THIS BLOG WAS CREATED FROM THE VERY BEGINNINGS OF SCARBOROUGH ATHLETIC'S FORMATION

Scarborough Athletic F.C were formed on June 25th 2007 following the winding up order imposed on the old club after the local council turned down the club's survival plans. The club were finally forced into liquidation with debts of £2.5 million by a High Court judge, and so ended the club's magnificent 128 year history, no thoughts or consideration was to be spared for anyone connected with the club or the towns footballing public. However a trust had been formed and we were prepared for such a situation should it arise. The Seadog Trust applied to the Northern Counties East League to enter newly formed Scarborough Athletic and they were succesful in their application.
The new club are a continuation of the old one, they have the same kit, badge, motto etc and most importantly have kept a large number of the old supporters. This blog was started by me from the very beginnings of Scarborough Athletic FC and will follow the fortunes, both good and bad of the newly formed club as they try to get back to the higher levels of the football pyramid where they rightly belong. A rival team has also been formed 'Scarborough Town', I do not expect that particular club will have much of a future, but do they realise the damage that they are causing to the future success of football in the town, our town cannot support 2 teams, Athetic are here to stay, we are the town's number one football team and will return to the higher levels of the game in the next few seasons..


THIS BLOG WAS ESTABLISHED FROM THE BEGINNINGS OF SCARBOROUGH ATHLETIC AND WILL CONTINUE TO FOLLOW THE CLUB ON THEIR JOURNEY BACK TO THE FOOTBALL LEAGUE. I AM NOT HERE TO ADVERTISE OR MAKE MONEY FROM 3RD PARTY LISTINGS, I AM HERE TO SIMPLY FOLLOW THE CLUB AND TRY TO KEEP THIS BLOG AS INTERESTING AS POSSIBLE. COMMENTS ARE WELCOME.

Thursday, 17 December 2009

IT'S OFFICIAL. FOOTBALL WILL NEVER RETURN TO ATHLETIC GROUND.

This article from the local paper only tells what most of us knew anyway, the sad fact is that Scarborough Athletic as a club are 100% in the hands of the council.Boro chairman Richard Adamson appears to have faith in the council keeping their word over the plans for the new sports village and the ameneties, part of which are planned with  Scarborough Athletic FC in mind, I wish I shared his faith. The ground has gone, the sporting covenent placed on the site to protect it for sporting use only will be lifted to enable the building of new homes, other sites also have to be sold to bring in revenue to start the sports village. The 5 year plan talked about by the council I imagine will be more like double that figure, if in fact it ever happens at all. The football club are a success and continue to grow but without the return to Scarborough as soon as possible, the club will be in danger of stagnating 20 miles down the road at Bridlington.The return to Scarborough will enable the club to attract more fans to their games, and run the club in a more profitable manner. I wonder also, has consideration being given to the size of the new ground and the ability to build on  and add facillities as the club progress through the leagues, this will  determine how far we can go as a club, it is no good winning the leagues if promotion will be refused because the ground does not meet a certain criteria.  'Boro's' progress hopefully will see them back in the football league one day. It would be a shame if all the hard work of the new club ammounted to nothing due to lack of interest, failed promises and lack of funds from the council.



"FOOTBALL will never be played at the former McCain Stadium again, it has been confirmed.
The news comes after Scarborough council chiefs met with "potential partners" to discuss the development of a sports village on the Weaponness Valley coach park.
A feasibility study carried out by the local authority makes it clear the Seamer Road ground has finally been written out of the town's sporting history despite all hopes.
The study showed it would require £600,000 to get the former Boro home back to a usable condition – but the council has decided that even after splashing out the cash, the ground would be unsustainable and the money would be better spent elsewhere. The council has ambitious plans to build a sports village with the next five years.
The village would include a new base for Scarborough Athletic FC, currently playing its home matches in Bridlington, and house the council's sports facilities.
The current council-run sports provision – the sports centre and indoor pool – are out of date and badly in need of repairs running well into six figures, replacing the sports centre's leaking roof would cost £250,000 alone.
Attendances are dropping at both venues and by September this year they had already made £31,000 less than expected in 2009.
As well as Scarborough councillors, representatives from local health trusts, George Pindar Community Sports College and a council-employed consultancy firm, attended the meeting.
Cllr Andrew Backhouse said: "The talks were positive. The hospital said they want to expand the provision of services they offer but they had no scope to do so at the present site. The idea at the moment is to centralise and look at the long-term prospects for a sports village.
"The consultants were given a very broad brief, so there was a lot discussed. They've now listened to us and will come back to us once they've taken our ideas into account."
The new venue looks to be a long way off however – at a recent meeting with the council, representatives of Scarborough Athletic were told that, at this stage, it is impossible to give a firm date for when a new stadium was likely to be ready.
The council still needs to carry out consultation with interested parties, firm up agreements with potential partners and undergo the tendering process.
Once a developer has been selected it is expected that the building work will take around 18 months.
Athletic's new chairman Richard Adamson said: "Obviously we would like to get back to Scarborough as soon as possible but we want also to get back in somewhere where we can afford to run and grow as a club.
"I honestly believe the council will deliver something for us. Personally I'd like it to be next month but we must be pragmatic – as long as we end up with something sustainable and suitable I'm prepared to wait."
* Three houses outside the Boro stadium are currently for sale, but that is believed to be unconnected to the ground move.

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