Alan Ferguson Has Agreed To Part With The FA

The FA have confirmed that Head of Grounds & Estates Alan Ferguson has agreed to part company with the FA by mutual consent.

Alan Ferguson Has Agreed To Part With The FA

This agreement follows a further restructure of the FA’s operations.

The FA stated that they would like to wish Alan well going forward and that Alan had asked them to share the following:

“I’d like to thank The FA for the opportunity to practice at two top venues. I have really enjoyed my time at both St. George’s Park and Wembley Stadium, where I have been fortunate to work with a great group of people.”

“I would like to thank both the playing and non-playing staff throughout The FA for the support you have given the grounds teams over the past six years. I also thank the various partners who have supported all projects and allowed us to develop both venues to a high standard.”

“Finally, I would like to pay specific tribute to my grounds staff for their tireless work all year round and wish everyone at The FA the very best wishes for the future.”

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Golf Bunkers Made From Crushed Beer Bottles

Golf Bunkers Made From Crushed Beer Bottles – A Taranaki golf club has hit on a novel way to promote the game and encourage more memberships.

Kaitake Golf Club, west of New Plymouth, has invested in 30 tonnes of fine grain crushed glass sand to fill three new bunkers on the 5500 metre long course.

The crushed glass sand was given to the club, free of charge, by beer brewers DB which launched a campaign last summer to recycle used beer bottles. Kaitake Golf Club committee member Craig Waite said the club members saw the promotion and approached DB.

“It just seemed like a cool thing to to do to have bunkers with glass sand in them,” he said.

It also fitted into a new direction the club is taking to encourage new members, which include dropping subscriptions, and introducing more younger players to the game.

Waite said the brewery had provided the sand and organised it to be trucked down to the golf club.

“We’ve never had a sand bunker before and the new committee decided to do something different.

“After we rang DB it all happened pretty fast.”

The majority of the 300 club members have supported the new glass sand bunker layout, he said.

“There was some uncertainty at first but the committee thought it was worth a crack.

“Our members have always struggled in the past playing out of bunkers on other courses.”

Course convenor Jono Heath said the Kaitake course is regarded as a parklands country course with well drained soils.

“It is an easy walk and has reliable weather conditions,” he said.

“Now the bunkers will now give the players a bit more of a challenge.”

Greenkeeper Domenico Squatriti​ added two glass sand bunkers surrounding the 18th green, with a practice bunker in the making.

There is between 300mm-400mm of glass sand in each bunker, enough to get a good lift on the ball, he said.

“We’ve revetted the faces of the bunkers to make it a bit more of a challenge to get out of.”

Adding the strategically placed sand hazards had improved the course overall, he said.

“We’re not blessed for length on the course so the next best thing to do is getting golfers to think more about their shots, and the bunkers do this.”

Squatriti said the sand was firm with a “fluffy” feel to it.

“The only time we can’t play on it is after a heavy frost when there is a hard layer of ice sitting on the top.”

DB brand PR and digital manager Simon Smith said the company wanted to promote recycling of beer bottles to help save the world’s beaches.

Sand was facing a global supply shortage due to huge growth in construction in the Middle East, China and India.

Recycling empty beer bottles into crushed glass sand helped replace using beach sand, he said.

“Most of our empty bottles are recycled into new bottles but we wanted to find a use for the bottles that cannot be re-used and go to the landfill.”

Crushing unwanted bottles to produce fine glass sand seemed to be the best option, he said.

Kaitake Golf Club was the first club to contact the company to use the crushed glass sand after the advertising campaign in January, he said.

Since then more clubs have shown interest.

Crushed glass sand has been used under the grass turf at Trafalgar Park in Nelson, and under vineyards in Canterbury.

To read the original article from Stuff, click here

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Attack On 14 Golf Course Greens

Attack To 14 Course Greens – The owner of a Cambridgeshire golf club has said an attack to 14 of the course’s greens is the worst case of golf vandalism she has ever seen.

Vivien Saunders OBE, who won the Women’s British Open in 1977 and is chair of the Association of Golf Course Owners as well as owner of Abbotsley Golf Hotel and Country Club, said she thinks a banned weed killer was applied to 14 of the course’s greens, wiping out 12 of them.

“I have suffered the worst case of vandalism ever at a UK golf course,” she said, “apart perhaps from Dunston Hall when the irrigation tank was tampered with.”

Saunders said she thinks the herbicide Casoron G, which was banned in 2010, was used.

“It was applied to 14 greens with a drop spreader, totally wiping out 12 of them,” she said.

“Research shows this weed killer can stay in the ground for five years.

“The estimated cost of re-turfing the greens to get them back into play as soon as possible is over £350,000 with an extra greenkeeping team. Our insurer has conceded that the damage cover is £100,000 per incident. We have loss of earnings cover for two years and some of the cost of the repairs will have to come from that.”

Saunders said other golf clubs should consider switching to an insurer that offers more coverage for course damage.

“Both Bluefin and Linkscover have standard policies with over £200,000 cover for course damage. Marsh also have a standard policy which I haven’t seen,” she said.

“Take it from me – you may need £250,000 cover for damage. I have contacted David Millar at Bluefin and Paul Holmes at Linkscover and suggested to both that they now offer courses the option to pay extra for additional cover – say £500,000 – and call it an Abbotsley clause.”

It’s not yet known who carried out the attack. Saunders said the club has recently been in dispute with some neighbours over a right of way issue.

“Look at the pictures to see what a disaster you could face from neighbours from Hell or even a disgruntled ex-employee,” said Saunders. “It isn’t pretty.”

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Birmingham To Kick-Start New Season On Hybrid Pitch

Birmingham to kick-start new season on revolutionary hybrid pitch – Birmingham City will kick start the new Championship season on a revolutionary new pitch at St. Andrew’s following extensive work in the offseason.

The Blues have installed a brand new SISGrass Hybrid surface similar to the recent installation at the Luzhniki Stadium in Russia where the 2018 FIFA World Cup Final will be played.

In fact 6 of the 12 Russian stadiums for the FIFA World Cup will boast the most technologically advanced hybrid system next summer.

Working on the project in association with Premier Pitches and MJ Abbott the laser guided stitching of the turf took place at St. Andrew’s this week in preparation for the new season under boss Harry Redknapp.

The laser-guided installation boasts 95% natural turf alongside 5% specially designed PE yarn, stitched into ground. The new SISGrass pitch will offer increased pitch stability and delivers considerably more playing hours than a natural grass surface.

Martin Kelly, Head Groundsman at Birmingham City, commented; “We are really happy with the installation of the new SISGrass surface and can’t wait to get the season underway on it.

“As you would expect a lot of research went into the decision for a new playing surface and SISGrass was the clear winner – the service from start to finish has been superb.”

SIS Pitches UK Project Director, Phil Blackwell, added; “St. Andrew’s is an iconic stadium in the UK and we are proud to have installed SISGrass for the new Championship season.”

British company SIS Pitches installed the revolutionary SISGrass system having already completed pitches at AFC Bournemouth and Derby County as well as the Ta’Qali Stadium in Malta where England will play their next World Cup qualifier.

Andy Cole, Consultant at iTurf Management, added; “This is a significant investment into the pitch by the owners at Birmingham City and it will give them a stable and reliable surface for many many years to come.”

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Doosan Excavator is 250,000th CESAR Machine in UK

Doosan Excavator is 250,000th CESAR Machine in UK

Doosan Excavator is 250,000th CESAR Machine in UK

At the recent Plantworx 2017 Exhibition, a new Doosan DX85R-3 mini-excavator was unveiled as the 250,000th CESAR marked machine in the UK.  The official CESAR Scheme is owned by the UK’s Construction Equipment Association (CEA), the organisers of the Plantworx event, and is the number one anti-theft and recovery system for plant and agricultural equipment.  CESAR was launched in 2007 to help combat the theft of equipment which was estimated to be costing the industry £1 million a week at the time.

Attending the unveiling at Plantworx on behalf of Doosan was Kim Dudley, Regional Manager – Northern Europe, who was presented with a certificate marking the occasion by Kevin Howells, the CEO/MD of Datatag ID Ltd, based in Egham in Surrey, the chosen delivery partner for the official CESAR Scheme.

Doosan Celebrates Tenth Anniversary of CESAR Membership

The ceremony marked the tenth anniversary of Doosan’s participation in the scheme, which began in September 2007, when the company became the first construction equipment manufacturer to fit CESAR to all the company’s products.  The official CESAR security marking scheme was itself launched earlier that year and, as well as celebrating 10 years of CESAR, Datatag is also marking 25 years in the security marking business in 2017.

Kim Dudley said: “Since we joined the scheme in 2007, every Doosan machine sold in the UK has been CESAR marked, providing a powerful deterrent to thieves and peace of mind for our customers.  It has brought our dealers and their customers many benefits as it allows the police to quickly establish the ownership of construction equipment recovered after theft and to quickly return it to the owner.

“This ensures that police will more readily pursue stolen plant (knowing it can be identified) and lowers the insurance premiums our customers have to pay for their machinery.  Since Doosan joined the CESAR Scheme in 2007, many other leading manufacturers have also adopted the scheme.”

Kevin Howells, CEO/MD of Datatag, said: “Reaching 250,000 machines protected is a significant milestone in the story of the CESAR Scheme and we couldn’t be happier that just as the very first machine protected was a Doosan product, the 250,000th is also a Doosan machine.  Doosan has supported the CESAR Scheme since it was launched, recognising the theft deterrent it provides to the company’s customers.”

Made up of state-of-the-art Datatag security marking technology which includes tamper evident warning labels, forensic DNA, Datadots and RFID tags, CESAR permanently marks and protects machinery, making it identifiable to the police in such a way that it is virtually impossible for a thief to defeat.

As a result, the risk involved in stealing a marked machine becomes high to the criminals who tend to avoid stealing it in the first place, with CESAR contributing to a 70% reduction in thefts.

Kim Dudley added: “New Doosan machines weighing 14 tonne and above offer another level of protection through the Geofencing available through our standard on-board DoosanConnect telematics system.  Whilst thieves have succeeded in producing jamming devices that can temporarily block telematics and tracking systems, they have not been able to overcome the protection provided by CESAR marking, which makes it another very attractive feature of the Doosan range.”

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