logo
Manx football festival 'lets fans come together away from home'

Manx football festival 'lets fans come together away from home'

BBC News18-07-2025
Fans heading to the FC Isle of Man Summer Festival of Football can expect "some really competitive football in a relaxed environment", organisers have said.The second event of its kind, it features teams from across the English football pyramid taking on the home side at the island's national stadium, The Bowl, in Douglas.The home side's Lee Dixon said Fleetwood Town, Altrincham FC and Radcliffe Borough and the Manx club battling it out in the mini festival on Friday and Sunday would provide "great entertainment".Altrincham's manager Phil Parkinson said the tournament meant a lot to the fans as it allowed them to "come together a lot more" while supporting the team away from home.
Dixon said the matches Manx fans would be treated to a "level of football that we don't see throughout the year" at the festival, which had been inspired by a similar contest last played about 20 years ago.The island team has just completed its fourth season competing in the North West Counties Football League, finishing 11th in the Premier Division.Fleetwood play in League Two of the English Football League, Radcliffe feature in the National League North, while Altrincham are part of the National League, the fifth tier of English football.
Parkinson said pre-season training was about "fine tuning skills and fitness, and coming together to bond, and every game here will give us that"."We're getting a full array of the different types of teams that we would normally have in our programme but we're getting that in one hit over a weekend," he said.The manager said the team also planned to make the most of the island by "having a cold dip in the sea" during their downtime, but "the weather will help us decide on how long we'll stay in".He said taking part in events away from their home ground ahead of the stresses of the season were important to not only the players but the fans as well. "Trips like this mean a lot to fans because they're able to get away, come support the team and come together a lot more because you're away from home," he said.
Dixon said: "Ultimately, we're an amateur football team, and people might say were the whipping boys but I know the benefits of the old festival and what we got out that going into the next season."The revamped contest for 2025 will provide a rest day on Saturday and a results table once the matches have all been played.Dixon said the day off in between games would be a chance for the visiting teams to meet fans and explore the island, which would also be "good for the local economy".He said the contest would see some "really competitively football in a relaxed environment and hopefully the games will make for good entertainment". "Fingers crossed we get plenty of people through the door so it's a win win for everyone," he added.On Friday, the schedule will see the Altrincham v Radcliffe match kick off at 15:00 and FC Isle of Man take on Fleetwood at 19:00.The play off for third will get underway at 11:00 on Sunday, with the game for first place scheduled for 15:00.
Read more stories from the Isle of Man on the BBC, watch BBC North West Tonight on BBC iPlayer and follow BBC Isle of Man on Facebook and X.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Oasis-style ticketing and expendable fans: the battle to retain football's soul
Oasis-style ticketing and expendable fans: the battle to retain football's soul

The Guardian

time15 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Oasis-style ticketing and expendable fans: the battle to retain football's soul

'I'm a bit younger, so this is all I've known,' says Nick Clarke, 'but something that defines this moment is the feeling that it's our last chance. You know that phrase: 'The game's gone'? I think the game is genuinely going away. It's excluding traditional supporters and the communities that built the clubs in the first place.' Clarke has just celebrated his 30th birthday and is coming off the back of a big season. As one of the four season-ticket holders behind the MCFC Fans Foodbank Support, Clarke has been active among the Manchester City fanbase and in the community since the pandemic. With the growing concern over the pricing and provision of tickets at his club last year, he helped coordinate protests by fans whose rivalries go back generations, but whose problems are increasingly shared. Supporters of Everton, Liverpool and Manchester United and others joined City fans under the banner 'Stop Exploiting Loyalty' and in doing so became part of a new wave of supporter activism. 'I know there's all these things about multi-club ownership, private and state ownership, playing games abroad, accusations of killing the soul of the game,' Clarke says. 'But, really, what is the game? It's the communities that go to it, it's the communities that have made the clubs who they are, going back four, five, six generations till their very inception. 'The wider football supporter community are only just now cottoning on that we have so much more in common and if we don't stand together the game is going to be gone before we know it. That's all we have to do and all we can do. We just need to really keep up that momentum.' It already seems there will be reason for fans to take a stand once more this season. It is not the first time they will have come together to demand change, but for those with clubs at the top of the pyramid there is a sense the ground is shifting and the needs of fans is becoming an afterthought, if not an outright problem. At the heart is a concern that clubs want to move away from having matches filled with season-ticket holders towards something more casual, and more lucrative. Imagine every Premier League fixture becoming more like an Oasis gig, for ever. 'The problems are different at different levels of the game,' says Tom Greatrex, the new chair of the Football Supporters' Association, who drove the Stop Exploiting Loyalty campaign. 'In the Premier League, and at the top of the Championship, Stop Exploiting Loyalty has helped to bring to the fore a set of issues that have been developing over a period of time. 'We are seeing that parts of clubs' fanbases, which have traditionally been loyal and go home and away, are now almost expendable to not all, but many of the people that currently run a number of those clubs. It's gone beyond exploitation to expendability.' Fans are suffering rises in ticket prices, the lowering or ending of ticket concessions and initiatives that require season-ticket holders to attend a certain number of games each season or risk losing their place, as examples of this trend. According to Greatrex, the effects are being felt in some grounds. 'The number of people who are there almost to experience something which they're not necessarily part of has tipped into a significant proportion to the extent that it undermines the thing they're going there to experience,' he says. 'There is a real danger that in a short-term push for increased revenue from matchday tickets and associated spend that clubs are in danger of actually undermining the whole 'product' they're so proud of.' One topic that crystallises the anxiety over expendability is that of matches being selected for TV. There will be more televised games than ever this season, with Sky showing a minimum 215 Premier League fixtures. With each televised match comes possible rescheduling and a potentially challenging (or even impossible) journey for fans. Sign up to Football Daily Kick off your evenings with the Guardian's take on the world of football after newsletter promotion 'There can be very very short-notice changes, which make it very difficult for people to be able to attend those matches. I don't think there's been enough focus on things that could be done to mitigate some of the frustration that comes from those changes.' The FSA has called for a 12-week notice period on fixture rearrangements, the provision of more 'football special' trains and the extension of the £30 cap on away tickets into the EFL. The Premier League has committed to giving six weeks' notice of fixture adjustments on all matches until January, but last month had to apologise after failing to meet its own deadline of announcing all September adjustments by 9 July. It is striking that the mood among fans is so febrile at the time the government has passed legislation designed, in part, to give supporters more influence over their clubs. Fan consultation is a central requirement of the new Independent Football Regulator for the English men's elite game and legislation is, in part, the result of long-term campaigning by the FSA. It is not a panacea and its influence is unlikely to take hold for some seasons yet, but Greatrex, a former Labour MP, believes it can form a platform for better understanding between fans, clubs and competitions. 'More than ever, there is an appreciation – among some, it's reluctant, but among others, it's embraced – that supporters have a legitimate voice that deserves to be heard and their views to be considered,' he says. '[The regulator] is actually the basis for a much more constructive approach, which means that if clubs are sensible you can prevent a lot of the flashpoints getting to the point at which they become high profile, because you've dealt with it sensibly ahead of that time.' Clarke would much rather have dialogue than protest. 'I don't want to be doing another protest all my life,' he says. 'I know there's no easy answers but a lot of this protest energy has come because people feel they're not being listened to. That's where the anger comes from.'

Club Brugge win away to RB Salzburg
Club Brugge win away to RB Salzburg

BBC News

time15 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Club Brugge win away to RB Salzburg

Club Brugge look in good shape for a potential Champions League play-off with Rangers after winning away at RB Romeo Vermant got across his man to steer home an excellent delivery from Bjorn Meijer on 74 minutes for the first-leg's only are in a very strong position to progress to the final hurdle before the league phase of the tournament after a 3-0 victory over Czech side Viktoria Plzen on Russell Martin's side complete the job against Plzen, they will be at home in the first leg of the play-off, which is scheduled for 19 August.

UK's Birmingham Airport temporarily shuts after plane's landing gear failure forces emergency landing
UK's Birmingham Airport temporarily shuts after plane's landing gear failure forces emergency landing

Reuters

time15 minutes ago

  • Reuters

UK's Birmingham Airport temporarily shuts after plane's landing gear failure forces emergency landing

LONDON, Aug 6 (Reuters) - Birmingham Airport in central England temporarily shut its only runway on Wednesday after a small aircraft made an emergency landing after developing landing gear problems that left one person with minor injuries. Woodgate Aviation, a private charter firm that is based at Belfast International Airport and owns the Beech B200 Super King Air plane, said in a statement that the "main under-carriage collapsed on touch down." Birmingham Airport said in a later update on Wednesday that the runway was likely to remain close until 2000 local time (1900 GMT). All people on board the aircraft had been discharged by the emergency services. Check-in services and security screening were temporarily closed, it added. The police said in a post on X that emergency crews responded to the incident, which occurred at around 1240 GMT. Images shared on social media showed a small propeller aircraft stationary on the runway of Britain's seventh busiest airport. The aircraft took off at 1211 local time and was bound for Belfast in Northern Ireland, according to plane tracking website Flightradar24. The airport website showed that some flights have been diverted to other British airports and some departures have been canceled or delayed. Transport minister Heidi Alexander said on X that disruption at the airport was "minimal" but she understood "how frustrating" the situation was for passengers. The airport, which served some 13 million passengers last year, is Britain's third largest outside London.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store