The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Cowdenbeat­h’s plight will test just how important the club is to the local community – Spence on Saturday

Hopefully enough people care to save Cowden

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The news that Cowdenbeat­h FC could face closure within a year unless they can find £135,000 is a window on a changing football landscape. De-industrial­isation of the former mining town and changing social habits have left the existence of the club, nicknamed the Blue Brazil, looking as shaky as a shanty hut in a Rio favela, with home crowds plummeting to the low two hundreds.

Many small clubs in Scotland are clinging to survival by their fingertips and it’s perhaps only a matter of time before one loses its grip.

Cowdenbeat­h’s grim situation brings into sharp focus the notion of community in football. How important a club is to the local population is sometimes only gauged in the most desperate of circumstan­ces.

The heroic battles by their fans to keep Dundee FC, (twice), Dunfermlin­e, Hearts, and Motherwell alive after administra­tion were inspiring.

At what point, though, is there no longer sufficient interest, affection, or finance, within a community to keep a football club afloat?

The answer to that may come very soon, with the 137-year-old club needing an enormous cash injection should they be relegated to the Lowland League.

Many old names have disappeare­d from existence, the most famous being Third Lanark, who went the way of the dodo through director malfeasanc­e, while others simply found that their fan base no longer matched their ability to keep the show on the road.

Since the advent of relegation from the Scottish profession­al leagues, dropping into the Highland league or the Lowland League threatens some clubs with financial oblivion.

Cowdenbeat­h find themselves in just such circumstan­ces.

Facing a battle to avoid relegation for the second successive year, the Lowland League next season would leave them with a cost base well in excess of revenue and a perilous future. Football clubs are not owed a living. They exist in a market place where top class football can be watched in comfort, in the pub or at home – and in smaller towns many clubs are increasing­ly struggling to compete.

It’s often said that there are too many clubs in Scotland, but history appears to show that if a senior club is lost, their fans either leave the game or decamp to a local junior club.

If the bottom two divisions in Scotland were to fold tomorrow, perhaps 10,000 supporters in total would be lost, but the blow to their communitie­s would be immeasurab­le.

Football clubs represent a link with the generation­s – a thread of shared experience­s and memories, which bind and strengthen communitie­s.

There’s more to a football club than a set of strips and the waft of Bovril on a Saturday.

There’s a sense of place and of belonging – a recognitio­n and constant reminder of who we are, where we come from and what, and who, sustained and sustains us.

The Blue Brazil don’t have a Pele or Ronaldhino in their ranks, but they represent the hopes and dreams of many.

Hopefully enough of them still care enough to save the day.

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 ??  ?? Cowdenbeat­h FC is in danger of going to the wall if £135,000 cannot be found within the next 12 months.
Cowdenbeat­h FC is in danger of going to the wall if £135,000 cannot be found within the next 12 months.
 ??  ?? Blue Brazil boss Gary Bollan has had a tough job at Central Park.
Blue Brazil boss Gary Bollan has had a tough job at Central Park.

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