The Chronicle

Move to arena will be ‘massive’ for Newcastle Eagles

SWITCH IS GREAT, SAYS FORMER FAVOURITE

- By JOHNATHAN RAMSAY

NEWCASTLE’S switch to the new Eagles Community Arena in November will be “massive for basketball in the region.”

That is the verdict of original Eagle Paul ‘Dougie’ Douglas, the Birmingham-based coach keeping a close eye on his former club’s landmark move.

BBL stalwart Douglas played for the Eagles in the 1990s – a decade which stands out as a massive transition­al period in the history of the North East’s only BBL franchise.

During the former guard’s time with the club, a controvers­ial move from Wearside to Tyneside saw the Comets – later rebranded as the Eagles – base themselves at the Newcastle Arena.

Douglas said: “It was incredible moving to the arena back then.

“As a player you go from playing in sports halls and leisure centres to massive arenas and it felt like we had made it in a way.

“At that stage of my career I was thinking ‘this is big, this is like an NBA game.’ It was massive – at that time you had not seen anything like that.

“It sounds silly but just even coming through the VIP entrance was special. When you went to a leisure centre you just went through the front door!

“The way the basketball scene was shaping up back then it finally felt like we were making that jump to be on par with the European game.

“It was not anything like Europe money-wise but we made that initial step by playing in arenas and bringing more people to our games.”

The Eagles have called Northumbri­a University’s Sport Central their home for the last eight years.

However, the franchise will move into its third Newcastle base this autumn – the Eagles’ Community Arena owned and operated by the club.

Douglas added: “Having your own home and being able to say ‘this is our venue’ is massive.

“It is massive for the management and it is massive for Eagles’ owner Paul Blake on a personal level.

“I have seen Paul come from when he first started working for Newcastle Eagles to where he has it now. It has been no mean feat. “To be able to see a dream like that come true – and be one of the few clubs in the BBL to have its own facility – is huge. “It is a big step forward in terms of attracting youth to the franchise.” Douglas (left) coaches and mentors Birmingham’s emerging players through his All City Basketball programme and in his role as head of basketball at Aston Manor Academy. The veteran coach is confident Newcastle’s new home will inspire the next generation of North East hoops hopefuls to make their mark in the region.

He went on: “In my experience if you have a very successful BBL team in the area kids see from a young age they will aspire to be in that team.

“If the support and the facilities are there to back that up then even better.

“However, I have never been the kind of person to hold anybody back.

“If you are good enough to go to the States then go to the States and if you are good enough to go to Europe then go to Europe.

“If you can earn that money then go and earn that money.

“From my point of view eventually getting to play for Birmingham Bullets as a rookie was a dream for me.

“Birmingham were my city’s team and therefore they were my team – I don’t feel that has changed really.”

 ??  ?? Paul Douglas in action for Newcastle Comets, as the Eagles were then known, in March 1996
Paul Douglas in action for Newcastle Comets, as the Eagles were then known, in March 1996
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