Friday, 1 March 2013

You Have To Change To Stay The Same


Hi all,

I's been a while since I have blogged and today I'm here with some news. 
I will be moving on from EH at the end of the month after 8 years (with a stint at the ECB in the middle) and after nearly 4 years as Clubs and Facilities Manager.

I wanted to just write a note to say how much I have enjoyed working with you all over those years. So many clubs have come such a long way mainly due to the dedication of an army of volunteers who go out and make hockey happen every week, and it will be a bit of a challenge to leave that behind.

I'm still playing so hopefully I will see many of you around, and I am very much looking forward to becoming a spectator at events, I can't wait to get my tickets for the Investec World League in July and to be able to sit with a Beer!

I am still working with many of you on a number of projects, all of which will be handed over this month but I am working to bring a resolution to many of the things we are working on before I head off. If any of the clubs I am working with need anything before I go, you know where I am. Please do get in touch via my EH email alex.teasdale@englandhockey.co.uk.

For me, I'm off for a change of ball - and will be headed to Twickenham to join the RFU. Im really looking forward to the next challenge but it has been a really hard decision to move on, mainly because I really enjoy working in the sport I love.

Thanks once again for all of the work you all do, I look forward to seeing how clubs continue to progress in the coming years - with the legacy of the games and the governing body positioned well in terms of plans and investment moving forwards, hockey will be the one to watch.

Alex

Saturday, 21 April 2012

Inspire a Generation

"Inspire a Generation"

With 100 days to go this was the games motto unveiled earlier this week. It does resonate, particularly as I think of the Hockey Nation programme, and the work already underway there to do just that. 5 days, 66 visits, 5000 kids visited by GB players through February and March kicked us off in terms of Inspiring a Generation, with many more exciting inspirational events to come.

I frequently visit clubs around the country and today I was fortunate enough to visit Thirsk HC in North Yorkshire for their pitch opening. I arrived in typical April weather, a mixture of sunshine and showers to see hundreds of people milling around the pavilion and resurfaced pitch at the school and sixth form college.

I always enjoy seeing so many young people playing, and today I saw the full range, from those who are just learning to walk knocking a ball around, to those representing at JRPC. As usual, these sorts of sights have a certain way of making you feel all is well in the world for those few moments.
What I wasn't expecting was to be so in awe of a simple conversation had between two men, who I hope wont mind me saying are slightly older than I.

Chris Darling, recently retired from the Board of England Hockey joined me today to open the pitch and hand out awards. As we were readying ourselves for the awards ceremony, we were introduced to the clubs President, Colin Gell. There was a moment and Chris and Colin shook hands and looked at each other slightly unsure of who was going to speak next.
Chris said "Colin?"
Colin said "You're never Chris Darling?" "What happened to your hair? Well at least you still have some I suppose" as he motioned towards his own head.

As the conversation grew, it transpired that they had met many years ago playing at Warrington HC, where I believe Chris is still a trustee. After the awards they sat down and recollected their days together and caught up on the days since then. Colin only stopped playing 16 years ago, aged 65.
Colin mentioned that he was delighted to see so many people had turned up and how may young people there were. He explained that in "his day" there were not the opportunities there are today for people to pick up a stick and enjoy a fun day at the pitch. This lead to the inevitable conversation of grass pitches and the quality of them, followed by the next inevitable question "you wont remember, you'll be too young". No no, sadly I'm not.
I do remember all too well the muddy hockey fields both at school and for some league matches in my early playing days. I remember watching the more experienced around me pick a ball that was in effect a bouncing bomb with startling precision, and move it on before you could say v drag. Far from it creating for me memories of cold, muddy pitches as some people will recount, I remember going back to the changing rooms surrounded by people who loved playing the game, and loved showing us youngsters how it was done, peeling off the muddy socks and being proud of the bruises I'd gathered whilst trying to stop the bounding bombs.
Those people all inspired me, so much so I seem to have followed my love of the sport into a full time career.

Chris and Colin continued to talk, and enjoyed the buffet which rivalled any cricket teas I've ever seen. There were some young leaders and coaches there today, who gave speeches about the teams they look after and you could see how enthused the U10 and U12 girls in particular were by the 17 year olds who had been working with them for the last season or more. I wondered how much those girls know about the positive role models they are and I also wonder how many of the children they work with will follow in their shoes in years to come.

Today was one of those days where you feel real community spirit, I'm sure only a glimpse of things to come as the Diamond Jubilee and the Olympics arrive, but it struck me today for the first time that the days we are currently living in, and those to come over the next 97 days or so, will create for many of us the memories we will talk about as Chris and Colin did today. We talk in hockey alot about The Hockey Family and it was lovely to see today a part of that family reunited and others being introduced for the first time. I was inspired today by seeing Colin still wandering around the pitch at 80 years old, inspired by Chris volunteering to umpire this afternoon, inspired by the young leaders giving their time and by all of the club members who worked hard to make today, and every day happen for Thirsk HC. I was also inspired to try and make some of the amazing Cup Cakes one of the parents made.

When I heard the motto Inspire a Generation I immediately thought of the GB athletes across all sports being responsible for that inspiration, but the games and the jubilee give us so much more than that. It gives us an unparallelled opportunity to come closer together as communities and as a nation to inspire each other in a variety of ways, those younger than us, those older than us. I wonder how many people we have all inspired in any way today, I wonder if Colin would know he inspired me to write this.

Enjoy the next few months, for those of us in hockey it will most certainly be memorable.




Saturday, 21 January 2012

The Changing Face of Hockey Clubs



According to the latest research, 7 out of 10 clubs in England find the support offered to them by EHB useful. 1 in 4 however are not aware of the support on offer. You have to feel that is a statistic which has changed over the last decade. Although there is still work to do to raise awareness, a significant majority of clubs are enjoying the support they can access.

Clubs cite the areas they need the most support in as accesing funds and recruiting new members.
Junior club membership has risen by over 50%, and adults 20% since 2005 alone, clubs are doing an excellent job of taking the opportunites available to them to raise participation within their communities.

Accessing funds, especially in this economic climate is extremely difficult, yet we have clubs enjoying wonderful successes. Old Sillhillians were just yesterday awarded Sportivate funding to run new programmes. A handful of clubs last week found out that they have been sucessful in accessing Inspired funding for new facilities. A decade ago money was plentiful and the sporting facilities landscape looked good, but fast forward and the cash is sparce. Hockey is become ever more resourceful and strategic, but most importantly it is surviving because of the huge amount of skilled and dedicated volunteers working to access funds and recruit new members.
The Grow Your Own programme was written to support clubs, to help them to be whatever it was they wanted to be, with a focus on volunteers, funding, recruitment and community events. The programme secured £90k from Harvester, and is currently being Sportsmatched for another £90k. All investment which will go directly back into clubs to support them and their communities.
GYO clubs have grown by 13% in the last 12 months alone, and with significant investment to come it will be interesting to see how those clubs continue to flourish. 
We need only look at Alderley Edge, EHB Club of the Year for a live example of how to "grow your own".

The main thing clubs identified as a problem was lack of coaches. Part of the GYO funding will look to offer coaching bursaries (not the first offered in recent years) for those communities and clubs who have ambitions to grow and desperately need new coaches. The lack of coaches was followed by the lack of volunteers. The biggest volunteer recruitment programme hockey has seen is about to begin, so watch this space! In the meantime, many clubs are using GYO Volunteers to help. Having young people in representative roles on committees is a great step forward for our sport, and helps to create a living legacy. Using local volunteer centres to get some help with back office tasks, leaving hockey people to do hockey jobs is also working well in some areas.

The last thing clubs would like more support in is accessing facilities. It is a huge problem for hockey, and something Im working on at the moment. 9 in 10 clubs hire facilities and have little control over them. The Right Pitches in the Right Places is a facilities guidance document for hockey, which has buy in from not only Sport England but the other sports which use Artificial Grass Pitches. We are already seeing success stories from pilots, and it's launch in February will be the result of 3 years work to secure the facilities future of hockey.

Opportunities
When clubs were asked what they thought the biggest opportunities were in the next two years, the message was loud and clear:
1) Linking with local schools

2)Utilising the opportunity of 2012 and the Olympics

The first point is something a colleague and I have spent quite some time on since 2009. Last week, we reported that we had not only hit last seasons young people club target, but this seasons also.
18 months ago we reviewed processes, made formulating a club school link much easier, and followed the link up with a revenue tail to ensure all clubs working on CSL had equipment to allow them to deliver. Each club now has on average 10 club school links, compared to 1 in 2005. Clubs have worked incredibly hard within their local communities and it is pleasing to see them reap the rewards.

The second point, around the Olympics links in well to the Hockey Nation blog of a few weeks ago. Clubs are excited, and planning is well underway across the nation for a summer of fun for hockey.
The biggest change I have seen over the past few years is how clubs communicate, with their members, other clubs and with the governing body.
Social media has been fully embraced by hockey clubs and their volunteers. We have 300 clubs on twitter, and slightly more than that with their own Facebook page. We have recently been priviledged enough to be given membership to many clubs facebook groups, to help with any problems, to advise where we can. It has been brilliant to see so much club activity through that, to see clubs embracing the way their members wish to be communicated with.
Twitter has revolutionised communications across the world, and hockey clubs made sure they weren't left behind.  300 of them tweet the day away, create friendly banter between themselves and support hockey in England. None more so that @richmondhcskip @lincolnroseshc and @RotherhamHC who all do an excellent job of utilising this fairly new tool.
I love being able to connect with the clubs and indviduals on twitter through my own account, and through @englandhockey being able to help someone in 140 characters I still find brilliant, the same as getting the latest scores from an event or a game on my phone on the go.
Reading HC as quite a few clubs do now, send out electronic newsletters, branded and templated and are able to see who opened the email, or perhaps who didnt, which stories generate the most interest and are able to track the success of the news they generate.
The changes in the way clubs are communicating has been such a huge change over the last few years and it is great to see hockey clubs leading the way, and generating their own hashtags #hockeyfamily #hockeynation #gogb to get behind the sport and each other.

It seems only fitting to close this with a story from a club who's story I came accross on Twitter today, and wouldnt have known about otherwise. Some extreme pre season fittness from @ipswichhc ladies 1st team, who today ran 817 miles for @helpforheros 
A big well done girls, and good luck with tomorrows DOMS!

Hockey clubs in England do a fantastic job promoting our sport and if we can continue to give them the tools and support they need it will be an exciting future for hockey.










Saturday, 17 December 2011

Hockey Nation the Road to 2012 - Get Excited

In July 2008, I was having lunch with a friend the day she was due to jet off to Macau for the holding camp for the Beijing Olympics. As we wandered through Marlow picking up things she needed, and chatting over lunch, I could feel myself becoming green with envy, thinking of how I would be sat watching from home.
2 weeks later, I landed at Beijing airport.
Holland Heineken House 2008

The excitement, atmosphere, and unity of people in sport was immense. From talking to fellow travellers in Dubai on their way to the greatest show on earth, to celebrating successes with athletes and fans from all over the world - the Dutch in particular really know how to put on a party ...





 
EHB  launched an Olympic programme, Hockey Nation earlier this year at a series of roadshows, aimed at making our sport accessible to all, providing people with great opportunities to get involved all over the country. 
For those who havent seen it, watch this video -never fails put a smile on people's face, especially the moment Jacques Rogge announces "The City of London"

We have such a huge opportunity, Im not sure how many of us really understand what our country will be experiencing in 223 days from now. We are a sport with great values and great people, and to be able to open our doors to our communities both during and after the olympics makes us special. We know how hard clubs work, and have worked over the last few years in particular to make sure they are ready for 2012. We have 300 clubs with ClubsFirst accreditation ready to welcome youngsters who are inspired by the games and the great role models in our sport, we have over 900 clubs with an enthusiasm for the game and wanting to help it to grow, and we have over 150,000 ambassadors playing and volunteering in clubs already doing a huge amount to promote hockey.

Hundreds and hundreds of communities are readying themselves through various LOCOG inspired programmes, and hockey clubs are beginning to widen their community reach by working alongside others.  I am hearing of many clubs taking part in festivals, olympic inspired events and club members who will be torchbearers. 
Seeing the excitement and enthusiasm start to build is such an experience - Sonning Hockey Club were last seen en mass with Sally Munday at a Hockey Nation Roadshow  quite some time after the event had ended (and not the first one they had attended) telling her about their plans. They have since had committee meetings about their own 2012 olympic programme. I'm looking forward to seeing how their plans progress, and seeing their local community embrace them. 

I was hooked on our sport through playing at school, and was fortunate enough to grow up in a club with great facilities, great coaches and a great club school links - I was also hooked on the Olympics at a young age. There is something about it which I find almost magical. To go to Beijing was an experience I find difficult to put into words - you have to see it to believe it.  I can only imagine what a home Olympics will be like, being able to work with clubs all over the country with such enthusiastic volunteers. 
We all have a very exciting year ahead, I can hardly believe where the time has gone to between the announcement in 2005, to being on the eve of 2012. I hope to see many of you during 2012 at the Maxifuel Super Sixes, the London Cup, the Olympic test event, domestic finals and awards events, The Big Dribble, Hockey Houses and Five Week Frenzy,  to find out how people are getting on in such an unique year. 







Wednesday, 7 December 2011

Surbiton hit 1,000 members - how did they do it?

In 2005 Surbiton Hockey Club in Surrey had an established club operating out of Sugden Road with 300 members, which included 110 junior members.
Interestingly, when you visit the website you don’t immediately see a section detailing the club history, but what smacks you in the face is an intriguing section called “The Future is Now”.
This is interesting to see, the club quite clearly have a vision which is evident within 2 seconds of clicking onto their website.

The club recently affiliated through the annual process to EHB and the numbers they submitted were staggering, not least because they are the biggest hockey club in England, but because their rate of growth has been so large and as far as I am aware, they haven’t miraculously built a new pitch on site since I last visited 3 months ago. So what changed for them to see over 150 new members in a season?

I caught up with Brett Garrard (Director of Hockey) after a community coaching session, whilst he was on his way to coach the senior ladies, about the changes the club have made since 2005 to see over  1,000 members sign up to SHC this season.

The piece of paper I wrote my notes on resembles well, nothing recognisable. The amount of information, schemes and insight Brett offered could fill reams of paper.
In an attempt to make sense of the vast amount of notes, I’ll start with how Brett describes the starting point.

He started in his role as Director of Hockey  3 years ago with a clear vision. Within 3 years he wanted to see the colts section hit 500 and add a new mens and womens senior team every three years.
The starting point apparently was quite simple. To offer value for money.
Over time, the club developed a motto, which is firmly embedded throughout the club – “Every player matters” this is quite clear to see when you visit the club and see the person who oversees the Colts sessions, watching every senior game on a Saturday and integrating junior members into the club. There is a feeling that whilst Richard “Ratman” Alexander of England and GB is wandering around, he is in fact no more important than the girls who do a great job in the bar. To be honest, they probably have the edge on him as controllers of the beer flow.

We would be in danger of this article becoming a novel, so I try to succinctly talk about some of the key points which Brett believes accelerated the club from being good to excellent.

Young People
The vision of taking hockey to the community and not expecting the community to magically turn up at the gates of Sugden Road pre empted the recent work of Sport England in identifying that community groups might quite like sport to be taken to them and not the other way around. This was also quite handy considering that Surbiton HC didn’t have an infinite amount of space and utilising community areas allowed rapid expansion of membership.
Fast forward 3 years, and I’m now looking at a website called Suburban Hockey, complete with it’s own sponsor. Suburban Hockey aims to bridge the social gap by taking hockey to children in a wider community and by offering opportunities for more children to enjoy the sport at club level in the future. The number of young people touched by SHC has far extended the aim to see 500 colts involved and is pushing 650. The strong link the club has developed with the community and the schools mean that there is a clear pathway for young people to enter in to club life. For those who don’t want to take that step, they are happily accommodated in satellites.
I wonder if it matters where kids play hockey, or is it about kids playing hockey where they want to play hockey? If that is the school playground or leisure centre down the road, who are we to argue? As long as the are picking up a stick and having fun, and have opportunities to join the club if they wish, I can’t see that it matters.

Adults
One of Brett’s ideas a few years ago was to run two programmes called “Learn to Play” and “Re learn to Play”. The former for ladies from the community to have a go at hockey in a safe environment with people similar to themselves in terms of interests. The latter programme was aimed at the parents of the colts who haven’t picked up a stick in a few years. We now of course know this programme as Back to Hockey, and the model has been replicated across the country with a tweak here and there.
The effect of these programmes saw new womens teams entered into the leagues, at a level that suits the women who want to play. They also have a large squad as many of them dont wish to train twice a week and play week in week out. They have families and like the flexibility this set up affords them.
The men who became involved were integrated into  the new teams formed, and for those who decided that wasn’t for them formed a 6 a side league which take place at the club every week followed by a beer or two in the bar afterwards.
The club also formed strong links with the local university which resulted in sharing facilities and subsequently players training with the club, and now playing within teams. The club also provides coaches and expertise to the University helping them to progress with their own hockey vision and we realise that many graduates stay in the area after they finish their studies.

Raising standards and offering value for money
None of the areas SHC have developed have happened by chance. The original mission of offering value for money dictated that the club needed to offer high quality coaching and administration. They invested a large amount of time in getting the right people into the right positions. Volunteers have been integral to SHC, and I have had the pleasure of working with some of them over the last couple of years. I wouldn’t even know where to start in describing Gill Griffiths who is the (Membership and Admin - the glue that sticks everything together). Her organisational skills are phenomenal. Keith Wallis looked after the recent resurfacing of the pitch, and gained planning permission for lights for the second pitch which has turned the club around in terms of maximising pitch space during the dark evenings.
The club has recently received Sportsmatch funding to run a programme called “Jump Start Hockey” with this money they will be able  to increase the numbers of coaches and provide additional training equipment so further driving up numbers. They will look to work with young coaches and umpires to create a sustainable future.

Did Surbiton get everything right? No, but every mistake is a learning opportunity.
I asked Brett if he was going to give other clubs who wanted to better themselves advice, what would he say? He firstly was very clear in stating that all clubs are different and no one model fits, he said they learnt a great deal from the journey, some things worked and some didnt. I think it’s really important that although these guys are a large club any club regardless of their size or location can take any part of the development Surbiton have looked at and apply it in their own way.  They didnt get everything right, and they feel that they still have a long way to go.
Brett stated that the main piece of advice would be to make sure there is plenty of support – this certainly hits home at SHC. Everyone is involved in some small way, some in big ways. Too many times I hear from clubs who are really struggling as they have one or two excellent volunteers, but ultimately the workload is too high. A job shared is a job halved as they say.
The second piece of advice Brett gave was around a clear vision. His, and the clubs vision wasn’t anything spectacular – offering value for money and every player matters are pretty simple statements.
We recently conducted a piece of work which involved visiting hundreds of clubs, large, small, growing, shrinking to establish why the good clubs were good and why some clubs were struggling – the overwhelming area that stood out was that the majority of clubs who were struggling had very grand aims and those who were doing well were taking small simple steps to better themselves. There isn’t anything wrong with aiming high, but perhaps we at EHB need to do more help clubs to identify the small steps. We have a starting point with the Grow Your Own programme and it would be interesting to see if any of the little steps provided there were anything that SHC covered on their journey.

For me, the most interesting part of the conversation with Brett was right at the end, where he briefly mentioned getting the ladies 1s promoted to the premiership and the men qualifying for Europe. It was a rarity to hear so little about the performance section of the club, and whilst we all know that profile can be built upon the successes at those levels, it was refreshing to not have to delve to hear about development. Also interesting to note, I don’t believe that the word “winning” was mentioned once in our conversation, somewhat ironic from an ex International captain and a club who experiences winning regularly.
Is winning important? Of course it is, life is tangled up in winning and losing and whilst I believe in the lessons winning and losing can teach it was a pleasant experience to hear from a club who value every member in the club in equal measures regardless of age, gender, winners or losers.

Most surprisingly, Brett ventured at the end that he would be really happy to talk to any club out there about any aspect of developing themselves. He and the club clearly believe in hockey and have a desire to see hockey in England flourish. He was very honest about what didn’t go well for them and the lessons they learnt along the way, and if those experiences can help others he is happy to share.

Welcome



This is the first blog from me, Alex, National Manager Clubs and Facilities at England Hockey Board. 
In the interests of dragging myself firmly into the social media world welcome to my blog about all things clubs and facilities. I will endeavour to make it as interesting as possible, with content about clubs, for clubs.
If you or your club have a story or something to share, let me know.

Alex