Could London not play at Rosslyn park until supporters are allowed and then move to Plough Lane.
In regards to Plough Lane people will be desperate to see live sport when they are able to do so and there are a lot of houses around the new Plough Lane. How about leaflet dropping the local area offering admission for a fiver and offering AFC Wimbledon fans a cheap ticket.
Joined: Apr 03 2002 Posts: 4958 Location: North West
gardener wrote:Could London not play at Rosslyn park until supporters are allowed and then move to Plough Lane.
In regards to Plough Lane people will be desperate to see live sport when they are able to do so and there are a lot of houses around the new Plough Lane. How about leaflet dropping the local area offering admission for a fiver and offering AFC Wimbledon fans a cheap ticket.
Not heard what the decision is yet at Wimbledon, but unsure about using Rosslyn Park for League matches, our players need time to adjust to the new Plough Lane surface as well.
Unless i have missed something, are the rest of the lads continuing to train at Trailfinders? While RP's ground is nearer to AFC's ground, what happens if their fans vote NO & we end up playing lord knows where?
Joined: Jan 23 2006 Posts: 7392 Location: Looking for a coach that can coach
Deadcowboys1 wrote:Unless i have missed something, are the rest of the lads continuing to train at Trailfinders? While RP's ground is nearer to AFC's ground, what happens if their fans vote NO & we end up playing lord knows where?
Having all levels of the club training in the same place does make sense, creates an atmosphere of being one club, splitting seems daft, the young lads learn from training witj the old heads
Joined: Mar 22 2009 Posts: 1200 Location: South Wales
wire-quin wrote:Does it matter where you train?
I think it does, experience and memory from playing and training on the same ground should help develop a much better knowledge of any quirks and how to exploit them.
I would also think it helps if your constantly practicing attacking / defensive drills, kicks or any other game plan stuff on the ground you'll need to execute them on, also perhaps helps to understand the impact of differing weather conditions.
Granted it would be a small advantage but an advantage nonetheless.
Joined: Apr 03 2002 Posts: 4958 Location: North West
Traffic wrote:I think it does, experience and memory from playing and training on the same ground should help develop a much better knowledge of any quirks and how to exploit them.
I would also think it helps if your constantly practicing attacking / defensive drills, kicks or any other game plan stuff on the ground you'll need to execute them on, also perhaps helps to understand the impact of differing weather conditions.
Granted it would be a small advantage but an advantage nonetheless.
St Helens have trained many years on an ex Grammar School pitches for many seasons now, not near the new ground! doesn't seem to have harmed them.
Joined: Jan 23 2006 Posts: 7392 Location: Looking for a coach that can coach
jaybs wrote:St Helens have trained many years on an ex Grammar School pitches for many seasons now, not near the new ground! doesn't seem to have harmed them.
Exactly
Wigan at Orrell Man Utd at Carrington Leeds Rhinos at a pitch that flooded Warrington on a public Park Harlequins at Surrey sports centre England RU at a fancy 5 star hotel in Bagshot
Joined: Mar 22 2009 Posts: 1200 Location: South Wales
All good points but how many of those teams have a pitch that is capable of being trained on in the week in all weathers and then played on during the weekend? Not 100% sure but are all of those pitches grass? As I said a small advantage but nonetheless one we seem to be giving up.
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