There was a clear message from Gerry Quinn along the lines of "my way or the highway" as the new boss settles into his second month in charge and stamps his personality on the Liversedge squad.

Quinn, who has previously been in the hot seat at Conference outfit Altrincham and Conference North club Ashton United, has added seven newcomers to the fresh-faced group of hopefuls he inherited when he was appointed.

Almost all of the first team had gone their separate ways after previous manager Eugene Lacy resigned.

"I would like to think we have finished recruiting now but all the time people are ringing me and asking if they can come to the club," said Quinn.

"You never turn good players away so we will have to see."

When Quinn arrived he stated that his best quality was working with the players, coaching and improving. Now he has had time to see what quality he is looking at, he intends to bring them on through hard work.

"The work is staring to show already. We are looking organised, we keep it simple and make sure each player knows his job on the field. The rest will take care of itself.

"I will explain how I want certain players to play and I don't want any arguments - one boat, one captain, so to speak. If they do things my way and we get beaten then no-one can blame anyone but me.

"If it is clearly defined that I'm in charge of player development and tactics then I will be happy, even to accept the consequences if things go wrong."