AVEYFEST – SUNDAY 5TH MAY! 

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We are delighted to announce that on 5th May, we will be hosting the first Avey-Fest, our new end of season event, which will see entertainment catered for all at the Horsfall. 

Gates are set to open at 12pm, below are just some of the events that will be taking place…

LIVE MUSIC

MARKET STALLS

WORLD FOOD & BEER STALLS

FACE PAINTING

MEET THE MASCOT – RONNIE THE RAM

COMEDIAN (FROM 7PM)

ON THE PITCH (FROM 2PM)

BPA Staff vs BPA Scholars

BPA Reps vs BPA Fans

All this for just £2 entry per person, or £5 for a family of 4. 

And, there is more to be announced… don’t miss it #Bradford

Head Coach Search Update

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After interviewing at length last week at the Horsfall, we are continuing discussions with our new potential head coach.

These conversations are detailed and include hierarchy and organisational structure and processes. In the interim as these talks continue, Tom McStravick has agreed to take interim responsibility for the first team training and match days.

We ask for your patience at this time and throw your support behind Tom and the boys.

Sykes-Kenworthy To Join National League side York City

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We can today confirm the transfer of Avenue #1 George Sykes-Kenworthy to Vanarama National League side York City for an undisclosed fee.

George has made 94 consecutive appearances in goal for the First Team, and has shown a high level of ability over the last two seasons, earning himself a place in full time football. 

While donning the Green Army’s #1 Shirt, Sykes-Kenworthy kept 28 clean sheets in all competitions.

On the transfer, First Team Manager Mark Bower said;

“George has been superb for us over the past two years and whilst we are disappointed to lose him, there is no doubt that he deserves the chance to move back in to full time football having shown an outstanding level of consistency and maturity whilst with us.” 

“I am pleased that we have been able to help another young player get back into the professional game and we wish him the best of luck.”

“We have secured a transfer fee for George and that, along with his wages will be available to us to invest in strengthening the team. “

George first joined the Club in December 2021 from Boston United, and in his first season (21/22) made 26 appearances in all competitions, keeping 11 clean sheets, for which he won both the Player of the Year award, and Player’s Player of the Year award at the end of the 2021/22 season.

Sykes-Kenworthy later agreed terms to stay at the Horsfall in June 2022, until the end of the 2023/24 season, and continued to show consistency and calm on the pitch, making 46 appearances and keeping another 12 clean sheets.

George was also named as Captain at the start of the 2023/24 season, and kept 3 clean sheets up until his departure.

All of us at Bradford (Park Avenue) wish George the best of luck on his move into full-time football.

MULTIMATCH RELEASING 20TH JULY ONLINE AT £30, OR PICK YOURS UP AT THE BPAFC VS CITY GAME FOR JUST £20!

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CASH & CARD BOTH ACCEPTED IN THE CLUB SHOP.

MultiMatch is a new way to support the Avenue, offering a discounted admission across the season, helping you save money and still enjoy the same Football.

Entry will cost you just £8 per game with a MultiMatch season ticket, for both Adults and Concessions. Read our full Season Ticket press release here to find out the best value for you.

You can purchase tickets to the BPA vs City game on the link below.

www.ticketsource.co.uk/bradford-park-avenue-afc

TOMORROW – THACKLEY AFC KO 1PM

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We kick off our pre-season tomorrow at 1pm, where we host Thackley AFC at the Horsfall Community Stadium!

This is a PAY ON THE DAY event, with admission costing £5.00 per adult and £3.00 concession.

After discussions with Albion Sports, who kick off at 4pm on the same day, we can also confirm that those who stay behind, can watch the Albion vs Wakefield game at NO EXTRA charge.

#UTA #GreenArmy #Bradford #Albion #Wakefield #BPAFC

#BPA 2023/24 SEASON TICKETS NOW ON SALE!

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YouTube player

We are delighted to announce the details of our season ticket prices for the upcoming 2023/24 season.

#BPA 2023/24 Season Tickets are on sale from MIDDAY TODAY! Following on from relegation last season, we are looking forward to welcoming you all back to the Horsfall for our first season in the NPL for over a decade.

Once again, we have tried to make the pricing fair on the fans. We understand there is a massive cost of living crisis at the moment and we have acted. This means an adult now pays just £5.95 per league game and Concessions pay an incredible £5.23.

Students can now come to the Horsfall for the equivalent of £2.14 per game, Juniors are in at just £1.42 and under 12’s can now see the Avenue for FREE in the league all season

Our hospitality upgrade package is still available for this year, which is priced at just £210.00. This includes catered food, tea and coffee and snacks

Parking this year will also be FREE!

Our Associate Director season ticket gives you entry into all of our Home AND Away League games for the full season, with Hospitality!

We also have some new features for you

Membership Numbers

The photos are gone, replaced this season with a membership number. This is aimed at further developments in the stadium in the future. Membership numbers will be given on a first come first served basis and will stick with you all seasons going forward

Introducing – Stans Seats;

You’ve seen the flags, and the heard the noise, get involved!
Our Youth Season Ticket this season includes a £10.00 upgrade. This will give you a reserved seat and a flag to be used during games. Open to all aged 12-17, come down and be a part of the matchday experience!

Introducing – Budget Boost

In conjunction with the fantastic Development fund, we are running a scheme to help raise funds for the first team budget. Available on all Adult and Concession Season tickets, the Budget Boost money will be given straight to the first team coffers.

Re-Imagined – MuiltiMatch Ticket

Our Multimatch ticket is back this year with a twist! Now only £30.00 upfront, the price for admission is now set at £8.00 for both Adults and Concessions.

*MultiMatch Ticket Launching Early July

Football Operations Manager Calum Cullen said: “We are delighted to finally announce the 23/24 Season Tickets, and especially happy that we’ve managed to make sure our wonderful fans have got the best possible deal

“At just £5.95 per game for Adults and £5.23 for Concessions, per-game pricing is once again cheaper for the new season. The support we’ve had this past season has been incredible and we cannot wait to have the fans back in.”

To purchase your #BPA 2023/24 Season Ticket, you can visit the Club Shop at the Horsfall, or click HERE to purchase online.

For any fans wishing to enquire about season tickets, feel free to email info@bpafc.com and we will get back to you as soon as possible. We are also open today until 7pm at the Horsfall if you would like to purchase in person.

HAVERN SIGNS PLAYER/COACH CONTRACT!

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First new signing of the close season, and it’s a new role for a experienced player

We are delighted to announce our first off season signing, in the form of our captain for the last two seasons, Luca Havern. 

Luca has agreed to join our management team in a slight change of role which sees him sign as player/coach for the 23/24 season.

Showing huge loyalty to the club and management team over the last 5 seasons, it’s a significant step for the club and Luca, to replace the large boots left last season when previous player/coach Ryan Toulson left. 

We look forward to seeing Luca playing next season, helping our push for automatic promotion back to the National League North, and his impact off the field with young and old players alike. 

 

Luca Havern

I’m really happy to be staying with the club and to have progressed into a player/coach role. I feel that it is a natural progression for me at this stage in my career and jumped at the chance to continue to work with Bows, Bosh and the players. We are all going to use last seasons disappointment to fuel us to be successful next season. Have a good summer BPA fans and see you all soon, Luca. 


Mark Bower

I am delighted that Luca has agreed to stay with us for another season firstly in a playing capacity but also taking his first step into a coaching role. 

As a player he has been excellent for us over the past few seasons both in his performances and his influence on the players around him on the pitch. 

He has been captain at numerous clubs and brings a wealth of non league experience, has the respect of the players around him, and will be a valuable addition to the coaching staff. 

VIEW FROM THE BOARDROOM (05/05/23)

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End of season thoughts

Well, there we are, it’s the NPL next season and hello again to Guiseley, Matlock, Macclesfield and FCUM. Probably wise for me to say that this note is more my own thoughts than the official football club’s view. The football issues speak for themselves, and we will all have a view. So close, yet so far away! In the end, for me, I think the most unfortunate event was the Jordan Preston injury. I’m sure he could have helped us win the extra points we needed and we wish him well in his recovery.

It’s been a while since we had a relegation and whilst the NPL is truly based in the north and our loyal, travelling fans will experience early evening returns home, both midweek and on Saturdays, we need to see this as a chance to build a more competitive and comprehensive squad and to get back to winning more than losing. We all hate failure, but we all want our club to endure and prosper.

Through the other end of the periscope, I’m not so sure I can easily feel the thrill of Wrexham’s promotion, based as it was on a £2m input to funds from the Hollywood pair. Happy for their fans, as their fanbase has remained strong over the years out of the EFL, and lucky to be without major clubs nearby, but hopefully their next aim will be financial stability rather than more and more cash funds from rich movie stars carrying out an experiment that might as easily have been done with Macclesfield or Bury, though Macc have their own benefactors now.

It’s hardly ‘plucky little Wrexham’ but more like a smaller version of ‘lucky little Newcastle’ in terms of buying in success. The glad-handing and back-slapping doesn’t make me think that this is the way forward for community, grassroots football, but merely more of a very strong echo of the Premier League’s behaviours. Either we are looking in future for hundreds of multi-millionaire funders for grassroot teams or we are aiming to be operating more sustainable local businesses, based on sports activities, funded locally, and with better Premier League distributions if possible.

Had the Premier League thought to spread their TV largesse firstly across grassroots clubs rather than on themselves, their players and agents, we might have seen more kids getting more from our national game rather than clubs trying to get rich quick. Great to see them investing locally, where that is happening, but it could have been so much more, so many more and so much better, morally and financially. Players earning more in a couple of months than many supporters do in a lifetime isn’t healthy, even with their short careers. Thankfully some, like Sadio Mané, put a lot back to help others.

Interesting to see Kevin Philips leaving South Shields after finally getting the club promoted. In the inevitable ‘club statement’ the owner mentioned ‘sound budgets and using their successful Academy’ going forward. Smacks of too much common sense and the ‘mutual consent’ is open to speculative thoughts: did he fall, was he pushed, was there no increased funding? Another club promising a manager an open cheque book?

No doubt Kev’s next stop will tell us more, as will the owner’s next appointment, Julian Arca, locally based, former player, long association with the club – now there’s a template! Hopefully, with the crowds generated up there, they can operate efficiently and can build with a manager who wants to work within a budget and with an umbilical cord to his Academy. That’s the way to do it!

Then there’s ‘plucky little Southport’s’ situation. Just saved their NLN status, lost 2-0 to us, and were poor, after slamming us earlier in the season, with the manager mightily slagged off during and after the game here, by their ‘fans’ and yet again last week by all accounts.

A manager turned director, so not an easy contender for a ‘club statement’, but, along with colleagues there, talking of new investment and wondering if those complaining loudly want a club or would prefer going out of existence. Very easy to join a baying crowd, much harder to sustain a football club. As I moved to Southport from Bradford, many years ago, I wish them every success in their rebuilding. I can’t say my allegiances changed but when you move round the country in your career you look for a local club to go watch to get your football fix. My journey included Bristol City, when Andy Cole was on loan there from Arsenal, Southend Utd, when I tried to help them relocate and add a casino to their new site and Luton Town, watching them yo-yo down and back up the divisions.

Well, we know what going out of existence is like, and the despair of losing a decent stadium with a big main stand and we can only sympathise with people accepting roles if it helps the club survive. Many have been there, done that, along with many others who did their bit for Avenue, some who departed these shores, some dearly departed, others who may have reached a financial watershed. We salute their fond memory.

And then we come to the Peterborough Sports example – a tale of how to survive promotions whilst closing your eyes to league ‘rules’, or so it might seem lately? Just buy good players so you stay in your league, or get promoted, then persuade the league directors that a change of ownership (all due diligence checks properly and speedily completed I guess) can allow the league to bend its rules. Sod the principle of stadium safety, improvements or operating standards required, for which there is a very competent stadium safety advisory body, even if it means going to another ground to finish your season! And to a ground shared by a now ex- NL club and a lower league club because that NL club blew its financial fortune years ago, when it had a top-class ground. The PS players will have coped, because the Burton Latimer pitch is arguably as poor as their own. No investment there and probably none expected for either stadium’s pitches. Ground grading at step 4/5 had already concluded a week after the end of their respective leagues. There’s a case for it being done before you get promoted, not after.

We have been fined for not playing planned games during the covid crisis, essentially for being unwilling to help spread a deadly disease. No refund for us after the league then did the same thing two weeks later; no thought that the £6k fine might have hurt the club with costs to bear and players to pay.

We were also not allowed to defer a game when our injury list was greater than our squad numbers. Nobody has yet heard about shared financial data from clubs, as promised from the NL some months ago, nor about any penalties for late submissions of financial data, as will be required by an independent regulator. Well done Peterborough for uncovering the soft underbelly of the National League! It defeated us. I’m keener than ever to see independent regulators in place!

It’s been a tough old season and who knows if we’ll hear about a few more grubby things under rocks turned over as we prepare for next season, but onwards and upwards as we fight valiantly to offer our own city and its kids a better sporting life, better facilities and a football team aiming to improve its fortunes sensibly. Our end of season run gives me great hope for next season.

I’m not sure I need to see much more of the National League for a while, or its nonsense in calling Hereford, Gloucester, Brackley and Kettering ‘northern clubs’, or having rules made for bending and rules made for ignoring and thankfully I won’t be obliged to sit and listen to the fawning over Wrexham’s success, with the NL trying to capture some reflected glory from it, rather than working out that copying the Premier League’s worship of self-invested cash isn’t the way forward for grassroots football. The only admirable side of the NL is its NL Trust work, which is under-funded and should be more widely publicised. Hopefully, when we return, their systems will have been much improved.

The sooner we get three up, three down through all leagues and the NL’s Premier League, which has mainly full-time clubs, becomes the EFL’s League Three, the better off we will all be. It may let the NL create three leagues again, with a north, south and midlands separation, with the top three promoted to League Three, or with an extended play-off system to include more clubs, knowing whether they can afford the uplift and have comparable facilities.  

Alignment in the NPL, SPL and Isthmian leagues should then create many more local games, better crowds, less travelling and then all we need is an independent regulator ripping money away from the PL and investing it in grassroots football so that all these clubs can operate with greater financial oversight and the integrity to go with it.

Having seen both success and disappointment in my six decades as an Avenue and football supporter, I look forward to a brighter future as I am very confident that we are on the right track as a club, despite losing NL status and visibility. We have an improving stadium, an improving Academy and a desire to be increasingly financially viable and that keeps us all going. Good people wanting good things to happen.

The journey continues, we merely pass through in our own time and I hope we see you at the pre-season friendlies.

Up The Avenue!