An FA Cup quarter-final at the Racecourse would do much to erase that unhappy memory

An FA Cup quarter-final at the Racecourse would do much to erase that unhappy memory.. It is almost half a century since Chesterfield reached the FA Cup fifth round and they have never progressed further. Perhaps such a lack of giant-killing heroics makes their manager John Duncan reluctant to talk up their chances of making history by beating Nottingham Forest next Saturday. "It's a very big game for us and we know we've never been so far for so long," he said last week after his side had caused a significant upset by winning the fourth-round tie at Bolton, runaway leaders of the First Division. "We'll have to try to get a videotape of them because there won't be a chance to watch Forest before the tie.

But Stuart Pearce has done a wonderful job there since he took over." Duncan also emphasised the importance of the league to his side. This may be essential talk from those enjoying brief flirtations with Cup glory but Chesterfield have been on the fringes of a play-off position in the Second Division all season. The manager is anxious that they do not lose touch by being diverted now. "I don't like to speculate on how far this side can go," he said."But I do know that they have work-rate, tenacity, team spirit It's always a difficult business We know they can play, we help them to play together. It would be very disappointing if several of them didn't go on to achieve at a higher level with us or somebody else."If so, some of this will be down to Duncan's careful stewardship, nurturing youth, spotting bargains, preferably free transfers from elsewhere, all the while building a team.

Chesterfield have improved in each season since he took over - for the second time - exactly four years ago. After finishing 12th in the Third Division they moved to eighth, to promotion via the play-offs and to seventh in the Second Division last season.This is unquestionable success yet Duncan, 48, might have been lost to the game completely. After a playing career whose highlight was 51 goals in 103 league matches for Spurs he went into management and had spells at Scunthorpe and Hartlepool. Moving on to Chesterfield for the first time he took them to promotion from the old Fourth Division and was subsequently offered the Ipswich manager's job.Three seasons of "so near but so far" league positions led to the sack and Duncan became a geography teacher, using the qualifications he had gained while playing for Dundee 20 years earlier. He kept in touch with football by doing regular radio commentaries and acting as an observer for the then England manager Graham Taylor, a task which entailed compiling reports on potential international players. He was fulfilled and content but the lure of the game in which he had spent his entire adult life was too much."When I look back on my time as teacher I think it gave me a fresh perspective on man management. Looking after a group of kids maybe enabled me to learn ways of approaching it differently." What it taught him most, of course, is that his time in it could end tomorrow."Life was a lot more relaxed as a teacher but over the last three games when it's all come together and then the other night when the finishing was there too, well then it all becomes worthwhile.".

Eager To raise awareness of their Premiership ambitions, Barnsley gave away 2,500 tickets to local schoolchildren yesterday and will have been happy at least to have rewarded their shrill support with the desired result. Their manager Danny Wilson, however, was less easily satisfied. John Hendrie's first-half goal confirmed that there is still good mileage in the former Middlesbrough striker's legs, taking his tally to 11 goals in 20 matches since Wilson released him from his Riverside obscurity in October. Overall, however, it was not a performance to convince the more sceptical members of the Barnsley public that the dream of top-flight football is about to become a reality for a club that has yet to experience such heights in a 110-year history.None the less Barnsley have already won the right to be taken seriously. The Oakwell ground is no longer the museum piece it once was thanks to the club's careful investment in two Premiership quality stands. Moreover, the football is sophisticated enough to have made the rest of the First Division take a respectful note.Wilson, a classy midfielder in his day, has built a team true to his principles, the difference between this season and previous promotion attempts being that Hendrie and Paul Wilkinson, his former Middlesbrough team mate, have added a cutting edge.The pair ensured that one of the First Division's more resilient defences had a lot to keep them occupied yesterday and combined to score the decisive goal.It stemmed from an unnecessary foul on Wilkinson by Neil Aspin, Vale's experienced captain, who brought his opponent down with a reckless challenge from behind almost on the halfway line. Aspin was booked and brought further punishment on his team when Neil Redfearn's free-kick launched a move from which Wilkinson, pulling back a low cross from the right, set up Hendrie to sweep the ball home at the near post.On the balance of possession the goal had been coming but Vale hit back swiftly, with Lee Mills and Tony Naylor each going close before half-time, and then made life difficult for the home side with some defensive readjustments, limiting the effectiveness of Barnsley's strike force.

Powered by www.ksafc.com