By Peter Ker
realfooty.theage.com.au
May 26, 2004
Richmond will review its tenant agreement with the Melbourne Cricket Club after it, and the three other MCG tenant clubs, were recently barred from training on the ground.
MCC chief executive Stephen Gough confirmed yesterday that Collingwood, Hawthorn, Melbourne and Richmond had been denied access to the ground indefinitely as stadium officials attempt to protect the playing surface coming into winter.
Richmond football manager Greg Hutchison said the club took issue with its lack of access to the MCG. "We want to train on the MCG as often as we can," he said. "We need to sit down and have a look at our arrangement with the MCC."
Hutchison said the Tigers had trained on the MCG - their official home - just twice so far this season, meaning the club had used alternative venues. Their traditional Punt Road is considered too small to prepare for playing on larger grounds.
"We are in a very similar situation to the Melbourne Football Club - you hear them complaining that they are all over the place; well, we are the same," he said.
"We train at Marcellin College, we train at Scotch College, we've trained at Sandringham, we've trained at Punt Road - we train at four different venues and we have to pay whenever we leave this venue (Punt Road) to go and train and it costs the club money."
The MCG has recently carried a heavy load of curtain-raisers and football clinics on top of its regular schedule of matches. Last weekend a fun run was held at the venue.
Asked if the MCC needed to limit its commitment to events other than football, Hutchison said: "Certainly there are some things that we can talk to them about to see if we can get ourselves on the ground," he said.
The tenant agreement allows home sides to train on the MCG once during the week they are scheduled to play home games there - providing MCG curator Tony Ware is happy with the weather and surface conditions.
Gough said the tenant clubs were well aware that their training sessions could be cancelled at the curator's request.
"You are not going to grow any more grass from now on, so the ground can only hold its own as best it can coming into winter," he said.
"Clearly the less turf replacement we have to do, the better in terms of cost and the look of the ground."
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