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9:51am Friday 29th August 2008
Michael Husbands and Rob Davies have both been shown the door by Oxford United.
And manager Darren Patterson says it's because the club's highly promising young players have greater potential.
Former Wrexham and West Brom midfielder Davies was on an extended trial contract which expired at the end of August, and has been told he will not be offered a new deal.
Much-travelled striker Husbands, 24, who was one of Aston Villa's FA Youth Cup winning team in 2002, was with the U's on non-contract terms.
Davies made just one start, in the opening day 3-0 defeat at Barrow, but was substituted at half-time.
Husbands made two sub appearances, at Barrow and in the home defeat by Weymouth.
Patterson said: "They weren't quite what we were looking for.
"If you look at Michael Husbands and at Matty Taylor and Alex Fisher, we think the young lads are going to be better.
"And you look at Rob Davies and then look at the boy Richard Groves, who plays centre, or Sam Deering, who plays wide - we feel they're going to be better.
"He's got to be ten times better than what we've got and he's not.
"It does make us even thinner on the ground, I know, but I'm looking at Andy Murray, Joe Burnell, Groves, Deering and Levi Reid."
Both Husbands and Reid came from Macclesfield, and Patterson hinted that Reid may have done enough to earn a longer-term deal. Both he and young keeper Ben Hinchliffe are on short-term deals.
"We're negotiating with Levi and Ben," United's manager confirmed.
Patterson is still hoping to boost his squad before the August 31 transfer deadline.
"I'd love it to happen," he stated. "Ideally I want a big ugly centre half and a big ugly centre forward, and I think it's something we need, watching us play at the minute. The other areas we've got enough to get by with."
Patterson has already found and identified the players he believes the team need, but there are stumbling blocks.
Finance is understood to be the main one, though he refused to comment on that.
I was set to interview Keith Allen in the run-up to Treasure Island, but he cancelled. I mention this non-event because, Allen not being someone I naturally associate with children’s entertainment, my central question was going to be: “Who’s the target audience?” The poster gave little away. Was it even to be a kids’ show? Would it be dark and/or adult? And how would he be playing Long John Silver? Straight-up murderous or loveable rogue? Having seen the show, I still don’t have my answer. What’s more, I’m not sure the production team has it, either.
Charlotte Keatley’s gentle, nostalgic and also vaguely feminist drama My Mother Said I Never Should was the latest production by the ever-reliable Oxford Theatre Guild.
One of Sunday’s newspapers reported that Michael McIntyre was on the point of signing a six-figure deal with the BBC and looked in line to succeed to Jonathan Ross’s Saturday night TV slot.
Being someone who works from home I’d have to admit that my tendency to be easily-distracted is not always conducive to being productive.
November 18 2008 . . . Oxford United fans may come to remember that date as the day Sam Deering came of age.
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