Portsmouth News

‘It would put our future in jeopardy’

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Hawks’ National League rivals have lined up to condemn the decision to offer them loans instead of grants for the next three months.

The 66 clubs across the three divisions are being asked to accept loans, via the Government's £300m Sport Winter Survival Package, rather than the cash handouts they had via the National Lottery in the last three months of last year.

Eastbourne Borough chairman David Blackmore said accepting loans would put his club’s future in ‘jeopardy.’

‘To incur debts of tens of thousands of pounds would be unthinkabl­e,’ Blackmore said. ‘It would put the very future of Eastbourne Borough in jeopardy.

“Every club at our level faces an annual battle just to make ends meet and balance the books. We have a duty to our employees, to our supporters and to the community, to be responsibl­e and not reckless with our club’s management.

‘It was actually touch and go when we opened the current season, at Dorking Wanderers on October 3. We had only just, hours before, had the confirmati­on of the monthly grant, funded by the National Lottery. As soon as we kicked a ball, we activated our players’ contracts for the season.

‘The club had every indication that, if crowds had not returned after the first three months, the financial support would be extended.

‘In common with all of our league, we currently have no significan­t income week by week – and we are suddenly expected to play the second half of our season accumulati­ng debts.’

Southport director Ian Kyle believes there has been a ‘complete breaking of a promise’ to league clubs.

‘We were told that the season would begin on the basis that we would receive from the National League either grants or we would have fans in,’ he remarked.

‘There’s a massive shift of the goalposts.

‘We are being told that the money is there, but despite the fact that we can’t have fans in, we can’t have it any more in a grant, it has to be taken as a loan. We don’t know the basis of the loan, we don’t know the terms of the loan.

‘As far as I’m concerned, it’s a complete breaking of a promise by the National League.’

Only last week 12 National League clubs published an open letter asking all parties ‘not to betray the trust’ they had shown in starting the season in October on the basis of promises and presumptio­ns of future funding.

The letter said: ‘We have also reminded the National League that when clubs agreed to start playing in October there was no mention of loans, only grants.

‘We are firmly of the opinion that any future Sport England funding must not betray the trust we and fellow clubs placed in a number of parties at that time.’

■ Your shout - what do you think should happen to the National League and the rest of non-league football in 2020/21? Email sport@thenews.co.uk

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