Crewe Alexandra F.C. Academy
Coordinates: 53°04′19″N 2°26′39″W / 53.071862°N 2.444094°W Crewe Alexandra F.C. gained a strong reputation for its youth policy, achieving official status as an FA Youth Academy in the late 1990s. By concentrating on developing its own players the club remained profitable (a rare thing in lower-division football at the time) by selling them on after they have gained experience with Crewe. The Academy is known to stress technical excellence, which accords with the aim to have the first team play attractive, passing football. Most of the club's achievement in youth development have come from former manager Dario Gradi, who was later manager of the Academy.
During the late 1980s, Gradi and club chairman John Bowler got the local council to contribute to the costs of an all-weather pitch on waste ground to the south of Gresty Road.[1] This formed the starting point for a youth coaching facility managed by Bill Prendergast, which by the early 1990s was coaching 120 youngsters every week.[2] In 1995, Crewe leased a 20-acre site at Reaseheath, near Nantwich, planning a £750,000 training and player development facility largely funded by transfer sales: since 1983, Crewe had raised £3 million in fees while expending just £200,000.[3] A year later, in 1996, Crewe received a lottery grant to develop a youth coaching facility in nearby Shavington[4] (which eventually replaced the Gresty Road all-weather pitch, removed during redevelopment of Crewe's main stand in 1999-2000). By 2015, player sales had generated over £20 million which had largely been invested in modernising Gresty Road and in developing its Academy set-up.[5] Crewe was the only club outside the top two divisions to have a Category Two academy club.[5]
Players who passed through the ranks at Crewe include the England international players Geoff Thomas and David Platt and Welshman Robbie Savage, and Northern Ireland internationals Neil Lennon and Steve Jones (Platt was the most successful, totalling more than £20 million in transfers and captaining the England team). All these were youngsters signed from other clubs, but Gradi also had considerable success in nurturing Crewe's own trainees - notably full England internationals Rob Jones, Danny Murphy, Seth Johnson and Dean Ashton and Wales international David Vaughan.
More than 80 former youth players have also made it into the first team at Crewe. In April 2013, in the team's final game of the season, manager Steve Davis fielded a team whose starting 11 were all Crewe Academy graduates.[6][7] This feat was repeated five years later by Davis's successor David Artell, formerly operations manager at the Academy, on 5 May 2018.[8]
Current Academy players[]
Graduates[]
Players highlighted in bold have gained international caps for their countries. Players who were signed straight to the first team from elsewhere are not included (such as former internationals Neil Lennon, David Platt, Robbie Savage, and Geoff Thomas).
Dele Adebola
Callum Ainley
Ben Amos
Dean Ashton
Ryan Austin
James Bailey
Lee Bell
Paul Bignot
Junior Brown
Mark Carrington
Max Clayton
Chris Clements
Owen Dale
Harry Davis
Maurice Doyle
Adam Dugdale
Paul Edwards
Rob Edwards
Gareth Evans
Nick Farquharson
Oliver Finney
Christopher Flynn
Stephen Foster
Steve Garvey
John Grant
Michael Higdon
Caspar Hughes
Rob Hulse
Michael Jackson
Eddie Johnson
Seth Johnson
Billy Jones
James Jones
Rob Jones
Charlie Kirk
Scott Leather
A-Jay Leitch-Smith
Tom Lowery
Matthew Lund
Kenny Lunt
Nicky Maynard
Ben Marshall
Chris McCready
Shaun Miller
Byron Moore
Danny Murphy
Luke Murphy
Mike Newell
Perry Ng
Michael O'Connor
Harry Pickering
Tom Pope
Nick Powell
Paul Rennie
Lewis Reilly
Mark Rivers
Ben Rix
Gary Roberts
Mark Roberts
James Robinson
Billy Sass-Davies
Danny Shelley
Peter Smith
Neil Sorvel
Kevin Street
Ritchie Sutton
Stuart Tomlinson
Matthew Tootle
Phil Trainer
Ollie Turton
David Vaughan
Richard Walker
Steve Walters
Ashley Westwood
Gareth Whalley
Owain Fôn Williams
Kyle Wilson
Andy Woodward
David Wright
Adam Yates
References[]
- ^ Hornbrook, p.36.
- ^ Hornbrook, p.56.
- ^ Hornbrook, p.94.
- ^ Hornbrook, p.118.
- ^ a b McClurg, Ian (9 February 2015). "The pioneering work of Crewe Alexandra's Academy". These Football Times. Retrieved 29 March 2021.
- ^ "Crewe 2-0 Walsall". BBC Sport. 27 April 2013. Retrieved 29 April 2013.
- ^ Scott, Ged (24 April 2013). "Crewe Alexandra: Dario Gradi's academy dream set to come true". BBC Sport. Retrieved 29 April 2013.
- ^ "Crewe Alexandra 2-1 Cheltenham Town". BBC Sport. BBC. 5 May 2018. Retrieved 10 May 2018.
Sources[]
- Hornbrook, Jules (2000). The Gradi Years. Crewe. ISBN 0953887707.
External links[]
- Crewe Alexandra F.C.
- Football academies in England
- Lancashire League (football)