Cochrane soccer club to lose its home pitch with sports centre turf upgrade - Action News
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Cochrane soccer club to lose its home pitch with sports centre turf upgrade

It's a long overdue change for the Spray Lake Sawmills centre in Cochrane;the facility's 20-year-old indoor field house is getting its floors upgraded.

New surface allows more sports to be played at the facility but soccer will have to find a new pitch

An indoor recreation facility is pictured with the logo of a soccer club that reads Cochrane Rangers displayed in the background.
With the floor of the Spray Lake Sawmills Centre's indoor field house getting an upgrade, the Cochrane Rangers and other soccer clubs in the community will need to find a new place to play. (Jo Horwood/CBC)

It's a long overdue change for the Spray Lake Sawmills sports centre in Cochrane, Alta.;the facility's 20-year-old indoor turf is getting its floors upgraded.

The aging artificial turf will soon be replaced with a multi-court floor, allowing the space more flexibility toinclude other recreational activities likevolleyball, basketball, pickleball, badminton, football and lacrosse.

But the change isn't good news for everyone. It means that Cochrane's primary soccer club a group that raised funds for the facility atSpray Lake Sawmills Family Sports Centre will lose its home pitch.

"We have nowhere to play this upcoming winter," said Don Ross, president of the Cochrane Rangers soccer club, which was founded in 1985.

"The fields we're on right now were built by the soccer community, essentially,the town leases the land to the soccer club and the club itself put up the money to build these fields."

Both the men's and women's CochraneRangers teams that currently use the pitch will be left in the lurch.

The decision to change the flooring came in January. According to Ross, it's near-impossible to play soccer on the soon-to-be implemented surface because of, among other things, the traction andthe type of footwear that is required for the game.

A bald man wearing black sunglasses is standing on a field talking into a camera.
Don Ross is the president of the Cochrane Rangers. (Jo Horwood/CBC)

"It's designed for court sports where maybe there's a lot of two, three steps, one direction and then change," he said.

"Whereas soccer,we do more long, long sprints and to be able to stop and pivot during that, it's much more difficult. The ball rolls and bounces a lot higher and faster on this surface."

Ross added that the nearest option for them for the upcoming winter would be in Calgary, but those facilities are already booked up for two years.

Upgrade 'good for the community'

While the soccer club is feeling the loss, officials at the sports centre are looking forward to the freedoms the surface will provide.

"We're super excited about it. It's a long time overdue," said Catriona Hill with the sports centre.

"It really is a multi-sport floor and it's also a very accessible floor, which is something else that we're working on a lot in our facility."

A woman with blonde-light-brown hair is pictured speaking with her hands out.
Catriona Hill says the centre's new surface will give more organizations the opportunity to use the facility for other sports. (Jo Horwood/CBC)

With the change, Hill saidthe centre will go from having two gyms to five and will cater to Cochrane's growing community.

As for the Cochrane Rangers, its athletes have one other option: switching sportsto play futsal, a game similarto soccer that could be played on the new floor.

"We don't know how successful that's going to be with our members," Ross said.

"Putting on my non-soccer hat, it's the right decision it just feels like the soccer community really is left to fend for themselves and not getting the support that that other sports seem to receive."

With files from Jo Horwood