Saturday 21 July 2018

Pooler Moving Forward


I have had time to reflect on last Tuesday’s meeting where Pontypool RFC CEO Ben Jeffreys spoke eloquently and passionately about the problems facing the club. He explained that the antisocial behaviour of certain people was putting players’ safety at risk and making the volunteers’ task in preparing the ground thoroughly unpleasant as well as frequently undoing the ground development work. It was clear that security at the ground needed to be beefed up but that the intransigence of Torfaen Council was preventing this from happening. An impasse has been reached and, as a consequence, the time was right for Pontypool RFC to find another home.

This is a highly emotive subject of course. I think most people would like the club to remain in the glorious surroundings of Pontypool Park with its rich history but equally there is a stark recognition that things cannot go on like they are. The club needs to be free to tackle its problems in its own way and continue to plan and prepare for the future. This will always be difficult at Pontypool Park where local government holds sway. It does sound an awful lot like Brexit doesn’t it? Let us hope we can manage it better!

Having thought long and hard about it, I am fully supportive of the plan to move away from Pontypool Park. There are plenty of positives that is for sure which in the cold light of day outweigh my emotional attachment to the Bank that goes back fifty years or more.  If Pooler move and end up with a purpose built ground with 3G pitch and a club house it would be a tremendous step forward. Imagine being able to have a beer in a room where all that Pontypool memorabilia was on display. It would also be a fantastic asset that could be shared with the local community.

If is a small word with big significance however. To move requires the selection and procurement of a suitable location and of course significant funding. Ben Jeffreys admitted that a site has not yet been found although they have been looking for some time. This will surely mean that a move is quite a long way in the future - at least a couple of years I guess. In the meantime, there is some important rugby to be played on Pontypool Park with Pooler having the major challenge of pushing to regain Premiership status. Let us hope a way can be found to work constructively with Torfaen Council and the police to tackle some of the current issues with antisocial behaviour and keep everyone safe.

Well done Ben for having the courage of your convictions! I am with you, Peter and Pontypool RFC all the way. I will continue to watch Pooler wherever they play – even in Newport!




Sunday 15 July 2018

That It Should Come to This


There are many cases of situations where the actions of a few cause heartache and pain for the many. What is happening at Pontypool Park of late is a glaring example of this. The antisocial behaviour of a few that takes place in around the rugby ground is threatening to force Pontypool RFC to leave their spiritual home. The mindless people who perpetrate this behaviour seem to gain some kind of satisfaction from wrecking Pontypool RFC’s ambitions to take a leading position in the community by wanton acts of vandalism.

Why has this not been stopped you might ask? Surely the police and the local authorities could intervene. So far everything that has been done has proved ineffective. Pontypool RFC would like to be able to fence off the ground to improve security but this according to the Council seems to contravene the covenant of Pontypool Park (although it was OK to build a large sports centre where you have to pay to use the facilities). You somehow doubt whether a fence would keep the vandals out if they really wanted to continue their campaign of destruction.

On the face of it, the pragmatic answer is for Pooler to up sticks and find a new home where they can be in charge of their own destiny – Pexit! This of course would be a terrible wrench for all those who are associated with the club and have had the benefits of playing and watching rugby in surely one of the most picturesque settings in the world. Let us hope it doesn’t come to this as I for one would miss those afternoons on the Bank which have been an important part of my life for the last fifty years or so. Rest assured I will still support Pooler wherever they play but it could never be quite the same.

Surely the best answer is to round up the perpetrators of the problem as soon as possible. They are hardly master criminals. I would then send them to a boot camp run along the lines of a Ray Prosser training session. You never know they might get a taste for playing rugby and realise that scattering sharp objects on the pitch is dangerous.

I have confidence that this great club with the guidance of Peter and Ben Jeffreys and the backing of the loyal supporters will find a sensible way to solve the problem. We must for everyone’s sake.