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John Fernandez

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John is Peterborough United fan, a sports enthusiast, and studies Journalism at the University of Lincoln.


Lincoln Ladies have appointed Rick Passmoor as the new manager of the club after Keith Boanas decided to stay with the Estonian National team earlier this year.

Rick Passmoor will take charge of the team’s pre-season preparations, before the 2013 Women’s Super League starts in just under two months.

The ex-Leeds Ladies manager has already worked with Lady Imps striker Carla Cantrell and has a proven track record in the Women’s game, having won the Premier League Cup as well as picking up a Manager of the Year Award.

Rick Passmoor said: “I’ve always been aware of Lincoln Ladies from being involved in the female game.

“I was aware of the new challenges ahead in pastures new, I met with the Chairman and Luke Negus-Hill and they mapped out a plan and I think it’s very exciting and very challenging.

“With the way the female game has been projected nationally and internationally Lincoln Ladies has the chance to be a very respected and successful club”

Chief Executive Luke Negus-Hill believes Passmoor’s appointment will be a good one for the future of women’s football in Lincoln:

“We strongly feel that Rick is the man to take this club to where it belongs, he has a great history within the game, in many different roles, and his great experience will become highly valuable to this football club,” he said.

Lincoln City FC chairman Bob Dorrian said the club is looking into the possibility of moving from Sincil Bank to a new stadium in the near future.

After finding stability under manager David Holdsworth, the club is now looking at ways to increase revenue and attract new investors.

Speaking on BBC Lincolnshire’s Saturday Sport, he said: “We are still very serious about it but we have got a long way to go yet.”

The idea of Lincoln City moving from The 12th Imp Sincil Bank Stadium isn’t a new one; the concept was first voiced before the club’s relegation to the Blue Square Premier League.

The chairman highlighted the impact a new ground has had at nearby Chesterfield. Their move in 2010 to a brand new 10,379-capacity b2net Stadium has provided revenue from a multitude of sources.

At Chesterfields’s old ground, Saltergate, the club only generated income on the days where a match was played at the stadium. Now the b2net Stadium provides a place for year-round revenue.

Chairman Dorrian said that Chesterfield made £1.2 million from catering at their new ground in the first year, compared to last season at Saltergate, where they made just £140,000. For a club at that level, £1.2 million is a substantial sum. For a club at Lincoln City’s level the effects would be much more significant.

However, Bob Dorrian was realistic when talking about the prospect of a move, saying that it was all part of a long-term plan: “We hope to have a new ground in the next 4 to 5 years.”

Sincil Bank has been the Imps’ home since 1895.

Finding the site for a new ground in Lincoln is the next stage of the process, with plans shifting towards a site on Tritton Road.

Last year Dorrian put forward a £9 million move to a new complex which would be utilised as a centre for the community seven days a week, with restaurants, hotels and meeting facilities that would all add to the club’s commercial revenues.

It’s likely that much like Chesterfield’s b2net stadium and Arsenal’s Emirates Stadium, the new Lincoln stadium would be named after a sponsor.

Dorrian admitted that the “football club alone couldn’t afford to the build the ground,” saying that a partnership with one or two different organisations would be needed. Possible sponsors would include the University of Lincoln or the Lincolnshire Co-operative.

— A version of this story first appeared in The Linc.

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