| AFC Telford United - What a
Year?
Most of the noisy crowd of 4,215
milled excitedly around the pitch. AFC Telford United had just
beaten Kendal Town 2-1 to win promotion to the Unibond Premier
League. It was 7th May 2005. Four weeks later a great night was had
by a 1,000 people at a civic reception held for AFC Telford Utd.
Fans and sponsors cheered their local heroes and there was a great
feeling of community involvement with the club. Fireworks, music
and video footage of the season's highlights all added to the
occasion.
So what? Twelve months before,
Telford United - stalwarts of the Vauxhall Conference, previously
managed by Sir Geoff Hurst and Gordon Banks - had gone into
liquidation with massive debts.
What happened next is a heart-warming example of true community
involvement. Supporters formed a supporters trust in 11 days. The
Trust then worked closely with a community partnership chaired by
the local Chamber of Commerce and facilitated by the local council.
Everyone had a common aim, to raise a new club from the ashes of
the old. AFC Telford United was born.
The immediate problem was that the
liquidator and major creditors of the old club had the lease of the
Bucks Head Stadium, one of the best stadia outside the football
league. And new rules from the Football Association meant that any
successor to Telford United would be demoted three divisions to the
Unibond League Division One.
The League set the new club a
deadline of 7th August 2004 to secure its playing facilities. A
tall order for a new club with no players, no manager, very little
money and very limited experience of running a semi-professional
football club.
But what they did have was passion,
commitment and a strong community spirit. Complicated discussions
with the liquidator and lawyers followed as the council acquired
the lease of the stadium and the assets within it. Within a day of
the deadline the keys of the Bucks Head Stadium were handed to Lee
Carter, the new chairman of AFC Telford United.
Meanwhile, the club had appointed
former Northern Ireland international Bernard McNally as its
manager and he was recruiting players. "The importance of success
on the pitch is obvious" says the Chairman, Lee Carter, "but our
main priority then was simply to get someone who could build for
the future. Bernard's experience, particularly of working with
younger players, was just what we were looking for".
On the pitch, the team struggled
initially as McNally tried to find the right blend. By the end of
2005 they were middle in the table, but had at least
consolidated.
Off the pitch, the partnership was
beginning to flourish. The club's captain, Sean Parrish, went into
local schools to involve the town's children in the future of the
club. Links were made with local residents, for many years
virtually ignored by the old club. The two local colleges, New
College and TCAT offered help and support. TCAT trains football
stadium stewards for clubs across the country and helped
significantly in that respect. Situated across the road from the
stadium, they also were developing top-class sports training
facilities, including a football academy, so they offered to help
AFC Telford United.
Off the pitch this enabled the
partnership to submit an innovative bid for funding to the Football
Foundation, linking the development of a new indoor synthetic pitch
in a state of the art dome at TCAT with a new multi-purpose
learning centre inside the stadium. Money was also awarded for a
vulnerable children's project.
The idea is to involve young people
with the club as much as possible. We know from past experience
that linking education directly with sport produces improved
health, better social skills, improved attendance levels and
improvements in academic performance. We want around 8,000 young
people each year to experience the learning centre at the stadium -
they're not just the future of the football club, they're the
future of the town.
And it certainly seems to be
working. The old club sold just four junior season tickets in its
last season. Last year, the new club sold well over 100 in their
first season. Local businesses have sponsored the town's children
to attend matches and families have returned to the stadium as a
result. Youngsters proudly wear AFC Telford United shirts. Young
Telford players now feature in the first-team squad. There's a
reserve team and a women's team. The club runs coaching courses for
the local community and has opened its own excellence centre for
growing local talent.
At the end of April, the Football
Foundation (the UK's largest sporting charity) approved three
grants totalling almost £1.2 million towards the partnership's
development at TCAT and the stadium. The developments will cost
over £2m in total
Lee Carter, granted the freedom of
Telford and Wrekin for his work on this, goes misty-eyed whenever
the club's anthem, 'Keeping the Dream Alive', is played. "What we
have achieved in the last twelve months has been beyond our wildest
dreams. I think Winston Churchill summed it up well" he says. "This
is not the end. It is not even the beginning of the end. But it may
be the end of the beginning…………".
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