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COMPTON SITE OPENED 9th November 2005 by Sir Jack Hayward News from Wolves World
Specifics Of The Site The Sir Jack Hayward Training Ground is a part two-storey building, which measures 72m x 16m, has a curved roof and balcony areas overlooking three pitches and both sides of the building. Accommodation includes changing rooms (11 in total), medical and physiotherapy facilities, gymnasium, hydro-therapy pool, kitchen and dining room, players' lounge, meeting rooms, academy study centre and administration offices. The building will be the permanent base for the professional squad and academy players aged 16 to 18 years, for day-to-day training purposes, and for the club's academy games programme. It replaces the temporary changing facilities which have been home to the first team squad since 2002. The new building complements Wolves' £750,000 indoor arena, which opened in October 2002 at Aldersley Sports Village, where the academy teams - ranging from under eights to under 16s - train on a nightly basis. The team began training at the Compton Park site in the summer of 1997, with a long term lease being acquired from the local authority in 2001. The club uses three pitches exclusively and shares another two with St Peter's school. Although the pitches were acknowledged to be of a high quality, the club has never had a permanent home on the site. Instead, players have for the past three years used a combination of portakabins and the neighbouring Wolverhampton Lawn Tennis and Squash Club for changing, gym, dining and media purposes. Before this the squad commuted from Molineux. Prior to Compton, Wolves trained for two years at Lucas (now Goodrich) on the Stafford Road and Wombourne Hockey Club before that. The only other training facility that was owned by Wolves was Castlecroft, a floodlit ground which was opened in September 1956 by Sir Stanley Rous, secretary of the Football Association. It was sold during the late 1980s and was developed to become a Rugby Football Union Centre of Excellence. Wolverhampton-based ACP, who designed the redevelopment of Molineux Stadium, were appointed as architects for the Compton Park project and Lichfield-based Linford Group have undertaken the construction work. The project managers were Drivers Jonas, based in London. Eighty per cent of the subcontractors are Midland-based companies. They include: Ibstock, Aldridge - bricks (55,000 in total) Tarmac, Wolverhampton - breezeblocks McPhillips Civil Engineering, Telford - groundworks Chamois, Wolverhampton - kitchen/office fittings Francis Catering, Kingswinford - kitchen equipment Brintons, Kidderminster - carpet (exclusively designed for Wolves) H&R Johnson, Stoke - tiles (white with a special gold and black inlay) Couch Perry Wilkes, Yardley, Birmingham - mechanical and electrical engineering Hills, Walsall - Electrics The most far-flung supplier was SwimEx of New Jersey who provided the hydro-therapy pool.Wolves are one of only a handful of English clubs to own such apparatus. The SwimEx, or endless pool, is commonly used by professional sports clubs in the USA. and Michael Oakes has already been working on his ankle injury from the Watford match in the pool A Facility To Be Proud Of - Glenn Hoddle Glenn Hoddle can't wait for his squad to take up residence in Wolves new £3.3 million training complex. The boss believes the building will bring countless benefits to the way Wolves organises its daily training schedule. He says: "All the players and coaching staff are very impressed. It's even bigger than we thought it would be. "It's come at a good time for us because, with the winter just around the corner, using portakabins isn't the best way to prepare for training. "We can't wait to get in there. Everything is going to be so much more efficient - countless things are going to be better for us. "Even small everyday things such as talking to an individual player privately have been difficult because of the lack of space we've had to work in. Now we will have proper facilities for reviewing videos, we'll have a bigger gym and a first class medical room. We've even got a hydro-therapy pool which will allow us to do initial rehabilitation work with injured players, who can't weight-bear, on site. "The players' dining and lounge facilities will be good for team spirit and the fact that the academy will be using the same building means there will be improved lines of communication between us. "It will also be somewhere we can bring players we are trying to sign. Up until recently the training ground was the last place you'd show them - we'd always take them to Molineux instead. But now we have a facility that we can really be proud of." Training Of Old - Steve Bull Prior to the rebuilding of Molineux under the Hayward era, Wolves' training sessions had a somewhat nomadic feel to them with the squad using a variety of venues. The Castlecroft Ground, which was hailed as one of the best facilities in the country when it opened in 1956, had been run down by the time it was finally sold in the late 1980s. Wolves' record breaking striker Steve Bull recalls the conditions players faced when he arrived at the club in November 1986. "Castlecroft was shared with the rugby club and the pitch was virtually a bog," he says."When it was sold off we spent a period training at Dunstall Park Racecourse, close to Molineux. Pitches were marked out in the middle of the course! "We had no changing facilities there so we got changed at the ground and either drove the mile or so, or sometimes the manager Graham Turner used to make us run there. "The dressing rooms at Molineux weren't in great condition either, with a leaking roof and cockroaches crawling about! "Later we trained at Wombourne Hockey Club which at least had changing facilities and a couple of fantastic supporters, Jack and Olive Carr, who used to make breakfast for us - and pay for it sometimes out of their own pocket."I think it's great that the club has finally got it's own proper training ground now - a club the size of Wolves needs that. It's a great facility and I'm sure it's going to be a big benefit to the players." Earlier announcement when work started one year earlier. For the design of the new buildings at Compton page down http://www.wolves.premiumtv.co.uk/page/News/NewsDetail/0,,10307~585626,00.html “The first sod is cut at what will be the new Wolves training ground by Moxey Nayls and Rick” - borrowed from the E&S. If you want to read the E&S and don’t live anywhere near Wulfruna then go here for the daily: http://www.expressandstar.co.uk/es/...tal/index.shtml
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