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Non-league standards are high but our academy players are poached for nothing

It feels strange to say this now, but early in my playing career I would look down on the National League. It was known as the Conference then, and there was a perception that it bore no comparison to the standard in the Football League. Few people would voluntarily take a step down to that level.

Now everything has changed. I would go as far as saying that the top flight of the National League is of a higher standard than League Two. The final weekend of the season looks tantalising: Stockport will be guaranteed to go up if they draw with FC Halifax Town and, whether they or Wrexham take top spot, you would fancy whichever side miss out to do well in the playoffs. There are massive clubs looking for a return to the league – Notts County, Grimsby and Chesterfield too – and you would not bet against any of them getting successive promotions if they make it.

It is the same at our level, the division below. At Hereford we fell short of the playoffs, despite giving it a good go in the second half of the season, but teams such as York have got there and it is easy to imagine them getting the momentum to progress through the divisions.

The National League is so competitive now but, at the same time, it has the hierarchies you see everywhere above it in the pyramid. It is getting more financially stratified: there are clubs operating with huge budgets and I know of sides in our division who, although they finished below us, have three times my budget. There are some who have at least £1m to spend on paying players and I would bite your hand off for even half of that.

We are seeing businessmen take over clubs with the understanding that, if they put wealth in and run them well, they can quickly take them several levels higher

Read more on theguardian.com