The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Sadness as Bradford fans bid farewell to iconic Odsal home after 85 years

The emotion was raw as the troubled Bulls left their historic stadium, writes Ross Heppenstal­l

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As hundreds, if not thousands, of Bradford Bulls supporters descended on the pitch at the final hooter, it did not look or feel like a club ready to part company with their iconic home of 85 years.

Rugby league’s fallen giants have suffered an extraordin­ary fall from grace during the past decade and yesterday’s 30-10 Championsh­ip

victory against Sheffield Eagles marked the end of an era.

Raw emotion dripped from every corner of Odsal, a decaying but unique amphitheat­re.

In 1954 it housed a then worldrecor­d crowd of 102,569 but a ground where the ashes of several generation­s of Bradford supporters are scattered will now close after owner Andrew Chalmers said he could no longer afford its rates, rent and maintenanc­e.

More alarming still is the club being placed in special measures by the Rugby Football League due to concerns over their financial sustainabi­lity.

From next season, the Bulls will share a ground with Dewsbury Rams some 10 miles away and outside the Bradford district.

There was great sadness among the 7,531 crowd at how it had come to this. Early in the millennium, Bradford reached five successive Super League Grand Finals and won three of them. They did the treble in 2003 and were World Club champions three times during that glorious era.

Since 2012, however, Bradford have suffered three administra­tions, two relegation­s and a liquidatio­n. Various owners have talked about returning the club to their former glories but none have delivered.

Odsal itself and its associated costs has partly proved the club’s undoing. In 2012, the RFL bought the lease on the stadium from the Bulls and later that year came the first financial meltdown and spell in administra­tion. The club’s entire coaching staff were made redundant but worked without pay for three months.

After a third spell in administra­tion in November 2016 came liquidatio­n and an unthinkabl­e fall into the third tier. In January 2017, the reformed club were handed to Chalmers.

The RFL owns the lease on Odsal but now has no tenant and closure of the site will lead to numerous Bradford employees losing their jobs. With only 14 players contracted for next season and coach John Kear unable to sign anyone while the club remains in special measures, the future remains uncertain. Despite this victory, Bradford’s play-off hopes ended due to results elsewhere.

Kear said: “It is sad to be leaving Odsal, but we have just got to keep this club alive and kicking.”

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