SWINDON TOWN: McEveley hails the Di Canio effect

Swindon Town's Jay McEveley Swindon Town's Jay McEveley

“MY ATTITUDE from this time last year is so different. I just see the game in a different light now.”

In only six months, Paolo Di Canio has changed Jay McEveley’s perception of both the game of football and himself as a professional, and the 27-year-old is keen to keep on learning from the Swindon Town manager.

McEveley, who has spent the vast majority of his career playing in the Championship, initially joined Town towards the back end of their League Two title-winning campaign last term, going on to sign permanently with the Robins over the summer.

Despite impressive career stats that show the left-back has played more than 200 times in England’s second tier, it is at the third level of the game that McEveley has had his eyes opened to a different way of approaching his job.

And the former Blackburn, Ipswich and Derby defender told the Advertiser that it did not take long under the direction of Di Canio for him to shift his mindset.

“My attitude from this time last year is so different. I just see the game in a different light now,” he said.

“I’ve bought into his way, the way he wants to do it, and no matter how hard he is and how hard the regime is, he is right.

“It doesn’t matter about the things he says and the way he goes through things, he is right. You sit back and say ‘okay, we’ve got to do it this way’.

“When he stops you in training he shows you the right way to do things. You think ‘that is right’ and it’s obviously about his knowledge of the game. He’s played at the highest level and it’s about learning new things every day.

“Even if you’re 35 and coming towards the end of your career you can still learn something new so I’m glad that I’m learning something new at 27 and hopefully will keep learning stuff.”

McEveley spoke eloquently about the small changes Di Canio has made to matchday preparation at the County Ground, most notably the fact that the Town squad reviews their previous game in detail - win, lose or draw - in a bid to become the best in the division.

“We come in and we watch our clips, what we could have done better and what we’ve done right as well,” he said.

“We did go through the games sometimes at former clubs but it was generally when we’d had a bad performance or you’ve lost.

“Here you can win 4-0 and there’s something you can improve on. There’s nothing missed at all, he doesn’t miss a trick the gaffer.

“You can come in and you’re buzzing - you’ve won 4-0 and you’ve put in a great performance and he’ll pick two or three clips where you’re not right and you’ve got to be right.

“You’ve got to focus on the worst and get those things right because, as the gaffer says, the performance, hard work and playing well should be normal to us. It should be normal.

“You’ve got to work at the things you’re not good at or the things that aren’t consistent in your game.

“I’ve been here long enough to realise that. Maybe last year when I was here and he was pointing these things out it was harder but now I think ‘yeah, that’s fine’.

“I’ll work on it and next time I won’t make that mistake and I’ll move on from there. Hopefully, if all the lads do that, then we’ll cut down on all the silly mistakes and that will give us a better chance of winning.”

Such has been Di Canio’s impact at Swindon, the players are even taking their work home with them as they try to fine-tune their respective games.

And McEveley is no different.

He said: “You think ‘I could’ve done that better, I could’ve done that better,’ you’re sitting at home thinking about it, you can remember what happened in the game and thinking ‘I should have made that run or made that pass’ and that’s what you do.

“I tend to do it Tuesday nights after the game and I did it this week in the house by myself. My crossing could have been a bit better, it’s been quite good the last couple of weeks and I’ve got a few assists, and I want to make sure that’s more consistent.

“I was trying to force things on Tuesday night, probably because we were chasing the game, but I’ll work on that in training through the week and make sure I get that spot on.”

Comments(15)

Chish and Fips says...
6:20am Fri 5 Oct 12

Quite a good insight of how PDC and his team operates.

batch says...
7:18am Fri 5 Oct 12

Good interview. I've wondered how players see it, and to some extent they'll all have different views depending on whether they are playing or not I suppose.

I've always though it wouldn't be much fun working under PDC, but that in years to come they would look back and realise he was showing them what it takes to be improve and successful. Good to see that some seem to see that even now.

SAPFanSTFC says...
8:43am Fri 5 Oct 12

Every part of life is different, some people go to work wanting to get better and get promoted, others want to stay doing the job and don't want the hassle of extra responsibilities.
---.
McEverley is one of those consummate professionals and is good enough to rise with us through the leagues...others aren't and in PDC's words "think they've made it when playing at League 1 or 2 level".
---.
You get the feeling that we've been unlucky with injuries this season but also that we're still missing a few pieces to the jigsaw....you want a Greer type kicking them up the backside if they start like they did on Tuesday - put the fear of god into them on the pitch. Macka is quality but not sure he is the fierce leader on the pitch we need.

CBCred says...
9:39am Fri 5 Oct 12

Interesting article but it couldn't have been much fun watching Tuesday night's video. I buy into Paulo and his ways and believe we will be a better club for his having been here but what disturbed me most on Tuesday was a failure to change things (fornations, tactics not substitutions) when quite clearly they needed to change. Midfield had no grip and was being overrun. Macca was one of the few players on his game. I would have brought him up into a five man midfield and gone three across the back. Macca's energy might have rubbed off on others and he might have been able to spark something. I was also confused as to why De Vita was withdrawn and Wiiliams was pushed wide as Rafa was trying hard and playing reasonably well whilst Williams was just having one of those days (rare for him).....still I am fully aware that Paulo has played at the highest level and I am working in a shop...but that had to be one of the worst performances for ages. Please Paulo, in Ferry we trust too. Could he start more often please??

southside7 says...
9:44am Fri 5 Oct 12

Very good insight. The fact that he's 27 alludes to the notion that the older players will appreciate/accept/re
spect Paolo's ways more than the younger players as they're more mature as people. I would love the challenge now of a boss like PDC, but don't think I would've enjoyed it at 21.

MITTED says...
11:18am Fri 5 Oct 12

A really good piece by the Adver. Just goes to show the quality of Paulo; he doesn't just focus on weeding out the negatives (which tends to be what the media and many key-board warriors zoom in on), he also looks for the good things and how to make them very good, and the very good things to make the excellent. That is good management.

Steve. Brentford says...
11:46am Fri 5 Oct 12

MITTED wrote:
A really good piece by the Adver. Just goes to show the quality of Paulo; he doesn't just focus on weeding out the negatives (which tends to be what the media and many key-board warriors zoom in on), he also looks for the good things and how to make them very good, and the very good things to make the excellent. That is good management.
Mitted, i reckon that Paulo is an impostor,you wait when Paolo finds out :O)

RamsburyRed says...
1:32pm Fri 5 Oct 12

This is interesting stuff, so much better than the usual 'must try harder' articles from players. It's a real insight into how PDC works and how he gets results. Really encouraging.

SeanG92 says...
4:19pm Fri 5 Oct 12

Blimey that ginger in the picture is strong eh! Don't even look like he is trying to lift jay! ;)

dreamofacleansheet2 says...
4:57pm Fri 5 Oct 12

It's amazing just what a tiny response the article has provoked. It couldn't be because it's a really interesting positive article from one of our players being extremely positive about our manager and his methods??

Best article on here for ages. Top work Sam and the adver but perhaps you're better off rehashing old controversial articles and you'll get more hits and comments!

SeanG92 says...
5:24pm Fri 5 Oct 12

People like bad news dreamofacleansheet2. thats why its pretty much all we see in the news nowadays!

Try making a good newspaper and you wont do very well!! Its a shame, but its true.

southside7 says...
7:40pm Fri 5 Oct 12

Steve. Brentford wrote:
MITTED wrote:
A really good piece by the Adver. Just goes to show the quality of Paulo; he doesn't just focus on weeding out the negatives (which tends to be what the media and many key-board warriors zoom in on), he also looks for the good things and how to make them very good, and the very good things to make the excellent. That is good management.
Mitted, i reckon that Paulo is an impostor,you wait when Paolo finds out :O)
Maybe it's his English cousin Steve? Wonder if he's got a Croatian uncle called Pavlo?

Steve. Brentford says...
9:27pm Fri 5 Oct 12

southside7 wrote:
Steve. Brentford wrote:
MITTED wrote:
A really good piece by the Adver. Just goes to show the quality of Paulo; he doesn't just focus on weeding out the negatives (which tends to be what the media and many key-board warriors zoom in on), he also looks for the good things and how to make them very good, and the very good things to make the excellent. That is good management.
Mitted, i reckon that Paulo is an impostor,you wait when Paolo finds out :O)
Maybe it's his English cousin Steve? Wonder if he's got a Croatian uncle called Pavlo?
Ha,or a Colombian nephew, Pablo.

Steve. Brentford says...
9:35pm Fri 5 Oct 12

dreamofacleansheet2 wrote:
It's amazing just what a tiny response the article has provoked. It couldn't be because it's a really interesting positive article from one of our players being extremely positive about our manager and his methods??

Best article on here for ages. Top work Sam and the adver but perhaps you're better off rehashing old controversial articles and you'll get more hits and comments!
You have been posting on here for long enough now Dreamo to know that comments go up when our form goes down,you look back on any thread with loads of hits and you will find some sort of bad news or scandal,if or when we go on our next run of impressive performances the amount of comments will go down,because no one has anything to argue about.

southside7 says...
9:54pm Fri 5 Oct 12

Steve. Brentford wrote:
southside7 wrote:
Steve. Brentford wrote:
MITTED wrote:
A really good piece by the Adver. Just goes to show the quality of Paulo; he doesn't just focus on weeding out the negatives (which tends to be what the media and many key-board warriors zoom in on), he also looks for the good things and how to make them very good, and the very good things to make the excellent. That is good management.
Mitted, i reckon that Paulo is an impostor,you wait when Paolo finds out :O)
Maybe it's his English cousin Steve? Wonder if he's got a Croatian uncle called Pavlo?
Ha,or a Colombian nephew, Pablo.
Or an Oxonian half brother called Knoblo?

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