100 BRITISH FOOTBALL GROUNDS TO VISIT BEFORE YOU DIE 
>From the blog at http://100groundsproject.blogspot.co.uk which serves as 
the voting process for the proposed book “100 British Football Grounds To 
Visit Before You Die”. (Working title only)

Recently, I read an article about Nantwich Town of the Northern Premier 
League. A photo of their neat main stand drew me in, to the point where I 
found myself thinking, “I wouldn’t mind going there to watch a match”. In 
itself, this is a fairly unspectacular anecdote, were it not for the 
epiphany it inadvertently gave me. 

Nantwich Town are one of several thousand clubs in Great Britain who, 
given the opportunity, I could choose to visit in order to experience the 
sights and sounds of a new football ground. But on paper at least, the 
choice is as arbitrary as hundreds of others. As a committee member and 
slavish follower of Wingate & Finchley FC in the Isthmian League, 
opportunities to indulge in random ground visits are rare. Even if I were 
a dedicated traveller, there would never be enough time to visit the 
several thousand grounds that constitute our football landscape. As such, 
one sometimes has to be more selective. And here is where the epiphany 
kicked in. What if there were a bucket list, a holy grail if you like, of 
the top 100 British grounds to visit before you die? Who would be on it? 
Why would they be on it? And then it occurred to me: why not find out and 
write a book about it?

The problem is, where do you start with something so vast? It would be 
pointless for me to draw solely on my own experiences as I have only 
visited around 90 grounds, some of which have been positively awful. 
Besides which, basing something so subjective on the basis of one person's 
opinion is riddled with folly. No, the correct thing, indeed the only 
thing, is to throw the matter open to a public vote. During my years 
following football, I have had the privilege to meet a diverse spectrum of 
fans and aficionados, from season ticket holders in the Premier League 
through to non-League groundhoppers. Hopefully, this wide ranging passion 
for the game will provide a wide-ranging selection of responses; whilst 
there is much to be said for grand old stadiums with electrically charged 
atmospheres, there is equal merit in the tumbledown ground set at the foot 
of a mountain range. It is this eclectic mix of venues that makes our 
football heritage so rich and rewarding, something the book will 
ultimately aim to capture in all its glory.

So this is very much where I hand over to you, the person reading this 
blog. In an attempt to try and bring this altogether, I am asking fans to 
nominate up to five of their favourite grounds visited. They do not need 
to be submitted in order of preference, as each ground submitted will 
receive one vote. However, each vote should be accompanied by a brief 
explanation. Not only does this give the nomination credibility, but it 
allows the book to quote those (assuming permissions is given!) who have 
actually visited the grounds. 

You can nominate any existing ground at any level of the football pyramid 
in England, Wales or Scotland. In terms of individual selection criteria, 
this is fairly open. It could be anything from architecture, location, 
atmosphere, historical significance, the warmth of welcome or quality of 
food. Selections that are too partisan should probably be avoided. For 
example, ‘because they’re my club’ or ‘because we won the League there’ 
don’t really constitute solid enough justification for entry.

Votes can be submitted by emailing [email protected]  Closing 
date for entries will be 1 September. After this point, I will tally up 
the entries, and then set about visiting the top 100 grounds with my 
camera and notebook as nominated by you good people. The final format of 
the book is yet to be decided, but I will aim to provide colour photos, 
directions, a brief history and a personal review for each ground that 
makes the final cut.

As a footnote, I should stress that no such list will ever be definitive. 
If you poll two different sample pools at two different points in time you 
are likely to get two different outcomes. But then this isn’t a referendum 
on the laws of the game or a thesis on financial governance. First and 
foremost, this is supposed to be a bit of fun. And if it introduces fans 
to grounds or clubs they were hitherto unaware of, it can only be a good 
thing.


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