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Kevin Nolan axed by the Mercury after 23 years

edited February 2009 in General Charlton
Unhappy to report that cutbacks at the SLP/Mercury have claimed the scalp of Charlton's longest-serving reporter, Kevin Nolan, after 23 years.

Together with Millwall reporter Neill Lebbell, Kevin's freelance services were apparently dispensed with in midweek and it does not appear he will even get the chance to sign off his epic series of match reports, which began at Shrewsbury as Lennie Lawrence's side were earning promotion to the old First Division in 1986.

The SLP/Mercury group's other Charlton reporter Rob Kelly covered today's game - however, he is also leaving, so the future coverage of Charlton in the two papers is unclear.

Kevin was the last survivor the Charlton press pack from the early 1990s and has enjoyed a particularly loyal and appreciative following among readers as the Mercury's fortunes have ebbed and flowed over two and a bit decades.

There's no doubt that local press is feeling the pinch like everyone else, and especially so with the migration of readers and advertising to the net, but there aren't many football reporters able to write with the character, insight and depth of background knowledge about their club as Kevin.

As one of his former sports editors I think it's a sad day for Charlton . . . and the Mercury.
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Comments

  • yeah, real shame.
  • edited February 2009
    ditto another Charlton legend.Met him in a boozer at Norwich this season with his wife when little Joe was mascot.A good bloke remeber him on the old Charlton live days with Mark Mansfield
  • sad day a name associated with Charlton for much of my supporting life, hope he can find another outlet, plus a book on his perspective of Charlton over the decades would be good, I'd certainly be up for purchasing pre publication
  • I always enjoyed Kevin's artful way of reporting. He will be sorely missed.
  • I wish Kev all the best. A loss for Charlton and local boxing.
  • Favourite ever Nolan article was after the game against Millwall in the first season at Selhurst, where we were 3-0 down after 20 minutes and pulled it back to 3-3. It was less of a match report and more a surreal account of Lennie Lawrence in the psychiatrist's chair.
  • I know him well, met him for a Valley tour a few years ago, never forgets a name. Always bumped into him at various valley functions. Top bloke.
    Charlton through and through
  • His boxing reports were quality too.
  • I know he's not a fan of mine, but don't wish that on him. He really was a lone voice in the local press, his matchday reports were required reading in the days before the interweb took off.

    Here's hoping that News Shopper or the Kentish Times group see sense and employ his services.
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  • I know him and his sons quite well, he is a top bloke.

    As for his writing, the bloke was different gravy, my brother and I used to race down the corridor to get hold of The Mercury to read his weekly match report.
  • HEard a very funny story about him at Barnsley game many moons ago, I think it was our man in the Algarve that told me, hopefully he can relay it here!
    Crying shame, a great match report, pure class
  • Very impressed when I met him on the Charlton Life Tour he conducted a year or two back.

    I also enjoyed his Mercury reports.

    Proper Charlton man.
  • Top bloke, lets hope one of the other locals see sense and pick him up.
  • Fantastic writer and a fantastc fella too.
  • This is a shame and even more so if another paper doesn't take him on board, very talented and unique in his style.

    Maybe he could/would contribute to Charlton life.
  • Agree with all of that. His Mercury reports back in the day were superb. Hope he can utilise his writing skills elsewhere.
  • edited February 2009
    Awful news, and a symbol of how many local newspapers are dying (waving NUJ card here) - initially through greed and a lack of investment by their owners, and now how many are just unable to cope with a changing environment where so much comes for free.

    Got to admit, I've not read his Charlton reports in the Mercury for a long, long time, mainly because I've not had a regular delivery of the Mercury here in Charlton for about eight years or so. But I remember reading him when I wasn't going to games, but getting a regular delivery at my parents' place, and seeing Charlton matches brought to life by his reports. Never properly met the guy, but I remember sitting in Bartram's when Millwall were in the Football League Trophy final and the commentator was describing the Spanners as "a family club" - and a voice behind us bellowed out "what family? The Kray family?" It was Mr Nolan.

    The local newspaper scene is dying, though - as far as I'm concerned, there is no real local newspaper in most of the borough of Greenwich; the Mercury is a cheap freesheet produced off the back of the SLP in Streatham and the News Shopper has always been an odd product, hampered by being based in Petts Wood and having to apply the same editorial values to an area which stretches from Nunhead to beyond Gravesend. Not even the best reporter is going to understand south-east London when they've got to work out of an office in the arse end of Orpington. At least the NS understands the internet, but there's basic fuck-ups in its copy which betrays how little its reporters know about the areas assigned to them. (That said, I rarely get a delivery and depend on what I read online...)

    And neither paper is helped by Greenwich Council running its own weekly propaganda sheet which is better distributed than either of them, and has started offering free advertising to small businesses. Like football clubs, local papers need millionaire benefactors and people willing to take a risk. Witness the Russian bloke who bought the stinking corpse that is the Evening Standard.

    That said, perhaps the club might consider withdrawing its "favoured paper" status from the SLP - after all, its news coverage stops at Deptford Bridge (the Lewisham/Greenwich borough boundary); clearly, so does its sport now.
  • shame a real shame
  • Will there be local papers of any kind in a few years time? Similar things are happening round my way with it looking as though journalists will 'work from home' - in other words, use their own computers, telephones etc - and email in their stories. And take the pictures for them too.

    This internet thing is the main reason, I'm afraid. I remember living abroad at the end of the 80s and the Mercury sent from the parental home, arriving on Tuesday or Wednesday, was the first proper information I'd have. I imagine that the Mercury may just start using the OS reports soon, as much of the CAFC content is paid-for anyway.

    Met Kevin once, Blackburn away, good man. Good writer too.

    Airman, can you say what the Mercury freelance rate is at the moment?
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  • Isn't he about 75? It's amazing how, despite watching Charlton for all these years, he's managed to stay so young.

    Hope he gets another job (if he wants one) , his write-ups are unique and always show that he`s Charlton though and through.
  • Remember speaking to him about the friendly at MK Dons, to say he was not impressed is an understatement.
    Top bloke.
  • On an away trip to Bolton I got to the coach and realized I had forgotten my ticket. I went up to a bloke and asked him to let the coach organiser know I would go and get it and not to wait for me.

    The guy said not to worry he had a spare - Kevin Nolan - Top bloke
  • edited February 2009
    [cite]Posted By: HandG[/cite]Isn't he about 75? It's amazing how, despite watching Charlton for all these years, he's managed to stay so young.

    I'm sure Kevin would want me to tell you that he is 72, although you wouldn't even know that.
    [cite]Posted By: BrentfordAddick[/cite]

    Airman, can you say what the Mercury freelance rate is at the moment?

    Pitiful as ever, I'd imagine. I doubt if the Mercury would have been paying much over £100 to cover an away game (including expenses!).

    I wouldn't presume to second-guess their budgets at this point, but having worked in the local press for a decade it was always difficult to understand their financial priorities. To be fair, however, under Westminster Press and Trinity ownership, the Mercury was usually prepared to spend more on freelances than the News Shopper or the Kentish Times and the latest owners didn't immediately change that.

    When I left the Mercury in 1998 the sports desk was folded into the SLP, which was always the likely outcome of Trinity's purchase of the papers in 1996. Neill and Kevin were a legacy of the Mercury's previous independence and the biggest surprise is that they lasted this long, given the vagaries of local newspaper management.
    [cite]Posted By: InspectorSands[/cite]Never properly met the guy, but I remember sitting in Bartram's when Millwall were in the Football League Trophy final and the commentator was describing the Spanners as "a family club" - and a voice behind us bellowed out "what family? The Kray family?" It was Mr Nolan.

    And mighty were the celebrations by all concerned when Wigan got their 90th-minute winner . . .
  • I've met and spoken to Kevin a few times over the years. Always interested in what you had to say, and his Mercury reports were a different class.
  • A truly unique writer Kev, so entertaining and cliche free.

    Spent many many hours in his company driving up and down the country in the early nineties, had some great laughs, and a few arguments, but his company remains as enjoyable as his writing. Always thought he deserved a bigger stage for his talent - there must be one of the papers out there that recognises an opportunity when it comes up?

    As for Barnsley... best you ask Kevin himself. ;-)
  • top bloke and always a good read
  • Kevin and Hazel are near-neighbours a few streets away here in Grove Park, and always stop for a natter on Addicks matters. I haven't seen the Mercury for years, but Kevin's contribution was always entertaining reading, written with insight and passion.

    Wasn't there a magazine compilation of Kevin's Charlton features some years ago?
  • A shame, but a sign of the economic times that we and the local newspaper industry in particular, live in.

    He didn't deserve to leave the Mercury this way whatever their financial problems.
  • If KN can wrest the copyright off Tindle Newspapers, I'd love to buy a compilation of his Charlton writing, through good times and bad.
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