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Update on the pitch
at 12:57 29 Nov 2025

A helicopter has landed on the Lacrosse pitches so I guess the Cameron Ogden is casting an eye over pre-match proceedings today......
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CAB minutes 17/11/25
at 21:11 27 Nov 2025

I buy my son a season ticket ( full adult SLE) on the basis of him getting to early and late season games and midweek fixtures, but on Saturdays he is often playing Lacrosse,.
Based on £22 per game without a SC, if he gets to more than 10 or 11 games he is breaking even if he makes 12 or 13 he's in profit...and having the card is much more convenient if a Lacrosse game is called off late in the day....
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Refwatch - Tamworth v Rochdale
at 14:58 23 Nov 2025

Why Rochdale are going to win the National League.....
https://andyscouting.wordpress.com/why-rochdale-will-win-the-national-league-thi
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Refwatch - Tamworth v Rochdale
at 14:00 22 Nov 2025

Jim doesn't do shooting he's more a tap-in kinda guy.....Shooting is crude and unpolished, tap-ins are stylish and cool.....
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Kevin Berkoe recalled
at 19:54 20 Nov 2025

Yes, seeing Pritchard back on the bench on Saturday was most encouraging , I guess we can assume that his injury has responded well without surgery as was suggested he might need....Its a good time to get him back as we go into these dismal days with lots of games to be played and more injuries are likely. He impressed in the early part of he season. Getting him back to full fitness and form would be like signing a new player....
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Update on the pitch
at 10:24 14 Nov 2025

New update
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Update on the pitch
at 18:03 12 Nov 2025

"1 cm of rain means that if the water collected on a flat, non-absorbent surface, it would have a depth of 1 centimeter (10 millimeters). This equates to a volume of 10 liters of water per square meter." .ergo.. 1mm of rain = 1 litre per sq meter

1mm of rain on 1 sqm of pitch = 1 litre of water... multiply the mm of rainfall. ( 4.3mm) by the number of sqm of the pitch ( 68 x105 metres) = total rainfall in litres on the pitch .. convert to UK gallons.( 4.45609 litres = 1 Imperial Gallon ) . BTW one imperial Gallon weighs approximately 10 lbs ( 10.0389 lbs) if you want to know what all that water weighs
Happy to help.....
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Update on the pitch
at 14:17 12 Nov 2025

Yesterday it rained 4.3 mm , so on 7140 square meters of pitch at 1 litre per millimeter it means that over 1600 gallons fell on just the grass....all of which needs to drain away to somewhere.. hopefully not under the pitch...

I wonder if its cheaper to buy one of these tents and use it for 6 months every season than it is to dig the pitch up again next summer and put more drains down. ....it would also stop the " will it be on?" jitters every time it rains before a game and give certainty to coming to fans coming to a match....
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Update on the pitch
at 09:56 12 Nov 2025

https://rochdaleafc.co.uk/dome-pitch-covers-121125/
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Rochdale v Scunthorpe on Tuesday
at 16:06 5 Nov 2025

The drains under the pitch have been a problem for decades my Dad used to tell the story of a local farmer putting field drains under the pitch which apparently worked OK until it snowed and the club got a snow plough on the front of a double decker bus clear snow off the pitch and in doing so smashed the drains... the groundsman mentions "hundreds" of drains under the pitch in one of the descriptions referred to earlier... none of the rebuilds has lasted much more than a couple of seasons.
But, modern football demands a much higher quality of surface, so we are obliged to do expensive repairs on an increasingly regular basis. Our problem, almost uniquely I would think, is to provide a suitable surface in the face of an incredibly wet climate which has days and days of rain and more rain from October to March, never allowing the pitch to dry out for months on end.... statistically it rains more than 1mm on around 160 days a year with over 100mm in just October this year in Rochdale
Sadly the fixes are required virtually annually, because It seems the very soils that permit grass growth also clog drains. At least a tent of some sort would allow an amount of mowing, marking etc underneath, whilst drying out the surface.
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Rochdale v Scunthorpe on Tuesday
at 15:13 5 Nov 2025

The 40,000 gallons of water in a week has to go somewhere. The last re- build mentions a drain across the SLE will lateral drains joining it from under the pitch. (lengthwise) and other , smaller drains, feeding into the laterals.. The first investigation is the SLE drain to see if water is or isn't entering and getting away . Then the laterals need rodding to see if they are blocked which seems the most likely problem...
If the Laterals are free draining and the problem persists, then its the small drains just under the surface that are blocked and at that point there isn't much else to do other than dig it up
Because the pitch is level with the surrounding track, the whole area needs draining, not just the pitch you might notice that Man Utd have a pitch that is 12 - 18 inches above the level of the surrounding area precisely to aid drainage off the pitch, the old Bury Pitch was built up like this too.
Maybe the track because of its different construction drains relatively well.. but maybe towards the pitch! Digging lateral drains under the track running to the SLE if they do not exist would seem sensible in the scheme of things using the plastic " "crates" like these would create a large void alongside the pitch for water to escape into.

https://skyplastics.co.uk/polystorm-soakaway-crate-x-120-22-46-20-tonne-1000mm-x
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Rochdale v Scunthorpe on Tuesday
at 12:35 5 Nov 2025

We could put it in a container..on the car park maybe on pallets with an electric pallet truck to make it easier?
[Post edited 5 Nov 14:50]
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Rochdale v Scunthorpe on Tuesday
at 12:29 5 Nov 2025

If we can afford one, a full pitch inflatable cover seems like the only certain way of securing a playable surface. There are costs no matter what we do, if we move to another ground, we lose money at home vis bars hospitality etc. and pay to be away in terms of a rental fees.
A full cover would also protect us from snow and frost...

Were it not for continuous bouts of rain, the pitch would require less work over summer months whereas the current situation seems to need major work every 3 or 4 years. A full cover might, over time, actually pay for itself.

We are between a rock and a very hard place with no easy solution. The current flat covers are apparently not working, and even an inflatable "tent" will need an assured route for the run off, which in the last week amounts to over 40,000 gallons of water given we have had something like 20mm of rain.
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Rochdale v Scunthorpe on Tuesday
at 12:01 4 Nov 2025

AI Overview

In the summer of 2020, Rochdale AFC conducted a significant renovation of the pitch at the Crown Oil Arena (Spotland Stadium), which involved stripping the surface down to the ash layer, improving drainage, and installing a new hybrid playing surface.
Key details of the 2020 pitch renewal:
Excavation: The top five inches of the existing surface, including the original Mixto layer of turf, were removed down to the ash layer underneath.
Levelling: Laser-guided bulldozers were used to ensure the surface levels were accurate.
Drainage Improvement: The main drain was installed in front of the Sandy Lane stand, with lateral drains laid out at five-meter intervals. Secondary drainage was also put in place to help water drain away more quickly.
New Surface Installation: A layer of sand was applied on top of the drainage system.
Stitching: A "stitch-pitch" system was installed, which involved inserting synthetic fibres 30cm deep into the sand and natural turf layer. This process binds the surface with the roots to create a sturdier, more free-draining surface that is less likely to divot.

https://hornetsrugbyleague.co.uk/article/654/crown-oil-arena-pitch-update#:~:tex
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Rochdale v Scunthorpe on Tuesday
at 10:15 4 Nov 2025

According to Chat GPT

Timeline — last 20 years (≈2005–2025)
Below is a concise, cited timeline of the pitch-works and major related events at Spotland / Crown Oil Arena from about 2005 up to the most recent public updates in 2025.

Timeline — headline items
Summer 2006 — drainage upgrade reported. After a winter of problems the stadium is recorded as receiving a new drainage system in summer 2006.
Wikipedia

2014 — pitch maintenance scored highly. The club reported very good Playing Surfaces Committee marks for the Spotland pitch (showing consistent maintenance standards at that time).
rochdaleafc.co.uk

Summer 2017 (reported) / Feb 2018 — new surface & drainage laid previous summer; pitch problems and postponements followed winter 2018. Media coverage in Feb 2018 noted a number of postponements due to waterlogging and said a new drainage system and pitch had been laid “last summer.”
Sky Sports
+1

June 2020 — major reconstruction of top layers and drainage works. Contractors removed the old top layers, exposed and relaid drainage lines, re-profiled levels, added sand layers and installed a stitch/hybrid type surface — a significant structural intervention.
hornetsrugbyleague.co.uk
+1

2024–Jan 2025 — recurring waterlogging and match postponements. Despite the 2020 works, the club reported persistent waterlogging in parts of the pitch (notably the centre circle), leading to postponements in late 2024 / early 2025. The club’s updates indicate the drainage failure is below the root zone in places and that only a full reconstruction would permanently resolve it.
rochdaleafc.co.uk
+1

Jan 2025 — targeted centre-circle excavation & relaying; additional maintenance equipment and covers used. The club excavated the centre circle (c.200 mm), applied sand infill, relaid turf and used hybrid stitching; they also deployed rain covers, Verti-Drain/air-drying equipment and other maintenance measures to manage ongoing problems.
rochdaleafc.co.uk
+1

Short analysis / implications
Over the last 20 years the ground has had repeated drainage and surface interventions (2006, ~2017, 2020) but still shows localized failures — especially under the root zone — that have caused postponements and required remedial spot-works in 2024–25.
Wikipedia
+2
hornetsrugbyleague.co.uk
+2

The pattern suggests that the club has intermittently invested in major remedial rebuilds (2020) plus ongoing maintenance and spot fixes (2014, 2018, 2025). Club statements indicate a full rebuild (from the base up) would likely be necessary to permanently fix certain underlying drainage failures, but that is costly.
hornetsrugbyleague.co.uk
+1
[Post edited 4 Nov 10:30]
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Rochdale v Scunthorpe on Tuesday
at 21:19 3 Nov 2025

A dome makes little difference if the problem is that there is no drainage...the rain still falls on the pitch surround and if the water isn't getting away to drains, the swamp remains the same. Something during the various pitch rebuilds has caused this problem , maybe reducing the slope from the Pearl Street to the Sandy Lane end has caused it, who knows? The damage has been done and we are going to have to get inventive. My quick suggestion is to dig out the surrounding track to about 3 feet deep and fill it with stones leading to big soakaways near the Sandy Lane corner flags and out into the Sandy Lane main drain. Covering the pitch would then at least push the water towards an escape route. A mini digger could dig a 3feet deep trench around two sides and across the Sandy Lane End in a day add a day to drop stone in and another day to fill it in and level it .? It's a 3- 4 day job....less if enough manpower can be brought in... any mini digger drivers on here?
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Rochdale v Scunthorpe on Tuesday
at 16:10 3 Nov 2025

You can protect the pitch as much as you like, but the water still has to go somewhere and it clearly isn't getting away into any drains.. what happens to the water that runs off the pitch onto the track?... nothing if it isn't getting to a drain. I suspect the pitch has developed a water table which never really drains away for 6 months of the year,
The only quick-ish solution I can imagine is to dig a new drain / soakaway around the pitch edge and give the water somewhere to get away to.

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Dale v Man Utd under 21s
at 23:12 29 Oct 2025

Amantchi is 24 years old has made 149 appearances for umpteen clubs and scored 38 goals...1 in every 4 games.. he has pace and height but seems a bit "awkward' .
Much of his experience has been at a lower level . I think there is a player in there, but if its as a centre forward is open to debate, maybe he is more of a Peter Vincenti essentially a very tall right winger using his pace, and he would be a menace coming in from the back onto left wing crosses ( similar to his goal against Burnley?)....Certainly last night his best moments were wider on the right hand side of the pitch ( other than his late effort which was very much hit and hope than a surgical strike) but still, his running is impressive and you can see why clubs have played him as a centre forward, but maybe it just isn't " his" position. Perhaps Jim can find a more suitable one for him and unlock his full potential....
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TVOS Preview - Rochdale v Yeovil Town
at 15:07 19 Oct 2025

I think your comment about the pace of passing is the critical element, in the past we have spent vital seconds dwelling on the ball before moving it, now the movement is much quicker and the rapid progress up the pitch is creating better opportunities... it also leaves other teams short handed because the ball is travelling faster then their legs!
Even Hogan, whilst still very defensively- minded was certainly shifting the ball quicker than in his last appearance, good coaching or a penny dropping, either way an excellent performance.
Having a player with more pace up front (Smith) coming on in the later stages will be a way to capitalise on tired legs in the opponent's defence, he just needs to integrate a little more with the other players i.e. reading his movements and he, reading theirs, and the goals will come for him...
I see Mancini is injured again, the gamble on his fitness looks like going south if we can't come up with a solution, which is a pity as there have been brief cameos of his abilities that I have enjoyed. It seems some people are genetically disposed to muscle injuries and require careful treatment and training. Hopefully, the physios have figured out why it keeps happening, but if we could get him fit for the second half of the season he would be an excellent addition
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FA Cup 4th Q- York City (H) 11th Oct -Match Thread
at 17:59 11 Oct 2025

If that's what York do regularly, good luck to them but I wouldnt pay to watch. Aided and abetted by a very poor referee and linesmen, the play-acting as though shot was pathetic... having said that Rochdale were utterly clueless for 45 minutes not knowing when to press and when to stand off them and then having had a half time to regroup, allowing Newby space to do what he is relatively good at .. shooting from 20 yards.. twice! You might have thought they would have learned a lesson after the first one.... but alas no..
The changes after the regulation 70 minutes were too little too late. I'm not sure what " moments" Jim will pick out, unless he won the half time draw, it was at times ponderous, occasionally it was comical and generally reminded me of the joke about the bloke who worked at the sewage farm but didnt really enjoy his job and was just going through the motions...I dont think anyone had a bad game but too many were not at their best and it felt like they didnt fancy a cup run...so job done....there will need to be a serious improvement if we are to remain contenders for the main prize
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