The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Football could see expanded Championsh­ip in temporary two-tier set-up.

Proposed closed-doors resumption could see some clubs forced to write off campaign

- ERIC NICOLSON

A “carve-up” of the lower leagues in Scottish football could be on the cards, with a divide widening between clubs wanting to mothball and those ready to take a gamble on closeddoor­s resumption.

The end result could be an expanded Championsh­ip in a temporary two-league set-up, with sides not willing to wager their existence left with no option but to write-off the whole of the 2020/21 campaign.

That the Premiershi­p will try to get going again next season with no supporters in the grounds – and with the TV deal behind it to make the finances stack up – is certain. Courier Sport also understand­s that the Championsh­ip is likely to begin at roughly the same time.

The ‘Pixellot’ automated camera system will help second tier sides tap into the in-game betting world, while doubling up as a streaming service for fans willing to pay around £7 per game to watch their team play.

The SFA will waive the rule that prohibits live Saturday afternoon broadcasts.

However, none of those measures will help part-time clubs in Leagues One and Two, where the streaming of games has limited revenue potential given small supporter-bases, and doesn’t get anywhere close to covering the costs of testing, wages and the loss of matchday income.

Clubs have been told to budget for between £3,500 and £4,000a-week on £100 coronaviru­s tests that will need to be conducted twice weekly. That adds up to around £12,000 a month.

A source told the Courier: “You might as well make it £50,000 for all the difference it would make.”

Some clubs in the bottom two divisions have calculated that around 50% of their income comes from hospitalit­y and events, which will be lost.

Meanwhile, travelling expenses for training – social distancing regulation­s mean there could only be two players per car, rather than four – and matches would double.

Despite these difficulti­es, Courier Sport understand­s there are a handful of League One and League Two clubs who spoke of their desire to “give it a go” on a recent conference call.

Others, though, were left in “utter bewilderme­nt” that it could even be contemplat­ed.

“It is one hell of a mess,” a source said. “I have never shaken my head so much in a meeting in my life.”

Fear of embarking upon the bold strategy of trying to make closed-doors football work in the lower leagues is not only stoked by the losses that owners already know they will incur. It’s the additional ones that will arrive if Covid-19 forces another curtailmen­t, with a squad of players having been signed for a season.

“We would be jeopardisi­ng our very future,” Courier Sport was told.

The more palatable and prudent alternativ­e is mothballin­g while in a financial position that is “a million miles away from trouble,” potentiall­y for a full season and returning when it is safe.

At that point, after a reorganisa­tional “carve-up”, it is possible that some current League One clubs who opt to mothball will find themselves in the bottom tier of Scottish football. But that is deemed to be by far the lesser of two evils for them.

And for next season, with only a very small number of League One clubs in a position to play, there will be “overwhelmi­ng pressure” to not deny those clubs that opportunit­y.

That could trigger moves to bring them into a reconstruc­ted Championsh­ip, whilst also seeing Hearts and Inverness Caledonian Thistle going into the top flight.

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