SNAP DECISION

I took non-league side on epic FA Cup run but I’m better known for keeping Classic FM-loving crocodile in my living room

Prison officer forced to sleep in loft after spending £20,000 converting house for croc and all his other exotic pets

CHRIS WELLER made a name for himself with a series of upsets during a spectacular FA Cup run.

Now he has to make sure he keeps his pet crocodile very happy indeed by keeping the radio tuned in to Classic FM.

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Chris Weller was part-time manager of Gravesend & Northfleet in the 1990sCredit: PA
Now he owns a pet crocodile at his Kent home called CaesarCredit: Times Newspapers Ltd
Weller is unable to go out for long and leave the croc unattendedCredit: Caters News Agency
The owner plays card games, watches TV and listens to the radio with his unlikely 'closest companion'Credit: Caters News Agency

Weller, a former prison officer for 40 years at HMP Rochester, was part-time Gravesend & Northfleet manager during the 1990s.

And in 1995-96, he took then-Southern League Premier Division outfit all the way to the third round of the FA Cup.

Gravesend & Northfleet - who became Ebbsfleet United in 2007 - played a staggering TEN matches in the competition in that memorable season, culminating with a trip to Premier League Aston Villa.

The non-league Kent club came through the first, second and third rounds of qualifying before needing not one but two replays to get past Marlow and book their spot in the first round proper.

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There, they beat Colchester United before needing a replay to get past Cinderford Town to then draw Villa.

Initially, the Fleet were given a home tie but conceded the advantage to play the match at Villa Park - and reap the financial rewards instead.

Gravesend & Northfleet put up a valiant effort but ultimately lost 3-0 to a side that included Gareth Southgate, Dwight Yorke and Andy Townsend as Brian Little’s men reached the semi-finals. 

But for Little’s opposite number Weller, he took a very different path.

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Because he decided to spend more than £20,000 converting his Strood bungalow into a home for exotic pets - none more so than his 6ft spectacled caiman croc called Caesar.

Weller, now in his late 70s, bought the South American native when he was just 1ft long in 2007 from a specialist shop in Kent after obtaining a council licence to keep dangerous animals.

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Gravesend & Northfleet's 1994-95 FA Cup run

1st qualifying round: Gravesend & Northfleet 7-0 Godalming & Guilford

2nd qualifying round: Molesey 0-6 Gravesend & Northfleet

3rd qualifying round: Gravesend & Northfleet 2-1 Carshalton Athletic

4th qualifying round: Gravesend & Northfleet 1-1 Marlow 

4th qualifying round replay 1: Marlow 3-3 Gravesend & Northfleet

4th qualifying round replay 2: Gravesend & Northfleet 4-0 Marlow

1st round proper: Gravesend & Northfleet 2-0 Colchester United

2nd round proper: Cinderford Town 1-1 Gravesend & Northfleet

2nd round proper replay: Gravesend & Northfleet 3-0 Cinderford Town 

3rd round proper: Aston Villa 3-0 Gravesend & Northfleet

His conservatory is an 8ftx8ft pool while the dining room provides “land area” for Caesar and a stable door allows the reptile to make his way around the house, which has a secure three-lock system to ensure the crocodile won’t escape outside.

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While retired Weller does not have any human housemates, it is a very full house with three parrots, a cockatiel, a cockatoo, five ponds of fish and several terrapins - plus a monitor lizard who occupies the bedroom.

That leaves the former prison worker to sleep in the relative safety of the tiny converted loft - while he cannot leave the house and the animals unattended except for essentials.

But Weller would not have it any other way.

The ex-football manager told in 2016: “It’s not everyone’s cup of tea… it takes a lot of expertise.”

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