 3-1. He was only playing for a pair of gloves each game because of how bad things were. He didn't get any money at all and after he was sent-off, every single player refused to go in goal.

"I had a player on loan called Robert Pell who Rotherham had let me have for nothing because they felt sorry for him. I turned to him and said 'Either you go in the nets or you're going back to Rotherham and back to running with the reserves. At least here, you get to play'. 

"He said he wasn't f**king using his hands and I told him I didn't give a sh*t so long as he went and stood in the nets, but we were stood arguing for five minutes."

The 'Goals Conceded' tally hit the 100 mark just seven days later with Lincoln's Jae Martin claiming that accolade in another triumph for the away team at Belle Vue. Then, three weeks later, Rovers travelled to Chester City's Deva Stadium knowing they had to win to have any chance of staying in the Football League.

By this point 'Uncle Ken' was, quite laughably, back on the scene.

According to Mark, interference from above rarely happened during his own tenure. He says the team was 'picking itself' simply due to the lack of bodies available, whilst some players, such as Jim Dobbin, were left out as a cost-saving measure to avoid paying out appearance fees.

Nevertheless, one instance of Ken involving himself, as was shown in the 'They Think Its All Rovers' documentary, took place on that fateful day at Chester where he telephoned each player to offer tactical advice and instructions - despite the fact he wasn't even present at the game!

"There was no way I could stop him ringing people because he had a major say and was owed a lot of money, but his involvement [from October onwards] got less and less," explained Weaver.

"He went to America in the December and didn't come back until March and there were rumours that he wasn't going to come back because he was facing trial. He never phoned from America; he just text me and said 'Only Eight?' taking the p*ss out of me because we got beat 8-0 at Orient.

"He then phoned me on the way to Chester [in April] when I had a couple of lads in the car with me because I was driving there direct from Stockport. He said 'I've been looking at the fixtures and if we win this game and win that game, I think we can stay up' and I just told him we had no chance."

Rovers subsequently lost the game 2-1 which meant they were mathematically relegated.

One of many protest banners (Photo: Doncaster Free Press).


For the third and final part of Mark Weaver's interview, click here.

If you missed Part 1 where Mark Weaver discussed how he met Ken Richardson and be employed by Doncaster Rovers, his relationships with Kerry Dixon and Sammy Chung and the Main Stand arson attack, click here.

Monday 22 February 2021

Mark Weaver on his time at Doncaster Rovers (Part 1)

He is the second-most despised figure to have ever been associated with Doncaster Rovers.

Hated by supporters of all ages, Mark Weaver, second-in-command to the even more reviled former owner Ken Richardson, presided over the ultimate nadir in Rovers’ 142-year history as the club lost their Football League status in 1998 amidst a putrid stench of chaos, scandal and corruption.

In an acrimonious Belle Vue campaign during which the club was brought to its knees under the controversial ownership, there was farce upon farce (on and off the pitch), death threats, administration, pitch invasions and protests aplenty. Unsurprisingly, the eventual record of ‘Won 4, Drew 8, Lost 34’ remains the worst ever recorded by a Football League club to this day.

It's a far cry from the present time with Rovers flying high in League One and in with a very realistic chance of achieving automatic promotion come the end of this season with home nowadays being the plush 15,000-capacity Keepmoat Stadium.

After Mr Weaver's recent re-emergence on Twitter under the username @MWeaver72139842 following years out of the public eye, it provided an opportunity to put forward many pertinent questions which many fans have wondered in the time which has elapsed since that fateful period - primarily, how could an ownership deliberately attempt to rip away the heart and soul of a community and purposely destroy a football club?

There's certainly every reason to be sceptical about anything which Mark says though his acceptance of my request for an interview at least allowed the chance for many pertinent and forthright questions to be asked over the course of what turned out to be a three-hour conversation.

In the first of a three-part instalment, the former General Manager discusses how he came to be at Belle Vue in the first place, dealing with Ken Richardson's constant meddling, his time working with Kerry Dixon and the summer of 1997 which saw the club plunged into administration amidst a financial meltdown.

Mark Weaver shortly after his appointment (Photo: Yorkshire Evening Post).





Meeting Ken Richardson

Our discussion begins with me questioning how, and where exactly, Mark's relationship with Richardson began in the first instance given that the main business interests for 'Uncle Ken' (one of many colloquial names given to the one-time 'benefactor') was with East Riding Sacks where he'd become a self-made millionaire over the course of the 1970s and 1980s.

"It started in the May of 1995," explained Mark. "Martin McDonald played for Bramhall Football Club of which I was manager in the Mid-Cheshire League. 

"Earlier in the season, Macclesfield were using him on a dual-contract. He got the opportunity to go and play against Hartlepool in the FA Cup as a substitute and he came on and scored and the winner was shown on Match Of The Day.

"He stayed at Macclesfield until the end of the season then he played a few games for Bramhall. He didn't drive or have a telephone at the time and he came round one day and said 'The landlord of the local pub has said the chairman of Doncaster Rovers wants to meet me at the hotel nearest to Manchester Airport at half past one?'

"I drove him there and we had to go into the airport instead. A man introduced himself, said he was Ken [Richardson] and told me he wanted to sign Martin McDonald and assumed that I was his agent. I said 'No, he plays for me at Bramhall'.

"He had to rush to get on his plane back to the Isle Of Man. I'd given him my number at the airport but heard nothing. Then, on the following Friday I got a phone call and it was Ken and he said he'd got two players who couldn't get back and could only get a flight to Manchester. He asked me to give them a lift from the airport to the train station but I told him that they'd have no chance [of reaching wherever they were going] because there was a strike on.

"The players were Darren Moore and Duane Darby. Their cars were parked at Birmingham Airport, the motorways were 'chocker', the coaches were full and they didn't know how they were going to get back. In the end I told them that I'd run them back [to Birmingham].

"That was the biggest mistake I ever made."

Darren Moore and Duane Darby pose for the cameras shortly after signing for DRFC.





The suspicious Main Stand arson attack

With Mark, who was also working at Stockport County as a door-to-door club lottery salesperson at this time, now acquainted with Richardson, it wasn't long before he ended up at Belle Vue - albeit in an unofficial capacity which initially began in July 1995 - only weeks after the well-publicised arson attempt and a full year prior to his eventual appointment as General Manager.

I interject at this point to question what knowledge he had about his new boss' past; primarily, whether he was aware of Richardson's involvement in the Flockton Grey horse racing scandal in the 1980s or if he had any initial suspicions about the fire in the Main Stand which, by this point, was already under investigation by the police.

He claims that he wasn't aware of anything whatsoever until a chance meeting with a shareholder whilst out canvassing for Rovers' own club lottery for which Richardson had asked him to work.

"I took a team of lads with me [from Stockport] to canvass and we went knocking on doors," recalled Weaver.

"One of the lads shouts to me: 'What the f**k have you got us doing?' I asked why and he said this guy wanted to tell him something. The guy asked why we'd come from Stockport to canvass for Doncaster and said 'You're the only ones stupid enough to canvass for him!'.

"I said 'Who?' and he said 'Richardson. He's a f**king horse thief. Flockton Grey, and not only that but he was the one who set fire to the Main Stand the other week at the ground!'

"I got the lads together and we drove back and I rang him [Richardson] as soon as I got back. I said to him this guy who was a shareholder has told me you were behind Flockton Grey and you were behind the fire. He [Richardson] kept me on the phone from seven o'clock that night until four o'clock the next morning, explaining every single thing and that's how our relationship started."

Mark continued: "He told me 'I'd love you to get involved and we need football people' but I stayed away and only did little bits for him [in the 1995/96 season]. 

"Martin McDonald didn't sign for him that season on my advice. He went back to Macclesfield but Ken got back in touch, told me he still wanted to sign him and asked to meet me. I was someone who was easy to pick him up [from the airport] because I lived in Stockport so I ended up talking to him about the team and the games."

At this point I ask Mark whether he personally believes Richardson was responsible for conspiracy to commit arson - an offence for which he was convicted in March 1999 after a court case during which the defence was labelled as being 'the worst concoction of waffle, piffle and flannel' they had ever heard by the prosecution. I also suggest a potential motive for the attack could have been 'financial gain' because with no ground to play in following the fire, it could have forced the council into building a new stadium.

In the 1990s, the Belle Vue site - located opposite Doncaster Racecourse and adjacent to ASDA, was considered as being one of the most expensive anywhere in the country with an estimated redevelopment value of approaching 20 million pounds.

Before the June 1995 fire, relations between Richardson and Doncaster Council had soured to such an extent that the two parties were barely on speaking terms - something which never changed and, if anything, only got progressively worse as time passed. This was largely down to the fact that an advert had been placed in the Daily Telegraph newspaper advertising the land at Belle Vue as being for sale when it wasn't even owned by Richardson - he instead owned the leasehold.

"According to the police records, the plans were made on April 30th 1995," said Mark.

"I've no axe to grind with Ken and he swears blind to this day that he didn't do it and says that he was set-up. But what I don't understand is 'Why?' because I don't see what the club was ever going to get out of it or what he was ever going to get out of it. We'd have still had to play our games and they'd have been at wherever was offered to us, it would have meant no fans, no income, he'd have had to refund Season Ticket holders and it'd have put him further into debt.

"With some of the things that went on in that last year [the 1997/98 season] I wouldn't doubt anything because some things were beyond belief and I wondered how some things had been done, what was going on and what was really at stake."

Later in the interview, he added: "I believe in British justice and they found him guilty and from what I've heard anyone would have found him guilty based on the evidence. But I just don't understand why and I've never been able to work that out and why would an SAS man leave his phone at the ground?"

Fire damage to the Main Stand (Photo: Shaun Flannery).





Sammy Chung's sacking

Whilst Weaver and Richardson were corresponding at infrequent intervals throughout the 1995/96 campaign, on the pitch Doncaster Rovers were struggling to make headway in their efforts to get promoted from Division Three (now League Two).

Despite a bright start to the season under Sammy Chung, results tailed off after the turn of the year and a team which contained talented players such as Gary Brabin, Colin Cramb, Graeme Jones and Russ Wilcox, eventually had to settle for a mid-table position.

According to Mark, it may have been a 'passing' comment he made some months earlier that Richardson took on board which set the ball rolling and brought about the start of the end for Mr Chung.

He said: "Ken would talk to me on the way back after games and he started to get a bit annoyed [about results].

"He was pumping money into the club like there was no tomorrow. It was £25,000 per week and rising, and I told him that this wasn't sustainable and it was never going to work because if you'd have got promoted, you'd have had to pay the players a lot more money.

"He kept saying 'We need to get promoted and get a new ground' so, rightly or wrongly, I told him Sammy Chung would never get the team promoted because he was a 'has been' in my opinion. Ken took on board what I'd said and he had the chance to go for Neil Warnock who was at Plymouth at the time but wasn't sure if he'd be the right man and he still stood by Sammy."

Mark continued: "We played Fulham in a midweek game and we lost 2-0. Ken was coming back in the car with me and I said to him that we'd only got 1,400 and if they [the supporters] wouldn't come for a game to get into the top four or whatever it was, they were never coming."

During a 0-0 draw against Mansfield at Belle Vue a month later, Richardson was arrested on suspicion of conspiracy to commit arson which subsequently led to the first protests about his ownership. Weaver admits 'the shutters soon came down' in terms of further investment but only after Richardson had asked him to make contact with Kerry Dixon in regards to bringing him to Doncaster Rovers and discussions took place on the very eve of the 1996/97 season.

"I got a phone call at home from Ken and he asked for a favour," he recollected. "He told me he'd spoken to Graham Carr (former football scout) and that Kerry Dixon was available, he was leaving Watford and had been paid up by them.

"It was a big thrill to me because Kerry Dixon was a big name in my day. I rung him and he was lovely man to talk to, very polite, but he said he'd never come 'up north' and it was too far. I told him that it was a chance to get into coaching and did my best to try and persuade him and he said he'd only ever come up north to be the manager.

"I rung Ken back, spoke to him, and he told me to get him to come up and meet us. We met at the Earl of Doncaster. Kerry, in his conversation, asked who I was and Ken turned round and said 'He's the General Manager' and that was the first I'd heard of it - that was me employed as General Manager."

With there being less than 48 hours before the season was due to commence, Mark then explained how Chung's consequential dismissal unfolded.

"He [Kerry] said 'I'm yet to settle my money yet with Watford. As soon as I've got my money then I'll be back.' Ken, rightly, said that he hadn't signed the contract and I told him that he couldn't do that until he'd been released from Watford," continued Mark.

"Ken said 'I can't sack Sammy this afternoon. What if Kerry doesn't come back or gets another offer or has a re-think and decides he doesn't like it. What the f**k are we going to do?' I rung Kerry throughout the Friday night to ask if he'd got his money from Watford but there was no answer. It was the same thing on the Saturday morning - no answer!

"I arrived at Doncaster about one o'clock and at about half past one Kerry f**king pulls up in the car park. We told him that we didn't know if he was definitely coming or not because he hadn't answered and there were no mobile phones. Ken then went into the portacabins and sacked Sammy Chung.

"That's exactly how it happened. Nobody would have believed they were going to get sacked an hour before kick-off on the opening day of the season but I knew it on the Friday, didn't tell anyone, and then I had to announce it. That was my welcome to football!

"I had to go into the dressing room and introduce Kerry Dixon whilst Ken was dealing with Sammy and George Foster (who was assistant manager). I sat in the dugout with Kerry and had to tell him who was who because he didn't know any of the players. The only other person [who knew the players] was the physio, Phil McLaughlin, and he was as shocked as anyone."

Mark added: "It was maybe my fault because I'd said to Ken that we needed something high profile to prove to people that we were trying to achieve something. In hindsight, Kerry was probably the wrong choice - but he was a big name!"

Sammy Chung in his office at Belle Vue (Photo: Unknown).





Uncle Ken's meddling

It was 'gainful employment' and 'the opportunity to work with my hero which fell into my lap' which Mark cites as being the reasons why he put aside any misgivings about his General Manager position.

Throughout Richardson's time at the club, it was also well known to everyone that he liked to meddle in football affairs - whether it be team selections, tactics or player recruitment. This goes as far back as Steve Beaglehole and Ian Atkins' respective reigns and is something which Sammy Chung also had to endure before his sudden and surprise dismissal in August 1996.

Whilst Mark admits that he didn't have much of a relationship with Mr Chung, he says the former Wolves manager was allowed to bring in some of his own players with Ryan Kirby and Paul Birch being two specific names mentioned, although he alleges the camp was 'split into two' with Gary Brabin and Graeme Jones, amongst others, being Richardson signings.

The benefactor could also 'veto' any prospective new arrival and his continued and persistent interference, even under new boss Kerry Dixon in 1996/97, is something which Mark quickly realised was causing plenty of problems.

"We played Exeter away in about the fourth game. Ken wasn't there," recalled Weaver.

"He wanted to know what happened and didn't want to hear it from Kerry so I told him we had Paul Birch playing. He was 34-35 and a brilliant footballer but he took every corner, every free-kick and was running about all over the place to take them. I'd never seen anything like it and in the second half, he was knackered - that's why we didn't win.

"He asked 'What did Kerry say?' and I said he was young, learning and a bit naive [to management]. Ken said 'Alright, lets try and get an assistant in, someone who can help him!' and I agreed that's what he needed.

"Ken asked me for my opinion and that was it. I was allowed to give it. Unfortunately, he then wanted assistants and he brought them in one after another. I can't even remember them all because there were that f**king many."

It was not long after this game at St James' Park that former Everton midfielder Andy King, who was available after his departure as Mansfield Town manager at the end of the 1995/96 season, came to Belle Vue to help out.

Mark continued: "He [Andy King] was a great bloke but that just made the party bigger. The three of us were like party kings - we liked to drink, we liked to bet and we liked to play cards until two in the morning. Ken found out and he wasn't very happy.

"Football-wise it wasn't great but it was the best year of my life, party-wise. I was out with Kerry Dixon and Andy King who both had great careers and it was just me with them two. I was in my element and I honestly didn't want it ever to end. Every week was like Christmas for that first six or seven months.

"But then we started a bad run of defeats and Ken wanted to bring in Colin Murphy, the long ball merchant and Kerry told me he didn't want him. By this point we still had a decent enough side but we were losing. 

"Ken knew that the drink culture that was causing the problems and he thought we were in danger of going into the bottom four. He wasn't stupid - one thing he isn't is stupid, and he had his spies [who were telling him] 'these will never win anything because they're out p**sed every night'.

"I did a deal with Kerry. I said 'Let Ken have more of a say and I'll convince Ken to help you rather than Colin Murphy' because I knew if Murphy came in we were having problems. He wanted £10,000 to keep us up, we didn't have it, and he wanted £3,000 per week to be coach.

"Kerry and Ken got to do it but, of course, Kerry got bladdered before one of the speaker evenings and told the whole f**king crowd 'I don't pick the team, Ken Richardson does' after which point I changed the team because Birchy [Paul Birch] wasn't in it and the fans wanted him back in."

When I ask Mark why he didn't try and persuade Richardson to take a back-seat in affairs, he says that he tried to on several occasions but it became 'impossible' over time. The eventual realisation that the writing was on the wall came when an article was unknowingly published in the programme for the last game of the 1996/97 season against Torquay United.

"We played Wigan who were top of the league," he said. "'Birchy' [Paul Birch] got 'Man of the Match' and we beat them 2-0 with Graeme Jones in the Wigan side. The fans turned a bit towards me and said 'You've stood up to him [Richardson] and got him in!' 

"But then there was an article in the programme, without my knowledge but done by me, saying that it was all Ken and it had nothing to do with Kerry. That was the beginning of the end. I knew when he [Ken] wrote that he didn't give a shit. 

"Kerry wanted out. He was on massive money because we'd obviously had to pay him well and it was a gamble that didn't pay off. His legs had gone, he couldn't play, the fans knew that and he was struggling and we'd paid him a big signing on fee, big bonuses - not win bonuses just loyalty bonuses.

"All of a sudden I saw the figures and realised what was happening." 

Ken Richardson in the dugout, rather than the boardroom, at Belle Vue.





The Summer of 1997

With Doncaster Rovers having done enough to stay in the Football League for another year, the summer of 1997 saw plenty of unrest at Belle Vue.

Amidst mounting debts, the club was put in administration stemming from a winding up order, served the previous February, which saw 10 players transfer listed and an embargo imposed as a consequence and there was a desperate battle to try and balance the books.

According to Weaver, what is perceived by many as a 'deliberate destruction' of the squad was in actual fact 'imperative destruction' with Darren Moore (sold to Bradford City for £310,000) and Colin Cramb (sold to Bristol City for £125,000) amongst the star players to depart and not be adequately replaced.

The former General Manager, who says he was paid £400 per week before the club entered administration and just £250 thereafter, also believes 'Uncle Ken' had, by now, simply run out of money to continue his financial support - resulting in the farce which was about to unfold in the 1997/98 season.

"Ken, clearly, could not put more money in," said Mark.

"He was paying his barristers fortunes and, being honest, I think he'd run out. He'd paid a fortune with the cost of the shares in 1993 and the other backers didn't want to know. They'd been in too long and they thought they were going to get a quick turnaround on profits - a new ground, backers, money, build it up and then sell the shares.

"To me that was it. It's like Simon Jordan at Crystal Palace. He ran out of money but nobody wants to come on television and say they've got no money otherwise all the creditors would be coming in."

Weaver also expressed bitterness towards the Football League claiming the club was 'strangled' from the point they entered administration and onwards by the Football League who would gladly have allowed it to cease to exist.

"We were, and still are, the only Football League club to have the league ladder money withheld," he said in a frustrated manner. "We had no points took off us at the start of the season for the administration, they just withheld our money. They knew they were strangling us to death.

"At the time we got about £22,000 per month. That would be nearly £300,000 over 10 months but we had that took off us and were asked to survive on £3,000 per week - money which was for me, all the players, Joan Oldale (club secretary) and the groundsman.

"It was impossible to stay up. I knew we weren't going to stay up when it got to about the end of September, early October. We had absolutely no chance and were heading 100 miles per hour [towards relegation] so I made sure we went into [non-league] with as little loss as possible."

He added: "All I was bothered about from September 1997 to May 1998 was that we fulfilled the fixtures because the minute we didn't do that, the Football League had the authority to kick us out and that would have meant the administrators didn't get the money."

Kerry Dixon in happier times as Doncaster Rovers manager (Photo: Doncaster Free Press). 



To read Part 2, where Mark Weaver discusses the fateful 1997/98 campaign - including Danny Bergara, Anton Johnson's potential takeover and signing a fat 'keeper from the Stockport Sunday League, click here.