John Lundstram has gone from outsider to fan favourite - with a cult following beyond Bramall Lane, too. Ahead of Sheffield United's Super Sunday clash with Manchester United, he speaks exclusively to Sky Sports about an unlikely renaissance.
John Lundstram's phone started pinging soon after the final whistle and has barely stopped. "It's been mad," he laughs as he sidesteps puddles on the way to training. "People have been sending me pictures of clown feet for days!"
The Sheffield United midfielder is laughing now but though he "had an inkling" his neon right boot had rendered him offside - by millimetres - at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, a wait of close to four minutes as the rain fell and supporters grew restless really rankled.
"That was annoying," he tells Sky Sports, mulling over the David McGoldrick goal that was eventually overturned by Jon Moss, the VAR official at Stockley Park. "I think they've got to bring that time down; if they cut it to, say, 60 seconds, it wouldn't be too bad but you're waiting for so long… it killed the atmosphere; it killed the celebrations for the fans and the players."
There was no VAR intervention at West Ham a couple of weeks earlier but his phone was buzzing again after another admirable 1-1 draw across London. He had been at the byline, bamboozling three opposition players with a back flick executed so perfectly it should have brought the Blades equaliser before it finally came. There were cheers in the visiting corner of the cavernous London Stadium, heads shaking in bemusement and delight, and later he was a social media hit, Lionel Messi hoisting a doctored red and white shirt. "I saw that one!" he laughs again. "Messi in my pyjamas too! It's brilliant, it's all banter, good-natured."
It was only a moment of improvisation, fun and fleeting, but telling, too. A once peripheral figure, a player deemed simply not good enough by his critics in the Kop, was doing this - and in the Premier League. "I think it comes with confidence," he says, thoughtful now. "When you're having a run of games in the side, you feel like you can start trying a few different things; when you're in and out, you're thinking it might not come off and you might not be playing the next week…"
The talent was always there in Wilder's eyes. This was, as he put it, "a good kid who just needed a break".
A meeting between the pair towards the end of last season provided the impetus but Lundstram himself has wrestled back his Sheffield United career with the sort of drive he has displayed since he was cut adrift at Everton as a youngster.
"I thought maybe my time here was coming to an end but the gaffer obviously had faith in me. When he told me he wanted me to stay and had a part for me, it gave me a massive confidence boost to go away over the summer and repay him."
Lundstram credits United's coaching and conditioning team for the bespoke daily plan they devised, with targets he could track on an iPad "so there was no cutting corners".
The sessions, focused on power sessions, leg weights and upper body strength, were "a lot more intense" but he went further, working with a Dubai-based personal trainer because "I wanted a prove a point that I was ready".
That meant extra gym sessions, more running work in 40-degree heat, and time spent boxing too. "I think that helped a lot, the boxing. It kept things fresh, didn't put too much strain on my legs."
Were the staff surprised when he reported back to the club's Shirecliffe training ground? He hopes so, thinking back, but the important thing now is that he feels "fitter than ever".
It is certainly showing: he has so far covered more kilometres (134.2) than any other Sheffield United player in the Premier League so far and has made more sprints (127) than anyone else, according to Opta's running data.
He is putting in the yards but thriving in a modified system honed throughout pre-season, operating alongside John Fleck and Oliver Norwood in a midfield three following the departure of Mark Duffy and the sacrifice of last season's 3-4-1-2 formation.
Flatter out of possession, the extra body is designed to help block passing lines and snuff out the counter-attack as Wilfried Zaha, for one, will attest but when his team-mates have the ball, Lundstram has licence to get forward.
"It's about solidarity really. We know we're not going to have as much of the ball in the Premier League so I can help bring that. But they also want me to get into the box in an attacking sense at the same time and get goals.
"We do a lot of work on the shape - drills focused on getting the ball wide, (Chris) Basham and George (Baldock) overlapping, creating the overloads, getting the triangles right. We work on the movement of the strikers and when the ball's on the left side, me getting in the box. I want to keep getting into those positions, adding goals and assists."
He suffered for what he wasn't, the deep-lying playmaker that Paul Coutts emphatically was. United went top of the Championship on the night Coutts broke his leg but they would finish 10th in that first season back, Lundstram tarnished by association. Norwood would soon arrive, promotion eventually followed and a crunching tackle on Aston Villa's Jack Grealish only briefly elevated the status of a player increasingly cast as scapegoat.
"It was massive shoes for me to fill at a young age," he says with a sigh no but hint of bitterness. "Couttsy was a massive fan favourite, an unbelievable player. It was tough but hopefully I've grown as a player and as a person. I feel I'm coming into my prime now."
He is, at 25, and it is easy to forget that he was signed in a £700,000 deal in 2017 for his potential until circumstance intervened. "We believe we can develop him - he's one for the long-term," assistant boss Alan Knill said at the time. Knill, whom Lundstram describes as the "backbone" of a tight-knit staff, has provided emotional support when he has needed it most. "(Alan's) been massive for me. Last year he was always the one saying, 'Keep going'. He's always been there for me, putting an arm around me and telling me to keep going when times have been tough."
Like many of his team-mates, setbacks along the way have hardened him. Leaving Everton hurt - he idolised Thomas Gravesen growing up, despite being a boyhood Liverpool fan - but he had grown tired of being shunted from loan to loan. There was a successful spell at Doncaster, a frustrating one at Yeovil - "it wasn't the right club because we never had the ball," he once told The Guardian - and stints at Leyton Orient, Blackpool, Scunthorpe before he took charge and found a permanent home at Oxford United, where he could start again.
The journey has fuelled him. "It's given me the drive to get back up, to make my family proud and prove people wrong. That's always been in the back of my mind when I've had knock-backs. I always knew I could play at the top level; I've always believed I would get there one day."
It is about consistency now; the sort he hopes might mean he is one day reunited with Harry Kane in the senior England squad, having started alongside him at the U20 World Cup back in 2013. Does it give him encouragement to see Gareth Southgate at Bramall Lane, watching the likes of Dean Henderson and Jack O'Connell? "Of course. Hopefully, if I keep playing well, he'll be watching me and it might happen one day."
A new contract is on the agenda in the meantime. "It would be great," he says. "When I spoke to the manager, I said it was all I wanted, to stay and play for this club." Personal reward that seemed unlikely now feels deserved but what is the collective capable of this campaign? "It's still really early days but I think week by week you can see the confidence growing. When we're playing the way we are you just don't know where it might take us but we all just want to make sure we stay in this league."
The next challenge is Manchester United, the Blades seeking a third successive home win, and Lundstram's phone will be going again in the run-up to a sell-out fixture that has, he agrees, extra spice "for a Scouser". "The rivalry has always been there. We'll be up for it. It's one I really can't wait for."