Postponement wasn't a fatal blow for Gold Coast United

By Ben Somerford / Roar Guru

Gold Coast United club chairman Clive Palmer (right) and head coach Miron Bleiberg speak at a press conference at Skilled Park on the Gold Coast. AAP Image/Laine Clark

Mother Nature showed she’s no fan of Gold Coast United or the A-League last Sunday when incessant rain at Skilled Park forced Clive Palmer’s free admission match to be called off due to a water-logged pitch. Over 10,000 fans had turned up but only got 20 minutes of action. So was it a disaster?

On face value it was a major anti-climax.

Many of those 10,000 people who turned out for the fixture would have gone home more than a little disappointed at not getting 90 minutes worth of entertainment.

In fact, the 20 minutes they got was far from great with the standard of the match clearly affected by the rain and the playing surface.

United owner Clive Palmer is also faced with the prospect of forking out the cash for another home game now too (free or not free, he’ll lose money), with the fixture re-scheduled at Skilled Park for February 9 (which, might I add, is midweek and after the school holidays break).

Palmer was always going to lose big money when he threw opens the gates for last Sunday’s game, with hiring costs at Skilled Park estimated to be in the range of $100,000 to $200,000 a game.

But for the game to be called off after 20 minutes, Palmer certainly won’t have made much return on his investment in terms of tempting fans to come back for more.

And you can understand his frustration and stance with Stadiums Queensland, who run Skilled Park, for the playing surface they provided which United management claim was the reason the game got called off.

Whether or not that’s right I don’t know (to be fair, it was bucketing down with rain), but if it is United do have a decent legal claim to ask for the costs of the fixture to be waived.

That would please most A-League fans as Palmer is understood to be willing to throw open the gates again if that happens, which would present another opportunity to the club.

If this does occur that would be a brilliant result for Gold Coast United, in the way that Palmer will have had two opportunities to throw the gates open, attract fans and show the club’s product for the price of one.

We’ll wait with bated breath on that one, although Palmer – as a shrewd businessman – will do everything in his power to get his way in this instance.

In most of those respects, though, Sunday’s abandonment was a disaster for United.

But on the positive side, the whole exercise has generated plenty of decent PR and goodwill towards Gold Coast United.

Palmer (formerly public enemy number one in South-east Queensland) has won plenty of friends for the gesture coupled by his decision to underwrite North Queensland Fury’s upcoming home game against Wellington Phoenix under the Queensland Nickel sponsorship banner.

As well, Palmer’s stance against Stadiums Queensland has impressed fans too.

Whether or not it’s all enough to bring 10,000 fans back next home game is unlikely, but the United owner is repairing relationships and building some bridges. He’s part of the Gold Coast United product and it’s positive stuff for once, even in the face of a big negative.

And the good thing for once is this negative was in no shape or form created by United management and as a result there’s been a certain level of sympathy afforded to the club for Sunday’s fiasco.

But without doubt the biggest positive of this episode was the fact that 10,147 people turned up on Sunday, despite the horrendous weather on the Gold Coast. It certainly shows the region has an appetite for A-League football.

And that’s what United management can take heart from, if they can get their product right.

Okay, Sunday didn’t work out according to plan but for once the Gold Coast public appear to be sympathetic towards the United cause.

And if United management can keep the locals onside then there’s hope yet for this fledgling club.

The Crowd Says:

2010-12-23T09:05:00+00:00

David Heidelberg

Guest


No need to point out that you are not a fan, your ignorant comment about low quality proved that.

2010-12-23T07:37:05+00:00

Midfielder

Guest


All sing along as its Christmas ... AF you can sing the loudest ... to the tume of winter wonderland Mariners are singing, are you listening The lights on Brisbane Waters, are glistening A beautiful sight, We're happy tonight. Walking in a MARINER Wonderland. Gone away is the long ball Here to stay is good football We play on the ground As we go along Walking in a MARINER wonderland http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JE8D52xD4uw

2010-12-23T06:32:44+00:00

Hooplah

Guest


Palmer was very critical of the AFL setting up shop on the coast saying it just would not work and soccer was the only logical chance of making it. Wonder what his opinion of that is now?

2010-12-23T01:21:40+00:00

punter

Guest


No I do not agree, the competition needed to grow & expansion was important. Here are some of the more obvious issues in the A-League; WC bid, The FFA took the focus of the A-League FFA mistakes, the FFA adminstration did not market the A-League well, did not jump onto the front foot on issues & made some glaring errors (Rovers). Clubs mistakes, the clubs also did not market their product well, the GFC has affected some of the owners in the A-League, Adelaide, Newcastle, Nth Queensland, Perth & also Wellington. Exposure, the lack of FTA exposure, plus the fact the competition is only in it's 6th year has not had the A-League the talk of the sporting mainstream, they are competiting with competition that are very well established & especially in AFL very well run. Money, the major issue affecting the A-league to market itself. the TV money while very good for a new competiton, very poor against the more established competitions. All this will take time to fix, not a doom & gloom situation.

2010-12-23T01:03:49+00:00

JF

Guest


All of the problems of the A-League seem to be related to the simple fact that competition has been far too ambitious with expansion. Struggling franchises, poor crowds, low quality and sustainability could all be remedied with a more compact competition, I am not a massive soccer supporter but surely this point is hugely obvious to all that are?

2010-12-23T00:41:51+00:00

Terry

Guest


It was an awesome day and there is definately a feeling of goodwill towards Clive not only for opening up the gates but also his stance against SQ. The pitch has been in poor condition for about 6 weeks now. And that combined with a saturated flood plain where the stadium is located led to the game being postponed. The ground will drain very well, but the high flood plain level meant it had no where to go. I agree with Roarchild as well about the media, it is definately more subdue than previous encounters. Ange was very complimentary to us today. As for returnees, I hope we can get up to 5-6k per game for the rest of the season, that will give a solid building block for next.

2010-12-22T23:53:20+00:00

Roarchild

Roar Guru


That 20 mins was probably more entertaining at the ground than on tv. Crowd was fairly vocal about the physical nature of it. Porter battling Amini and then passing it around his back got a cheer, as did the penatly miss, one of the CCM players coming of second best when clashing with the keeper and the balls lumped to Djite (about 3 or 4 of them lead to breaks) which seemed strangley effective. fair few of the crowd were wearing some sort of GCU gear so I'm guessing there is a fair few of the stay aways decided to give Palmer another chance. The press between GCU and the Roar in lead up to the derby feels friendlier too, feels like GCU may be on the right track.

2010-12-22T22:02:25+00:00

whiskeymac

Guest


Here's hoping the positives outweigh the negatives and we get back on track with the HAL: if the qld "franchises" survive and prosper will BB get the praise as a visionary? It wld be a Holman-esque sized bandwagon if it all panned out well.

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