timeslogo

Fleet featured in Times article

Ebbsfleet United’s ‘back from the brink’ story is featured online at The Times today, written by journalist Gary Jacob and headlined ‘Hard work the key as Ebbsfleet begin long journey to league football’. The article is reproduced below:

It sounded like the ultimate Championship Manager when Ebbsfleetย United was bought by a website whose members made team selections,ย transfers and decisions via online polls.

At its peak about 30,000 people from 70 countries paid ยฃ35 for theย privilege of owning a say in a club but the experiment failed asย numbers dwindled to below a 1,000, Liam Daish, the manager, wasย unhappy with polling results and the wheels very nearly came offย totally after six years of the ownership model in May.

The Conference South side were issued with a winding-up order forย unpaid rent and the club were saved at the eleventh hour by a Kuwaitiย investor. That seemed no less fanciful an outcome to the story of aย club effectively being renamed after a train station and having itsย roots in Northfleet United, dating back to 1890. Roy Hodgson, theย England manager, made 59 appearances for the club between 1969 toย 1971 when it was called Gravesend and Northfleet.

Ebbsfleet have departed on another unlikely journey which they hopeย will arrive in the Football League. The team were relegated from theย Conference Premier last season, amid protests against the websiteย owners, and getting the club back up and rejuvenating local interestย is the first stop.

Stonebridge Road was a pretty uninviting place last season. When theย ball hit the tin-pot roof, paint flakes would fall like snow on theย 900 or so fans. The ground is being radically upgraded but aย discussion has already begun on redeveloping the stadium or moving.ย The area in North Kent is being opened up for development and a ยฃ2bn theme park is planned by Paramount Pictures for about five years time.

If the estimates are right that about more than 10 million peopleย visit the park each year,ย Ebbsfleet is 17 minutes on the train from St Pancras International โ€“ย then some people might take in a football game too.ย Barry Hearn had a similar idea when he wanted to move Leyton Orient,
his club, to the Olympic hockey stadium after the Games last summer toย take advantage of the people flooding into the east London on aย weekend.

In the short-term, Ebbsfleet are spending about ยฃ100,000 on improvingย the basic facilities at the ground: a new roof, painting the stands,ย changing the colour of the grey dressing rooms and a new pitch asย Steve Brown, the new manager and a former Charlton Athletic defender,ย wants to play a passing game. That money is part of an overallย ยฃ750,000 investment from Dr Abdulla Al Humaidi, the chairman of KEHย Sports Limited which has healthcare and property interests.ย The Kuwaiti investor employs Peterย Varney, the former chief executive of Charlton who helped the clubย into the top-flight in 1998 and 2000.

KEH say they have spent ยฃ54,000 on paying staff money owed, are close to buying the training ground, and ticket prices will be cut from ยฃ15 to ยฃ10 and anyone under 12 will be free. When Varney was handed theย keys to the ground in May, he found people taking pictures for posterity. โ€œThey told me, โ€˜it was all over, goneโ€™,โ€ Varney said. โ€œMyย dream is to have League football here. At Charlton it was European football.โ€

His model is to repeat the success of Crawley Town and Stevenageย Borough, who have made it from non-league. You can see the logic withย the overall plan. Ebbsfleet is changing. About 160,000 new homes areย planned to be built in the Thames estuary and, together with theย possible theme park, more scope for people on the clubโ€™s doorstep.

KEH will not throw money at promotion and Varney knows the perils ofย people getting carried away from his days at Charlton, whose fans cameย to regret what they once wished for. He estimates that about fourย teams will have a bigger budget next season and Welling were promotedย from the Conference South with a weekly total wage bill of ยฃ5,200 lastย season.

Things had seemed to be going well after MyFootballClub.co.uk tookย control in 2008. The club lifted the FA Trophy that year, defeatingย Torquay United 1โ€“0 in their first trip to Wembley. Will Brooks, theย founder of the website, said that they needed a minimum 15,000ย subscribers to make the concept work but two years into the projectย and the numbers had fallen to 3,500. A third of the members livedย outside the UK including Vietnam, Belize, Jordan, Madagascar andย Pakistan. They were promised a say in team selection, but later votedย to leave that to the manager. The most significant vote was in Augustย 2008 when 7,400 members voted in favour of striker John Akinde beingย sold to Bristol City in a ยฃ150,000 deal which could rise to ยฃ275,000ย with a 20 per cent sell-on clause.ย Power resting with the people turned into near-disaster. The reality ย project nearly killed the club.

Nearly all of the 640 who voted from the website approved selling theย club to KEH in May. The company published comprehensive details, including to guaranteeย a minimum playing squad budget of ยฃ8,000, as well as a ยฃ100,000ย transfer kitty.

“The club is looking forward to the future with optimism, progressย will be managed in a financially responsible manner and, if hard workย counts for anything, we will achieve our goals,โ€ Varney said.

FLEET SHARE...

Share on Facebook
Share on Twitter
Share on Linkedin
Share on WhatsApp
Email this article

More News

match stats

Click to enlarge ยป

First-Team Squad
Goalkeepers
Defenders
Midfielders
Strikers