Notts County may look at MK Dons with frustration at timing of Swansea City raid

Mike Williamson has been a revelation with the Dons, leaving Notts to consider what could have been as their season takes a downturn

Given that the Magpies are currently plunging into the bottom half of the League Two standings, it must be difficult for supporters of Notts County to believe how strong their season began upon their return to the EFL.

As County began their first season back in the Football League following five campaigns in the fifth tier of the football pyramid, the atmosphere at Meadow Lane was upbeat, but it wasn’t to last long.

It was evident to everyone members of the club that Luke Williams was much sought-after, and it didn’t take long for teams in higher divisions to notice his exceptional performance with one of the oldest football clubs in the world.

After the Welsh team decided to let go of Michael Duff, Swansea City eventually acquired their man at the beginning of 2024, and things have never quite been the same on the banks of the River Trent since.

Notts County 23/24 League Two season

Stuart Maynard, the manager of Wealdstone, was given his first full-time managing position by the club shortly after Williams was fired. However, since Maynard’s appointment at the beginning of the season, the County team has only managed one victory, and they currently appear to be a shell of their former self.

After winning just four of their first 13 games, MK Dons parted ways with Graham Alexander, the former Bradford City manager, rather soon at the beginning of the season. Alexander was fired by mid-October.

The Dons have tried to play a passing style of football ever since they were founded, and Mike Williamson was a standout candidate from the division below who was having significant success doing so.

Before turning The Heed into a promotion candidate in the early going of the season, the former Newcastle United player [shown above] had been pulling up trees with Gateshead in the National League, with promotion to the top division of non-league football coming in 2022.

 

Mike Williamson kickstarts MK Dons League Two promotion challenge

With a race for automatic promotion still in the works as the season comes to an end, MK has already seen a return on their investment in Williamson thanks to his commitment to playing football on the pitch and providing his strikers with plenty of opportunities to score goals.

Although the Red Dragons still have a game in hand, the Buckinghamshire team now sits in fourth place in the League Two standings, level with third-place Wrexham.

The Hatters have been pulled back into the race for the top three after leading the table for the majority of the season, but their form deserted them at the wrong time. They have only won one of their last seven league games, dropping them to only a point behind the leaders. ahead in second with two extra games to play

Notts were riding high at the moment, leading the table with County and Mansfield Town after Williams’ departure, and they were in the running for the playoffs even though the Dons were looking like also-rans in the current campaign.

However, one club’s actions can have a significant impact on many others, as is frequently the case in sport, and Swansea’s choice to fire Duff at such a critical juncture in the season has contributed to Notts’ demise.

With usual goal producers Macaulay Langstaff and Jodi Jones losing their touch in front of goal and an inability to keep opponents at bay, Notts’ record has collapsed, as evidenced by a recent 4-3 loss to Sutton. United epitomising their struggles of late.

 

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