The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

We need your cash, says Cowdenbeat­h chairman Donald Findlay.

Community urged to help pull Cowdenbeat­h back from brink

- Craig sMiTh csmith@thecourier.co.uk

Cowdenbeat­h chairman Donald Findlay QC last night issued an impassione­d plea to the local community to help reverse the decline which has put the club in dire straits of late.

The Blue Brazil are fighting for survival in League Two and trying to avoid dropping into the Lowland League, but the 137-year-old club is also fighting to survive in a far more literal sense.

Windfall cup receipts have helped in recent seasons, but officials recently confirmed it has been kept afloat largely due to fundraisin­g and regular cash injections from fans who are the club’s directors.

That situation is unsustaina­ble, and Mr Findlay urged everyone at a public meeting in the town’s Junction Bar to do what they can to rally round.

Mr Findlay revealed that directors had held an extraordin­ary general meeting earlier this week during which they pledged to continue to manage and maintain the club no matter its league status next season, and committed to giving positive and practical backing to a new action plan to take the club forward under the banner of ‘Honour the Past, Ensure a Future’.

“The purpose of this meeting is not to confirm the demise of Cowdenbeat­h FC, and I can also say that the rumours some notable people have contribute­d substantia­l sums of money are not true – if that was the case then we would not be here,” he said.

“We’re not going to let the club die but if we’re going to take it forward we need people to come forward.

“I have this foolish notion of the club and the community getting more involved together.

“If I was to say now ‘That’s it, I’m shutting the club, we’re not going to play the game on Saturday’, we would get people coming from every direction wanting to become involved in the club.

“So why not now? We need people who will commit to doing something for the club and stick at it, at least until the end of next season.”

Supporters were urged to back the Club 135 initiative, which is a plea to anyone with a link to Cowdenbeat­h to donate a minimum of £10.

Reaching out to at least 13,500 people globally would raise at least £135,000 to provide some security, and the meeting heard that £35,000 has been raised in eight months, with contributi­ons coming from around the world, including Vietnam, Canada and the USA.

“When you start to slide, there is a danger that the slide can become very difficult to arrest,” Mr Findlay added.

“The lower you go the less attractive you are to players, to managers, to coaches, to sponsors.

“We have decided our approach should be to move forward, because the other choice is to operate a strategy of containmen­t, trying to fend off another year of relegation, and eventually that will bite you and you will end up in the Lowland League. We have decided that we need to be ambitious and try to take the club forward.

“But there’s only so many times you can go back to the same sponge and keep squeezing it to get water out.”

when you start to slide, there is a danger that the slide can become very difficult to arrest

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 ?? Picture: George McLuskie. ?? Donald Findlay urged everyone at a public meeting in the town’s Junction Bar to do what they can to rally round.
Picture: George McLuskie. Donald Findlay urged everyone at a public meeting in the town’s Junction Bar to do what they can to rally round.

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