Winter Sports - Football
Stirling Albion Football Club
Stirling work!
Stirling Albion’s Head Groundsman, Graeme Glen, will have been in his role for one year this coming April. In that short time, he has had to battle a freakish spring and excessive winter rainfall, and all whilst making the transition from greenkeeping to groundsmanship
52 I PC FEBRUARY/MARCH 2016 G
raeme Glen is the new (ish) head groundsman at Stirling Albion, the Scottish Division Two football club known affectionately as the Binos. Their recent history has,
according to Wikipedia, included ‘the yo-yo years’ and they have avoided relegation from the Scottish professional league system by the ‘skin of a haggis’ on a couple of occasions.
The Forthbank Stadium has been their home for the past twenty-three years and the club ground share with Stirling University FC, who play in the Lowland League.
Stirling Albion was founded in 1945 after the town’s previous football team, King’s Park, had failed to survive the Second World War. Their ground had been damaged during the war, having been hit by a German bomb on 20 July 1940. This was one of only two bombs to fall on the town during the Second World War.
The new club was the brainchild of local businessman Thomas Fergusson, a local coal magnate, and the ‘albion’ suffix was reputed to have come from the make of the coal lorries used to transport the mineral. This, though, is believed to be an urban myth.
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