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Chris Powell article in the Independent

A nice article in the Independent on Chris Powell.

http://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football/football-league/paul-newman-charlton-reap-rich-reward-for-bringing-back-old-boy-powell-2368166.html

Shame there aren't more Premiership free Saturdays so we can get some more well deserved publicity in the national press!

Comments

  • For anyone that cannot access it:

    There were times towards the end of last season
    when even some of the most diehard Charlton Athletic supporters might
    have started to question the appointment of Chris Powell as manager. The
    former Addicks defender was given a hero's welcome on his return to the
    club in January, but after a flying start which brought four wins in
    the new manager's first four matches, Powell's men won just two of their
    last 19 games last season. Having started the year as promotion
    contenders, Charlton finished the campaign in the bottom half of the
    table.

    Powell, nevertheless, was always likely to be
    given time to turn the team's fortunes around, especially given his
    popularity with the fans, and this season has seen a rapid improvement.
    Despite needing a late penalty to secure a 1-1 draw at home to Tranmere
    on Saturday, Charlton are three points clear at the top of League One
    and are one of only two teams – along with Huddersfield Town – yet to be
    beaten in the competition this season.

    For a club which was playing in the Premier League
    only four years ago, promotion is clearly the overwhelming priority at
    The Valley. Charlton have made early exits from both the Carling Cup and
    Johnstone's Paint Trophy – losing at home to Preston North End and
    Brentford respectively – but have looked in good shape in the league.
    Their away form is particularly impressive: MK Dons are the only
    opponents who have taken any points off Charlton on their travels as
    Powell's team have posted wins at Notts County, Colchester United, Bury,
    Rochdale and Sheffield United.

    Attendances have
    held up well at a club with a reputation as one of the best for looking
    after fans. Even in last season's ultimately disappointing campaign
    their home gates averaged 15,582; this season the figure has already
    climbed to 16,184; and 22,151 – many drawn by a "Football for a Fiver"
    initiative - watched last month's win over Chesterfield.

    Powell
    has steadily changed the shape of the team he inherited from Phil
    Parkinson, who left at the start of January when Charlton were in fifth
    and only three points off an automatic promotion place. Johnnie Jackson,
    last season's leading scorer, was the only player in Saturday's
    starting line-up who also began Powell's opening match.

    During
    Alan Curbishley's 15 years as manager Charlton were a byword for
    stability, but his departure in April 2006, when he said he needed to
    take a break from football, was followed by more turbulent times. Two
    managers – Iain Dowie and Les Reed – came and went within eight months,
    after which Alan Pardew was unable to prevent relegation from the top
    flight.

    Charlton still had 17,500 season-ticket
    holders when they began the following season in the Championship, but
    within two years they were relegated again, Parkinson having succeeded
    Pardew in November 2008. On-the-field problems brought difficulties off
    it and at the end of last year the club were taken over by a group of
    investors represented by the former chief executive, Peter Varney.

    The
    appointment of Powell was one of the new board's first moves. The
    defender had established a reputation as one of the game's most
    articulate figures during his five years as chairman of the Professional
    Footballers' Association and was always thought likely to make his mark
    in management.

    He had his first taste of life
    behind the scenes when he returned briefly to The Valley as player-coach
    under Pardew in the summer of 2007 and had been working as first-team
    coach at Leicester City under Sven-Goran Eriksson when he signed a
    three-and-a-half year contract with Charlton in January. The first
    Addicks player to be called up by England for 36 years, Powell put in
    more than 250 games in three separate spells for the club and was a
    fixture in the team during their heyday under Curbishley.

    While
    Saturday's draw meant that his side missed an opportunity to move five
    points clear at the top of the table, Powell is more than content with
    his team's start to the season. "I'm happy because I've an unbeaten team
    in the dressing room and I have an unbeaten football club," he said.
    "From 6 August until now we haven't lost a game in the league. I think
    that's a fantastic achievement. We should remain positive and calm."

  • Wouldn't we be 8 points clear ?
  • No we would have maintaned our 5point lead
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