Cut Price Entry is a saviour (Coutesy of the Waikato Times Saturday 18th October)
Ian Anderson
The cut-price Waikato FC entry into this season's New Zealand Football Championship was necessary to save the future of soccer in the region, according to club chairman Keith Ward.
A week after it appeared certain the franchise would have to pull out of the league due to a $90,000 funding shortfall, Waikato were yesterday confirmed in an eight-team competition of two rounds instead of the scheduled three.
Ward said the club were told by New Zealand Football that if they didn't enter a team their franchise licence would be terminated.
"We would have had to re-apply for a licence with no guarantee of getting one," Ward said.
"That would raise the strong possibility that we would lose national league soccer again in the Waikato, so we had to make sure that didn't happen."
The shortened league season will help Waikato save $31,000.
Ward said Waikato's budget "still has a couple of areas of low-level risk" with the organisation looking for funding trust grants during the season.
"But the risks for those are the same as they were in past seasons. We're optimistic we'll get that funding and, if we get turned down and have to find twenty or thirty thousand it is something we can do."
Ward said the club's ambition for the season was "to be competitive".
"I think we can compete with all the sides excluding the top two or three," he said.
"Fourth place and a spot in the playoffs is realistic I think - we did it in our first season when no one thought we would. We'll be the underdog again and we don't mind that."
Waikato are aiming to play their home matches at Ngaruawahia's Centennial Park and Ward said he expected New Zealand Football approval for that once "a couple of conditions are fulfilled".