HCST welcome introduction of ‘Supporters’ Committee’

We are pleased to hear of the introduction of a “Supporters’ Committee” at Hull City AFC, and hope to play a key role in having the voices of Hull City fans heard in the near future. Hull City announced this week that meetings will take place four times a year and will be attended by representatives from various groups.

The concept of such a committee was discussed between the Trust and Club representatives back in November, and while it’s a big shame that the club has waited until after finalising and announcing the latest changes to its membership scheme before arranging this dialogue, the formation of the committee is a step in the right direction.

Like many supporters, we do have some concerns based on the events and outcomes of previous fan dialogue arrangements. In recent years, the Fans’ Working Group was held, but the views aired by fans at the meeting were routinely ignored, while the representative of the club who attended the meeting was not allowed to make any meaningful decisions without the consent of the club’s owners. Of course, neither of the Allams themselves ever dared to attend.

It is vitally important, if this committee is to be successful, that whoever attends this meeting on behalf of Hull City is in a position to actually listen to and act upon the views of supporters’ on the key issues. This is as prescribed by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) guidelines for Meaningful Supporters Dialogue. The guidelines, which can be read in full here, state that:

  • Senior representatives from the club – either club owners / directors and/or senior executive management should represent the club at these meetings
  • No individuals should be excluded from the meetings without good reason
  • Frequency of meetings must be clear, set-out from the start, and consistent
  • Meetings should be fully minuted and minutes should be made public knowledge in weeks following meetings

All of the above points represent a change from how the meetings were run in the past.

This committee could represent a positive step forward in rebuilding the relationship between fans and the club, but only if it really is a genuine concerted effort by the club to do so. There will be no shortage of passionate fans prepared to give up their time to contribute. The only question is whether the club are serious about consultation or whether it will be a half-hearted effort like previously.

Amber Nectar Podcast #139

The latest podcast from Amber Nectar can be accessed here.

Warning – AN podcasts often contain bad language!

 

Looking back at West Ham, looking ahead to Middlesbrough and Manchester City, and snorting with derision at the latest effort by the Allams to justify/prolong the membership scheme. All this rolled into a snug, fun-filled, action-packed, value-for-money 45 minutes. We spoil you

Match Report: Hull City 2-1 West Ham United

We are getting to the business end of this turbulent season, and the widely held view is that it could be the home form that keeps City up. Because of the international break the Everton away game seems like an age ago, and despite the FA appeal, Tom Huddlestone was still (wrongly) suspended. Sam Clucas replaced him and Niasse also returned to the starting eleven, with Elabdellaoui missing out through injury.

A 3-5-2 formation took to the field as follows-
Jakupovic
Maguire – Ranocchia – Davies
Elmo – Markovic – Clucas – N’Diaye – Robertson
Niasse – Hernandez

It could well have been the pressure of this “must win” game, but City started poorly, and continued to under-perform throughout the first half.

Ex-Tiger Robert Snodgrass was in the Hammers midfield, but the Scot was seen more as Pantomime Villain than returning former hero, and was roundly booed from the off.

Mark Noble had been dropped to the bench following a number of lacklustre performances for the Hammers, so Andy Carroll wore the captain’s armband for the visitors. And it was he who opened the scoring. The lanky target man was dominating all the early exchanges, and on 17 minutes a cross came into the City box, Davies mistimed his jump, Carroll chested the ball down and fired past Eldin Jakupovic. 0-1.

City didn’t seem to take the goal as a wake-up call, and continued to play poorly, constantly coughing up possession, with the back three looking all at sea. It wasn’t looking good as the ref blew for half time.

However Marco Silva could see what was wrong, and just as importantly knew how to fix it.

Grosicki replaced the struggling Davies, switching things to 4-4-2. More cover on the wings cut-off the supply line to Carroll, who only had one real chance in the second half – a header straight at Jakupovic. The flat back four settled things down, and it was from a well-worked break that City equalised on 53 minutes.

Markovic broke quickly and found Grosicki with a cross-field ball. The Pole tried to cut inside his defender and Robertson, who had followed up intelligently picked up possession before slotting the ball low into the West Ham net. 1-1.

The goal seemed to deflate the visitors, and City tried to press home the advantage with N’Diaye hitting the post and Grosicki shooting just wide from the rebound.

Henriksen and Maloney replaced N’Diaye and Hernandez with 10 minutes of normal time remaining, but it was another defender who scored to take all three points. Grosicki played a decent corner into the near post on 87 minutes, and Ranocchia powered his header past Randolph to make it 2-1.

Not a great performance from City, but a crucial win nevertheless. A case of Never mind the quality, feel the three points. Silva now has an impressive run of 39 home games unbeaten (spanning back to his previous clubs). ‘Boro at home is next, another “must win” home game against a struggling side. More of the same please Mr Silva.

 

Mark Sellers      (@mrmarksellers)

Match Preview: Hull City v Middlesbrough

City welcome relegation rivals Middlesbrough to the KCOM on Wednesday night in what is a classic example of a bottom of the table ‘six pointer’.

Both sides currently find themselves in the bottom three, and will have been eyeing up Wednesday’s fixture for a long time as an opportunity to put three points on the board. There is still certainly hope for City and Boro, but a loss for either team under the lights at the KCOM would surely prove fatal for their chances of survival.

Steve Agnew returns to his old stomping ground having worked under Steve Bruce during his time at the Tigers, and he will be looking to record his first win as Boro’s caretaker manager. His side produced a solid performance to take a 0-0 draw away at Swansea on Sunday, yet it is wins they need if they are to retain their Premier League status come 21st May.

City fans can take comfort in Marco Silva’s outstanding record in managing teams at home – the man who is looking to perform a ‘miracle’ by keeping City up has not lost a home league game as manager in over three years (spanning four different clubs). At the KCOM Silva has led the Tigers to six wins in seven, but the harsh reality is that this will count for nothing if Boro come out on top on Wednesday.

City looked far more effectual playing a 4-4-2 system than they did in a 3-5-2 in the win over West Ham, so Kamil Grosicki could be recalled to the starting line-up on Wednesday at the expense of Curtis Davies. Harry Maguire and Andrea Ranocchia both picked up knocks on Saturday but should be fit to play.

Boro left-back Fabio has been ruled out after suffering concussion in the game at Swansea, and George Friend looks favourite to replace him. There could be changes up front for Agnew’s side who have netted a miserable four Premier League goals since Christmas.

Given City’s recent home record it is no surprise that the bookies fancy us to win, with most offering odds around EVS. Boro are outsiders at 3/1, with the draw – a result that would suit neither team – at 9/4.

 

Harry Drew    (@hdrew95)

HCST Statement: The Membership Scheme 2017/18

HCST is disappointed yet unsurprised by Friday’s reveal of the latest version of Hull City’s Membership Scheme.

Despite what has obviously been a season of poor attendances at the KCOM Stadium (particularly compared to previous seasons when Hull City played in the Premier League), which has seen many lifelong fans being forced out of watching their local football team, the club has again shown its utter contempt towards fans of Hull City AFC.

What Happens Next?

HCST will have a senior representative at the Premier League fans meeting on April 25th where concessions (in particular those at Hull City) are on the agenda and Chief Executive Richard Scudamore will be in attendance. We will also be writing to the Premier League again this week to confirm whether or not these ticketing arrangements for next season have been approved by the Premier League or not.

We will also be continuing to try to arrange a meeting with the club. It was hoped that issues like this could be discussed at the Fans Forum which was due to be set up by the club by the end of January – unsurprisingly this has not been forthcoming.

It is clear the club has missed yet another opportunity to give the team and manager Marco Silva the support they deserve. The aim should be to fill seats by offering affordable tickets to all fans, including concessions to those that need them, not to take tickets off sale, close areas of the ground and alienate your own supporters.