On the downside unless it is used well and as a tool to harness team spirit teams with similar facilities i.e. Sunderland and bstards have dropped. Another reason it was vital that Sean stayed with his baby for at least it's teething stage.

Oh yeah can imagine the discussion "come join us and you will get to sit on a bench, if you are lucky and get to play we will attempt to stifle any talent you have as our manager prefers a worker than a flair player, you must never stray from the framework or else "Conroy92 wrote:I'm hoping it convinces players to join us over other teams offering similar wages. Think it will be particularly appealing to young foreigners who have come up through state of the art academy's. For me, I'd like to see us doing a bit of shopping in some of the top teams youth teams. There's clubs like ajax who have some excellent under 21 players on an affordable wage.
Will certainly help in signing players, absolutely no doubt.Conroy92 wrote:I'm hoping it convinces players to join us over other teams offering similar wages. Think it will be particularly appealing to young foreigners who have come up through state of the art academy's. For me, I'd like to see us doing a bit of shopping in some of the top teams youth teams. There's clubs like ajax who have some excellent under 21 players on an affordable wage.
Right so The Foundation had raised 10 million plus....never realised it was so profitable and fans were so generous. Hats off to you all you should be really proud of this legacy that you helped withbfcjg wrote:I went to the launch of the Clarets foundation and am still a member. The foundation help lay the foundation's if you pardon the pun for what we have now. Sky BT etc come and go but there is a hard-core of Clarets who will always be there for the club.
I don't have any pics from the old building - but back in 2004 Steve Cotterill said he wasn't having his players using it. I asked someone who was involved with the youth set up at the time about how bad it was. He said the walls in the shower room were almost completely black with mould and damp. No wonder SC condemned it and it would be a further seven years before it was used again by the first team.Jel wrote:CT, I have seen the many different photos from the development of the new facilities, it looks great!
How bad was it in the old place? I don't think I have seen any photos to compare. I bet you have some, any chance you could post some please?
The place was just left to rot sadlybfcjg wrote:Gawthorpe was set in the days when players had a fag at half time steak before kick off and a skinfull the night before games. I think the debts we were in throughout the eighties and nineties etc was personified by Gawthorpe.
They even scrounged the bath from James Hargreaves
What are the rules regarding spectators at the youth games and first team training? Are we still not allowed to go and spectate at all? Is there somewhere you can watch without trespassing?ClaretTony wrote:It's fantastic. I've been going down Gawthorpe to watch games for years and years now and have seen how poor it has been from close quarters. The pitches weren't even adequate for a non-league side and the facilities inside the old building, while much better in recent years, were quite honestly disgraceful.
I stand and look in wonderment when I go down now and have enjoyed watching things progress. We started with work on the youth pitches and then it was the turn of the brand new first team pitches as the building started to progress. I never, ever thought I would see this at our training ground. There were plans for it, but I'm not sure we'd have ever got close to it had we not got back in the Premier League for a second time in 2014. That was the promotion that clinched it although we've added some extras, including the under soil heated pitch, with the promotion in 2016.
Agreed. It won't be instantaneously noticeable, may take five years upwards before we reap any benefits from a better quality of youth player but can only be beneficial to the attraction of staff of all types and their comfort/state of mind.Inchy wrote:I haven't read all the comments on hear so probably saying something that's already been said.
I don't think the new training facilities will increase points this season but it will help us attract better players both at senior and youth level. It will also attract better coaches, physios etc going forward, as they now have all the tools they need to do their job to the highest level.
It's a fantastic legacy for Dyche and the board
No restriction for watching youth team gamesKRBFC wrote:What are the rules regarding spectators at the youth games and first team training? Are we still not allowed to go and spectate at all? Is there somewhere you can watch without trespassing?
Sounds like a dictatorship. Would using different entrances and stairs be allowed in any other business?ClaretTony wrote:Piece from Michael Duff this morning in the LT which highlights the benefits of all the teams being in the same building. Shows just how ridiculous it was to move the academy off site in the first place.
“There literally used to be a separate world, not just the Under-18s, it was the whole academy,” he said.
“Tommy Wood, one of our second years, got player of the year last season (2015/16) and, even being a first team player, I didn’t know his name. It’s wrong. He got player of the year so he must’ve been the best player but I didn’t even know his name, nevermind anybody else’s.
“It’s different now. They train indoor in the morning and Tom (Heaton) will stick his head around the corner and have a chat with a couple of the lads. Dean Marney has done the same. They’re building relationships, it’s aspirational.”
Giving youngsters a clear pathway through from youth team to first team was something that Clarets chief Sean Dyche was keen on when he had an input into the plans for the new training centre, and Duff can see it working.
“You train on one pitch, you make the under 23s you train on the next pitch, then it’s up to the first team pitch,” he said.
“At the moment they go in a separate entrance, they use a different staircase to get to the canteen, they sit in a different room, within the canteen, but they know if they make it that changes. They move on, they move in to the first team dressing room, they get in to the first team canteen. There’s definitely a method behind the madness.”
“I remember when I was a youth team player I used to take snippets off first team players, I had a bit of a laugh with them and it was good with the respect thing as well,” he said.
“The lads need to keep their nose clean. You need to learn to be respectful and polite and well-mannered because they’re in and around first team staff.
“The main thing for me is standards. When they walk in the bootroom the first team boots are spotless. There’s have to be spotless too because they are the tools of their trade. Those core values are the most important things.
“If they see it, watch it and breathe it then hopefully it’s going to become ingrained. If Sean Dyche walks past then you need to hold his eye and say ‘morning gaffer’. They’re just life skills, it’s not about being whether you’re a footballer or not. We’re big on that, which most people should be really.”
I think you've misinterpreted that. It fits in with where their dressing rooms/boot rooms are etc.Quickenthetempo wrote:Sounds like a dictatorship. Would using different entrances and stairs be allowed in any other business?
You are joking aren't you...Quickenthetempo wrote:Sounds like a dictatorship. Would using different entrances and stairs be allowed in any other business?
I'm really hoping he/she is.MACCA wrote:You are joking aren't you...
Aren't you?
Wouldn't be a problem with the new facilities, I'm told there is a box of tissues on reception with players are welcome to take some when required.Steve-Harpers-perm wrote:Thank god Patrick Bamford isn't still here.
Where I work, based in a DHL airfreight site, the office staff enter through the main reception area whilst the warehouse, yard, security and driving staff are expected to access through a gate round the side. Same swipe cards but with different access coding. Not at all unusual.Quickenthetempo wrote:Sounds like a dictatorship. Would using different entrances and stairs be allowed in any other business?
I think it has been going about 17 years so my contribution has been £1700 and if there are 3000 members that is £5million but I have no idea how many members there areCleveleys_claret wrote:Right so The Foundation had raised 10 million plus....never realised it was so profitable and fans were so generous. Hats off to you all you should be really proud of this legacy that you helped with