Portsmouth News

ARE THE FA READY TO GET 2020/21 TO BE CREATIVE COMPLETED?

Latest national lockdown leaves non-league football

- With Simon Carter sport@thenews.co.uk

The vast majority of the 2020/21 non-league football season appears under the threat of a second successive null and voiding.

Monday’s announceme­nt of another national lockdown means no clubs below the National League South and North divisions - the sixth tier of English football - can play until late-February at the earliest.

There will need to be some major extensions to the usual finishing times, or some creativity with points-per-game ratios or playing a certain number of fixtures, if league seasons are to be completed (with promotions and relegation­s) ahead of 2021/22 starting on time next August.

Last season, with twothirds of the season gone, the FA controvers­ially null and voided steps 3-6 (locally, the Southern League to Division 1 of the Wessex League). That had a knock-on effect to the Hampshire Premier League (step 7).

What are the chances of a repeat?

Here, The News looks at the state of play for our nonleague clubs.

National League South

Unlike in 2019/20, completing this season’s league games shouldn’t be a problem for Hawks.

Classified under the ‘elite sport’ bracket has brought its problems - the club weren’t allowed any fans into their ground when 2020/21 began (unlike clubs lower down the pyramid).

But the advantages have far outweighed the disadvanta­ges, as they have been allowed to play through all this season’s lockdowns, along with the other clubs in the top six tiers of English football, and have received £90,000 of National Lottery funding.

The Hawks’ regular league season is due to end on May 29, the final Saturday of the month. Though they still have 30 league games left, there is plenty of time in which to play them - even if the fixture list continues to be stop-start due to Covidrelat­ed postponeme­nts for a few more weeks yet.

Southern League

No club at steps three or four of the non-league pyramid have as many league games left to play this season as Moneyfield­s.

Since the Southern League campaign began on September 19, Dave Carter’s men have played just four Division 1 South games out of 38.

Even if their season began on Saturday, February 27, and was extended until the last Saturday of May - bringing the Southern League into line with the National League - that would mean Moneyfield­s playing 34 league games in 92 days.

Put another way, that would mean 14 Saturday games and 20 matches to fit into 13 midweeks. So for seven weeks Moneys would be playing three times a week.

Profession­als couldn’t do it - they wouldn’t do it - so how can you ask part-timers?

Carter told The News yesterday he would be happy to play on into July.

He is unlikely to get his wish but, hypothetic­ally, let’s say the Southern League season was extended to Saturday, July 10. That would leave 34 games to be played on 20 Saturdays (and that’s given the league restarting at the end of February, a huge presumptio­n in itself) and 19 midweeks.

Even if that was all possible, Moneys would still be playing twice a week for 14 weeks out of 19.

Oh, and they still have to play Fareham Town in the semifinal of the 2019/20 Portsmouth Senior Cup! The least of their priorities, I know, but it’s another game. The situation at Southern Premier League South club Gosport Borough is only marginally better - they ‘only’ have 31 of their 38 league games left!

It is impossible to see how the Southern League campaign can be completed, even if you extend into the summer months.

Wessex League

Generally, the Wessex have looked to wrap their seasons up by late April. In the last 14 seasons, only six times has the last game been played in May - and the latest finish was May 9.

Such a timeframe is patently not possible in 2020/21.

In a season where 760 Premier games were due to take place, only 236 - 31 per cent - have actually been played.

If games restarted on February 27 and finished on May 9, that would leave 11 Saturdays in which to complete 69 per cent of the season. Fareham Town still have 27 Wessex Premier Division games left, plus at least one FA Vase tie.

Even before Monday’s announceme­nt, the FA had given the Wessex, and other non-leagues, the option of extending until the end of May.

Extending the season to May 29 would give 14 Saturdays (given a February 27 restart). But that would still mean Fareham having to shoehorn in 27 games - 71 per cent of their Wessex campaign - into a 92-day period.

I’ll do the maths - that’s one

It is impossible to see how the Southern League campaign can be completed 2020/21 season

league games left and would be confident of completing their season (especially as they have floodlight­s) by mid-May.

Even with a late February, or early March restart, there is a good chance the league could be concluded.

But if the Wessex League isn’t, then how does that affect promotion and relegation between the two leagues?

Ending the Southern League and Wessex League seasons now and rolling them over into 2021/22 has been suggested as a way around the problem. After all, in those four divisions no club has played more than 15 league games.

If you ended the 2020/21 season now, you could restart in August/September and be finished by February 2022. Reintroduc­ing the Hampshire Senior, the Russell Cotes, the Portsmouth Senior Cup could allow a competitiv­e season to progress to March or even April if there is the usual raft of bad weather to contend with.

But that raises various questions.

1) How do you fill the blank weeks in March and April this year if restrictio­ns are lifted and non-league football can resume? Do you organise local cup competitio­ns - for example, one featuring Gosport, Moneyfield­s and the local Wessex clubs (and you could throw in Chichester and Bognor Regis for good measure as the Isthmian League will surely fall in line with the Southern League, or vice versa)?

2) If the Hampshire Premier League can be played to a conclusion, you can’t promote anyone as the 2020/21 Wessex season won’t be finishing until early next year. So what happens then? Do you promote the 2021/22 HPL champions into the 2022/23 Wessex League? Hardly fair on the 2020/21 winners, is it?

The upshot of all this - I feel genuinely sorry for those in officialdo­m who have to sort this mess out, though the national FA have brought some of this upon themselves with their all-too-hasty null and voiding last March.

I also have a solution; not a brilliant one - name me one that is? - but a ‘fits all’ solution nonetheles­s.

That is for each club to play at least half their league fixtures, or 70 per cent if possible - and draw a line under the table when that happens. Promotion and relegation to still take place. The Hampshire Premier League should be completed, even with an early March restart.

My solution would mean, for example, a club being relegated from NL South having played a full season, and a club replacing them having only played 50 per cent of their matches.

That is not ideal, but it’s better than null and void.

Anything is better than null and void.

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