Showing posts with label Hearts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hearts. Show all posts

Monday, 24 March 2008

GORGIE HOUSING REPORT

by Atholl Simpson


SquareOne News


Locals in the Gorgie and Dalry neighbourhoods of Edinburgh are unable to afford properties in the area after numerous regeneration projects increased house prices, according to local community groups and estate agents.

Projects such as the new Sainsbury's store in Gorgie and modern housing developments have attracted investors to the area who snap up available properties. The interest has pushed prices up and out of reach of many of the local residents and first-time buyers.

Elaine Brand, Project Manager of Gorgie Dalry Partnership was involved with some of the regeneration schemes. She said: "The one bedroom flats in a block of sixteen used to be good for first time buyers to get their foot on the property ladder, but now that's not possible. There are also plans in Haymarket for a five star hotel, where the Morrison's street car park is, and that's going to give a different picture to Gorgie and Dalry."

Heart of Midlothian FC's recent stadium plans which include an upmarket hotel have also drawn the interest of investors. Other projects include demolishing the B&Q store next to Murrayfield to open up the area for future development.

Some locals have resorted to buying property further out in more affordable places such as Livingston. Local estate agent Gavin Smith from Century 21 said: "A lot of people who are indigenous to this area are finding it incredibly difficult. To even get property in the traditional tenements is hard enough but to get into the regenerated areas is almost impossible. You are looking at professional people or people from outside Edinburgh that can afford it. The average wage just cannot afford the average flat."

Local resident Alasdair Carmichael, 27 is amongst those struggling to afford a place. He said: '"I wanted to buy a property in Gorgie as I have been renting a flat for some time. Even though I work in a bank, I just couldn't get a mortgage that offered repayments I could afford. There is so much competition that I don't know if I will be able to afford it for another few years, and by that time prices will have doubled."



Monday, 17 March 2008

GRETNA'S MARRIAGE WITH DISASTER

by David Hynes

SquareOne Sport

Sometimes three clicks of the heel is all it ever needs. Sometimes the frog turns into Prince Charming and sometimes the ugly sisters are silenced into submission; but for Gretna FC all talk of fairytale endings is well and truly over. For the town most famous for its quick-fire wedding arrangements, their divorce from footballing success could not have been more pronounced.

The rise and fall of Gretna football club reads like a movie script. The tiny Dumfriesshire village, with a population of only 3,000 and famous only as the destination of choice for runaway lovers must now come to terms with its starring role in a tragic separation - that of fantasy and football.

Gretna won the hearts of so many football fans with their courageous efforts against Hearts in the 2006 Scottish Cup Final- cruelly losing in a tense penalty shoot-out. In doing so they became the smallest team ever to reach the final, in any cup in British football history. This was a truly staggering achievement which defied all expectations and flew in the face of conventional footballing wisdom. Gretna became the first team from the third tier of their domestic league to qualify for the UEFA Cup. Football’s minnows had done it, they’d competed with the big boys and the horizon looked rosy indeed.

Their rise from the Unibond League to the SPL was fuelled by cash injections from millionaire benefactor Brooks Mileson. With a sugar daddy seemingly hell-bent on making his footballing baby the pride of a nation, Gretna began to draw fans from around the country becoming everybody’s second favourite team.

But this season, things began to go wrong. Brooks Mileson fell seriously ill and a string of bad results on the field were matched by paltry attendances in their temporary Fir park home. In the midst of this chaos, the Mileson family withdrew all funding from the club.

On 12 March 2008, Gretna officially went into administration. The ten point deduction that this meant left them with just six points from 28 games and without hope of SPL survival.
The SPL will be relieved if the club can fulfil their obligations for the rest of the season. If Gretna goes into liquidation, which they still might, their results will be expunged from this season's record.

Such an outcome would have had a major impact on the SPL table, reducing leaders Rangers' advantage over Celtic from four points to just one. Fourth-placed Dundee United would leapfrog Motherwell and the make-up of the top six would also be affected.

Gretna lost 3-0 to Aberdeen in their last game, and they can only fulfil their SPL fixtures with financial support from the league. With only a handful of fixtures left, their fate has been sealed, though their future seems far from certain.

Can there be one last twist in the fairytale? I’d start kissing frogs if I was a Gretna fan and hope Mr Mileson can pull through and have a change of heart. A tragic ending to a tale which only last year seemed to promise so much.