Rob Lee: 'It's a dream come true for my boys to play Newcastle'

Rob Lee (centre) with sons Olly (left) and Elliot, who now play for Luton
Rob Lee (centre) with sons Olly (left) and Elliot, who both now play for Luton Credit: David Rose

At 7am on Saturday 40 members of the Lee family will pile onto a bus outside Rob Lee’s home in Hornchurch, Essex, and make the near 300-mile trek north to St James’s Park to watch Luton Town take on Newcastle United in the Third Round of the FA Cup.

It will be an emotional, and joyous, journey for them all. For years, the evocative stadium was a second home, Rob having spent a decade at Newcastle – he still calls them “us” – and a key midfield performer for the “Entertainers” who came so close to winning the Premier League under Kevin Keegan in 1996.

But, this time, they will be rooting for Luton and Lee’s two sons – Olly and Elliot – who are now important performers for the team who have been out-scored only by Manchester City in English football this season. Luton are, in fact, the Entertainers of League Two, which they lead.

“It will be crazy,” says Durham-born Elliot, a striker and, at 23, the younger of the brothers by three years. “A busload are going up… I do remember going to St James’ Park watching him [Rob], although we were usually in the box causing carnage. We all have fond memories of there.”

Lee shared an executive box with Alan Shearer, still one of his best friends, and has called in as many favours as he can to get enough tickets for this tie. “It’s a dream come true for the boys to go back there,” he says, sitting next to his sons at Luton’s training ground. “It’s the next best thing to pulling on a black-and-white shirt.”

Rob Lee in action
Rob Lee spent a decade at Newcastle Credit: Action images

Also on the bus will be Lee’s wife, Anna, her father Colin, and his own father, Reg, and the Lee brothers grin as the involvement of the former businessman – who was also a turnstile operator at Rob’s first club, Charlton Athletic – is discussed.

“He [Rob] is not much of a shouter,” Olly says of his father’s style when watching his sons play together. “He leaves that to my granddad. When I play at Kenilworth Road, I can hear him shouting in the crowd. Dad’s quieter, takes everything in, has a word after the game.”

“My dad couldn’t play football,” Rob says, laughing. “But he’s got an opinion on it! They are the worst people! He’s old-school. He will say exactly what he thinks, whether it’s right or wrong, he just comes out and says it. He swears a lot. But he supported me. When I was a kid, we had no manager, so he took over. He was president of a shipping company, so he knows how to handle people.”

For Rob, the tie is an opportunity to reminisce and the memories of the England international’s playing days at Newcastle, whom he joined from Charlton in 1992, with Keegan having convinced him it was nearer to London than Middlesbrough – who also wanted him – come thick and fast.

“People ask ‘do you regret not winning the league?’ and I genuinely say to them the five years I had with Keegan I would not trade for a league winner’s medal,” he states. “He played the kind of football I dreamed of as a kid. I played for Charlton under Lennie Lawrence and Alan Curbishley and it was all very structured. Keegan said to me once ‘I just buy good players and let them play’. I just wish he had won the league, then no one could question him, and maybe the whole structure of coaching would have changed.

“He didn’t really like buying defenders. He wanted to buy players who wanted to entertain. At one time, we had Ginola, Asprilla, Ferdinand, Beardsley, Shearer all playing. I had to play holding midfield. He called me and Dave Batty his dogs. I used to score goals. There I had to sit in.

“I remember when I went, I asked ‘who is taking free-kicks’? He just said ‘if you are playing well take one’. But there was such a long queue to take one. So, I never took one. I was there 10 years. Even when we were injured, we went to watch. We always scored goals. I was asked the other day how many 0-0s we had. I can remember one. Keegan went home at half-time. He did not like that at all. Everybody wanted to watch us play. I think we have lost a little bit of that. Maybe it’s the money in the Premier League, teams are scared of falling out of it. But people want to be entertained.”

Elliot Lee celebrates scoring for Luton
Elliot Lee celebrates scoring for Luton Credit: Rex Features

It is something that Lee feels passionately about, not least with the opportunities – or lack of them – given to his two sons, who were both products of the academy at West Ham United before being let go and dropping through the divisions.

“I’m proud of them and, if I’m being honest, I think both of them are suited to a higher league,” Rob says. “I might be a little bit biased, but I’ve been in the game for a long time and I know when people can play football. I’m looking forward to Luton getting promotion and seeing how they get on in a higher division.”

Those skills started back in Newcastle. “They were playing against my mates who were all professional players – Alan Shearer, Gary Speed, Warren Barton, Shay Given,” Lee says. “They used to come round during the season and we had five-a-sides with all the kids. I don’t know if it was allowed. I don’t think the physio was very happy about it. But he used to join in as well.”

Olly Lee in action against Blackpool
Olly Lee in action against Blackpool Credit: Getty images

Elliot joined Olly, an attacking midfielder, last summer after being released by Barnsley. “When the opportunity came up for Elliot, we had to weigh it up: When one of them is playing and the other isn’t, sometimes it’s difficult. But it’s much easier to see them play when they are both in the same place!” Rob says.

It has worked, with Olly adding: “I don’t know if it’s telepathy but we just enjoy playing with each other. Obviously, we used to play in the garden with our mates together and it’s always been the case that in training we tend to try and pass the ball to each other. Playing with your brother, you have to make the most of it because you don’t know how long it’s going to last.”

That includes relishing such a prestigious FA Cup tie. “We’re a confident bunch, we’ve got the players to take the game to anyone, so what better stage to do it than in front of 50,000 people at St James’ Park? It’s what the Cup is all about,” Olly says. The Lees will all be there.

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