If ambition is rewarded then ROBERT BRADSHAW should go far in our industry ASaint@NEOTS
ROBERT Bradshaw is one ambitious young man. His aim is to get to the top of his profession. He played football for his school team but realised that he didn’t have the talent to become a professional footballer. So, Rob took, for him, the next best course of action; to work as a groundsman. Robert works for Huntingdonshire District Council where he maintains 24 football pitches and various other ‘green’ areas including parks and housing estates. “I’ve been with council for five years”
says Rob. “My job entails marking out the pitches and carrying out general maintenance. I find the more I do the more confidence and experience I gain. But the council are very ‘clock’ driven and I don’t get the time to look after these pitches to the best of my ability. I find this rather frustrating, I have to say.” “During the 2005- 2006
football season I wanted to
take this
experience and improve it at a ‘proper’ club, so I volunteered to help out at my home town club, Huntingdon FC. The committee didn’t know me or my work so, to get the job, I offered to do it for free. I just love doing the work and knew that I was going to gain valuable experience in my spare time.” “The club had limited equipment - a
battered old mower (make unknown), a strimmer and an old-fashioned wheel to wheel line marker. I just about got by with the mower but the line marker really used to cheese me off (polite option) so I ‘borrowed’ the council’s Fleet Kombi. The Chairman soon spotted the improvement and the club purchased their own. In that year I won FA Groundsman of the Year for Step 7 and below, a national highly commended certificate from the FA, the Chairman’s Outstanding Achievement Award and Clubman of the Year. During my time at Huntingdon I put in over 1000 voluntary hours.” “I have also worked on the training
grounds at Cambridge United, Chester City and Carlisle United and also been involved with the Italian Serie C team, and the England Under 19 Ladies where I was cutting, rolling and marking out the pitches. When you get letters from the FA thanking you for what you have done it gives you great confidence in what you are doing.”
“In September of last year I joined St
Neots Town FC. I felt I needed a new challenge and, in comparison to Huntingdon, the ‘Saints’ are a big club with big ambitions - a bit like me! They also have a bit of a budget for machinery!”
“I decided that, if I wanted to make
groundsmanship my career, then I had to make a few sacrifices where money was concerned. At the end of the day, as the old saying goes, money is not everything!” The pitch at St. Neots is rated as one of the best in Cambridgeshire. Bearing in mind over 100 games are played on it each season this is no mean achievement. The club run a 1st team, reserve team and Under 18’s, and the County side also use it as their home venue.
“I cut the pitch using a Hayter Ride-on and a Hayter Harrier rotary mower with a collection box and rear roller. We also have a fertiliser spreader and, yet again, a wheel-to-wheel line marker - but this one is a bit more modern and, using Fleet paint, gives us a nice bright line. Presentation is the key to success.” “From July to February we had over 70 games on the pitch and over 55 training sessions! That’s an awful lot of wear and tear. I tell the players not to train on the pitch. They get angry with me but it is in their best interests as they are the first to moan if the match day pitch is not in good condition. Until we have our own training pitch there is not a lot they can
“I tell the players that grass grows by the inch and dies by the foot”
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