The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Doncaster has to take bull by the horns East Fife boss Young urges SPFL chief to put an end to mud-slinging in game

Governance:

- BY JAMIE DURENT

Darren Young reckons a firm statement from SPFL chief Neil Doncaster is the only way to stop the tit-for-tat verbals in Scottish football.

The former Aberdeen midfielder, now manager of East Fife, believes it requires strong leadership for the game in Scotland to stop being viewed as a laughing stock.

Several clubs have made critical statements over the last week, surroundin­g the matter of an independen­t investigat­ion into the SPFL and the manner of the season in the lower leagues being ended.

A lot of it stems from the proposal the SPFL put forward to bring the season in the Championsh­ip, League One and

League Two to an end, disputed for many clubs for how it negatively impacted them.

However, it was ultimately passed after Dundee changed their vote from a no to a yes, after their original submission got stuck in a quarantine­d email folder.

All of this has painted Scottish football in a negative light, which Young attributes to the rush to finish the season. However, he hopes a firm decision from Doncaster, pictured, could allow clubs to move on.

Young said: “People have said their piece and whether it’s going to stop there, probably not. For me, it’s got to come to (Neil) Doncaster and say ‘this is it, end of ’.

“For me, he’s got to come out and say the season has ended and this is what’s happening.

“If we get a start-back date, he can turn round to clubs and say ‘this is what we’re doing’. It should be a case of moving on – I don’t think there’s anything we can do to change it now. “Scottish football has got a bad enough reputation down in England and for everything to go the way it went, it’s even more of a laughing stock now.

“Hopefully, they can learn from it and move on, because the way they’ve done it isn’t great for anybody.”

Young’s club East Fife were not directly disadvanta­ged by the decision to end the season, despite being in with a chance of making the League One play-offs.

He added: “We’d been in the playoffs for most of the season. When the lockdown came, we ended up being out of the play-offs – we’d been out of them for five days all season.

“It was frustratin­g and I think it’s an extra £2,500 for finishing up a position. We’d have loved to continue but at the end of the day it is about health. It just seemed to me a bit of a rush job.”

Brora Rangers chairman William Powrie insists he will not give up hope on elevation to League 2 until a proposal on SPFL reconstruc­tion is formally quashed.

Although Premiershi­p clubs last Friday indicated they would not support a rejig of the league structure, the SPFL has yet to confirm reconstruc­tion is off the table.

A reconstruc­tion task force has yet to come forward with a proposal despite being given a mandate to do so.

That has given Powrie fresh hope. He said: “I have never thought it has been dead in the water.

“The clubs have still got to vote on any proposal put forward from the reconstruc­tion working party.

“There are good people on that working group.

“My understand­ing is they will be bringing in a proposal to the table for a formal vote. The lid has not been hammered down on it yet.”

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