June 2025 (Page 3)

Yeovil Town Football Club’s decision to relocate their first-team training operations to the SGS Wise Campus in Bristol ahead of the upcoming season evokes mixed reactions among the Glovers’ faithful. While rooted in practicality and ambition, it also raises concerns about the club’s long-term commitment to Yeovil and the community.

Reasons Behind the Move

Former chairman Martin Hellier highlighted reasons of the decision when he commented on the club’s Facebook announcement post, he mentions the inadequacies of the Alvington facility. Poor drainage leading to injuries and ongoing local political disputes significantly restricted effective usage, making Alvington unsuitable for professional football standards. Hellier’s stance emphasises an urgent need to upgrade facilities, something the SGS Wise Campus unquestionably provides.



Advantages of the SGS Wise Campus

The benefits of the SGS Wise Campus are considerable. It offers world-class facilities, critical for attracting talented players from further afield, including areas such as the Midlands, London, and Wales. This broader geographic recruitment reach, potentially enhancing the squad’s overall quality and hopefully for us fans competitiveness.

The Football Stadium Pitch at the SGS Wise Campus in Bristol.

Additionally, SGS’s indoor and outdoor facilities ensure uninterrupted training, eliminating frustrations caused by weather conditions that often disrupted sessions at Alvington. SGS’s facilities include

  • FIFA & RFU-approved 3G football stadium pitch (100 seats)

  • Multiple grass pitches for football and rugby

  • 8-lane Olympic-standard athletics track with full jumping facilities

  • Indoor sports hall for netball, basketball, futsal, handball (750-seat capacity for big events)

  • Indoor 3G Astro turf (60 × 40 m) – divisible into two pitches

  • 40-station gym with weight room and performance lab

Potential Drawbacks

Despite the obvious advantages, significant concerns persist. A major issue is the physical separation between the first team and the newly formed Under-19 National League squad. Traditionally, successful clubs foster close integration between youth setups and senior teams. This relocation risks weakening that critical link, potentially affecting player development.

Questions also arise about why closer facilities, such as Millfield School, Sherborne School, or King’s Bruton, weren’t prioritised. Although schools might understandably hesitate to accommodate professional sports teams, the club’s transparency regarding any negotiations remains limited, leaving supporters unsure whether local options were thoroughly explored.

Historical Context and Infrastructure

This decision reflects long-standing frustrations regarding infrastructure investment. Despite Yeovil Town’s spell in the Championship and EFL, significant improvements, especially in training facilities, never fully materialised. Persistent stagnation around Huish Park, despite investment from individuals including Hellier, has driven this necessity for short-term solutions, potentially exacerbating community disconnect in the long term.

Community and Economic Impact

Economic and community implications must be carefully considered. The relocation may divert significant economic benefits away from Yeovil. Players and staff based in Bristol naturally spend less locally, impacting businesses that historically benefited from their presence. Sponsorship dynamics and community activities might also suffer, weakening the club’s local integration.

Despite assurances of continued community engagement through local festivals and school visits, the genuine day-to-day interactions that build deep local bonds, such as casual meetings and spontaneous community appearances, are difficult to maintain authentically from afar. Players might risk becoming distant figures rather than accessible local heroes.

It is worth knowing SGS stands for South Gloucestershire and Stroud College.

Practical Challenges

Current players or staff who live in Yeovil or further south may feel inconvenienced by the increased travel distances, potentially impacting their morale or commitment to the club. This added strain could even lead some individuals to consider leaving the club altogether due to these logistical challenges. Additionally, the practicalities of Bristol’s Clean Air Zone pose a potential financial burden for commuting players unless they fully relocate. Increased commuting costs and logistical complexities might lead to further unintended issues.

Potential Local Collaborations

Exploring strategic partnerships with institutions like Millfield School, renowned for elite sporting facilities and development programmes, might offer a sustainable, locally-rooted solution. Leveraging such resources could maintain Yeovil’s identity while enhancing competitive standards and helping the academy establish its roots. More details on Millfield’s facilities can be found here: Premier League Private Schools and Millfield School Telegraph Article.

Long-Term Strategy Needed

Ultimately, the relocation signals clear professional ambition and addresses immediate infrastructure issues effectively. However, without a transparent long-term strategy aimed at returning operations closer to home, the club risks longer-term alienation from its community roots.

The first-team squad in training Alvington

Yeovil supporters rightly expect clear communication regarding future intentions. They understand professional progression’s necessity but need reassurance that community connectivity and local identity remain central to the club’s long-term vision. Balancing immediate professional needs with preserving Yeovil’s community spirit and identity will be essential moving forward. We know the new owners have only just got their feet in the door and the decision was made before their ownership began, so information about the long term may already be in the works. However, if this could be communicated transparently moving forward, it would be greatly appreciated.


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Yeovil Town owner Prabhu Srinivasan interviewed during a visit to Huish Park.

New Yeovil Town owner Prabhu Srinivasan has spoken about his ambitions for the club after visiting Huish Park ahead of Thursday’s Meet the Owner event.

The Dubai-based businessman, who completed a takeover from former owner Martin Hellier in last month, spoke with the media at the stadium on Wednesday afternoon.

Asked by BBC Somerset’s Jack Killah about his background, he said: “I am banker originally a banker, but I did a lot of work with technologies and then I had to find a way to get involved in sports in some form and shape. That is how I set up a youth sports platform for kids, we manage about 1,600 schools and colleges in India and about 50-odd schools in the Middle East.”

That business is KOOH (Kids Out Of Home) Sports a company he co-founded  in 2010 as an organisation which runs sports curriculum activities with schools across India funded by invested raised from private investors. 

In a more pointed question about his personal wealth from ITV Westcountry reporter Ross Arnott he was asked how much he was worth and when the club would get to the Premier League. He replied: “I wish I could tell you the answer to the first question, I can’t unfortunately. This is not a vanity buy for us as a family, not an ego buy for us, we are there for the fans. There have been highs and lows and there will be highs and lows when I am the owner as well, but we need to do what is right for the club, on and off the pitch.

He also appeared to reference the desire to reunite the ownership of land at Huish Park with the club, something which Executive Chairman Stuart Robins spoke with us about in the latest edition of the Gloverscast – listen here.

Srinivasan said: “This is not about the money, our desire is to get the stadium back with the club. I am not going to put a timeframe on this, but our desire is to get back to the EFL but be competitive and make sure there is calmness in the club and some sustainable growth for the club.

In his interview with the BBC, the new owner echoed statements made by Robins and in his own open letter to supporters about the desire to bring stability and sustainable growth to the club.

He said: “We want to be very measured in what we do, we want to get sustainable growth for the club and therefore we need to work on and off the pitch. It is not about being a one season wonder, we do not want to do that at all, we want to look back in three years and be able to say ‘we have done what we need to do for the club.’ We will ensure we have a very measured, thoughtful process in the way we do it.

We think we should get in to the EFL as soon as we can and we hope (manager) Mark (Cooper) and his new team get there sooner than we think we should. I have been listening to Yeovil True almost every day and, like the song says, there will be ups and downs. Any club, any business has ups and downs, but you have to have green-and-white in your heart which is very important.

VERDICT: Do you agree with the decision to move first team training to Bristol?

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The most significant decision made since the takeover is the one which will see first-team training move more than 70 miles away at the SGS WISE Academy in Stoke Gifford, north of Bristol.

Speaking about the decision, Srinivasan said: “It is fundamentally driven by the fact we need proper training facilities. There were a few injuries last season, we want to make sure we do not have injured players and we can make sure they get proper facilities in Bristol. We went to see the facilities in Bristol which are outstanding. But one thing we need to understand is that this does not mean we will not be taking players from Yeovil, we will keep coming and checking here and evaluate them on their capabilities and take them to Bristol for efficient training, it is all for the team to be competitive.

Asked if he hoped to bring training back to Yeovil, he added: “That is the plan, subject to how we do in the next two seasons. The intention is to bring it back.

What are your thoughts on the latest from Prabhu Srinivasan? Let us know by leaving a comment, below.

Yeovil Town have confirmed plans to move first team training to Bristol from the start of the 2025/26 season.

The Glovers will train at the SGS WISE Academy, part of the West of England Institute of Specialist Education (WISE), to the north of the city which the club says will give players and staff “access to top-class facilities in a high-performance environment.”

News of the move had been rumoured by former loanee and one-time permanent player Otis Khan in an interview with the I Had Trials Once podcast last month.

In a statement on the club’s website on Tuesday evening, manager Mark Cooper said: “From a football perspective, this is a really positive step for the club. The facilities at SGS Wise are first-class and will help create the kind of professional, high-performance culture we want to build here. It’s about giving the players everything they need to develop, compete, and succeed. At the same time, our heart remains in Yeovil – we’re doing this to bring success back to our fans and our town.”

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The statement from the club said that the relocation of training, which had previously taken place at the Alvington Playing Fields in Yeovil or on the artificial surface at Huish Park, would broaden its “recruitment reach.” It added: “By positioning ourselves in a more central and accessible location, we are better placed to attract a wider pool of talent – an important factor as we continue building a squad capable of pushing closer to a return to the Football League.”

Executive chairman Stuart Robins said: “This move represents a major milestone in the continued evolution of Yeovil Town Football Club. Providing our players and staff with access to elite training facilities is essential if we are to raise standards and push toward our ambition of returning to the Football League. The SGS Wise Campus offers exactly the kind of environment we need to drive progress and deliver results, while maintaining our strong identity and connection with the Yeovil community.”

The decision has raised questions from some supporters about the connection the club will maintain with the local community in Somerset by choosing to move its training base more than 70 miles away from Huish Park. Strengthening links with the community has been a centrepiece of the initial pitch made by new owner Prabhu Srinivasan who described service to the community as “equally important to success on the pitch in an open letter published after he completed his takeover.

The statement added: “This move represents a major milestone in the continued evolution of Yeovil Town Football Club. Providing our players and staff with access to elite training facilities is essential if we are to raise standards and push toward our ambition of returning to the Football League. The SGS Wise Campus offers exactly the kind of environment we need to drive progress and deliver results, while maintaining our strong identity and connection with the Yeovil community.

Manager Mark Cooper, left, alongside former chairman Martin Hellier at the fans’ forum in January.

You may recall that Mark Cooper spoke about training facilities at the fans forum back in January – click here to relive the answer, it starts about one hour and 33 minutes in to the recording.

Answering a question, the manager said: “The club went down in to the Championship and went down in to the non-League with no legacy whatsoever – no training ground, nothing. For me training facilities are the most important thing. I am not bothered about (the Huish Park) pitch because we are only on it 23 times a year, we train four or five times a week and that is where my work is done, so I need really good facilities if we are going to be better.

That is one thing that will attract a player, certainly a good young player, who will ask ‘have I got somewhere really good to work every day?’ or am I going to come and train all over the place on a mud pit. Little things like that can attract players, so we have to strive for that.

I am talking about trying to build organically, it is not boom or bust. Instead of spending money on a striker in the summer, we might put it on a training pitch which makes more sense to me.

The Football Stadium Pitch at the SGS Wise Campus in Bristol.

What is the SGS WISE Campus?

Opened in 2005, the SGS WISE Campus is the sports facility of the West of England Institute of Specialist Education (reckon they thought of the acronym first?).

It is based in Stoke Gifford which actually falls in the district of South Gloucestershire, but to all intents and purposes it is really north of Bristol – don’t tell the villagers we said that though! If you are driving, Google Maps suggests it is a 72.2 mile journey each way taking about one hour, 20 minutes – depending on traffic.

WISE is involved in teaching a whole range of subjects across the Bristol area including arts at the Bristol School of Arts, construction and engineering, hairdressing, beauty and complementary therapies and animal science and conservation – and sport, of course.

On the WISE website, it describes its Football Stadium Pitch as follows: “The Football Stadium Pitch at SGS WISE Campus features a 3G surface suitable for both training and matches. It is RFU and FIFA approved with a shock pad for enhanced safety and performance. The pitch is frequently used by prominent non-league teams such as Bath City, Mangotsfield United, and Yate Town FC. With seating for 100 spectators, it also serves as the home ground for the college’s elite teams, hosting matches on Wednesdays and Saturdays. Whilst being marked out for football, this pitch can also be used for other contact sports including Football, Rugby, and American Football.

There are a wide range of grass pitch facilities – including two football pitches which will probably be our preference – along with indoor 3G, sports hall, and rugby and American football. Exactly which facilities you get to use is unclear, but we assume there will be no gridiron training being undertaken.

SGS Colleges which runs the facility has its own football academy which has been responsible for producing a number of male and female professional footballers including Antoine Semenyo, the former Bristol City winger now plying his trade at AFC Bournemouth in the Premier League, and a number of Bristol City Women’s team members (current and former) including Jasmine Matthews, Aimee Palmer, Flo Allen, Georgie Wilson and Maisy Collins.

Time to get the diary out and pop some key dates in ahead of the 2025/26 season.

The Vanarama  National League begins on Saturday 9th of August and we wrap the title up on the final day Saturday 25th April, 2026.

For those sides who don’t get enough points to go up as Champions, they do have the chance to get through the play-offs, they take place after the season concludes with the finals taking place the weekend of Saturday 9 May/Sunday 10 May.

Fixture release day is July 9th 2025!

Confirmation of key dates for the 2025/26 season:
Fixture Release Day – Wednesday 9 July
Opening Day – Saturday 9 August
Closing Day – Saturday 25 April
Promotion Finals – Saturday 9 May/Sunday 10 May

Yeovil Town Women have had their division and opponents confirmed for the 2025/26 season following the FA’s League Allocations were released.

Like last year the Glovers will play in the South West Regional Football League – Divison 1 South.

This is the equivalent of Tier 6 in the Women’s game.

Some new opponents this season including Appledore – which sounds like a dessert Harry Potter might eat – Banwell and Wells City.

Fixture specifics, dates, venues and all that jazz will follow in time.

Defender Jake Wannell and midfielder Charlie Cooper have both committed their futures to Yeovil Town.

However, midfielder Harry Kite and defender Michael Smith have both followed Sonny Blu Lo Everton in confirming that they will not be returning to Huish Park next season.

The club confirmed it is in talks with a number of other players including defenders Alex Whittle, Dom Bernard and Marcel Lavinier about new contracts after their deals expired.

In an official statement posted on Tuesday afternoon, it said Wannell had “agreed terms to extend his stay at Huish Park” with no details around the length of the new deal, and added that Cooper had “activated a clause in his contract” to stay for next season.

In the statement, the club listed Kite, who joined the club on a short-term deal at the end of last season as he looked to rebuild his fitness after a serious injury, as one of those in “ongoing conversations” with manager Mark Cooper.

However, in a post on his own social media, the former Exeter City man said: “Would like to thank @YTFC for the last few months. It’s been short but sweet! Wishing you all the best next season and beyond!

Smith followed suit with his own farewell confirming the end of two seasons which saw him collect a National League South champions’ medal to his collection during the 2023/24 campaign.

Michael Smith says goodbye as well.

The statement also lists goalkeeper Will Buse, who spent last season on loan at relegated W*ymouth, and little seen midfielder Caleb Hughes among those in talks with the manager.

Kite and Smith’s confirmations that they will not be returning next season follows hot on the heels of a similar confirmation by Lo Everton that his two-year spell at the club has ended.

The 22-year-old posted on his Twitter/X channel to confirm he had left the club before the club had published its retained and released list of players.

In the post, Sonny said: “Just wanted to say thank you to @YTFC for the past 2 years, would have loved to carry on and make more memories but that’s football. I’ve had some really good times and met some unbelievable people.  Massive thanks to the fans who support home and away, and for the supporters Player of the Season.

The club has also confirmed players who remain under contract  from last season with the club as goalkeepers Aidan Stone and Matt Gould, defenders Morgan WilliamsFinn Cousin-Dawson and Jordan Thomas, who spent much of last season on loan at National League South side Torquay United. Midfielders Brett McGavinJacob Maddox, Josh Sims and Lewys Twamley also remain under contract along with strikers Harvey Greenslade and Aaron Jarvis.

Midfielder Sonny Blu Lo-Everton has announced he has ended his time as a Yeovil Town player in a post on his social media.

The 22-year-old posted on his Twitter/X channel to confirm he had left the club before the club has published its retained and released list of players.

In the post, Sonny said: “Just wanted to say thank you to @YTFC for the past 2 years, would have loved to carry on and make more memories but that’s football. I’ve had some really good times and met some unbelievable people.  Massive thanks to the fans who support home and away, and for the supporters Player of the Season.

A huge thankyou to Sonny for everything he has done in green-and-white.

Tickets for Yeovil Town’s pre-season friendly against Weston-super-Mare are now on sale.

The Glovers head to the Optima Stadium on Saturday 2nd August 2025 for a 3pm kick-off.

CLICK HERE TO BUY TICKETS

Prices are as follows: 
Adults – £11 (+ 0.55p fee)
Concessions – £8 (+ 0.50p fee) [Over 60s, Student ID, Armed Forces ID, NHS ID.]
14-17 year olds – £4 (+ 0.50p fee)
9-13 Year Old – £3 (+ 0.50p fee) [Must be accompanied by an adult]
Under 8s – FREE – [Must be accompanied by an adult]
Family Ticket – £23 (+£1.15 fee) [2x Adults and 2x Under 13]

On Match Day, prices increase to;
Adult – £12
Concession (Senior 60+, Student ID, Armed Forces ID, NHS ID) – £9
14-17 Year Old – £5
9-13 Year Old (Must be accompanied by an Adult) – £3.50
Under 8s (Must be accompanied by an Adult) – Free
Family (x2 Adults & x2 Under 13s) – £25


Tickets are also on sale for the Glovers friendly game at Chippenham – CLICK HERE FOR DETAILS