Quotes: Graham Alexander – 15th August 2006

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I’m just up at St Andrews, we’ve had a couple of training days, it’s just a get-together, there has been no game but the manager wanted all the players together again and to see each other again after the summer. It has been a good couple of days.

The manager wanted certain opposition but after the World Cup a lot of the bigger countries didn’t want a game so early, the games that he could have got he didn’t see as being beneficial to us, he thought it would be better to get the lads together and have a training session.

It is going to be tough. We’ve got the two World Cup finalists in our group as well as the Ukraine and a couple of other teams that will give us tough tests. We know what is expected of us but we have picked up some good results against some decent teams since the new manager has taken over. We’ve done ok in the last group so obviously we want to try and qualify for the Euros.

It is always a great occasion to be playing the bigger countries. I remember playing Italy last year, we got a draw against them and we were a bit disappointed with that to be honest, they went on to win the World Cup. On your day if you stick together and believe that you can get the result then nothing is impossible.

Gutted is an understatement, I was really disappointed with the red card, I don’t think I deserved it, I thought it was a booking at the most. The way everyone reacted and with it being away at Norwich, the referee was quite weak throughout the game, I think I was a victim of circumstance but it was myself that put myself in that position so I blame myself a little bit, I’m not totally blameless but I thought that it only warranted a yellow and I am disappointed that it wasn’t rescinded.

I’m not going to blame anyone for it, it goes on in football and it has done for a few years now. Players always react to situations and I think that referees have to be stronger and just look at the challenge rather than all the hoo-haa afterwards, in different circumstances with that challenge I don’t think I’d have got a red card. I just think it all added up and got me sent-off.

I let my team down in that game, not so much in that match because it was over at that stage but I will be missing for the three games at a time when we have got a few injuries. I have to say though that the lads did brilliantly at Wolves, it was a great result and they did well.

The last few years I have been ok but when I was younger I used to get a few suspensions over a season, but that was my fifth sending-off and I think that it has been kept quite quiet, to be honest they have been five travesties!

I watched the game against Wolves, it took us a while to get into the game but once Nuge scored I thought that there was only going to be one winner to be honest. The confidence grew in our team and drained out of theirs at the same time, two fantastic strikes from Nuge and then Simon finished it off at the end.

Mick McCarthy was a big competitor as a player and he’s the same as a manger, we’ve seen that with the games we have had against Sunderland. We probably played them at a good time because he has only been there two or three weeks and I’m sure he will get them going, but it is about what we do and you have to beat what is put in front of you and we got the three points which is what we needed.

With what had gone on over the summer and the first two games not going our way. We should have won against Sheffield Wednesday but we can’t really complain about the Norwich result, we needed to get a win to get the confidence going, we did that and now everybody is looking forward to the weekend and getting more points on the board.

You want to see the big games and you want to see the players who have done well in the World Cup, you want to see the world stars like Shevchenko and Ballack and see how they get on. Even though you are not involved in it it is good to go home, watch Match of the Day on a Saturday and take it all in.

Claude’s injured at the moment but I was speaking to Christian Dailly about Tye and he has said that he has done well in pre-season and might be playing. Hopefully he does because Tye is a good player, a good lad and he deserves his chance. Hopefully he will play for West Ham and get a few games.

After the World Cup tips that I gave you, I said that Michael Owen would be top scorer and Brazil would win so I think my days as a tipster are over.

Crazy Prices: Queens Park Rangers

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North End start this afternoon’s fixture as 8/11 favourites with the Club’s official bookmaker pnebetting.co.uk (08000 322 365) and that’s probably a fair price bearing in mind the start to the season the two clubs have had.

After grabbing their first three pointer of the season at Molineux last weekend I expect to see Paul Simpson’s men firing on all cylinders and I’m tipping a comprehensive 3-0 victory at 12/1.

If you are looking for a goalscorer it’s quite hard to look beyond David Nugent, even at 9/2 but if you are looking for a bigger price then why not take a gamble on Sean St. Ledger who has looked quite dangerous at set pieces.

Specials
The BBC Sports Personality of the Year award has attracted plenty of punting interest in the past month or so. David Walliams was heavily supported following his cross-channel charity swim but is now drifting if you excuse the pun, the new hot favourite is England’s new spin king Monty Panesar at 3/1.

Birmingham 10/11 Draw 9/4 Crystal Palace 13/5 – Verdict Draw
The Championship’s early pacesetters meet at St Andrews this afternoon with Clinton Morrison keen to make his former employers pay. It’ll be a tight one and I’m backing the draw.

Burnley 6/5 Draw 11/5 Wolves 2/1 – Verdict Wolves
Steve Cotterill’s men have started well but Wolves will be smarting following their defeat to PNE and whilst I expect this to be a fiery game I’m backing Mick McCarthy’s men.
Ipswich 5/6 Draw 11/4 Hull 3/1 – Verdict Draw
Two sides rooted to the bottom of the Championship table meet at Portman Road, both in search of their first points. Hull looked unlucky not to take at least a point off of Derby and I reckon they can steal one this week.

West Brom 4/9 Draw 3/1 Colchester 5/1 – Verdict West Brom
Colchester have the hardest task of the weekend according to the bookies at 5/1 for a win. I have to say I agree with them though and Bryan Robson’s men should win comfortably.

Quotes: Graham Alexander – 1st August 2006

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I think the Play-Off defeat at the end of last season hurt more than ever to be honest. It is bad to go out at any stage, the semi or the final, but the way we played throughout the season and the position that we finished in, plus going into the second-leg with a decent result from the first, we should have at least got to the final. We would have been playing Watford and no disrespect but I thought we were a better team than them but they finished in the higher positions and fair play to them they probably deserved to go up during the season anyway.

If I’m being honest Billy Davies’ departure didn’t surprise me, I had a funny feeling that something might happen during the summer so when all the speculation started it didn’t really come as a surprise. When he eventually left I thought it was inevitable to be honest, but that gave the Club plenty of time to get it sorted and get a new manager in. The staff upheavals during pre-season weren’t very helpful but now we have got the staff in and hopefully we can start the season all together.

The new gaffer has come in and he has been brilliant. He is doing it his own way, the training is a little bit different to when Billy was here and a lot of things are a little bit different but the discipline is still there and he wants us to be an organised team. He’s got his own staff in now which is good for him, we are eventually getting to know each other, obviously the first couple of weeks are a little bit different with new faces around the place and a couple of new players but as pre-season has gone on we have started to understand what the gaffer wants on the pitch and I think you could tell in the performances towards the end of pre-season, we played quite well.

It’s my first pre-season as captain of the club and this year that has brought a little bit of extra responsibility with the new manager coming in. There are little things where Paul might want to know what went on last season in terms of discipline and club fines, we’ve been talking about things like that and trying to get it all set up. I’m a link between the manager and the players so for the tiny details like what to wear for games the gaffer has come and asked me. It’s not so much responsibility but just finding out from the more experienced players.

We’ve brought extra cover in on the left with Danny Pugh’s arrival and I’m happy about that, I played at left-back a lot last season because at one point we only had two full-backs with myself and Tyrone Mears. The previous manager thought that I would be the best one at left-back because I can use my left foot a little bit and that’s why I played there, I ended up playing there for the rest of the season. I’m a right-back first and foremost, I’ve played most of my football at right-back, I feel that I can help the team more at right-back but I’m sure if the occasion comes up for me to play at left-back then I’ll be more than happy to do it but it is good that the manager has brought in extra strength on the left hand side.

The likes of Danny Pugh, Lewis Neal, Simon Whaley and Chris Sedgwick have seen a lot of the ball in pre-season and I think that might come down to the fact that the gaffer was a wide man himself, he was a player that wanted to get on the ball and he wants his wide men to do the same here. They won’t have a better teacher of wing-play than the manager we have got now, he wants us to get plenty of width and plenty of crosses in and plenty of shots. He wants to change us a little bit, the whole team had a great defensive record last season but we didn’t score enough goals, I think he wants to put that right whilst at the same time keeping the defensive qualities that we have. There has been a lot of emphasis in pre-season about attacking play, we’ve seen the wide men, the midfielders, the forwards and even the full-backs getting up, crossing from all areas and taking your chance from shots and crosses.

We’ve benefited from that already, I’m not renowned for my heading but I did score one against Bury last week, I had just give a goal away and I was probably making up for that. I took a run forward, lost my marker, attacked the near post, like a good centre-forward should and I flicked it into the net. My first ever professional goal was a header, back in the day, when I was at Scunthorpe but I’ve only scored one since then in my whole career.

We’ve had some decent pre-season games, especially the Everton and the Man Utd games, it gives you a little taste of the season but nothing can compare to the start of the season and the hurly burly of Championship football, we will get that today against Sheffield Wednesday, they’ll bring a big support, hopefully it will be an exciting game and fingers crossed we can get off on a good foot. We’ve recently been slow starters but we’re looking to change that this season and get off to a flyer.

We already had Adam and Brett out, two quality players, they’ll be looking to get back soon. Unfortunately this season has started with Callum needing an operation and Brian O’Neil will have to rest for a while, we also had the big blow last Saturday with Youl picking up the injury, it’s a nightmare because he has been flying in pre-season and he was superb against United. Youl would have been a big player for us this season but I’m sure he is going to come back stronger.

Crazy Prices: Sheffield Wednesday

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We kick off this new campaign with Preston North End full of renewed hope and expectation and after two successive Play-Off campaigns the bookies have cut North End’s odds to their shortest since we’ve been in the Championship.

To win the Championship Paul Simpson’s men are 16/1 chances with pnebetting.co.uk that’s with each-way odds ¼ 1-2-3. Steve Bruce’s Birmingham City are 7/2 market leaders with Colchester and Barnsley 250/1 outsiders.

If you think that finishing in the top three is a bit of a stretch at those odds then you might fancy the shorter odds of 6/1 for PNE to be promoted. That equation of course includes the possibility of North End going up via the Play-Offs – third time lucky for PNE?

Sheffield’s finest, The Arctic Monkeys are being heavily tipped to win the prestigious Mercury Music Award this September, the indie band have had an amazing rise to prominence and are 13/8 to take the prize. If the judges decide to move away from Indie then my outside tip is a young blood by the name of Sway whose album ‘This Is My Demo’ has been bubbling under nicely this last year, he’s 12/1 to take the spoils.

Other matches

Birmingham 2/5 Draw 3/1 Colchester 6/1 – Verdict Birmingham
Steve Bruce’s Blues should be too strong at home against a Colchester side who have faced much disruption this summer, take the home win.

West Brom 8/13 Draw 5/2 Hull 4/1 – Draw
Phil Parkinson has had a bit of cash to spend at his new club and hopes are high. I’m backing the Tigers to get a draw at the Hawthorns.

Barnsley 7/5 Draw 21/10 Cardiff 7/4 – Cardiff
Andy Ritchie’s men have returned to Championship level but they will find it tough against Dave Jones’ Bluebirds. I think Cardiff will just nick this one.

Southend 13/10 Draw 2/1 Stoke 2/1 – Southend
Not many teams will look forward to going to Roots Hall this season. If Freddy Eastwood can continue his excellent goalscoring form then they could win their first ever Championship match

The Fiver Five-Fold
A £5 five-fold on Birmingham, Draw, Cardiff, Southend and Preston (8/11) pays an impressive £262

Quotes: Graham Alexander – July 19th 2006

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He’s had a great career at Preston North End so far, he’s done really well 10 years in. It’s probably more than that if you include his schoolboy and YT years but as a professional for 10 years at one club is a great achievement. He has seen the Club rise from the lower league to being on the doorstep of the Premiership and he has been a great player for the Club over the last few years, I think now he is just coming into his peak.

Definitely, there is so much movement in football these days, there are a lot of agents involved and players can see that they can make a good living by moving around. When you get a player as good as McKenna staying loyal to Preston, I’m sure he’s had offers and heard whispers about moves to other clubs, he fully deserves his game tonight against Everton. He’s a great lad, if you speak to any player that has played with McKenna while they have been here they will say that he is one of the top three players, and that’s true in the time I have been here. He’s good technically, he trains really well, he’s fit and he’s a great lad off the pitch as well, he deserves it more than anyone else I think.

If you actually watch him he wins more headers than anyone else on the pitch, he’s a great athlete, he’s got a great spring, he’s a strong lad and since I have been here he has been one of the top players. I remember playing against him when I was at Luton, he couldn’t really live with me then, so I think he was happy to see my on his side. He’s a great player to play with, he’s got a good football brain, he’s always thinking about the game and he knows how to get the best out of certain situations.

I found it quite surprising in my first three of four years here that he didn’t get the accolades that I thought he should have. I think he has been quite underated for a lot of years, it’s only in the last two years that he has got a bit of press attention from outside of Preston and that people actually realise what a good player he is. All the players and staff that have been here over the years know what he can do but I think he has been underrated by football people away from the Club. If you actually ask people within the game they know what he can do and I’m sure there would be a lot of clubs interested in him if he ever became available. Hopefully we can keep him here at Preston because he is a top player.

He has got a great strike on him, he knows where the goal is and he has got great technique. The thing with Paul is that he wants to help the team so much that he does a lot of defending and sometimes because he is so unselfish and he helps the team he probably doesn’t get into those goalscoring positions like other people do. That’s just down to the type of character that he is, he helps the team and he puts the team first, if he became a bit more selfish and didn’t defend so much he could probably get 10 goals a season every year. He always thinks about the team first and that is what makes him the player that he is.

When David Moyes took over as manager I think it was an upturn in a lot of players’ careers, Paul was one of those players and so was I. David Moyes did really well for the Club when he was here and he did really well for a lot of the players, it’s great to see him bring his team back for this night, for Paul. If you ask Moyesy he will tell you what a great player Paul is as well, it’s going to be a special night for ‘Kenna’ and one that he deserves.

You never know, I’ve done something like seven years now and I’ve got another year on my contract and that would be a great thing to do. But three years is a long time in football, there’s probably only three or four players left from three years ago here, so much can change. It’s a long way away, it would be great for me to get that far but I am not thinking that far ahead to be honest.

Quotes: Paul Simpson – July 15th 2006

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It was absolutely roasting, I feel as if I have burnt my face watching that game today, I dread to think what it was like for the players to play in it.

It’s bound to to be fair, but it’s pre-season, it’s about getting the match fitness, we know that the lads are not going to be fully fit for the full 90 minutes. It’s about using them right and building it up so that hopefully when the start of the season comes around we are all ready to go then.

It was a fantastic workout for us, I’m delighted that Hearts have come down to play us, we knew that it was going to be tough because you normally find that the Scottish teams are two or three weeks ahead of us, they are a very good side but I’m delighted with our players, there are a lot of plusses from it and we can move on to the next match now.

I’ve said all along, I want us to be successful and I’m still not going to be drawn into saying what success is. We all know what has happened over the last couple of years and everybody wants to go one better but we have just got to keep working to make sure that we are putting a team out that does this football club justice.

I was pleased with the reaction after the second goal, I thought after the first goal went in that we lost our way a bit for 10 or 15 minutes we got a bit erratic and we were going chasing things that weren’t going to win and giving silly free-kicks away and making wrong decisions, once we settled down we started playing football and created some chances. The big thing from today is that you have got to want to score goals a bit more, people have got to want to get into the box a bit more and go and get goals for us.

Somebody landed awkawardly on him and he just had a bit of soreness and I am not prepared to take any risks with anybody so I just took him off as a precaution but I expect him to be fine.

I’m hoping so, there’s nothing imminent at the moment but as with the ones we have brought in, we go about it very quietly until the point when we can let everyone know once he signs the contract.

Sean St. Ledger should be fine for Wednesday, Callum Davidson should be fit, Alan McCormack will be fit, Adam Nowland, Brett Ormerod and Andy Smith I don’t expect to be right for Wednesday. Matt Hill probably won’t be right for Wednesday but we will probably have to wait and see if he can join in training over the next couple of days.

Callum saw the specialist on Friday and the specialist said that he has got to go and try and get on with it, work through and try and resolve the problem that he has got, he wanted to be involved today but he has only had one day’s training so I decided that it was better if he had a couple of days next week with a view to being involved on Wednesday night. There’s still a threat that that could happen, the surgeon has said that he has got to get on with it, it may heal itself, it may not but we can’t predict that at the moment.

It was a good goal, he was brave to be fair to him, we had a couple of other opportunities, Nugent put him in second half but his first touch just let him down and he didn’t get in, he had other opportunities that I felt with a little bit more concentration and a better touch we could have got more goals, but that will come over the next couple of weeks.

I was very pleased, really pleased. The big disappointment for me was the two goals, there could have been more communication for the first and we should have been stronger for the second one, the lad should not have got through there when we have got three defenders around him on the edge of the box, apart from those two things I felt that we performed very well on the day against a very good opposition.

Friends Reunited: Kevin Kilbane

Gary Peters has a lot to answer for, if it wasn’t for the former PNE boss, three young lads from the local area might never have worn the proud Lilywhite of Preston North End and may not even have become professional footballers.

Within the space of just over a year in the mid-1990s Peters handed those three young lads their professional football debuts, the fact that the three remain firm friends and follow each other’s career is testament to what they came through to reach their goal.

Kevin Kilbane, David Lucas and Paul McKenna were all products of the PNE youth system, all three made their debuts between October 1996 and December 1997 – McKenna actually made his league debut coming on as a sub for Kilbane.

But it was Kilbane who was the elder of the three, he was the first to make his debut, the first to get a big money move and remains the only one to play in the Premiership. The Everton midfielder looks back on his time as a youngster with PNE fondly.

“It was great for me,” Kilbane told the matchday programme.

”I was brought up within half a mile of the ground, so to play for the club I supported as a boy was terrific. Paul was a year younger than me but I had known him since I was 10 or 11 years of age.

”I made my Preston debut during the promotion season of 1995/96 against Torquay United and it was obviously a big thrill. David and Paul weren’t far behind me, we had some good times together and I thoroughly enjoyed every minute of it.”

Kilbane, a member of the 1995-96 Third Division Championship winning squad, was soon thrilling the crowds at Deepdale and it wasn’t long before some of the bigger fish in league football were soon coveting his services and in June 1997 West Bromwich Albion paid North End £1.25 to take him to the Hawthorns. It was a record fee received for the Lilywhites and a big move for the 20-year-old but he never forgot his roots or his mates.

“I keep an eye out for the results of all my previous clubs, especially Preston. Personally I always like to see Paul McKenna and David Lucas do well and I keep a watch out for Lucas doing well at Sheffield Wednesday.

“It would have been great to see Preston in the Premiership, they were unlucky to lose twice in the Play-Offs, it would have been great to see Paul display his skills in the Premiership.

“McKenna is a wonderful player with a great touch and he is a terrific passer of the ball, hopefully Preston will be there or thereabouts again this year because I would love to come up against Paul in the Premiership.”

Kilbane should get a chance to test his wits against McKenna tonight though, he’s only come up against the Lilywhites once before, for Sunderland in August 2003, it was one his last games for the Black Cats before switching to his present employers.

”I have only been at Deepdale once since leaving the Club and that was for Sunderland. It is always great to get back and I am really looking forward to the game.

”I really hope that Paul gets a good turnout because he deserves it for the loyalty that he has shown to Preston North End,” added the Preston born maestro.

Quotes: Kevin Kilbane

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It was great for me, I was brought up within half a mile of the ground, so to play for the club I supported as a boy was terrific. Paul was a year younger than me but I have known him since I was 10 or 11 years of age.

I made my Preston debut during the promotion season of 1995/96 against Torquay United and it was obviously a big thrill. Paul wasn’t far behind me, we had some good times together and I thoroughly enjoyed every minute of it.

I keep an eye out for the results of all my previous clubs, especially Preston. Personally I always like to see Paul McKenna and David Lucas do well and I keep a watch out for Lucas doing well at Sheffield Wednesday.

It would have been great to see Preston in the Premiership, they were unlucky to lose twice in the Play-Offs, it would have been great to see Paul display his skills in the Premiership. He is a wonderful player with a great touch and he is a terrific passer of the ball, hopefully Preston will be there or thereabouts again this year because I would love to come up against Paul in the Premiership.

I have only been at Deepdale once since leaving the Club and that was for Sunderland. It is always great to get back and I am really looking forward to the game.

I really hope that Paul gets a good turnout because he deserves it for the loyalty that he has shown to Preston North End.

Fanzone – Have Your Say In Next Season’s Matchday Programme

PNE v Birmingham (06-05-07) Fan Photos

As we strive to make next season’s matchday programme bigger and better than the last we have opened up an opportunity for you the fans to have a big input into the publication.

This year’s programme will have the usual exclusive interviews, features, photo-stories and player profiles but we have also reserved quite a bit of space for a feature we are calling Fanzone.

It’s a pretty self-explanatory concept, the fans basically have carte blanche to fill three pages every week in the programme.

The kind of things we are looking for are the usual standard stuff, for example we will be running a piece called Dream Team, where you pick a favourite 11 players, favourite kit, favourite manager, favourite games and goals from history etc.

We are also looking for North End related stories either from the past or present, for example if we are playing Sheffield Wednesday you may have a particularly good story to tell of a previous game against the Owls.

We are also putting aside some space for fans photographs. So many of you take photographs at games these days and it seems such a shame to see them confined to photo-libraries on internet sites, send us your best ones each week and we will publish them in the programme.

We will also be following the progress of PNE-Online FC, they are a fans team who have done remarkably well in their first season of competition so far and hopefully next season will be just as good.

Basically this is your platform, you can send us absolutely anything at all and if it is good and we have got the space we will use it. Questions, queries, messages for particular players or even the boss, absolutely everything will be considered.

Reading the fans forum we know that there is absolutely loads of talented writers, photographers and designers out there and this is your opportunity to see some of that work in print.

If you have photos or stories which may be ready for print then you can email us at editor@pne.com. We are also looking for ideas or suggestions, not only for the Fanzone piece but the match programme, the website and our media output in general. Let us know what you want and we will endeavour to deliver it.

Many Thanks

Matt Morris and Becky Ashton

PNE MEDIA

Club Legend: Ian Bryson, Preston North End

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Ian Bryson is one of only two North End players to score a goal in a Play-Off Final for the Lilywhites. The Scottish midfielder was involved in one of PNE’s most thrilling of Play-Off campaigns in the 1993/94 season, it would almost inevitably end in disappointment, but the former PNE captain still has fond memories of that month of May in ’94.

You gave yourself and uphill task in that First Leg defeat at Torquay.
Yes, we lost 2-0, we didn’t play particularly well at all and we were probably quite lucky to come away losing just 2-0. That obviously set us up for the home game, the last game on the Astroturf.

It can’t have been a happy journey home all the way from the south coast?
It wasn’t, we were all disappointed, we had let ourselves down and we just didn’t perform on the day and that was the biggest thing. Not that we thought we didn’t have a chance, we knew that it would be hard at Deepdale but we more or less got together and decided to give it our best shot.

John Beck was famous for his unusual training methods, did he do anything different in the build up to that game?
Not really, we trained as normal, we didn’t have our own training facilities in those days, we did a lot of training at the barracks that week. We didn’t do anything different that set us up, we all knew what was at stake, not many of us had ever been to Wembley and when you look back you think that there wasn’t many years of Wembley left. We’d more or less dominated the season and we shouldn’t really have been in that situation of being in the Play-Offs and I think it was up to us to put it right.

We got an early goal but then they equalised which made your task doubly hard.
We knew that that would make it tougher, away goals counted after extra-time in those days so we all knew that a clean sheet was imperative to give us half a chance. To get one up quickly was great but to lose a goal, we all knew that it was going to be very difficult. I think they got a man sent off which gave us a boost. I don’t remember the time of the goals, I think I set one up and I remember Hicksy [Stuart Hicks] scoring the one in extra-time to make it 4-1. It’s the only game I have ever been in tears after the game, it was a very emotional day.

That sending-off is probably what tipped the game in PNE’s favour.
We more or less battered them second half and that gave us the buzz, the crowd sensed it as well and once we got the one goal we knew we had to get it back to 3-1 before the end because we all knew the rules on away goals. The priority was always to get the two goals and once their man got sent off it gave the game that extra edge. It was a very exciting game, although we won 4-1 we didn’t create a lot of chances during the game, but it was one to remember.

It was one for the fans to remember and they piled on the pitch at the end.
Everbody wanted a little memento of the plastic pitch and I believe that there a few gardens throughout Preston with bits of it stuck down. There’s a picture in the old players’ lounge of David Moyes and Andy Fensome being carried off the pitch, it was quite an occasion.

You scored in the final against Martin O’Neill’s Wycombe, what are your memories of the trip to Wembley?
There was a long build-up between the semi-final and the final, it was about 10 or 11 days, but we prepared as we normally did. The big news before the game was the fact that all the players thought Stuart Hicks was playing but Mr Beck decided that Jamie Squires was playing. It was a shock to all the players and it was a shock to Gary Peters, we had worked most of the set-pieces with Stuart during the week so it was a bit of a gamble. We took about 26,000 fans down there, it was a fantastic occasion.

That was one of many unsuccessful PNE Play-Off campaigns, do you think this will be lucky number seven?
The year after we got to the semi-finals again and we got beat by Bury, home and away, we didn’t play particularly well in any of the games. We had double misery from Play-Offs in my time, but we won the Championship after that and that is the best way to go up. Obviously I went to the Bolton game and on the day the best team won, all the quotes were that the Bolton fans went to win the game and the Preston fans went for the day out. Whether the players had that attitude it is difficult to guess, as it turned out Bolton have done well and have stayed up. It was a disappointing day, as was last year when North End probably didn’t do themselves justice against West Ham. In hindsight and you see what West Ham have done, they have not been outside the top ten all year, there’s not many teams do that, especially after going up through the Play-Offs.

Last Three Play-Off Games At Deepdale

15th May 2005
PNE 2-0 Derby
David Nugent opens the scoring before Richard Cresswell grabs a last gasp second to give Billy’s men a two goal cushion.

17th May 2001
PNE 2-1 Birmingham
An amazing night at Deepdale as Mark Rankine’s last minute goal takes the tie into extra-time and after Francis’ strop North End win the shoot-out.

16th May 1999
PNE 1-1 Gillingham
David Eyres puts the Lilywhites ahead just after the break but David Moyes watches in despair as Rob Taylor grabs a crucial equaliser for the Gills.