Home   Sport   Article

Southern League Premier Division (South) football: Former Lymington Town boss Dave Lewis joins AFC Totton management team




FORMER Lymington Town manager Dave Lewis has made the short trip across the New Forest to become part of Jimmy Ball’s management team at treble-winning AFC Totton.

The 52-year-old will join the ahead of the newly-promoted Stags’ Southern League Premier Division (South) campaign.

Dave Lewis has joined AFC Totton
Dave Lewis has joined AFC Totton

Lewis will reunite with Ball and their fellow former teammate Paul Masters, formerly of BAT Sports, which is now known as Totton & Eling FC, to create a formidable football management trio with several decades of combined managerial and coaching experience.

AFC Totton manager Jimmy Ball (Photo: Craig Hobbs Photography)
AFC Totton manager Jimmy Ball (Photo: Craig Hobbs Photography)

During their time as joint managers at Lymington Town, Lewis and Masters took the club into the Southern League for the first time in its history thanks to a superior point per game average calculated over the two seasons affected by the covid-19 pandemic.

They then consolidated their position in the Southern League Division One (South) league with a 16th-place finish in 2021/22.

When Masters left to join AFC Totton at the beginning of last season, Lewis took on sole managerial responsibility with a team of coaches working under him. He once again led Lymington to 16th, despite racking up an additional nine points during the campaign.

However, ground grading complications at the Lymington Sports Ground have seen the team demoted back to the Wessex League Premier Division at step five of the non-league pyramid for the new season following an unsuccessful appeal against the decision.

Lewis played left-back during an amateur football career, representing BAT Sports, Bashley, Newport IOW and Winchester City, before becoming a player/coach at Folland Sports.

He won the Wessex League Division One title with The Planemakers during a campaign that gave him a new perspective on football.

During an interview in the AFC Totton boardroom at the Snows Stadium, Lewis said: “You’d think that after a title-winning season, it would be all the four-nils and five-nil victories that stay in your memory.

“For me though, it was those tight two-one wins that we had to suffer through, grabbing a late winner or withstanding a late onslaught to fight our way to a narrow victory.”

After a brief spell away from management, he played in the local veterans’ league where one of his teammates was Kev Hallett, the father of the newly-crowned AFC Totton supporters’ player of the year, Luke Hallett.

He said: “I enjoyed getting back into family life during that period, but the dressing room banter playing for the vets’ team kept me in touch with the essence of football.

“So, when John Pyatt called asking me to come and take over the manager’s role from him at Lymington Town, it was too good an opportunity to turn down.”

Names familiar to Stags fans, such as Nathan Hurst, Tim Stephenson, Callum Davis and Sam House, were among the players that Dave Lewis played a big part in developing while also achieving the goal that Pyatt had set for him by winning promotion to the Southern League.

He added: “Paul Masters joined us the season before we won promotion and made a big, positive difference.

“Although we ended up surviving relegation as far as the football on the pitch was concerned, Paul’s departure last summer did have a detrimental effect on the side.

“He and I go back a long way. He’s a fantastic influence in the dressing room who knows the game inside and out, and it was no surprise to me to see AFC Totton achieve everything they did last season with Jimmy and Paul working closely together.

“The three of us all have a very similar football ethos; the players have to be at it, always thinking about winning, and we share that passion for the game that has kept us all coming back for more year after year.”

Stags boss Ball welcomed the new addition to his management team with open arms and said: “I’ve known Dave for 25 years or more. I had played 10 non-league games and hated every minute of it and was ready to quit until Dave’ Mad Dog’ Lewis turned up at BAT, and I ended up staying for a good while longer largely due to him.

“As well as enjoying Dave’s company, I benefited massively from his football knowledge. Last season, with all due respect to the players at Lymington, we had a much better side on paper, but Dave had his team so well-drilled and organised that in both matches against them, we had to work really hard and think on our feet to find a way to beat them.

“They made it very difficult, and it’s that sort of knowhow – to get players up for it and motivated week-in, week-out, irrespective of the last result – that can win you valuable points throughout a long, arduous season.

“You can never have enough good football people around you, and that’s what we’re getting by bringing Dave Lewis to the football club.

“That, and I need somebody on the coaching staff who might get a round in once in a while!”



Comments | 0
This site uses cookies. By continuing to browse the site you are agreeing to our use of cookies - Learn More