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Gareth Ainsworth’s Roy of The Rovers football dream continued this month, when Wycombe Wanderers made their bow in the Championship, after 133 years of non-league in the lower league echelons.
Wycombe gaffer Ainsworth hosted Rotherham at Adams Park on the opening fixture of the 2020-21 season, behind closed doors amid COVID-19 legislation, after Wycombe reached the Championship in the play-off final at Wembley in July.
Ironically, Ainsworth returns to his home town Blackburn Rovers on September 19 – the club that threw him on football’s scrapheap as a teenager, almost three decades ago.
“It left me in tears,” said Ainsworth, dumped by Rovers aged 18, after being part of the clubs youth team.
![Gareth (centre) playing for PNE against Wycombe at Wembley in 1994.](https://www.theleader.info/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/20200912_091358.jpg)
After getting the boot at Blackburn, Ainsworth’s Roy Of The Rovers return story kicked-off at Northwich Victoria in the nineties – that lead to a move to my home town club Preston North End, what was the first of three spells at Deepdale.
Cambridge, a return to Northwich on loan, a return to Preston, Lincoln City, Port Vale and a £2m move to Wimbledon encompassed his journey.
In 2002 another return to Deepdale on loan surfaced, along with a loan spell at Walsall, prior to moving to Cardiff in 2003.
QPR was Ainsworth’s next stop-off, making 141 appearances for the club during 2003-10, returning to Wycombe on loan in the 2009-10 season, joining Wanderers on a permanent deal. A brief spell at Woodley United followed.
His first taste as manager came at QPR, when caretaker in 2008-09; taking charge at Wycombe in 2012 and leading the club to promotion from League 2 in 2017-18 and into the Championship last season at Wembley.
![Gareth: Play-off winners Wycombe reach Championship.](https://www.theleader.info/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/20200912_091422.jpg)
Ainsworth returned to Wembley, having suffered defeat – ironically against Wycombe under Martin O’Neill – in the third division play-off final when at Preston in 1994.
“We are hoping to pull off a few surprises in the Championship – it’s new territory,” said Ainsworth.
“It’s a hell of a challenge,” said Ainsworth, who graduated from the University of Liverpool with a Diploma in Professional Studies in Football Management in December.
Ainsworth, who says COVID-19 lockdown has lead to a stronger bond at the club, has ambitions to reach the Premier League: “I have ambitions to manage in the Premier League,” said Ainsworth.
Roy of The Rovers is a British comic strip about the life and times of a fictional footballer and later manager.
It be a No.1 hit for Ainsworth, 47, who has rock ‘n’ roll through his blood alongside football, tutored by his mum, a former professional singer in the sixties.
He formed band APA, while at Wimbledon as a player. Bands, Dog Chewed The Handle and Road To Eden followed. In November 2019, Ainsworth became lead singer of Cold Blooded Hearts.
With a Roy of The Rovers story in the locker and his dad being a former bookie, don’t rule out the odds: “It would be a dream come true – to do it with Wycombe,” said Ainsworth.