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The story of Bamber Bridge FC and its place in the community
Posted on - 25th September, 2024 - 8:00pm | Author - The Nose Bag | Posted in - Bamber Bridge, Preston News, South Ribble News, Sport
The man behind @PNEFCandBRIG lets us into the real battle that faces non league clubs with ever increasing costs and ever dwindling money
Welcome to what is hopefully a regular look at the local non-league scene in the Preston area. Due to the new Sky TV deal, the fortnightly Saturday 3pm pilgrimage to Deepdale is likely to be reduced to a monthly event so there’s never been a better time to take a look at what non-league football can offer.
However, be warned, what can start out as a one-off visit on the back of a cheap ticket can turn into joining another rollercoaster of hopes and dreams being shattered on an annual basis.
Way back when, the ‘non-league’ scene in the Preston area never really took off as the likes of Preston North End and Blackburn Rovers were such giants in the game that people would rather walk the half a dozen miles to Deepdale to watch a game rather than entertain what was effectively in those days ‘park football’.
This meant that there was a void in the South Ribble area for decades which was finally filled by Bamber Bridge when they joined the North West Counties League in 1990.
That entry into semi-pro football was almost a decade in the making but it had been built on very solid foundations, led by Chairman and also Preston North End fan, Arthur Jackson. Those foundations allowed Brig to effectively win promotion four times in seven years but ultimately they were unable to take their place in the Vauxhall Conference for the 1996/97 season due to ground grading.
Since then we’ve seen the likes of Fleetwood Town and AFC Fylde emulate and surpass Brig’s early achievements thanks to the backing of their ‘ambitious’ owners but Arthur Jackson was no tycoon businessman – just an ordinary bloke, who with the help of other committee members such as Gerry Lawson, built the club from scratch with fundraising ideas such as collecting waste paper, which was then weighed in at a local paper mill.
Every penny the committee earned was invested wisely in the club and it is these investments, namely owning their own ground and clubhouse, which allows Brig to keep competing in the Northern Premier League to this day. Officially, Bamber Bridge FC are an Unincorporated Members’ Club, which essentially means that the club is run on a not for profit basis.
In more recent times, the term used for this type of ownership in football terms is “fan-owned”, however Brig are keen to emphasise the community aspect of the club in that not all of its members are football fans and the clubhouse is also used for other activities which benefit the local community.
Regardless of the terminology of the ownership structure, on a matchday, it is the fans of Bamber Bridge FC who have raised the money to fund the team and have volunteered to help out on matchday and during the week to ensure that a game takes place on a Saturday.
Whereas football at Championship level has become somewhat stale over the past decade with skilful wingers being replaced by athletes with a safety first ball retention mentality, that isn’t the same at Northern Premier League level.
As most people’s experience of a non-league team is either a pre season friendly, which is expected to end up five or six nil, or an FA Cup 1st round tie, which might produce the odd shock but normally is a comfort win for the professional side, they don’t always get to appreciate the skill level on display when two evenly matched teams go head to head.
The majority of players in the Northern Premier League started out in professional academies aged 16, meaning that they were in the top 500 players in their year group nationally. However, for various reasons they just didn’t quite make it as a pro but many, such as Brig’s Jack Baxter, haven’t given up hope on one day getting another pro-contract if the opportunity arose.
The National League is now almost exclusively home to “professional” clubs, many of whom have never played in the Football League, and even the league below, National North, now has half a dozen “full-time” clubs, with Chorley perhaps being another club who will go down that route if they find an owner willing to fund it.
Under their current ownership structure however, Brig will never be in a position to go full-time, but that’s not necessarily a bad thing. It gives ordinary fans the opportunity to have a say on how the club is run and allows people to take up roles such as Chairman on ability, not just on the size of their bank balance.
Brig are also a potential stepping stone club for people who want to work in football in an off-the-pitch role and theoretically a future senior club secretary, or similar role, at PNE could have started out at Brig.
While it’s easy to paint a picture on how everything is brilliant at non-league level, there are downsides too. The biggest one being the lower quality of the pitches means that they are more susceptible to the weather and there are far more postponements in non-league than there are at Championship level. However, due to the growth of the non-league game, attendances are significantly up in the past decade for 95% of teams in Brig’s league, and organisations such as the Football Foundation that means improvements are being made to facilitates so there’s never been a better time to give non-league a try.
Last edited by Matchman (25/9/2024 7:33 PM)
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Bamber Bridge FC @BamberBridgeFC
Bamber Bridge are reaching out to the Football community for help. The club are looking for urgent fundraising to save the club, with a goal of £30,000 to keep the club afloat for the upcoming season. RTs appreciated, and thank you for your support.
From gofundme.com
11:54 am · 27 Sep 2024
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Not liking what's coming out of bamber bridge.
Can't afford them to go tits up after beating them at our place
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Now that they have said that they need £30,000, will the league step in and give them a deadline to come up with the money like they did to Marske United?.
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If they go bang our last away match will be Macclesfield away
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Bamber Bridge Appeal.
Fundraiser progress
£10,210 raised of £30,000 goal · 439 donations
Last edited by Matchman (04/10/2024 12:59 PM)
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Lancashire Evening Post report on Bamber Bridge FC
Bamber Bridge is one of the crown jewels of local football - the club needs support to survive and thrive
By Craig Salmon
The jewel in Preston’s non-league crown, Bamber Bridge Football Club has long been the city’s ‘second’ club.
While Preston North End will forever be a great name in the history of world football, Brig has grown in prominence from humble beginnings to co-exist with its illustrious neighbour.
A small village situated a couple of miles south-east of Preston, Bamber Bridge boasted a football club in the late 19th century although the modern-day club has its roots in the early 1950s. A local amateur outfit which played in the Preston and District League, Brig’s domination of the local football scene during the 1970s and 80s was the start of a remarkable rise up the football pyramid.
Having moved into their present-day home Irongate in 1987, Brig enjoyed stints in the West Lancashire League and the North West Counties League.But those years were just the preludes to establishing themselves as a force to reckoned with in the semi-professional Northern Premier League (NPL) in the 1990s.
Theoretically at one point in the mid-1990s, the club had risen to being just one step away from the Football League. Unfortunately, despite winning the NPL Premier Division in 1996, they were prevented from competing in the Football Conference – the top-flight of non-league football – because their Irongate home was deemed not up to requirement for English football’s fifth tier.
In the three decades since, amid ebbs and flow, Brig have maintained their position in the NPL. Although the pyramid has been restructured over time, Brig are still only three steps away from League Two. However, despite having a history to be proud of, the future is unknown and the club openly admits it is teetering on the brink of extinction. The rising costs of semi-professional football means Brig – who have commanded an average league attendance of just over 400 this season – are struggling to pay their players’ wages along with the bills. Over the past week, they have set-up a GoFundMe page to help them cover a shortfall in income for this season which is estimated to be around £30,000. However, longer term the club needs greater investment and more revenue streams – even if it’s just more clicks of their turnstiles on a match day or a local business sponsoring a match ball.
Club volunteer Mellisa Garswood has urged the local community to rally around and support Brig not just for the short-term – but for good. She insists the club will leave a huge void in the local footballing landscape if the unthinkable was to happen.
"We try to sell ourselves as a community club,” she said. “We want new people to come in but we want them to keep coming back. "I think the big issue is people don’t think about Bamber Bridge. I say, ‘Come down and see what we’re all about. See the spirit of the club when you walk through the turnstile’."You will quickly find that you will get to know everybody, it’s got that personal touch. When I go to away games, I go on the players’ coach. You get to know them, you get to know the manager Jamie Milligan. "Jamie’s a great bloke, he always has time to stop and chat to the fans.
”Over the summer, Brig invested heavily in their playing surface and the budget required to keep the team competitive amongst better resourced clubs in the NPL is a huge strain on the club’s finances."
We had to invest quite a bit in the pitch,” she said. “So that was around £25,000. "The player budget has risen. I think the problem you have now is there are clubs like Bury and Macclesfield who can offer player contracts. "We can’t offer contracts because then we are tied-in and we have to pay them. "It is just the challenge of facing other clubs who have got investors.
”While Garswood – who works as a solicitor for law firm Watson Ramsbottom – admits Brig can’t compete with professional outfits like North End with regards to attracting investment and sponsorship, she believes smaller businesses can benefit from a link-up."We have lost the commercial aspect and that is where we are falling short,” she added. "We are not Preston North End and we can’t get the big investors." If there was a big investor, we would welcome them with open arms but I think you have to start small, look after them and build from there.”To donate, access the website