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Stockdale plans the perfect parting gift to team-mates
IT WAS an emotional farewell yet
a satisfying one. After playing
what would appear to be his last
match at the Darlington Arena,
David Stockdale now wants to
make promotion his parting gift.
A deal has been agreed worth
around £600,000 with Fulham for
the promising goalkeeper and, although
nothing has been signed,
he is 95 per cent' certain to be
leaving this summer.
And, having already had a brief
chat with Cottagers boss Roy
Hodgson, Stockdale is intent on
following his new manager's first
instruction to the full.
"I went down to Fulham, had a
look around, and the first words
he said to me were, Make sure
you get Darlo up this season.'
That's all he said, concentrate on
that, do your best and I'll look
forward to working with you next
year'," said Stockdale.
It was as if he had those words
ringing in his ears against
Rochdale. After Ian Miller had
heroically put Darlington 2-1 up
in the second-minute of injurytime,
there was still time for
Stockdale to pull off a stunning
close-range save to deny Rene
Howe a second equaliser.
Stockdale's acrobatics, despite
struggling with a foot problem
that forced him to withdraw
against Peterborough a week earlier,
highlighted why he has rose
to prominence this season.
The 22-year-old has kept 20
clean sheets in his first season as
a League Two goalkeeper and he
hopes his display against
Rochdale highlighted to manager
Dave Penney and the Darlington
fans just how much promotion
still means to him.
He said: "As a Premier League
manager Roy Hodgson has other
things on his mind, like keeping
Fulham up, so for him to take the
time to come and see a signing
that isn't a £1m signing from
Inter Milan, stuck in my head.
"He knew where I'm from,
what I'm doing, how big I am,
how many clean sheets I've had.
"It just stuck
in my head
that I wanted
to be at that
club because
of how keen he
was for me to
concentrate on
Darlington rather
than on the move
ahead.
"Some people can get
side-tracked and I'm glad I
didn't because it gives the
wrong impression to Roy
Hodgson if he was watching.
"If I hadn't had the best of
games he might have thought
is he the right player for a Premier
League side?"
After the final whistle had
blown the former York goalkeeper,
who was working as a
bricklayer for a couple of
months before joining Darlington
in August 2006, was
one of the last off the pitch.
He was keen to acknowledge
the Quakers fans who
have come to worship his
work in the club's promotion
push this season.
"It was a very emotional
occasion for me," he
said. "It was my last
home game as everybody knows.
I made a save late on but it's one
of those things,
it's my job.
"It was so important
for me
mentally to play. I
wanted to do it for
the fans.
"I didn't want
anyone to think I
was backing out
of a big game.
"My main job at
the moment is to
get Darlo into
League One and
we're one step
closer to that
now. I hope we
get through it
because then
people can't say
I was thinking
about Fulham.
I'm not thinking
about it at all, I
won't be until
July when I start
pre-season with
them."
9:02am Monday 12th May 2008
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