GMA and ECB Apprenticeship Support Scheme

GMA and ECB Apprenticeship Support Scheme: The Grounds Management Association (GMA) and the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) have joined forces to launch the ‘Apprenticeship Support Scheme’, designed to enhance the experience of grounds people apprentices in First Class Counties.

This pilot initiative is designed to strengthen the future of cricket by attracting and supporting more aspiring grounds professionals.

GMA and ECB Apprenticeship Support Scheme

GMA and ECB Apprenticeship Support Scheme

With the demand for skilled grounds managers growing, the scheme aims to provide apprentices with not only the technical knowledge required for cricket-specific turf care but also the essential support they need to develop their careers.

It also aims to address broader industry challenges such as workforce retention and succession planning by making apprenticeships a more structured and attractive career pathway. At the same time, it provides additional support for existing grounds professionals, ensuring they have the resources and expertise to mentor and develop the next generation effectively.

The GMA will provide tailored cricket-specific online courses to supplement apprentices’ learning, as well as bespoke webinars designed to enhance their knowledge and better prepare them for a career in cricket grounds management.

Apprentices will also have access to GMA membership, unlocking a range of benefits including the GMA Member Assistance Programme – a 24-hour confidential counselling and wellbeing service – alongside online technical resources, salary advice and guidance, legal consultation and much more.

The ECB Pitch and Grounds Advisor, Andy Mackay, will play a central role in the pilot, acting as a key point of contact for employers seeking advice on apprenticeship support. Andy will also work with stakeholders to develop an information and support hub, and resources to help promote grounds management as a career, laying the foundation for an all-rounded scheme in the future.

By working closely with First Class Counties, the ECB and GMA are hoping to help modernise grounds management recruitment and improve career progression opportunities to ensure that cricket venues continue to be maintained to the highest standards.

With this announcement coinciding with National Apprenticeship Week, it’s a great opportunity to recognise the important role apprentices play in the industry’s future.

Jason Booth, Chief Operating Officer at the GMA, said: “We are proud to be partnering with the ECB to pilot this initiative which not only opens the door for new talent but also strengthens the long-term sustainability of the profession. Apprentices are the future of the grounds management industry and providing them with the right support is essential to achieving high standards across professional cricket.”

Andy Mackay, ECB Pitch and Grounds Advisor, said: “Apprenticeships are a fantastic way to develop skills and discover talent, whilst having the potential to set people on the path to a rewarding and enjoyable career. We are excited to bring the GMA and our Counties together in partnership to explore how we can maximise this opportunity to add value to the apprenticeship framework for employers and apprentices alike and create long term solutions to recruitment challenges.”

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SISIS Machines Transform Greens and Fairways

SISIS Machines Transform Greens and Fairways: Maintaining a golf course as unique and picturesque as Shiskine Golf and Tennis Club demands equipment that delivers exceptional results with precision and reliability.

For Head Greenkeeper Stewart Fotheringham, the introduction of two SISIS machines—the Maxislit and the Multislit—has been nothing short of revolutionary. These innovative tools have transformed the condition of the course’s greens and fairways, setting a new standard for drainage, firmness, and overall playability, even in the face of challenging weather and high foot traffic.

SISIS Machines Transform Greens and Fairways

SISIS Machines Transform Greens and Fairways

Maintaining the course’s stunning greens and fairways has always been a labour of love for Stewart. He began his career at Shiskine, on the Isle of Arran, in 1982 as a 15-year-old apprentice and, 42 years later, his passion for the course remains as strong as ever.

“If you’ve ever been here, you’ll understand why I’ve stayed so long,” Stewart explains. “The location is incredible, with breathtaking views, and the 12-hole layout is a hit with everyone. The members love it, and we see plenty of visitors in the summer. But with all that play, and the wind that hits us from every direction, the course takes a beating.”

To keep the course in peak condition, Stewart and his small team of two full-time and one part-time greenkeepers recently introduced two SISIS machines: the Maxislit for fairways and the Multislit for greens. The results, according to Stewart, have been transformative.

Shiskine’s seaside links course, established in 1896, is a mix of quirky features and challenging terrain. Regular aeration is essential to manage drainage, reduce compaction, and ensure the course can handle heavy play and unpredictable weather.

“The advice to incorporate slit tining came from our agronomist, Gordon Irvine,” says Stewart. “Gordon explained that slit tining over winter offers unique benefits, so we decided to invest in the Maxislit and Multislit from SISIS.”

The SISIS Maxislit, a tractor-mounted deep slitter, is used on fairways to enhance drainage and reduce compaction. “We use the Maxislit about three times between November and January,” Stewart says. The angle of the tines and the spiral design allow deep penetration with minimal surface disturbance, and it’s incredibly simple to operate—just hitch it to the tractor and go. “The results have been excellent,” adds Stewart.

On the greens, the SISIS Multislit, a tractor-mounted deep slitting lawn aerator, has also worked wonders. “We’ve only had the Multislit for a year, but the difference is remarkable,” Stewart notes. “After just a few uses, the greens are firmer and much drier. During Storm Darragh, we had 60mm of rain, and there wasn’t a single puddle on any of the greens. Before using the Multislit, we’d have seen standing water everywhere.”

Stewart emphasises the ease of use as a standout feature of both machines. “They’re straightforward and fast to set up. There’s no complex PTO shaft to deal with, and they’re highly effective. For the Multislit, we’ve used it 4-5 times so far, and the improvement in drainage and firmness has been incredible.”

For Stewart, the investment in SISIS machinery has been transformative. “If you’re struggling with soft greens or poor drainage, the Multislit is a must-have. It’s transformed our greens in no time. The Maxislit has been just as effective on our fairways. I’d recommend these machines to any greenkeeper—they’re simple, efficient, and deliver fantastic results.”

For further information or a no obligation demonstration, please contact SISIS on 01332 824 777 or visit www.sisis.com

For more news, reviews and insightful views, you can follow SISIS on Twitter or Instagram @SISISMachinery and like the company’s Facebook page – www.facebook.com/SISISMachinery. You can also view the latest SISIS videos by visiting www.youtube.com/SISISMachinery

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Dennis Launches Revolutionary Multi Charger Hub

Dennis Launches Revolutionary Multi Charger Hub: Dennis has unveiled its latest advancement in sustainable technology: the Multi Charger Hub.

This new product significantly enhances the efficiency and convenience of charging their acclaimed E-Series battery-powered mowers.

Dennis Launches Revolutionary Multi Charger Hub

Dennis Launches Revolutionary Multi Charger Hub

The E-Series, known for its eco-friendly and high-performance battery-powered mowers, has already set a new standard in the industry. With models such as the ES-34R, ES-860, ES-760, ES-30, and ES-36, these mowers offer versatility, reduced carbon emissions, and operational quietness, catering to the growing demand for sustainable solutions.

Now, with the introduction of the Multi Charger Hub, owners of these innovative mowers are poised to experience even greater benefits.

Efficient Charging Solution

The Multi Charger Hub is designed to streamline the charging process for multiple E-Series mowers, offering a host of features tailored to the needs of professional grounds persons:

  • Sequentially Charging: This mobile unit can recharge up to 8 large E-Series machines, ensuring that all mowers are ready for use without the hassle of multiple chargers.
  • Intelligent Charging System: The Hub includes a smart system that shuts down each mower at 100% charge, preventing overcharging and preserving battery life. The display screen provides a clear indication of each mower’s state of charge (SOC) and highlights which machine is currently being charged.
  • Convenient Design: The easily manoeuvrable trolley design allows for convenient positioning in workshops, reducing clutter and optimising workspace efficiency. Individual cable connections prevent unused wires from trailing across the floor, enhancing safety and organisation.
  • Storage Solutions: The Hub features top box storage for all individual charger cables and additional under-cabinet storage for spares or service items, keeping everything neatly organised and within reach.
  • Versatile Charging Options: Capable of charging all connected mowers to a selected level before moving on to 100% SOC, the Hub can charge from low to high or high to low. It also has a default setting that charges all connected mowers to 60% initially, then completes the charge to 100%, ensuring all mowers have sufficient charge for short turnaround times.
  • Manual Override and Display Features: Users can manually skip to the next mower if required, and the display shows all connected mowers’ SOC and indicates which machine is being charged. This feature allows for precise control over the charging process.

The Multi Charger Hub addresses common challenges associated with battery-powered equipment, such as avoiding deep discharge—a condition that can occur if a machine is stored at 0% charge. The Hub’s ability to bring all mowers to a safe charge level prevents this issue, ensuring the longevity and reliability of the batteries.

Technical Specifications

  • Powerful Charging Capability: The 3kW charger can charge an individual machine from 0-100% in less than 2 hours. Overnight, it can charge all 8 machines from 10%-15% to 100%, making it ideal for busy schedules.
  • User-Friendly Interface: The Hub automatically cycles through each connected mower, displaying each mower’s SOC on the screen. The mower’s console also shows the charging status, providing a consistent user experience whether charging individually or via the Hub.

With the launch of the Multi Charger Hub, Dennis continues to lead the way in providing innovative, sustainable solutions for turf maintenance professionals.

For further information or a no obligation demonstration, please contact Dennis 01332 824 777 or visit www.dennisuk.com

For more news, reviews and insightful views, you can follow Dennis on Twitter and Instagram @DennisMowers and like the company’s Facebook page – www.facebook.com/DennisMowersUK. You can also view the latest Dennis videos by visiting www.youtube.com/DennisMowers

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The with man perfect pitch

The with man perfect pitch: Scott MacCallum met up with CEO of Labosport, Professor David James, the man at the forefront of sports pitch development.

If we think back to sport in the 1970s there are two images that spring to mind. There was Ronnie Radford scoring a remarkable goal for Hereford United to defeat Newcastle in the FA Cup in 1972 and then England prop Fran Cotton playing for the British Lions, in Melbourne, in 1977, looking like the muddiest man you’ve ever seen in your life.

The with man perfect pitch

The with man perfect pitch

Both iconic sporting images, neither of which would ever be replicated today. Ronnie’s goal was incredible as he more or less shovelled the heavy leather ball out of the boggy pitch from 30 yards and into the top corner. John Motson’s commentary and Ronnie’s celebration are part of English football’s folklore, but do you really think that the game would have gone ahead in 2025?

And Fran. Same thing. Would a game that resulted in Fran turning into a monster from a B-movie horror ever have got past a modern day pitch inspection?

Different times and different standards, but I do think it is fair to say that most people forget just how far we have come in the construction, maintenance and preparation of modern day sports pitches. It is now rare for a pitch to become a game-defining issue and it would take a highly trained eye to identify whether a pitch was at the beginning or end of its particular season.

And alongside the development of natural turf surfaces is the quite extraordinary progress of synthetic pitches.

At the sharp end of much of natural and synthetic pitch development is Labosport, the international company which is a the forefront of testing, certification and consultancy on all aspects of sports surfaces. Since 1993 they have spearheaded the development of testing methods to raise the quality of sports surfaces and provide guidance on the design and construction of sports facilities.

And the man who is Labosport’s worldwide CEO is Professor David James. As you might imagine David is a busy guy. When I caught up with him, at Labosport’s unassuming UK Headquarters on an industrial estate on the outskirts of Nottingham, he had just returned from viewing some test pitches at Sheffield Hallam University and was about to head off to New Zealand. Air miles are not something for which he is short!

I first bumped into David at the Syn-Pro Seminar held at Loughborough University early last year where he started by saying that the very first synthetic sports surface was at the Houston Astrodome, in Texas, and had been installed in 1966 – the same year as some people ran onto a natural pitch in North London, thinking it was all over!

Given that David is a man with whom you could talk for hours and hours I decided to limit the bulk of the time to the subject he talked on at Loughborough – synthetics.

As a starting point I asked him that, if that Houston pitch were an Amstrad computer, where were we at now?

“I would say the Apple Mac Pro. However it’s still not a finished development. Looking at synthetic surfaces, they’ve really come on huge amounts in terms of playability, athlete welfare, skin injury risks and other injuries,” said David, adding that as with most industries sustainability is now very much the driving consideration.

As for a Eureka moment for the synthetic turf industry along that path from 1966 to 2024..

“I think the Eureka moment has to be the arrival of the so-called 3G. “The two key components of a 3G pitch are a longer pile. Rather than something that’s 25mm, it’s up at 50mm or 60mm.

“And then having an infill, which does a number of things. First of all, it keeps the fibres standing upright which allows players to wear studded footwear, because the infill allows the penetration of the studs. So it gives traction which is much more similar to natural turf and the ball bounce is more comparable to natural turf. You’ve got much more energy distribution so you don’t get very high bounce or very long roll.

“It really simulates natural turf much more closely than those early generations of pitch,” said David, adding that the original 1966 Astrodome pitch was much better suited to American football than it would have been for our more global version of the game.

And indeed those early pitches were still perfectly suited to a sport that has thrived since the introduction of synthetic surfaces – hockey.

But as development continued the understanding of the benefits of a high quality artificial pitch grew.

The key argument for synthetic turf is that that it can withstand up to ten times more playing hours than a natural turf field.

“That’s really important, as you can then look at the availability of land.

Among the reasons why synthetic turf took off so much is that you’ve got this all-weather playability. We don’t get fixtures being cancelled in February. It’s a sobering statistic that up to 50% of all football matches are cancelled in February in recreational football,” revealed David.

“Added to that rather than having ten football pitches you can have as many games on just one pitch. That literally frees up land. You can sell off your playing fields, perhaps for housing developments, and keep the one synthetic field because it can withstand the amount of use.”

But now having had 20 years when 3G pitches were the gold standard new heights are being reached and new quality levels achieved.

“We’re now looking at the next generation of pitch. What we’re looking at is having a shorter pile system, perhaps 40mm using less infill material and having a shock pad under the turf.

“Using less infill on the top and incorporating a shockpad underneath, you get synthetic surfaces which are more consistent than natural turf,” said David, adding that upwards of 35% of all the recycled tyres in the world get recycled into sport fields.

The EU have made a decision to effectively have a ban on the sale of granulated tyres for this use from 2031. The UK has yet to decide what they are going to do.

“There is a lot of work looking at alternative infill materials and there are many options including coconut husks, olive pips, ground walnuts, shells, corn on the cob, cork, wood chip.”

The with man perfect pitch

The with man perfect pitch

For a system to work everything has to gel – the shock pad, the carpet, the density of the pile, the amount of stabilising infill, the sand and how much performance infill there is.

“We’re now in a period where there’s going to be huge diversity in the market with these different infill materials, different shock pads, different pile lengths.

They’ve got different characteristics. They’ve got different price points. They’ve got different maintenance issues, different longevity. Some of the materials are very robust while others are more prone to deterioration over time.”

One previous area of concern was the level of injury which can be caused by playing on a synthetic pitch.

“I recently gave a speech at the SAPCA conference on the latest research into the injury risk to players from different playing surfaces. There are very strong perceptions among elite football players that synthetic turf has a highest higher injury risk.

“I don’t discount the player experience but, at the same time, I want to look at the data and there have been something like a 120 peer-reviewed scientific publications that have compared inury risk between synthetic turf and natural turf.

“Indeed here has been a recent systematic review, which took 53 of the highest quality studies from all over the world. It showed that there is no elevated injury risk on synthetic turf to natural turf for football. It did, however, show a slight elevation of risk in American football.”

Around about 10 years ago there were newspaper headlines, and some anecdotal evidence, that rubber crumb in synthetic pitches was causing cancer. However all research has since revealed that the level of potentially carcinogenic chemicals in recycled tyres is so low that it is deemed to be of no risk to humans.

Having taken on the global CEO role at Labosport 18 months ago, how did David find himself in such a key role within the sporting world?

“I actually trained as a mechanical engineer at the University of Sheffield, so for me it’s all about materials and how balls and athletes interact with the surface. That’s still my fundamental passion and I view a lot of these topics through the prism of engineering.

I’m not an agronomist, but I did my engineering degree and then a PhD that was funded by the England and Wales Cricket Board. I got to work with Bill Adams, who sadly recently died, He was a huge leading light in agronomy, and worked for the ECB, looking at cricket pitches.

“He was taking soil cores and looking at clay content while I was coming from an engineering perspective, looking at how balls bounced. It’s impact mechanics.

“I was using high-speed video to film balls bouncing and then characterising things such as the pace of the bounce. That got me going on the engineering of sports surfaces, The surface is fundamentally an engineered product, whether it’s natural or synthetic. Amazingly, my PhD actually became an important reference document on cricket pitches and the science of cricket pitches.”

David remained in academia for the next 15 years, focusing on how balls and humans interact with surfaces in all sorts of different ways.

“I was looking at footwear and worked with companies like Adidas, while working for the University of Sheffield and then Sheffield Hallam University.

“I ended up running the Research Centre. We had a great time during London 2012 as well, and did a lot of work with our Olympic teams, taking this engineering perspective around sports performance and understanding the sports environment. But my personal passion has always been the surface, always been understanding the playing surface or the running shoe.”

David joined Labosport six years ago and ran the UK side of Labosport. Then, a year and a half ago, he became CEO of the whole group.

Labosport has 16 laboratories in 11 countries but also has companies, such as PSD, Professional Sports Turf Design, TGMS. Outside of Europe there is Labosport China, Labosport India and Labosport Australia.

“We also have the New Zealand Sports Turf Institute. In the Americas, we’ve got Labosport Canada and in Texas, Labosport USA, which really focuses on golf and the golf industry.”

The company is there to assist anyone wishing to develop sports facilities.

“It could be that we produce a feasibility study. Maybe you’ve got an old facility, you’ve got a piece of empty land, and want to build an athletics’ track. We would look at the ground conditions and then provide options and potential designs and then perhaps assist with the writing of a specification and then assist it through planning. We’re an independent consultant, so we stand aside from construction. However we might be involved in monitoring the quality of the construction and carry out the certification. We would then monitor the pitch throughout its life, carrying out recertifications and ultimately look at the end-of-life options.”

Having been immersed the subject for so many years it would be remiss not to ask David for his thoughts on the future and where he would like to see stadiums and pitches in the next decade or so.

“I would like to see the industry moving away from the model where you have a massive stadium in a city where you play one game every two weeks. It’s a huge facility so why not have four or five games a week there shared by different clubs – men and women, rugby and football, hockey whatever.

“From a sustainability perspective, it just makes so much sense.”

Even if that means we won’t be seeing any modern day images of the likes of Ronnie Radford and Fran Cotton!