Bolton Wanderers boss Ian Evatt not a fan of Under-21s in Papa Johns Trophy
WANDERERS boss Ian Evatt counts himself among the vast majority of lower league football supporters who would rather not see Liverpool Under-21s competing in the Papa Johnâs Trophy.
For the last few years, the EFLâs decision to allow Premier League elite academies to play their kids in a competition which traditionally offers lower league clubs a route to Wembley has proven a controversial one.
Boltonâs lowest-ever attendance, a paltry 1,540, watched Phil Parkinsonâs side against Everton Under-21s in August 2016.
And while the current public clamour to see Ian Evattâs side should ensure a better gate tonight, the Bolton boss reckons there is little evidence to suggest that allowing âreserve teamsâ into the competition has had any positive effect.
âIâm not a fan,â he said. âWeâve had this debate recently and even though Pep Guardiola said it, I donât agree with everything he does and says. The idea of having B teams in the Football League - no is the answer, from me.
âEven though itâs probably good for their development, youâve seen with the success that theyâve had in this competition, they are not ready to play in competitive fixtures against menâs teams on a regular basis.
âI think it should be kept to competitive reserve team football and an under-23 model. I donât think thereâs anything wrong with that at the moment.
âWe have to remember a large percentage of these lads wonât ever get into Liverpool, Man Cityâs, Man Unitedâs first team and theyâll have to go and ply their trade elsewhere. I guess itâs a good opportunity for them to be in the shop window for potential suitors for the future. But at the moment theyâre still harbouring dreams of getting in their first teams there.â
Wanderers won a previous incarnation of the Papa Johnâs Trophy in 1989 and also reached the final three years earlier.
But when the new format was introduced five years ago, there has been little appetite among the public to see the Whites lock swords with the kids of Everton, Manchester City or Newcastle United.
Financially, Wanderers do stand to profit more from the Papa Johnâs than, for example, the Carabao Cup with prize money on offer, even in the group stages.
Evatt says his side will be going all-out for a win which should theoretically take them into the knockout stages, and, as ever, he has not entered the competition to do anything else but target a place in the final.
âI understand the public image and that it maybe cheapens the competition,â he said of including Under-21s teams. âBut for us it doesnât because even though obviously we will make changes, we still want to win every game we play.
âWeâre professionals, thatâs what professionals do, and you should never turn down a chance to play at Wembley. I did it many times, loved it, and you remember it for the rest of your life, so weâll have to make sure weâre at it, do what we can to prevent them playing the way they play and then all our lads are coached the same way, so they should know automatically how we want to play and what weâre trying to do and implement our game plan on them.â
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