Dominic Booth 

Steve Evans returns reinvigorated on mission to spark Bristol Rovers revival

The veteran manager has lost eight stone on a health kick since his last job and made an immediate impact by halting the League Two club’s 10-game losing run
  
  

Steve Evans and Bristol Rovers players applauds the fans after the 1-1 draw at Crewe
Steve Evans’ ultimate goal is to lift Bristol Rovers up to an equal footing with rivals Bristol City. Photograph: Phil Oldham/Shutterstock

The first task for Steve Evans in his opening match as Bristol Rovers manager was to avoid defeat, to start winning points again. Doing so at Crewe Alexandra, albeit with his new side playing against 10 men for more than an hour, at least removed an early monkey from his back.

Ahead is something far trickier, a task that would daunt many other managers, as the veteran coach seeks to fire the League Two strugglers – hitherto on a 10-game losing streak that had taken them into the relegation zone – up the division. The ultimate goal? To clamber on to an equal footing with Bristol City.

That was Evans’s mission statement after taking the job at the Memorial Stadium, though this 1-1 draw 136 miles north at Crewe’s Gresty Road perhaps shows how much work he must do just to keep the Gas in the Football League, let alone reach League One or the Championship, where City kicked off the weekend in 11th.

After being unveiled as manager on Tuesday, Evans doubled down on his belief that Rovers have been “operating at a level in the pyramid way below where they should be”. “I’ve thought that for a number of years. There’s two proud football clubs in this city, but I’ve genuinely always believed that Bristol Rovers can be a big, big club. The first thing we have to do to be on an equal platform [with City] is to win some games.”

The morale-crushing 10 defeats on the bounce spelled the end for Darrell Clarke, a figure previously beloved at the club for overseeing successive promotions in 2015 and 2016 but who ran woefully short of ideas by the end of that sequence. Rovers soon identified Evans as the ideal man to lift them out of the funk. A phone call with the director of football, Ricky Martin, in which Evans insisted on an initial short-term contract until the end of the season and was promised January funds, sealed the deal.

The performance at Crewe was far from a dream beginning, but it offered hope for the weeks ahead, as does Evans’s track record. He has certainly navigated similarly choppy waters before. When he took over Stevenage in March 2022 they were sitting near the League Two relegation zone after a nine-match winless run. Mansfield had lost one of their past 11 when Evans was handed that job in November 2016. He steered both clubs, and plenty of others, to League Two safety and beyond.

Evans has appeared reinvigorated in his Bristol Rovers tracksuit this week and on the touchline at Crewe, perhaps a consequence of his dramatic weight loss – he has lost eight stone since his last managerial spell at Rotherham – as much as being motivated by the return to management. But now 63 and with more than 700 games as an EFL manager, he is back where he belongs.

Walsall continue to lead the way in League Two after holding fourth-placed Notts County to a 0-0 draw at Meadow Lane, but Swindon moved level on points after Ollie Palmer's second-half penalty secured a 1-0 home win against Crawley.

Will Hondermarck struck twice as third-placed Bromley made it seven wins from eight league Two games by beating Grimsby 2-0. Doubles for Aaron Collins and Alex Gilbey inspired MK Dons to a 4-0 rout over struggling Harrogate

Salford and Chesterfield remain in the playoff positions after impressive wins on the road. Salford won 3-1 at Barnet with Josh Austerfield opening the scoring before Nnamdi Ofoborh turned the ball into his own net before half-time. Daniel Udoh added a third and the Bees managed a late consolation through Oliver Hawkins. Chesterfield owed their 1-0 success at Shrewsbury to Lee Bonis' sixth goal of the season just after the hour mark.

Fleetwood are just outside the play-off places after substitute Zech Medley grabbed a late winner in a 2-1 home defeat of Gillingham. Michael Mellon bagged his second hat-trick of the season as Oldham beat Tranmere 3-1. Oldham played the last 21 minutes with 10 men after Mike Fondop was sent off for an off-the-ball clash with Tranmere defender Nathan Smith.

Bottom-placed Newport are five points from safety after another defeat at Colchester, their 14th in 21 league matches. Colchester cruised to a 4-1 win with Kyreece Lisbie, Samson Tovide, Micah Mbick and Jack Payne on the scoresheet, with County having to settle for Sammy Braybrooke's spectacular 35-yard strike. PA Media

There is no doubt the Scot, who has asked the club to put him up in a Bristol hotel with its own pool so he can maintain his daily 6am swim of 70 to 80 lengths, was thrown into the deep end with this opening assignment at Crewe. The Alex have not lost at home in the league since mid-October and pressed home their early advantage when Emre Tezgel was picked out by Reece Hutchinson and smashed home inside nine minutes.

Rovers may have been forgiven for caving in after the early concession. Many teams languishing in the relegation zone after 10 successive defeats would have wobbled – but they fought back quickly. It took Callum Morton less than three minutes to find a leveller, pouncing on indecision in the Crewe defence after a ball over the top and rounding the goalkeeper Sam Waller to score on his first Rovers start.

Crewe’s Adrien Thibaut was then sent off for an act of violent conduct against Clinton Mola and suddenly Evans’s side found themselves in the ascendancy. Tezgel, the hosts’ top scorer, was forced off with an injury and the game appeared there for the taking. But Rovers, despite an improved display, could not seize it in the second half. Kamil Conteh hit the woodwork late on but the 10 men clung on.

It’s a mark of Evans’s ambition that he was “frustrated and disappointed” with a point – despite it being Rovers’s first since 27 September and lifting them from 91st to 90th in the Football League, where they stayed on Saturday as Harrogate lost at home to MK Dons. “We know tonight we’ve left two points in Crewe,” he said, while admitting confidence is still in short supply among his squad. “I think those players, quite rightly, have received criticism from every angle,” he said.

“The players have been beaten and their brows are down but I’ve tried to work with them. It’s a testament to the boys in the dressing room that we came back from a goal down. But we’ve had two days on the training ground with the boys. We’ll be better after two weeks and after two months. I’m looking forward to January to make this group how I would like it to be.”

 

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