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Southend defend decision to sack groundsman Ken Hare after postponed game

GV of Roots Hall

Southend have defended the club’s decision to sack groundsman Ken Hare after Saturday's League One game against Bolton was postponed because of a frozen pitch.

Hare, who is still listed on the club's website as head groundsman, has been at Roots Hall for 27 years, with the last postponement four years ago.

The much-anticipated fixture between two promotion-chasing clubs was one of four English Football League games, all in south-east England, called off that day because of the cold weather.

Games at Dagenham and Woking were also postponed in the National League and nine of 11 fixtures in the National League South were cancelled.

After four nights of temperatures between four and five degrees below freezing, Hare used covers and heaters to thaw the penalty area in front of the South Stand, which gets no sunlight in the morning, but referee Charles Breakspear decided the surface was unsafe when he inspected it four hours before kick-off.

In a statement issued on the club website, Southend said: "People generally lose their position as a result of not doing their job. The necessary decision surrounding Mr Hare was a disappointment and of course not taken lightly.

"Very FEW people have been dismissed at this football club over the past 20 years and that even extends to managers."

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The word "few" was capitalised because local newspaper the Southend Echo had earlier run a version of the statement without the word. The paper's long-standing club reporter Chris Phillips has since posted two messages on Twitter to say the first version of the statement did not contain "few" and he still has it on his phone.

With a big attendance expected for the visit of the former Premier League club, Southend chairman Ron Martin is understood to have taken the postponement particularly badly. Martin has been more hands-on at the club since chief executive Steve Kavanagh left to join Millwall in October.

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