x

Exclusive - Maguire talks to LFW after signing QPR pro deal

Youth teamers Danny Maguire, Matt O'Brien, Chris Arthur, Ramone Rose, Josh Ford and Lee Brown have all signed one year professional contracts at Loftus Road.

All six youngsters featured in the QPR youth side that has won the title for the past two season running fuirst under Joe gallen and then Steve Brown. Captain of that side Danny Maguire has been with the R’s since he was eight and kindly took time out to talk to LFW after signing his first ever professional football contract. 

Danny, congratulations on signing your first pro deal at QPR. How does it feel to be stepping up to the first team?
It feels great, it’s a massive step towards what I want to be at QPR, but all the hard work starts here. I just can’t wait for the season to start.


What are you looking forward to the most?
I’m most looking forward to making my first team debut. Hopefully, when I get my chance, I will take it and then go on to play regularly for Rangers. It would be something to run out at Loftus Road in front of a full house.


What are your aims for the coming season?
My main aim for next season is to stay injury free, a bad injury last season was a pain because it held me back at a time when the first team were short on midfield players and I always thought if I was fit, and in good form, maybe I would get the nod.


How did you come to join QPR in the first place?
I joined QPR when I was 8 years old, I was playing in a tournament in the west London area for my local side (Fisher Athletic), I was spotted by a scout called Micky Waldron. When I joined, it was the first season clubs introduced the Academy system, and I remember looking at my fixture list and seeing the likes of, Arsenal, Spurs, West Ham, Man Utd, Chelsea, Aston Villa, I just couldn’t believe it.


You spent some time with AFC Wimbledon last season, how did you find that? Will you be looking to go out on loan again and pick up more experience?

It was a big shock and a big learning curve playing for AFC Wimbledon last season, I played a game against Hornchurch at the back end of the season and I think I headed the ball more then I kicked it. Although the style didn’t suit me, I learned how to look after myself and it showed me the difference in class from playing in that game and training with the first team. It gives you that extra hunger to make it at this level.<


I gather you suffered a nasty foot injury last season, what was the nature of that and how has your recovery gone?
I felt a pain in my left foot in the warm up before the game away to Brentford at the start of the season, I told the physio, so he strapped it- it didn’t feel anything major. I played through the slight pain for a couple of weeks, then a couple of days after the Millwall reserve game, the pain was getting bad so I was sent to get an MRI scan. The scan showed I suffered a stress fracture to my Navicular, which ment I initially had to non-weight bear for 6 weeks in a cast. After the 6 weeks there was no real improvement, so I had to rest for another six weeks. After about another 2 months, I stared walking and then progressively after nearly six months on the sidelines and tough rehabilitation, I came on for 5 minutes against Colchester in the cup. Now it feels good, and fingers crossed the same problem doesn’t arise again.


The youth team you skippered has won the title for the last two seasons, what do you put the success down to?
The first year we won the league I would have put it down to us being fitter, faster and stronger then every other side in our league, but last year it was different, I feel we won the league due to the football we played, we passed the ball a lot better then any other team in the league, and played a system 4-3-3, which most teams couldn’t cope with.

Apart from your good self, who else should Rangers fans be watching for coming through the ranks?
There is a lot of players coming through the ranks- Danny Davenport, who also suffered a couple of nasty injuries filled in for me last season when I was out and did a brilliant job. Obviously Antonio German, who played the whole season for us last season, and scored plenty of goals whilst still at school, and also George Stollery looks like a good centre half.


Where do you see yourself in five years time?
Who knows? But I would like to see myself playing for QPR in the Premier League.

Discuss this story on the Message Board

Click here and be the first user to comment on this story

 

What to read next:

End of Term Report 23/24 – Defenders
Part two of our annual individual player reports for the season focuses on a defence which really came into its own under Marti Cifuentes and contains the two outstanding candidates for the club’s player of the year award.
End of Term Report 23/24 – Goalkeepers
The first of our annual four-part individual assessment of the QPR players’ performances during the previous season always starts with the goalkeepers – and, regrettably, that means we’re puncturing the recent feel-good factor round here by beginning with a negative.
The Coventry Conference – Report
Coventry away, for so long a fixture that loomed almost as large as the spectre of Eoin Jess over Queens Park Rangers, turned into an eighth away win of the campaign and survival party for a manager and support base who both really stepped up when it mattered in 23/24.
Coventry City 1 - 2 Queens Park Rangers - Player Ratings and Reports
If you saw the match, please give us your player ratings and a mini match report.
The season that was - Preview
As QPR, unbelievably, head to Coventry on the final day safe and secure, LFW looks back at a tumultuous two years at the football club, and the lessons it must learn to make the most of the potential it now has to move forwards.
I hear you’re a set piece team now father – Analysis
In his final analysis piece for LFW this season, Dan Lambert looks at how QPR went from being the worst team in the league for offensive set pieces to, eventually, kind of good.
Coventry left to reflect on another Wembley heartache - Oppo Profile
For a second year in a row a promising Coventry City season has ended in penalty shoot-out heartbreak at Wembley, only this time with some added VAR nonsense thrown in for good measure - Neil Littlewood (@littlewood88) and Dominic Jerrams (@SideSammy) take us through it.
The Copa de Ibiza - History
As QPR prepare to visit Coventry City on Saturday, we look back at connections between the two sides, past results, and Rangers’ last successfully foray into European competition with the 2005 Copa De Ibiza triumph.
Smith in charge at Coventry - Referee
Josh Smith, last in charge of QPR for the memorable Good Friday win at home to Birmingham, is the man in the middle for the final day trip to Coventry.
Watch me rise up and leave, all the ashes you made out of me – Report
On Friday night, under the lights at Loftus Road, Queens Park Rangers landed on their wheels, pulled over and asked what you were worried about.