Our system detected that your browser is blocking advertisements on our site. Please help support FoxesTalk by disabling any kind of ad blocker while browsing this site. Thank you.
Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted
6 minutes ago, Gamble92 said:

Shown exactly what sort of bloke Mandaric was really didn't it? Finally found a manager that was genuinely class after about 4 failed attempts and then let's him go. 

Pretty sure it was Vichai and Top who wanted NP replaced with a 'big name'. They eventually learned their lessons though and brought him back.

Posted (edited)
1 hour ago, Gamble92 said:

Shown exactly what sort of bloke Mandaric was really didn't it? Finally found a manager that was genuinely class after about 4 failed attempts and then let's him go. 

Then bringing in the hapless Sousa in the manner in which he did further endorsed it re "Mandyrich" I guess! Thank God the Thais then sought to successfully get NP back from his season long plus stint at Hull - and the rest as they say is history!! 

Edited by Guy
Posted

i still wear the number 12 shirt, i started because i adored this guy! I actually recently needed a black shirt for a 7s game and whacked out my tops tiles matty fryatt shirt from league 1 just a few weeks ago. 

 

absolute miracle it fits but that’s what you get with the old designs.. the mediums were humongous 

 

  • Like 1
Posted

Lovely if limited lad who came into his own when playing in the third tier. Anyone who didn’t replicate the gash of previous seasons was always going to be sung about with love. And what words of love they were - do do do. Smashing, isn’t it.

Posted
9 hours ago, SouthStandUpperTier said:

Pretty sure it was Vichai and Top who wanted NP replaced with a 'big name'. They eventually learned their lessons though and brought him back.

Paulo Sousa? 

Posted

Just a lack of pace that did for him and that was mainly down to injuries. Such a great player; intelligent footballer with such quick feet.

 

Was a guy I was begging for us to sign for ages and was so pleased we did.

Posted
9 hours ago, SouthStandUpperTier said:

Pretty sure it was Vichai and Top who wanted NP replaced with a 'big name'. They eventually learned their lessons though and brought him back.

Yeah Vichai did NP dirty by having Sousa in a box at Cardiff we are lead to believe.

Posted
2 hours ago, Gamble92 said:

Paulo Sousa? 

Yeah. Mandoric had the new owners in the box for the second leg at Cardiff and, I'm led to believe, Sousa too. It obviously pissed Pearson off and rightly so. Pearson clearly didn't have a good relationship with Hoos at the time either.

Posted
On 26/11/2022 at 17:17, davieG said:

https://www.lcfc.com/news/2917860/matty-fryatt--catching-up-with-a-foxes-favourite/featured - With pictures

 

Former Foxes striker Matty Fryatt looks back on his footballing career, from a season as champions to the lows of relegation.
ByMatthew Temple

In 2006, Leicester City completed the signing of teenage sensation, Matty Fryatt from Walsall FC, for the low-cut price of £135,000. 

A Foxes career spanning over six years, which included 62 goals and one league title, made Fryatt a fan favourite among the Leicester faithful. 

To this day, Fryatt still holds the record for the fastest-ever Leicester City goal, when it took him just nine seconds to find the net, in a 2-1 defeat to Preston in April of 2006. He was also the first player in 42 years to reach 20 goals before Christmas and was the first to score successive hat-tricks in 83 years.

Now a 36-year-old, and Under-15s coach at Walsall, Fryatt spent an afternoon with us at the Meynell Ingram Arms in Burton to talk us through his playing days, with honest reflections of team-mates, managers, and fans, as the former Fox unravels the rollercoaster tale of his time on Filbert Way. 

“I got into football with a friend who lived around the corner,” the former striker told LCFC.com, as he began telling the story of his footballing career. 

 

“I went and played this game, we lost 9-2, but I got Man of the Match because I held my position and stayed on the wing. I got a bag of sweets at the end of the game!

“The following season, I got picked up by Hammerwich. I was there for three or four years. It was 11-a-side on full pitches, with massive goals and tiny little goalkeepers.

“I was a bit like Jamie Vardy back then believe it or not! I was up top, quicker than the rest, and you’ve just got to beat a ‘keeper who’s got no chance! You’d score a hatful.

“We played a tournament at the back of Walsall’s stadium and played the home side themself. I think we beat them and then they said they’d take three of the lads on a trial and I was one of the chosen few.”

After spending a few weeks on trial, mainly in goal, Walsall signed a nine-year-old Fryatt who explained had to wait for his chance to impress. 

“It was only once Walsall A played Walsall B that I really got noticed playing for the B side, he said. "We won 5-1. After that I continually played and got recognised. You get noticed when you score goals, and I carried on scoring at Walsall.” 

The young striker forced the hand of first team manager, Colin Lee, to giving Fryatt a chance in the Championship: “My debut was against Bolton in the League Cup. I got the last 10 minutes against players like Mario Jardel, Kevin Nolan, and Jay-Jay Okocha. We lost 3-1 but it was a good experience.

“Lee didn’t really trust in me - I was shipped out on loan to Carlisle in League 2 to get used to the men’s game. 

“I came back in February and played against Preston in March. I scored and played well. Walsall were sixth or seventh on Boxing Day, but eventually went down that season.”

 

Walsall then replaced Lee with Paul Merson, who took temporary charge, and the forward recalled an unusual experience at Norwich: “[Darren] Huckerby is tearing our defence apart that day and we’re 2-0 down at half-time. They’re all over us, clearly the better team. 

“I remember Merse [Paul Merson], at half-time, came in and said: ‘You know what? We’re going to go for it!’ He put me and himself on, so we’d go with four forwards essentially. ‘All out, we’re going to go for it!’ he told us. We lost 5-0.

“You may laugh, but Walsall went down that season on goal difference by one goal. If we’d have shut up shop, it could have been 2 or 3-0 and we’d have stayed up.”

Becoming a regular in League 1 for Walsall, the young striker caught the eye of Leicester City, who admired Fryatt, a striker that offered something different to their original frontmen in their roster.

“They wanted a poacher type to compliment to other three (Iain Hume, Elvis Hammond and Mark De Vries). Once I saw the stadium, it was a no brainer. It was the next level. I’d been at Walsall since I was nine and I loved it there, but it was the next step up. 

“Craig [Levein] was only there for about two weeks with me, but I felt like the players had a bit of fear of him. They were a little bit scared. It was that sort of style. But I was just a kid, I was fearless back then.

“We had a consistent team. I wouldn’t say we were world beaters, but we were solid, and we had enough to do well. But we needed more backing at the time. If you look at the signings, it didn’t quite work out the following season. It was a season of nothingness.”

With new chairman, Milan Mandarić, taking control, this saw the conveyor belt of managers be switched on. Nigel Worthington came in to help avoid relegation, which was achieved, but wasn’t enough to prevent being replaced by Martin Allen. 

“There was a hell of a lot of players coming in. Some you could just tell weren’t going to be Championship ready, without being too bad on them.

 

“Some of the stuff at the stadium was a little bizarre. He wanted all the flowers to be blue, white, and yellow to match the kit, but does that really matter?

“He also changed the warm-up room into a ‘sofa room’. He had movie posters on the wall, with the likes of Arnold Schwarzenegger up there. It was like going to the cinema."

"It was the chill room, but before a game, you’re not going to go into the Club, put your feet up and crack the films on,” he said comically. 

Further down the line, Ian Holloway became manager, and Fryatt admitted he had never known a character like him. 

“He could really wow a room," he said. "He had everyone in the canteen, including the staff, and he started jumping up on tables and delivering speeches, talking about Coach Carter. He loved that film. 

“He spoke about how we needed to be together and outlined all his ideas. It must have been about five or six hours on his introduction day. You leave thinking: ‘Wow, he’s a character!’ One had gone and then here’s this guy, who’s larger than life.

“Sadly, it didn’t really work out, did it? He had five forwards and he wanted to keep everyone happy. We’d have two up front, one behind, and forwards on the wing. 

“Forwards don’t want to be crossing it for another forward. Unless you’re rapid, you’re not really suited to that inside role or being used as an out-and-out winger. That caused a problem.

“That team should never have gone down, never. He’d probably say that he’d have done things a little bit differently. It was a forced team. I never felt there was a togetherness.”

Fryatt told us about one Holloway story – a night on the south coast: “We never did well at Southampton. We always lost. I remember it was about 10 or 11 in the hotel and some of the lads had taken sleeping pills to get some rest before the game and he calls everyone down for a team meeting in the squash courts. 

 

“He’s got bandages all over him. Apparently, he’s dressed as Patch from Dodgeball. He’s got his staff with him and we’re in the viewing area above looking down on this. His staff all start throwing size five footballs at him.

“It’s bouncing off the wall and missing his head. If any one of them did hit his head, he’d probably put himself in A&E. He then says: ‘Get the boys down here! This is what we need! This is what we’re about!’"

Reluctantly the players got involved, but Fryatt told us how, unsurprisingly, it didn’t quite have the impact that was intended: “We turned up for the game the next day and got smashed. I think we were 2-0 down after 10 minutes.”

Through all the stories, Matty could see what the managers were trying to achieve, but it didn’t change the fact the Club would be in League 1 the next season.

He said: "‘I’m not saying we were a special team - but strong enough to stay in the Championship, definitely. 

“It was the first time in my short career that I had no confidence, the doubts came in. Even if there was no ‘keeper, I think I’d have kicked it wide.”

Luckily for the centre-forward, form did return for the Foxes, as the appointment of Nigel Pearson sparked life back into the Club: “There was a sense that he knew what he was after. I went into pre-season games determined to impress and I think I scored four or five, and that continued into the season.

“I scored 20 goals before Christmas, but I’d say the season after was my best at Leicester. I was just tapping them in, Steve [Howard] had done all the work! But that partnership really came to fruition. It felt better to be a Leicester City player.

“We knew what the minimum was. You knew your job and there was more organisation, and a lot of people took to it. He (Pearson) formed a team that could do what was needed.

Following promotion back to the Championship, Fryatt couldn’t see why new heights couldn’t be reached, labelling the 2009/10 season the best he ever had with Leicester.

 

He recalled: “We got the sense in the first couple of games that there was nothing to be scared of... why can’t we carry on? It was a very organised, together, and solid squad. There was usually enough to get a goal and keep other teams out."

He spoke of that dreaded play-off game: “Cardiff was painful. We knew Blackpool had got to the final and we’d beaten them twice in the season already. It just felt like we’d got so close and yet so far.

“It was taken away from us cruelly and I don’t know why that change happened, with Nigel leaving and Paulo [Sousa] coming in. I could understand what he was trying to do. Maybe it would’ve worked over time, but we were trying to change too much.

“We weren’t that type of team, that would be free-flowing, and playing out from the back. Some of the goals we conceded… it was a mess. Sousa’s last game was Norwich away. I remember it because I got a red card. He thanked me for scoring and getting sent off!"

Not long after, Fryatt’s six-year spell in the Midlands came to an end, as the striker would move north to sign for Hull City. 

“I loved the first spell of it,” The forward said, concluding his time here. “I know I didn’t score the goals I wanted to in that second Championship season, but I enjoyed it. Then there was the mess, followed by a good patch before I left.

“The fans were unreal and when it’s booming, Leicester is a great place to be. I know being in League 1 isn’t what the Club would ever want, but maybe going down is what was needed to come up again.”

Fryatt believed there was a ‘togetherness’ formed throughout his playing days with the Foxes and says he’s still in contact with several his old team-mates.

 

“Michael Morrison and Jack Hobbs, I still talk to quite a few of them - I obviously had big respect for Steve (Howard) and that worked on the pitch," he said.

“I don’t think you realise what a good club it is until you go elsewhere. The grass isn’t always greener.”

Jumping to today, the former Leicester striker is taken back by the recent history and development happening on Filbert way.

He concluded: "I couldn’t just walk in now; I’d get stopped by security! I’ve been back since and I felt: ‘God, did I used to play here?!’ The calibre of the players now and the level they’re at…

“They’ve had some fantastic years and it’s gone to a different level. Can they sustain that? There’s no reason why not. It’s not always going to be Premier League titles here and FA Cups there but keeping that team spirit will help them on the pitch.”

Talking about the new training ground in Seagrave, the former Leicester man believes it shows dedication towards the growth from the club, and rivals that of even the national team. 

“The training ground is something else, it’s unbelievable," he said. "It blows St.George’s Park out of the water in my opinion.

“For me before, it was a tight training ground, but it had everything you needed. Now it’s just ‘wow’ – it’s a whole different level of professionalism. From the outside, you certainly think: ‘they’ve come a long way’."

Fryatt will be considered by most, as a true servant to the club during a period of high’s and low’s. An impressive Foxes’ career considering ‘it all started out with a mate round the corner, playing for a bag of sweets’. 

 

Nice little dose of nostalgia, still to this day I scratch my head over the meaning of his goal celebration at Cardiff in the playoffs.

Posted
9 minutes ago, jonathan_ross said:

Nice little dose of nostalgia, still to this day I scratch my head over the meaning of his goal celebration at Cardiff in the playoffs.

A few of them did it that year, King and Waghorn definitely did, wasn't it Call of Duty related or something like that.

Posted
10 minutes ago, Tommy Fresh said:

A few of them did it that year, King and Waghorn definitely did, wasn't it Call of Duty related or something like that.

I remember it influenced me that much that I also did it in PE

  • Haha 4
Guest Electric Yetis
Posted
3 minutes ago, FOXYTALK said:

Pretty sure he scored against Bristol Rovers. We were down 1-0 at home on a freezing night after 80 odd mins and he scored. We ended up winning 2-1 and bovril went everywhere. 

Seemed like a night match as it was that cold and dark but it was a Saturday 3pm kick off. Fryatt scored in the 88th and 90th+ minutes. 

 

Went to a gig in Loughborough that night and think it was the coldest I've ever been. Got a taxi back to Leicester and paid extra for a heated seat 🤣

Posted
2 minutes ago, Rain King said:

Seemed like a night match as it was that cold and dark but it was a Saturday 3pm kick off. Fryatt scored in the 88th and 90th+ minutes. 

 

Went to a gig in Loughborough that night and think it was the coldest I've ever been. Got a taxi back to Leicester and paid extra for a heated seat 🤣

A heated seat in my house was just wherever my Mum had been sat farting

Posted
6 minutes ago, Rain King said:

Seemed like a night match as it was that cold and dark but it was a Saturday 3pm kick off. Fryatt scored in the 88th and 90th+ minutes. 

 

Went to a gig in Loughborough that night and think it was the coldest I've ever been. Got a taxi back to Leicester and paid extra for a heated seat 🤣

Great game, Bristol Rovers one of the teams who appeared to sell out the corner that season. Kuffour scored a worldie for them as well.

  • Like 1
Posted

The guy could probably have had about 50 or 60 goals that season. He missed an insane number of one on ones. That league one team is one of my favourite. Great blend of youth and experience that we always had with Pearson's teams.

Posted

Even after everything that’s happened since I’d still have our 2-1 win on a Friday night away at QPR where he scored a brace in my top 20 favourite LCFC games.

Posted
On 28/11/2022 at 11:14, Fox92 said:

Yeah. Mandoric had the new owners in the box for the second leg at Cardiff and, I'm led to believe, Sousa too. It obviously pissed Pearson off and rightly so. Pearson clearly didn't have a good relationship with Hoos at the time either.

Lee Hoos at Burnley is where a lot of the animosity Nige had for them in 2013/14 came from. Said something like we’re a better club from top to bottom. 
 

Then dyche responds with the many pound notes comment 

  • Like 1

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Unfortunately, your content contains terms that we do not allow. Please edit your content to remove the highlighted words below.
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...