WORKSOP TOWN FANS CAMPAIGN FOR NEW HOME
Worksop Town has a long and proud tradition. The club, who play in the UniBond 
Premier Division, was formed in 1861 and spent the next 147 years in playing 
Worksop, aside from a brief three year ground share with Gainsborough Trinity 
in 
the early 90s. 100 of these years were played at the club's Central Avenue 
ground and included famous Cup runs that were only ended by the likes of 
Chelsea, Spurs, and Burnley. Sadly Worksop Town now finds itself homeless and 
stuck with a local council that is not only unwilling to help but seems to be 
actively preventing the club from finding a new home.  Not that the Tigers' 
support is about to take that lying down:

Join Worksop Town fans' Facebook campaign at http://tinyurl.com/y8ec6ab

Email your messages of support to [email protected].

Download their petition at http://tinyurl.com/yk44hnp

The club's problems can be traced to property developer Howard Raymond who, in 
2005, took over the club and its assets (via a company named 1861 Leisure Ltd) 
as it went through a period of financial difficulty. Raymond, incidentally, is 
the son of famous p0rn baron Paul Raymond who was behind such literary 
treasures 
as Razzle, Men Only, and Mayfair.

A slump in form followed and the club was eventually relegated from the 
Conference North. In 2008 Raymond decided to kick the club out of their Sandy 
Lane stadium, still retaining ownership of the club's assets (i.e. ground) 
through 1861 Leisure, without ever bothering to explain himself to the club's 
support. Since then the club has played its fixtures at Watnall Road, in 
Hucknall, and Ilkeston Town's New Manor Ground.

Good news looked to be around the corner though when planning officials at 
Bassetlaw Council, the club's local authority, recommended that a planned 
development on the local Vesuvius site (fans erupted etc.) be given the go 
ahead. The plans also included other sports facilities, a supermarket, and 
industrial units.

However, in a very unusual move the council's planning committee rejected the 
application leaving Worksop Town reeling. Chairman John Hepworth said he was 
"appalled" by the decision and blamed it on local party politics as a rift 
appeared in the planning committee.

The club's fate now lies in the hands of a planning inspectorate who could 
overturn the committee's decision - if enough fans and members of the local 
community make their voice heard.
 

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