WSC DAILY
January 2010
Moving football to the summer | Moving football to the summer |
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After the recent cold snap Sir Alex Ferguson suggested that a winter break would be beneficial for Premier League clubs. A knee-jerk reaction perhaps, with top flight games rarely affected by the weather and a mid-season break also conflicting with the international calendar. However, the non-League fixture list is severely disrupted year on year with clubs unable to rely on a large army of full time groundstaff or state of the art undersoil heating. Instead of wasting efforts in a losing battle against the elements, some are wondering if non-League football could be converted into a summer sport. The outgoing Chester City manager Jim Harvey recently offered his assessment of the attempts to get matches on during Britain's coldest winter for 30 years: "Playing football in the current conditions that we're experiencing is nonsense, he told the BBC. "Summer football is the obvious way to go. The pluses it brings are immense."
A club like Warrington Town, for example, are competing with six Premier League clubs within a 30 mile radius. If their matches were played during the summer attendances and revenue would increase substantially. Admittedly non-League teams would be in competition with the established summer sports but they would not provide anything like the obstacle presented by the media monster that is the Premier League. On the subject...
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