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Archaic SPL rule threatens to ruin Accies' grassroots football



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Published Date: 06 May 2008
The SPL must reverse its policy on the use of artificial surfaces, says Hamilton Academical fan Scott Wright
A SHORT number of years ago, Hamilton Academical were relegated to Division Three of the Scottish Football League as a result of a deduction of 15 points, a penalty imposed when the club failed to fulfil a fixture because of a player strike.

The c
lub has been transformed in the intervening period and this season has emerged as the strongest club in the SFL in every sense of the word, with the Division One championship secured and along with it a place in the Scottish Premier League next season. A massive part of this progress has been the result of Hamilton becoming a community club with a significant emphasis on youth development. On a weekly basis, around 700 youngsters are welcomed and nurtured at New Douglas Park.

The benefits of the youth scheme are obvious and there are some current shining examples of this, with James McCarthy and James McArthur the best known of a rich crop of talented youngsters. McCarthy is an under-19 international with the Republic of Ireland, while McArthur is a Scotland under-21 international.

But a recent communication by the SPL to the club was effectively an instruction to tear up the synthetic surface at New Douglas Park, and replace it with grass because such technology is not allowed in our top league.

Make no mistake about it – replacing this surface and effectively removing the youngsters from the playing surface at New Douglas Park will drastically stunt the success of the youth programme, not to mention the development of the game in this part of Scotland at least. If more clubs were to embrace the technology available, such as Fourth Generation turf, the promotion and development of our young talent could be massively improved across the country.

A 4G pitch is relatively inexpensive, particularly in comparison to the grass and undersoil heating alternative.

There are other significant advantages to synthetic turf. You need look no further than two miles north of the Hamilton ground for a stark contrast, at Fir Park. Motherwell are an established SPL side yet the condition of their playing surface is disgraceful, and the argument that groundsharing with Gretna is the cause of the problem has been overplayed. Indeed, the club themselves have said the pitch is being used no more often than last year, with the reserves now playing elsewhere.

Not surprisingly the weather in Motherwell is almost identical to Hamilton yet six games have been postponed at Motherwell this season while Hamilton, with a synthetic surface, have not had a match postponed in the three years since the current surface was laid. In addition, the pitch at Hamilton is normally used seven days a week and is always in pristine condition come Saturday. And there is no underground heating at New Douglas Park.

We must try to remember the weather in Scotland will always be mainly cold and wet during the football season, and postponements of fixtures scheduled to be played on grass pitches will remain a way of life here. The only way we can change this is by accepting the role and value of synthetic surfaces.

Let us now also consider the financial implications of upgrading a grass pitch to SPL standards. The cost of installing a grass pitch and undersoil heating is estimated to be in the region of £1million. What is the sense in crippling a very successful youth programme and installing an inferior pitch to meet SPL requirements? This is an archaic requirement and anyone with a progressive sense of how Scottish football can improve itself should be concerned about the long-term effects on a club like Hamilton's finances caused by the installation of a grass pitch and the negative effect on youth football.

As if anyone needs reminding, the state of Scottish football's finances leaves no reason for complacency. Broadcasters and sponsors are important stakeholders, and there is no better way of ensuring that these investors get value for their money than by ensuring matches are played when they are scheduled. At the moment, the SPL is struggling to fulfil obligations under the existing television deal every time a match is postponed, which is unacceptable for fans and broadcasters. Sponsorship supports football, and television gives sponsors a profile. Scottish football simply must deliver on its commitment here, by ensuring there is a match to screen.

There is also the knock-on effect of fixture congestion. There are two teams in the SPL currently affected at least in part by not being able to fulfil their match obligations due to adverse weather; Motherwell and Rangers who may suffer on a domestic and European front as a consequence.

There have been times when the SPL has reviewed their regulations, as all professional organisations do, for example in scrapping the 10,000-seat requirement for stadia and temporarily allowing clubs to ground share.

The Scottish Premier League was absolutely right to take such measures. They should do so once again on the key issue of artificial surfaces, and reverse the policy which insists on matches being played on grass.

And incidentally, those who say Hamilton will gain an advantage in the artificial surface should consider this: In their successful promotion campaign this season, Billy Reid's team gained more points away from home than at New Douglas Park.



The full article contains 909 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 05 May 2008 11:39 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Hamilton Academical FC
 
1

sonofcosmos,

glasgow 06/05/2008 01:36:35
"is it safe...?.."
2

Rebus,

Brampton, Ontario 06/05/2008 04:01:04
I could be mistaken here, Mr. Wright, but a quick check of the final Div. 1 table would appear to show that Hamilton secured 46 points at home and only 30 away. Don't think that matches up with your concluding statement above. No losses at NDP and only 3 goals conceded all season. To claim that the plastic pitch provided no home advantage doesn't quite seem to ring true. You may have guessed by now that I'm a Dundee fan in exile. Congrats on your promotion, by the way. (That hurt!)
However, I do take your point about the apparent broader community benefit of the plastic facility. I would suggest, though, that to establish a level playing field in a competitive, professional, national football league, all playing surfaces should be uniform, whether it be grass or plastic. This would remove any shadow of a doubt that any one team training and playing on a plastic surface every second week does not gain an unfair advantage on other teams which may only play on plastic once or twice a season. Regardless of any denials, it simply has to make a difference. No?
3

Colin P,

06/05/2008 04:39:30
#1 Nah, stay under your rock....


#2 Rebus is from Cardenden...Fife. Not Dundee.

It's all well and good having a club at community level. A dream, actually. But this is 2008, Scotland. The SPL cares not a jot about the success or apparent success of it's members, as long as the overall entity does well.
Proof of this is the fact that, Although Zenit St Petersburg was given over a week off to prepare for the UEFA Cup final by the Russian Federation, Rangers had to conform to SPL edicts. We can't have the other members thinking there's any sort of favouritism, can we?
Dunfermline had to change their surface a few years back, thanks to the SPL.
You've more chance of Hamilton winning the SPL next year than all the other clubs changing their pitches to plastic. This would make only one difference, that being that Hamilton, at best, could win 1/2 it's games.

Sorry, but them's the facts in modern day SPL.
4

Colin P,

06/05/2008 04:41:31
PS #2
Where in Brampton? I grew up in Bramalea (yes, Bramladesh)
5

Magnet,

06/05/2008 06:52:17
Livingston have a great community development system and use astro for that but still play on grass.
6

Johnny Jambo,

06/05/2008 08:54:24
I think football should be played on Grass. I have played on synthetic pitches and I believe there are more injuries come from these type of piutches that there are on grass.
In addition only if all teams are to play on a surface should it become the rule. FIFA and UEFA do not allow major competitions to be played on synthetic pitches do they??
7

Johnny Jambo,

06/05/2008 08:54:32
I think football should be played on Grass. I have played on synthetic pitches and I believe there are more injuries come from these type of piutches that there are on grass.
In addition only if all teams are to play on a surface should it become the rule. FIFA and UEFA do not allow major competitions to be played on synthetic pitches do they??
8

Johnny Jambo,

06/05/2008 08:54:53
I think football should be played on Grass. I have played on synthetic pitches and I believe there are more injuries come from these type of piutches that there are on grass.
In addition only if all teams are to play on a surface should it become the rule. FIFA and UEFA do not allow major competitions to be played on synthetic pitches do they??
9

Johnny Jambo,

06/05/2008 09:05:48
Sorry did not mean to post 3 times guys.
10

Pmonkey7,

06/05/2008 09:10:07
Spartak Moscow play Russian league games and Champs league games on an artifical pitch and Russia's national team played Euro qualifiers on it.

Looks to play fairly normally on tv and the English FA did not make too many complaints. Surely this kind of pitch would be better than some of the poor quality pitches in the SPL?
11

Scotabroad,

Bergen 06/05/2008 09:15:24
Russia played their Euro 08 qualifier against England on an artificial pitch. Everyone loves playing on a perfect grass pitch, but how often does that happen. The new artificial pitches are really good, and you use them 24 hours a day seven days a week. Economics will drive them in, and lets face it, would you rather watch good players stroking passes around, or good players made to look like donkeys on bad surfaces?
12

just a jambo,

06/05/2008 09:36:32
plastic pitches are crap, bin it.
13

Johnny Jambo,

06/05/2008 09:54:19
Just a thought, why are UEFA making the Moscow pitch be lifted and grass laid for the CL Final??
14

Johnny Jambo,

06/05/2008 09:54:23
Just a thought, why are UEFA making the Moscow pitch be lifted and grass laid for the CL Final??
15

no fan of the sfa,

06/05/2008 09:58:33
If fifa and uefa allow "plastic" pitches to be used in domestic, european and international football games i'm sure the spl can allow them scotland.

When dunfermline had their pitch they were making around £100k a year from renting out the ground for other teams to play on. There were no recorded injuries caused by the pitch and the general feedback on the pitch was positive.

Why was the pitch banned - cos the OF were worried about dropping points on it. The celtic CEO tried to claim it caused injuries, when it was pointed out that bobo balde had caused more injuried than the pitch celtic and their cheerleaders in the redtop media went into overdrive.

The pitch is fine, let hamilton be, we don't need another gretna next season.
16

Johnny Jambo,

06/05/2008 10:03:16
#15 - I am not against artificial surfaces, but I think if that is the rule then all clubs should have them as I am sure there is a definite advantage to clubs with these type of pitches.

In addition is has been proved that there are more injuries on artificial pitches, there is less give causing more strains etc.
17

Hugh Hefner,

London 06/05/2008 10:31:18
Lets be honest, what the SPL needs is more money in TV revenue. What Hamilton needs is more revenue.

I feel that having teams playing on artificial pitches makes the league look even more mickey mouse than it already does and therefore will weaken our chances of gaining a better deal later on.

So, IMHO, it really boils down to the interests of one club against the interests of the league in general.

Im aware that a high ranking Moscow club play on one, but having watched two games played on it this season, I am not impressed by it and neither was anyone else.

Credit where its due, Hamilton have done very well, and by all accounts have a really good set up, but why do they deserve no favours - who do they think they are, the deluded Glasgow Rangers? - if they want to be in the league, put down a grass pitch and build an artificial one nearby....how can they afford this? - Sell some of their players, the same ones they have been talking up for the last few years (clearly with the intention of selling them on).

Thats business....and last time I looked, football was a business....There arent many teams in the world who dont have to sell on their best players to generate funds....thats just the way it goes!

18

Hugh Hefner,

London 06/05/2008 10:32:09
Lets be honest, what the SPL needs is more money in TV revenue. What Hamilton needs is more revenue.

I feel that having teams playing on artificial pitches makes the league look even more mickey mouse than it already does and therefore will weaken our chances of gaining a better deal later on.

So, IMHO, it really boils down to the interests of one club against the interests of the league in general.

Im aware that a high ranking Moscow club play on one, but having watched two games played on it this season, I am not impressed by it and neither was anyone else.

Credit where its due, Hamilton have done very well, and by all accounts have a really good set up, but why do they deserve no favours - who do they think they are, the deluded Glasgow Rangers? - if they want to be in the league, put down a grass pitch and build an artificial one nearby....how can they afford this? - Sell some of their players, the same ones they have been talking up for the last few years (clearly with the intention of selling them on).

Thats business....and last time I looked, football was a business....There arent many teams in the world who dont have to sell on their best players to generate funds....thats just the way it goes!

19

paulmac,

surrey 06/05/2008 10:53:34
A plastic pitch is not the right surface for a professional game of football...end of.
20

Hugh Hefner,

06/05/2008 11:10:35
11 - A pitch doesnt often make a good player look like a donkey. Being a donkey makes a bad player look like a donkey far more often than a pitch makes a good player look like a donkey. In Scotland we have far more donkeys than this post even has reference to donkeys.

Thats the harsh reality of it all!
21

Tuatha De Dannan,

06/05/2008 11:14:48
Good Morning all.

Good to see the Scottish version of Pravda, is dictating what we can and cannot comment on these days. Thanks for that guys your contributuion to "free speech and democracy is legendary".

As for plastic pitches, no thanks. There is absolutely no need for them. If you have a pitch that has PROPER drainage and undersoil heating there should be no problem in producing a decent playing surface.
22

Tuatha De Dannan,

06/05/2008 11:18:10
20 The pitch has HEE - HAW to do with donkeys, they cant even eat it.
23

Hugh Hefner,

06/05/2008 12:22:18
21 - Yeah, its interesting that nobody in the press seems to be asking Walter Smith if actually believes the rubbish hes speaking these days!

24

Magnet,

06/05/2008 13:06:54
Looks like the Celtic minded are being forced to do the decent thing ! Shame on you lot !
25

Magnet,

06/05/2008 13:07:06
Looks like the Celtic minded are being forced to do the decent thing ! Shame on you lot !
26

G...,

Scotland 06/05/2008 13:18:52
No fan of the sfa - I played at east end when the plastic pitch was down and it was atrocious... they didn't help by going for one on the cheap, which was actually worse than the dalgety bay sports centre pitch. 2 guys sustained ligament damage in 1 of the games i played in due to the "tiles" expanding up in the heat and causing ridges.

sorry to shoot down your OF conspiracy theory, but it was terrible...its now laid at vida dunfermline, where you can try it out yourself to see how bad it is.

I suspect the hamilton one is of better quality, but as a traditionalisyt...i'd still take grass over astroturf every time - although i've never smoked astroturf *cough*

27

,

09/05/2008 09:20:20
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