EDITOR'S BLOG
BRIGHT START
To growing season
by TurfPro Editor, Laurence Gale MSC, MBPR
 
Laurence Gale MSC, MBPR

The recent warmer air and soil temperatures has initiated a lot of activity regarding the maintenance of natural grass playing surfaces. 

 


Spring has finally arrived. The recent warmer air and soil temperatures have spurred many spring flowers to come into full bloom and initiated a lot of activity regarding the maintenance of natural grass playing surfaces. 


Many turf professionals and volunteers are busy preparing themselves for the start of a new growing season.  With soil temperatures well above seven degrees, we are now starting to see some much-needed grass growth and recovery – which means the need to start some more regular grass mowing and feeding regimes. Cricket groundsmen are now focussing their efforts on pre-season rolling programmes to get their facilities ready for the start of a new playing season in April. 


Many football and rugby clubs will be organising their end of season renovation works and securing the relevant products and services they need to undertake the required tasks. Essentially for many grass roots clubs this is often centred on scarifying, aeration, topdressing, feeding and overseeding the pitch.

 

Spring flowering Narcissi 


Flying visit to Bristol


A recent trip to Bristol enabled me to meet up with four turf professionals who themselves were busy maintaining their facilities.

 

My visit was organised by Joe Hendy sales manager for AGS who was keen for me to meet some of his customers.  We started our day calling in on Richard Ponsford, course manager at Clevedon Golf Club, who like many greenkeepers was completing a number of winter works and spring renovations at his parkland course. You can listen to a recent produced by AGS featuring Joe and Richard that’s well worth a listen here

 


Richard Ponsford & Joe Hendy at Clevedon GC 


We then called in to see Ash Arnel at Bristol Grammar school, who with his staff were busy maintaining their fifty-plus acre schools’ grounds site on the outskirts of Bristol. After this we called in to see Chris Fox (Foxy) who looks after the training pitches for Bristol Bears, which is a fantastic modern rugby set up. 


Finally we called in to see Ben Ford, head groundsman at Bristol Rovers FC. 

 

Bristol Bears training facility 


All in all, the day was a great opportunity to catch up with some excellent professionals and find out how they have been coping with the pandemic and what challenges they are facing in in the coming year in terms of budgets, staffing, maintenance and machinery needs. I will be compiling feature articles on each of the four venues in the coming weeks that will be published in future editions of TurfPro.


Ego testing


Also last week I had the privilege to attend another press event that enabled myself and other editors / journalists to see the latest updates on three new products being produced by EGO.

 

 

In recent years we have been seeing the popularity of EGO battery powered products grow substantially. In fact, during my visit to Clevedon Golf Club I noticed they were using several Ego battery-powered products and their course manager had nothing but praise for their durability and performance.


The day was centred on informing members of the press about the launch of three key new products – including what they descrbed as a world-first for ride-on mowers, a new handheld leaf blower, and a new 40cm chainsaw.


Steve Roskell, marketing director EMEA at EGO, said, “EGO is at the forefront of a technological revolution in outdoor power equipment. Demand is growing for tools that help reduce greenhouse gas emissions, improve air quality, and enhance working conditions for the operator with no sacrifice in the performance of the tools. We are further expanding our product range in 2022 to continue to meet this surging demand.”


I got to experience the EGO Z6 which is the company’s first zero-turn ride-on mower that Ego described as unique in the industry, as it uses the same interchangeable batteries that power the rest of their garden tool range. By combining up to six of their 56V ARC Lithium platform batteries, the Z6 delivers the same power and performance as a 22HP petrol ride-on mower.

 

 

I was certainly impressed with the performance, power and design of this ride on mower. It was easy to operate and offers three driving modes and four-blade speeds, with easily adjustable cutting height positions between 2.5cm and 10cm. Operators can also choose to collect the clippings; side-discharge or mulch them. The mower can cut up to two and a half acres on a single charge with 6 x 12Ah batteries.


Alongside the Z6, EGO is expanding its Power+ range of chainsaws with the CS1610E – whilst completing the new tool range for 2022 is the LB7650E leaf blower. This offers a run time of up to six hours on a single battery charge. 


Ego have also introduced a new 12Ah battery and Professional Multi-Port charging case.

 

 

Joining six smaller sized batteries in the range, the battery is interchangeable with all EGO tools, and uses 56V ARC Lithium technology to provide balance between required performance and usable power.

 
Also promoted was the company’s EGO Challenge 2025 - their call to arms that has as it’s aim the desire to educate and empower both domestic and professional outdoor power equipment users to decide that the only logical choice when purchasing new gardening equipment is to opt for battery power. They said this has been their goal since their conception back in 1993.

 

I myself have been testing and using a number of EGO products and have found them to be very reliable, well-built and powerful, offering our grounds professionals another choice when buying cordless battery powered tools. I recently tested several EGO Hedge trimmers in fact, with a full report on these products to be published in TurfPro in the coming weeks. 

 


Finally, I'd just like to say that myself along with my colleagues from our sister title, Service Dealer, will be attending BTME week in Harrogate from tomorrow (21st March). I look forward to meeting and catching up with many of our turf professionals and exhibitors during the event. 

NEWS
GMA RELAUNCH THEIR AWARDS
Revamp for 2022
 
GMA Awards 2022

In our first WEB ONLY story, the Association says the Awards host 19 categories to cover the broad spectrum of its members.

 


INDUSTRY STEPS UP
To offer help to Ukraine
 
The industry is helping with donations to Ukraine

In our next WEB ONLY story, the land-based machinery industry has stepped up to offer their help and support to humanitarian efforts in Ukraine.

 


NEW HOME FOR TURFPRO
After two years remote working
 
Some of #TeamTAP at the new offices

TAP, the publishers of TurfPro, have relocated to new office space that boasts superb green credentials.

 


TAP, the publishers of TurfPro and our sister title Service Dealer, have relocated to new office space that boasts superb green credentials.

 

 

Owner of the title, Duncan Murray-Clarke said, "In March 2020 we made the decision to close our UK office, as the pandemic started. We’ve waited two long years but we’re so pleased to finally have a new home in Howbery Park, Wallingford. Like many businesses we are introducing the home/office hybrid model and hot-desking."

 

The new office space is located in beautiful grounds that enjoy Thames river frontage, its own solar farm, a park biodiversity scheme, beehives on site, and there is even a TAP allotment. You can find out more about the mature parkland and unique trees that it is home to, here.

 

"We’re looking forward to inviting our friends, colleagues and clients here very soon," added Duncan. "All are welcome to come and try our home-grown veg!"

 

The new trading address is:

 

Howbery Business Park

Benson Lane

Wallingford

Oxon

OX10 8BA

 

All other details remain unchanged.

BTME RETURNS TOMORROW
Following Covid postponements
 
BTME returns next week

BIGGA's exhibition for the golf industry returns to an in-person event in Harrogate tomorrow, for the first time since January 2020.

 


BIGGA's exhibition for the golf industry, BTME, returns to an in-person event in Harrogate tomorrow, for the first time since January 2020.

 

 

Taking place at the Harrogate Convention Centre, the show runs from Tuesday to Thursday (March 22-24).

 

The schedule for the events taking place is as follows:

 

Tuesday 22 March

  • 9am BTME Exhibition opens
  • 9.15am to 5.30pm Continue to Learn
  • 3pm BIGGA AGM
  • 5pm Exhibition closes for the day
  • 5.30pm BIGGA Welcome Celebration

Wednesday 23 March

  • 6.30am Syngenta Early Bird Run
  • 9am Exhibition opens
  • 9.15am to 5.30pm Continue to Learn
  • 5pm Exhibition closes for the day

Thursday 24 March

  • 9am Exhibition opens
  • 2.30pm Exhibition closes

Free registration for the event can be completed here.

TRAINING COURSES LAUNCHED
To be held at customer's venue
 
New training courses launched

Provider says they knew coming out of the pandemic they were going to have to look at doing things differently.

 


Reesink have launched their new range of training courses, of which there are now four, that are now held at the customer’s venue and focus on getting the best from Toro equipment in two days.

 

 

Lee Rowbotham, service manager at Reesink Turfcare, said, “We knew coming out of the pandemic we were going to have to look at doing things differently and we decided all the courses would all be hosted at the customer’s venue using their own products. This ensures there’s little disruption to the new schedule, but most significantly it comes with the advantage of the customer learning in an environment they are familiar with, about products that they have and use daily.”
 
The courses cover the Safe Use of Ride-On Mowers which is suitable for new starters giving a thorough overview of operating, checking and maintaining ride-on mowing equipment. The Turfcare Mechanics course is aimed at instilling confidence in troubleshooting, routine servicing and maintenance of Toro equipment as well as understanding Toro Fault Codes and Level 1 Hydraulics and Electrics fundamentals to incorporate on board machinery diagnostics. 

 

The Professional Sprayer course focuses on how to calibrate and operate Toro spraying equipment and the Compact Tractor Driving course is a quick refresher course on what to look out for on pre-use checks before using a compact tractor and its attachments, guiding you through basic operations and manoeuvring. 

 

Reesink say all provide manufacturer backed certification at the end of the course and both course material and assessment are included in the fees. Each course ranges from one to two days of training and can be conducted on an individual basis or in small groups. 

 

Lee continues: “We’ve tailored these courses to meet our customers’ needs, whether that be carrying out preventative maintenance, fine tuning their cutting units or calibrating their Toro sprayer. We feel that having this knowledge has so many benefits in getting the best from their Toro and TYM equipment.”

PROMOTION FOR UK PRODUCT MANAGER
Moves to EMEAA role
 
AriensCo have appointed a new product manager for EMEAA.

Manufacturer says his lawn and garden industry knowledge will be brought to customers and dealers throughout Europe, Middle, East, Asia and Africa.

 


AriensCo has announced the promotion of Matt Wilson to product manager for EMEAA.

 

Matt Wilson


The company says Matt, who is stepping away from his previous role of UK sales manager, will be bringing his lawn and garden industry knowledge to their customers and dealers throughout Europe, Middle East, Asia and Africa - an area they describe as a "crucial expansion territory" for themselves.


AriensCo say the new appointment comes because of their investment in new product development, engineering and manufacturing for the EMEAA region. Since 2019 they have invested heavily in EMEAA including establishing its UK factory in Oxfordshire where it designs and manufacturers zero-turn mowers and garden tractors for the market.

 

Matt’s core responsibilities will include overseeing new product development strategies and engaging with customers and dealers across EMEAA to ensure all products continue to meet their standards.


Jef O’Riley, director of marketing and product management said, “AriensCo has seen unprecedented growth throughout Europe, in part due to our strategy of developing tractors and zero-turns specific for the needs of European customers. Matt’s vast industry experience and technical knowledge means he is best placed to guide us to a very exciting product line up.”


Matt will be part of a team of European product managers led by the newly promoted Jef.

Sponsored announcements
STIHL ENHANCES BATTERY OFFERING
New AP 500 S
 
AP 500 S

STIHL has enhanced its battery offering with the introduction of the new AP 500 S, the most powerful AP battery in the STIHL range and the first to feature power laminate technology.

 


STIHL has enhanced its battery offering with the introduction of the new AP 500 S, the most powerful AP battery in the STIHL range and the first to feature power laminate technology.  

 

 

Designed for use with any professional STIHL AP System tool, the 36V AP 500 S features innovative flat power laminate cells instead of traditional round cells, helping to double the service life of the battery up to 2,400 charge cycles and ensuring a long working life of up to 10 years. 

 

What’s more, the AP 500 S boasts a 20% higher capacity and increased operating time with all STIHL AP Systems tools for only an extra 200g of weight, ensuring professionals can use STIHL tools for longer, while keeping the overall system weight to a minimum. 

 

 

The AP 500 S is the only battery compatible with the new MSA 300, STIHL’s most powerful cordless chainsaw for professional users. In addition, the new battery can also be simply integrated with STIHL Connected, the smart fleet management tool, to easily monitor total discharge time and location of the battery.

 

Like all STIHL batteries in the AP System, the new AP 500 S can be used in all weather conditions and has a charge level indicator via the four green LEDs. 

 

For more information on STIHL’s new AP 500 S battery or its range of professional cordless tools, please visit www.stihl.co.uk.

JOBS
ADVERTISE YOUR JOBS HERE
Amazing success rates!
 
Advertise your jobs on TurfPro Weekly Briefing

Advertise your recruitment needs on TurfPro Weekly Briefing and reach our targeted audience of recipients every week.

Contact Nikki Harrison for details - 01491 837117


PREVIOUS FEATURES
EDITOR'S BLOG ARCHIVE
Catch up with Laurence Gale's recent blogs
 
TurfPro editor, Laurence Gale

Want to catch up with one of editor Laurence Gale's blogs? Here is the place to do so.

 


TURFPRO FEATURE ARCHIVE
Find our previous features here
 
TurfPro Feature Archive

If you want to catch up with any of TurfPro's previous features, here is the place to do so.


ROUTES INTO THE INDUSTRY MUST BE ENSURED
Q&A with David Fisher, Lantra’s head of industry partnerships

 

STRONG VIEWS ON CRICKET PITCH PERFORMANCE MARKING
A bone of contention

 

A PREMIUM PRODUCT
Delivered at Naas Golf Club

 

THE GREEN REVOLUTION
And Esker Hills

 

MAKING A CHANGE
Laytown and Bettystown Golf Links

 

A DAY AT THE RACES
Naas Race Course

 

WORKING TOGETHER AS ONE VOICE
How the industry needs to proceed

 

OVER 175 YEARS OF EDUCATION
Wesley College

 

ELECTRIC EXCITEMENT
Dennis's Ian Howard talks electrification

 

THE HOME OF CORK GAA
Páirc Uí Chaoimh

 

LONG POLE BATTERY HEDGE TRIMMERS TESTED
STIHL HLA 66 and HLA 86

 

OVER 800 YEARS OF HISTORY
Johnstown Castle and Gardens

 

A CLUB GONE WILD
Kilkenny Golf Club

 

A GOLF COURSE IN THE GARDEN OF IRELAND
Woodenbridge GC

 

80 YEARS YOUNG
Charleville Golf Club

 

AN UPLIFTING EXPERIENCE
Bunclody Golf & Fishing Club

 

GETTING BACK TOGETHER
Albeit gradually . .

 

GO WEST
Inishturk GAA pitch – one of the most westerly sportspitches in Europe

 

WORKING ON A TIGHT BUDGET
Nenagh Golf Club

 

ON A MISSION
Wrekin Golf Club aiming to enrich wildlife and fauna

 

WILD AND WONDERFUL
Design By Nature

 

LEARNING HOW TO SURVIVE
Abbey Par 3

 

TACKLING OBESITY
Vital that schools can provide sport

 

A LIFETIME OF LEARNING
Vital for turf professionals

 

CELEBRATING 125 YEARS
Tullamore Golf Club

 

UNIVERSITY CHALLENGES
At Trinity College Dublin

 

BLENDING THE OLD WITH THE NEW
Bray Golf Club

 

A WELL POLISHED COURSE!
Ierne Social And Sports Club

 

IDENTIFYING THE TRUE VALUES
Of grounds maintenance

 

THE INDUSTRY WILL CHANGE & ADAPT
But it will survive

 

WIRRAL GOLF COURSES SAVED
Renewed hope and optimism for the future

 

GREEN SPACE CONTRIBUTION TO WELLBEING IS UNDERVALUED
Parks invisible on national agenda

 

A SHINING LIGHT IN IRELAND'S SUNNY SOUTHEAST
Wexford Golf Club

 

GREEN SPACES DO NOT LOOK AFTER THEMSELVES!
Keith Kent says we must invest in people

 

WE SHOULD TELL THE WORLD ABOUT THE UK INDUSTRY
Right time for all sides to come together

 

SOIL LIFE IS PRECIOUS
Good-quality soil can help save the planet

 

MORE THAN JUST CUTTING GRASS
Encouraging the next generation

 

A BUZZ FROM DOING THE JOB
Wide experience of the turf grass industry

 

PAYING THEIR WAY
Low wages is the bane of the industry

 

AMENITY MANAGEMENT IMPACTS US ALL
Professor John Moverley

 

CARING FOR PARKS OF ALL TYPES
Mary Worrall

 

TOP FIVE FRUSTRATIONS FOR CRICKET GROUNDSMEN
What causes you the most frustration in your role?

 

PROFESSIONALS AT THE CUTTING EDGE
Vic Demain and Phil Sharples

 

BOWLS CLUBS IN PERIL
A sad decline

 

A VERY SPECIAL INDUSTRY
Loz looks back

 

SNEAK PEAK AT A ROBOTIC "GAME CHANGER"
Commercial model capable of covering 50,000 m2 teased

 

HALESOWEN PICK A BIG ROBOT UP FRONT
Invest in mowers

 

COMPRESSED AERATION
The new way

 

PARKS MATTER MORE THAN EVER
Recent sector developments

 

ON TEST
STIHL blowers

 

THREE CORE VALUES TO SHAPE OUR INDUSTRY
Real concerns for the future

 

ENGLAND'S GREEN SPACE GAP
A split along racial lines

 

ON TEST
EGO STX3800 strimmer with RTX2300 Rotocut head

 

A SECTOR FACING IMPORTANT TIMES
Review of the National Action Plan

 

PARKS MATTER
The role of public parks in the recovery: a discussion paper

 

A UNIQUE SPORTING VENUE
Wormsley private estate

 

A BTME OUTDOORS?
A good bet for the industry

 

PARKS NEED APPROPRIATE POLITICAL REPRESENTATION
Q&A with Philippa Reece, Parks and Foreshore Manager at Adur and Worthing Council

 

CRICKET LOAM
What does it mean?

 

A HERCULEAN EFFORT TO GET PARKS BACK TO NORMAL
Q&A with Chris Worman, Rugby Borough Council’s parks and ground manager

 

ON TEST
STIHL battery products

 

TURFGRASS STRESS MANAGEMENT
Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS) and antioxidants during biotic and abiotic stress in turfgrass plants

 

AUTUMN DISEASE MANAGEMENT
The coming months are going to prove very difficult

 

THE ABUSE OF PARKS . .
Is the abuse of society

 

WHY PARKS MATTER?
A statement from the Parks Management Forum to the Prime Minister

 

THE 21st CENTURY PARKS MANAGER
Innovative, creative and entrepreneurial

 

EAT, SLEEP, CUT, REPEAT!
Cricket under covid

 

TIME FOR A SINGLE SHOW?
Debate brought back into focus

 

A CHALLENGING TWO MONTHS
Running golf design projects from home

 

PRESSURE SITUATION
Cementing the reputation

 

A CLUB TO BE PROUD OF
10 years at the helm of Olton GC

 

GAME CHANGERS IN TURFCARE
The day the Lord's outfield reconstruction proved its worth

 

THE ESSENCE OF ESSENTIAL
Finding a sensible way forward on defining "essential maintenance"

 

THAT WAS THE YEAR THAT WAS
2001

 

HOW TO LOOK AFTER A GOLF COURSE WITH NO GOLFERS
Fundamental to the survival of almost all courses, if not of the game itself

 

RAIN STOPPED PLAY WOULD BE WELCOME
. . along with ‘lunch is being taken early’

 

PHYSICAL CONTROL OF TURFGRASS PESTS
An urgent problem

 

A DIVERSE & ENTERTAINING WEEK
Successful BTME 2020

 

INTEGRATED PEST CONTROL
Opportunity to embrace new methods

 

ENVILLE ON THE UP
Major investments taking place

 

GREEN FLAG AWARDS 2019
A great success

 

U.S PROFESSIONAL EQUIPMENT SHOW EXCELS
Buoyant GIE+EXPO

 

LEGACY OF THE SOLHEIM CUP
At Gleneagles

 

A DAY OUT WITH THE LADIES
Behind the scenes at the Solheim Cup

 

COVENTRY UNIVERSITY'S EDIBLE GARDEN SUCCESS
2006 - present

 

HAIL THE GRASS MASTERS!
Boorish media comments about pitch quality are wide of the mark

 

CONTRACTOR SEES MULTI-DISCIPLINE SUCCESS
360 Ground Care serving professional facilities

 

BUSY TIMES
Judging the Green Flag Awards

 

TAKING AN INTEGRATED APPROACH
What does it all mean in managing turf surfaces?

 

UNDER PRESSURE
Dry weather conditions continue to keep turf managers focused on moisture management

 

EDDIE SEAWARD
Death of Wimbledon’s influential grounds manager

 

MAJOR NEW IRRIGATION PROJECT
At Top 100 classic Berkhamsted Golf Club

 

NEW HORIZONS FOR THE HATTERS
Investment paying off at Kenilworth Road

 

ELIZABETHAN RESTORATION
At Castle Bromwich Hall Gardens

 

WHAT IS BIOPHILIA?
The vital impact of parks and green spaces on health and well-being

 

WORM CONTROL
Without carbendazim

 

THE TRUE COST OF PETROL
Battery-powered outdoor power tools are now turning the heads of professionals

 

SANDS OF TIME
Sand-based pitches are now the norm in professional sports

 

WHY DO WE DO THE RIGHT THING?
We must maintain industry standards

 

CHASING GRASS PERFECTION?
11 things you need to know . . .

 

MAINTAINING STANDARDS
Q&A with BASIS ceo, Stephen Jacobs

 

STRI RESEARCH DAY 2018
Hosted at research trial grounds in Bingley

 

THE MECHANIC
Leicester City FC invest in new role

 

LORD'S 'GRASS-GUVNOR' TO RETIRE
Mick Hunt bows out after 49 years

 

HOLLOW CORING & DEEP SCARIFICATION
Is it really necessary?

Side Advert Image


PARTNERS
BAYER
 
Bayer
CAMPEY
 
Campey Turf Care Systems
Foley
 
Foley Company
HUSQVARNA UK
 
Husqvarna UK
ISEKI UK & IRELAND
 
Iseki
LANTRA
 
LANTRA
ORIGIN AMENITY SOLUTIONS
 
Origin Amenity Solutions
Garden trader
 
Garden Trader
PRODUCED BY THE AD PLAIN
 
VIEWPOINT
THE DEATH OF GRASS ROOTS CRICKET
Gathering apace?
by Tony Leach, Kent Cricket Groundsman's Association
 
The death of grass roots cricket?

Exacerbated by a dire lack of governing body support and more recently the effects of the pandemic, all are asking whether we are reaching a tipping point where the game at the lower levels may be unsustainable. 

 


Introduction


Grass root cricket is dying, a fact many in the game at this level have been witness to for many years.

 

The loss of grass root cricket clubs in recent years due to falling player numbers, a wide range of ever increasing costs, fewer full time / part time experienced groundstaff and a dearth of experienced and competent volunteer groundstaff with little or no focus on succession planning resulting in poorer and deteriorating playing surface quality and performance (Ref: Daily Mail, January 12, 2022, page 73 – Lawrence Booth, item on Zac Crawley in Hobart). Exacerbated by a dire lack of governing body support and more recently the effects of the pandemic, all are asking whether we are reaching a tipping point where the game at the lower levels may be unsustainable.   

 


Current Workforce is diminishing in number as many newly qualified groundspeople are taking up more highly paid opportunities in sports-grounds where greater financial resource is generated and available and the individual sports are better supported by their respective governing bodies, such as Football and Rugby. 
 
Changing lifestyles mean fewer “new” volunteers are coming forward as the demands of family leaves little time for a singular indulgence such as cricket either to play or to prepare for.  Long gone are the days when the whole family got involved with their local cricket club, although a few still do.

Caring for grounds and pitches receives inadequate support from the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) and/or the local County Boards, a very large proportion of the available finance goes into salaries, administration and cricket at County level; little of this available finance reaches the depths of grass root club cricket. 

 

Cricket is played on pitches and not in the bar or pavilion.

 

 

Cost of ground-care is spiralling and making it more expensive for players to participate; contractors are increasing maintenance charges at an alarming rate well beyond many grass root cricket clubs capacity to generate funds.  Contractors are now concentrating only on renovation operations and construction projects due to the diminishing revenue generated from maintenance and pitch preparation alone; cricket clubs therefore, are increasingly reliant on a diminishing volunteer workforce leading inevitably to the poorer and deteriorating playing surface quality and performance noted earlier.

 

Machinery and equipment required for grounds maintenance operations (cricket pitch preparations included) can be a huge financial burden to grass root cricket clubs, finance running into tens of thousands of pounds, monies not usually or easily available. The ECB have even withdrawn their ‘Machinery Funding’ so clubs are forced to rely on second hand and old used machinery and equipment (which sometimes have Health & Safety and Legislation issues). Little wonder then that many, many cricket clubs are unable to employ qualified groundstaff but have to rely on an aging volunteer workforce a situation recently highlighted in ‘Pitchcare’ magazine  (November 2021) where the two volunteer groundsmen at ‘The Mote’ cricket club in Maidstone, Kent, have a combined age of 166 years.

 

 

Evidence


At this point it is intended to indicate an overall picture of the present state of affairs. The evidence presented here is derived from a number of sources including conversations shared with colleagues from grass root cricket clubs around the counties plus, Cricket Development Officers and League Secretaries.

 

Clubs' decline


Reference to an original copy of a Cricket in Kent Year Book dated March 1954 shows there were 12 Districts covering 538 grass root cricket clubs. Compared to the final copy of the Kent Cricket Club Directory (dated 2014) the number of districts had increased to 16 covering only 303 grass root cricket clubs; an increase in districts of 75% but a decrease in grass root cricket clubs of 56.32%. 

 

Highlighted from these conversations were contributory factors such as the lack of competent grounds-people leading to the increased dependence on enthusiastic but predominantly untrained, poorly skilled volunteers resulting in reduced quality playing surfaces; the greater dependency on the use of expensive contractors and most notably the lack of finances.

 

 

The finance and funding issues, amongst other pressing issues, are not new and have been well documented as can be identified by the following report written a number of years ago; the report has been edited with some more recent updates included:

 

Bridging the Funding Gap
In the Metropolitan Areas, a crisis is developing in recreational cricket. Over many years, at the lower levels of recreational cricket, where junior players including many BAME players cut their teeth in English cricket, grass wickets are continuing to disappear at an accelerating rate.

 

The Phoenix project
It is about 10 years since Peter Wiseman, Honorary Secretary of Beckenham CC, based in Bromley District, recognised the problem and conducted an audit of available grounds. He found an alarming decline in available places to play cricket. While Peter laudably managed to get a limited number of facilities back into operation, facilities continue to disappear throughout SE London.

 

In my archives, I still have records of the work undertaken by Peter Wiseman's Phoenix Group, while similar work was at least started in Greenwich to audit the past and current facilities. Both make depressing reading.

 

As Peter noted at the time, both central and local Government both continue to support recreational sport in various ways, yet seem unable to protect some of the grounds on which these sports are played.  

 

And so the problem continues: back in Bromley, at the back end of the 2021 season, OD CUACO lost their second ground, when, almost without warning, it was sold to a football club for immediate use.

 

 

OD CUACO had two cricket grounds, the main ground and then a second ground alongside it, with its own pavilion. This was sufficient for the club to run four league teams on Saturdays, but they had to finish their last few 2019 third and fourth XI league games on other grounds, arranged at short notice, after the official season had ended. The club is left with the need to find an alternative ground to hire for its lower league teams in 2022.

 

There is a similar tale in Copers Cope Road, which used to be home to CUACO (before its merger with Old Dunstonians), now a professional football training ground. 

 

In the same street, Lloyds Bank is now part of the KCC Beckenham site (at least cricket is still played!). On the other side of the road, Nat West Bank is now a Goals facility.  Close by, the former Midland Bank (now HSBC) ground is a fabulous facility, but the bank is now controlling its use more tightly to bank employees only. How long before it disappears altogether, just like the other bank and insurance grounds, now a distant memory? 

 

Elsewhere in Bromley, in Perry Street, the former Old Elthamians facility is now home to the Glebe football club, while the cricket and rugby are now ground-sharing with Eltham College. 

 

The situation is now so acute that, Beckenham's fifth and sixth elevens have been given special dispensation to play on an artificial pitch, there being no grass wickets available on which to play. For a while, the club used the old Sydenham ground, but cricket is no longer played there.

 

In the Greenwich and Lewisham areas which neighbour Bromley, there are many grounds where cricket is no longer provided. 


Some facilities, such as those off Weigall Road, in the Lee area, there are grounds which are just lying idle, as the owners hang on in the hope that they will get permission to develop the site for housing, a much more lucrative option than running sports facilities.

 

Other clubs have just gone out of business. A drive down Foots Cray Road towards Sidcup (a club thankfully still operating cricket and rugby); there is a string of discontinued cricket facilities.

 


 
Old stagers will fondly remember wonderful games at RACS, Bardhill and Old Shootershillians.  Foots Cray Rugby club is hanging on, but now there is only one cricket pitch, rather than the original two. Cricket facilities at Shooters Hill in Broad Walk, Old Brockleians off Middle Park Avenue and the Civil Service Ground on the A20 have disappeared in recent times.

 

Other pitches, such as those owned by the Royal Borough of Greenwich at Avery Hill Park and Eltham Park, lie idle and in disrepair because there is no resource to maintain them, despite considerable investment in installing the facilities.

 

Will this tragic story be the future trend? What is needed to arrest it and even turn it round?

 

Ground economics
It is increasingly the norm in junior cricket, where U13 and U11 games are now routinely played on non-turf pitches (NTPs). Are we heading towards a point where only the biggest clubs - and then only their senior first and second elevens - will be playing on grass?

 

Why has this happened? Part of the problem is simply that, compared to running a football pitch, running a cricket ground is not economical. Grass wickets are expensive to maintain - the strips require careful regular attention each week, and the whole square needs work before and after the season. Only one (or at best two) games can be played in a day. If a game is played on a Saturday, then a separate strip needs to be prepared for a game on Sunday.

 

On the other hand, converting the same ground to football, with a system of permits for 90 minutes, as many as six games per day can be played, bringing in much more revenue than a single cricket match, and with far less preparation required. Football is becoming a 12 month sport as well, so a football field can be used all year round, whilst a cricket pitch has to lie idle for as much as seven months of the year. 

 

Everyone knows how expensive it is for capital assets to lie idle, and cricket pitches are no exception.

 

 

In addition, in the big cities, such as metropolitan London, green spaces are under great pressure for other reasons, most notably for building housing and amenities. In the Greenwich and Lewisham district where I operate, this is particularly acute. 

 

On the Greenwich Peninsula, a massive residential area, home to 250,000 people, a Google search for sporting facilities comes up virtually dry. There is a golf driving range and the option of some attractive riverside walks, but previous little else, certainly not of the outdoor grass sporting type. 

 

This exerts yet more pressure on the surviving grounds to the south, which are heavily over-subscribed. The population has a significant South Asian community, yet where can they play their beloved sport of cricket?

 

Groundsmen
It is not only grounds which are disappearing, but groundsmen are too. Just as in many professions, many cricket groundsmen are reaching retirement age and there is no discernible succession strategy in place. 

 

 

The demographics of the UK, with a low birth rate and increasing life expectancy means that we have too few people of working age available to take over. Is being a cricket groundsman an attractive profession for the younger generation? And as more retire, those remaining are in great demand, can pick and choose their work and prices are creeping up - they will gravitate towards the richer clubs and better wickets, rather than the wickets in small clubs and public parks. Specialist machinery is also in short supply.


The funding gap
All of this translates into cost pressures on lower level, recreational grass cricket wickets. The chickens are coming home to roost - or at least they would do if only they could find some grass! 

 

We urgently need to address the problem, not just of commissioning grass cricket wickets, but maintaining them as well.

 

While the situation may be different in rural areas, where a culture of volunteers is more prevalent and the cost of land is much lower, grassroots cricket in the urban areas of high population, and especially in the deprived areas, is under existential threat.

 

It is all very well spending a lot of money on installing attractive new grass facilities to accommodate the demand, but if the owners of those facilities cannot any longer afford to maintain them, and the players cannot afford to pay for them, what is the point? 


The market will bear about £120 to £150 for hiring a pitch of this standard, or about £10 to £15 per home player, yet it probably costs £175 per pitch to maintain the average facility.  But when one considers that third and fourth teams are made up of many youngsters and students, they cannot afford to pay this for each match.

 

Too many grant providers will provide funding for an installation, but specifically exclude on-going maintenance. The result is loss of facilities and derelict grounds. 

 

To allow these facilities to be provided in the future, funding sources, whether from traditional grants or private benefactors, must address need for the on-going maintenance and at least provide a subsidy of - perhaps £50 per pitch.

 

There seem to be only two solutions: either we accept that most urban grass wickets are a thing of the past, or we address the funding gap between what lower level teams are able to pay and what is costs to maintain the facility. 

 

Artificial tracks allow players to play, but they take away one of the magical aspects of cricket, which is to learn how to play on different types of wicket - hard, fast pitches, slow tracks, damp wickets, dustbowls, turning tracks and so on. Reliance on artificial tracks removes a lot this variation, and with it a lot of the skills required to progress in the game.

 

Perhaps now that teas are a thing of the past, the money saved by the away team (circa £45 per game) could instead be levied as a pitch-sharing contribution? It surely is not unreasonable to ask both teams to share the cost? Such an away team contribution would enable pitch hire prices to rise to an affordable level. But there are many wandering teams in the area who depend on the generosity of home teams who pay for the full cost of the pitch hire. This cannot continue.

 

 

Although the original report was written ten years or so ago, little has changed. Many of the problems encountered then still exist today, some even more exaggerated, while others have come the full circle and their prediction of failure or amalgamation, materialised.  The problems started decades ago, for example; there is a 14.2 Hectare (35 acre) sports ground, formerly a Schools Sports Centre owned by the Inner London Education Authority (ILEA), maintained by the Greater London Council (GLC) that is located on the convergence of four London Boroughs. The site was devolved to the London Borough of Southwark back in about 1990 and was subsequently mothballed and now sits, as far as is currently known, derelict to this day (2022).  Originally there were 10 cricket tables on the site.

 

The recent Coronavirus pandemic has resulted in dire consequences for many grass root cricket clubs whose finances have taken a severe knock despite some funding from central government and local authorities, many grass root cricket clubs around the country are unlikely to survive. Once these cricket club facilities and grounds are lost to redevelopment they are gone forever.

 

Over the years grass root cricket has had to contend with the additional pressures of Health & Safety Legislation, European Union dictat and now Climate Change, plus crickets “Governing Body” failures, and currently, the additional economic effects of the red diesel issue and the Russia/Ukraine conflict have all, and will, secure THE DEATH OF GRASS ROOTS CRICKET.