obeone wrote:When will the link up with Cas be severed ?
The agreement with Cas lasts until the end of the year but it can be terminated with 1 months notice from either party at any time. However, the point of this particular question appears to be more aggressive than that - certainly with the use of the word "severed". There have been a number of comments to me that the dual registration agreement between us and Cas is not something we'd want as a club and it renders us to a status of feeder club to Cas. The agreement with Cas is clearly nothing of the sort and it would have been very silly not to take up Cas's offer of a partnership agreement in the light of the considerable movements and upheavals running across Super League and the Championship, once the Under 23 competition had been abandoned this season. As an aside, our club was committed to the Under 23 competition and stated that it wished for this competition to run indefinitely and for the Cougars to always be a part of it. I certainly feel that the loss of the Under 23 competition has weakened the game as it was a strategic part of the game. In any event, Super League teams had nowhere for their first teamers to get game time so the obvious route was partnerships with Championship clubs. With virtually all the Championship clubs signing up (even Leigh after they had said they wouldn't!) the club had to make a decision (for example, Whitehaven fielded Ade Gardner in our home game! Would any of our fans complained if Rangi Chase appeared on our side for a game or two?!). The obvious route was an agreement with Cas. The agreement is loose and not binding for both parties and has helped us in the past when we had injury issues. Further, we are not forced to field any Cas players so it's a matter of choice by our Head Coach whether or not he wishes to play anyone from Cas. Clearly, Marchy will make that decision based on performance reasons and nothing else. The reason why is that every time Marchy picks a team he wants to win the game so he will pick the best team to accomplish the task. Finally, and most importantly, people do seem to be hung up about this agreement which is tantamount to a loan deal only. And, interestingly, we have loaned players in the last 2 seasons without anyone raising any concerns. George Elliott and Jake Normington from the Rhinos (and Jake was a key player in our win over Workington so where would we have been without him?). And James Davey from Wakefield last year. Further, we have loaned Elliott Cosgrove from Dewsbury Rams this year and he contributed very well whilst we had him. Partnerships like the Cas partnership are nothing new and do not betray the fabric and essence of what makes Keighley Cougars the club it is. The critical issue in all of this is that we stay in the Championship this season, ideally getting into a play off position, and then we push on next season to become a top 6 Championship team. Given the change in the coach,our playing personnel and the structure of the game at the start of this season we had significant issues to face but we have faced them, the team is gelling and I feel we can go far this season (reference the good performance against Sheffield this weekend - not perfect because we started slowly but the performance showed that we should be nearer the top of the table rather than where we are)
burleycougar wrote:Are there any plans to exploit the ' crossbar challenge ' a bit more ?
We sold 12 tickets on Sunday 21st April. I would like the Crossbar Challenge to be a part of the match day experience but clearly, at 12 tickets per game, the club cannot afford to pay someone to walk around selling them. If someone, or a group, wishes to volunteer to sell them them they will get my full support. We have plenty of pre-printed tickets to sell and I feel that the Crossbar Challenge could contribute anything between £50 and £100 per match to the club (that is, of course, unless someone finally hits the Crossbar!)
Dreamer wrote:baring in mind the clubs stated ambition of SL by 2015, how likely in percentage terms is a new stadium.
Our stated ambition is to achieve SL status by 2018, not 2015. We are working on the new stadium process at the moment but it is early days. I would say to achieve an entirely new stadium is a 20% likelihood but a much higher degree of likelihood is that development will be underway with completion of the first 2 or 3 stages of the development having been achieved prior to entry into Super League, e.g. new stand and new gym at the Hard Ings end of the stadium and a proper seated area and media centre on the TV gantry side.
Dreamer wrote:Failing that are there contingency plans to replace the wooden stand and provide SL appropriate seating, access/egress, turnstiles, toilets, eating facilities etc.
Again, as per previous question, if we can't get the total budget to completely re-develop the stadium we will look to secure the money for a staged implementation that will progressively give our club what it needs.
Dreamer wrote:What strategy have we identified to raise the crowd to a sufficient level.
We are moving forward on a range of fronts to gradually raise the crowd to sufficient levels. For example, offline we need to win more games (which is gradually coming together), we have had our first go at distributing 20,000 free junior season tickets and we have learnt some interesting things from this so we will be better at it next season where we will be distributing 40,000. Further, we have built good relationships with a range of schools and this will bear fruit in the coming years. We have finally got some budget to promote now and again so you will see adverts in the KN and T&A raising the profile of the club and fixture lists were distributed in the KN a few weeks ago. We will do a season ticket offer prior to Christmas this year in much the same vein as Christmas 2011 and we are in conversation with Keighley Town Council to try to get signs on the Keighley boundary signs which state "Welcome to Keighley. The home of Keighley Cougars." and similarly, we intend to have a conversation with Bradford Council to have brown signs indicating where the ground is. Online our Twitter following has passed 2,200 and is increasing at a rate of 150 per month, our Facebook has over 700 Likes and our new website (to be implemented very soon) will be kept up to date in a way that makes it very attractive for people to come and visit it. We have also just signed up for Welcome to Yorkshire which will help promote the club online and offline. Bear in mind, this list is a tiny part of the things we are doing and we are doing it in a sustainable way that does not de-stabilise the club financially unlike various attempts in the past.
Dreamer wrote:What strategy have we identified to raise the team to a sufficient strength to win competitions.
We have the club financially stable. As the seasons progress we will gradually strengthen the team in much the same way as Featherstone have. The race to Super League and staying in Super League is a marathon, not a sprint. The club will continue developing its young players and it hopes for a powerful partnership between the club and Craven College whereby the young academy players end up almost being developed full time and provide coaching services back to our children in the community to further develop rugby league in the area.
Dreamer wrote:If we get a new stadium will we own the facilities or will it be a Stadium Management Company?
I'm not sure how it will pan out at the moment. Bear in mind we don't own the facilities at the moment. The RFL lease them from the Co-op and we lease them from the RFL. It may continue to be the same arrangement.