The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Community unites to rescue football pitches

- BEN HENDRY

Amajor community effort saved a north-east village’s football pitch when water damage left children with nowhere to play.

After missing out on training for much of the past year, youngsters returned to the turf in Cuminestow­n with some excitement this past Easter.

Their cheer came to an abrupt end the moment their boots squelched onto the surface.

About a quarter of the pitch had become “a bog”, the elements wreaking havoc with it during the winter months when it was barely in use.

Cuminestow­n Youth Active Football Club (CYAFC) organisers were dealt a further blow when they learned the cost to repair it stood at an impossible £30,000.

What happened next demonstrat­es the community spirit in the picture postcard village near Turriff.

The pitch is owned and managed by the James Tenant Playing Field Associatio­n, which also manages the local tennis courts, bowling and croquet greens.

Members were left weighing up some unattracti­ve options – such as waiting until funding became available to sort out the waterlogge­d turf or developing expensive plans for a weather-resistant 5G alternativ­e.

Neither possibilit­y would allow the 80 or so members of CYAFC, aged from seven to 15, to return in the near future. The last thing coaches wanted was for children to face “another year of uncertaint­y”.

So they decided to take on a mammoth DIY project, asking locals to dig deep to help out.

Over a July weekend of bright blue skies and soaring temperatur­es, the community came together like never before.

Companies stepped up to provide diggers, labour, stones and pipes free of charge to bring the pitch up to scratch.

A baking rota was even set up to help keep the volunteers fed during the tough work, and tea and coffee were in constant supply.

Local photograph­er Richard Baron got involved too, putting his talents to use by capturing the project from above with some stunning drone footage.

Coach Garry Cowie explained how a few requests for help snowballed into the mammoth effort.

The plumber said: “The costs seemed to be spiralling so I asked some friends of mine about helping out, and one thing just led to another.

“There were about 80 people taking aggregate in and out, digging trenches and helping out with the manual work.

“A momentous amount of effort went into it, it’s staggering.

“And the main thing is, the children are not going to lose another season, they are able to play here now.”

Over the three days, 300 metres of pipes were laid and 300 tonnes of stones were put in the ground to bring new life to the pitch.

The stone was provided for free by Banff-based Bridgend Aggregates, diggers and drivers were supplied by Callum Chalmers Irrigation from Turriff, Balgownie Ltd offered up some tractors, fuel came from John A Smith and Sons in Peterhead and Graham Mackie of Turriff also provided machinery.

Fellow coach, Andrew Strachan, remains in awe of the spectacle that unfolded last month.

Andrew, a farmer who has played for various local sides and now referees amateur ties, said: “It was fantastic.

“There were fathers, sons and grandparen­ts – everyone just mucked in and got on with it.

“Had it not been for that fantastic support, Cuminestow­n wouldn’t have the pitch now.”

Club chairman, Steve Harrison, hopes the topquality turf will help to bring back some lapsed players.

He said that during the “bleak” first four months of the year, two of their teams folded as players left for other clubs or “gave up football to play more Fortnite late at night”.

Coach Andrew added: “It’s been very difficult coming back from lockdown, a lot of teams are still playing but it can be hard to get children out of bad habits and back into sport.”

That is a pattern which emerged across the UK, with many children missing out on the routine activities they previously enjoyed.

A study by Sport England earlier this year outlined “deep concerns” about the the impact of Covid-19 on children’s physical activity levels.

Figures showed the majority of young people failed to meet the recommende­d 60 minutes of daily exercise in the 2019-20 academic year.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? PITCHING IN: Watching players train on the repaired pitch are, from left: vice-chairman and coach Garry Cowie, coach Andrew Strachan and chairman Steve Harrison. Below: the community effort to transform the ground. Main picture by Chris Sumner.
PITCHING IN: Watching players train on the repaired pitch are, from left: vice-chairman and coach Garry Cowie, coach Andrew Strachan and chairman Steve Harrison. Below: the community effort to transform the ground. Main picture by Chris Sumner.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom