Colin Williamson

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Colin Williamson

Colin Williamson

@williamsoncolin

Edinburgh, United Kingdom Katılım Mart 2009
1.2K Takip Edilen727 Takipçiler
Colin Williamson retweetledi
Rangers Football Club
Rangers Football Club@RangersFC·
💙 Earlier today, representatives of the Club, @poppyscotland and the @RFC_Charity took part in a wreath laying ceremony at the John Greig statue alongside representatives from the Royal Navy, Army and the RAF.
Rangers Football Club tweet mediaRangers Football Club tweet mediaRangers Football Club tweet mediaRangers Football Club tweet media
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Larry the Cat
Larry the Cat@Number10cat·
Today is World suicide prevention day. Every 90 minutes, someone in the UK or Ireland dies by suicide. We can all make a difference by checking in on those around us.
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Steve Magness
Steve Magness@stevemagness·
A great coach once told me that good coaches take complex ideas and make them simple, while a bad coach who wants to appear like they know what they are doing takes ideas and concepts and makes them more complex.
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MarkMunro
MarkMunro@MarkMunr0·
Join a highly successful team @EdinburghUni as S&C Coach in our performance prog. working with multiple international standard athletes across various sports Note: given high % of female athletes in prog. we would encourage female applicants🙏 @UoESport sportscotland.org.uk/jobs/vacancies…
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Christopher Anton
Christopher Anton@GBRChris_A·
So the Olympic finals at Varies-sur-Marne tomorrow will have over 10,000 spectators which will be many times that were at last year's World Championships in Belgrade. But why? People will be seeing mostly the same rowers.
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Colin Williamson
Colin Williamson@williamsoncolin·
@SnailTideway Loads of these schools are all over Europe on training camp in April. I’m sure they’ll make it to Nottingham.
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Tideway Snail
Tideway Snail@SnailTideway·
So to satisfy my curiosity I wrote a quick a dirty script to figure out the difference in travel miles wrt moving NSR. So using the J14 8x entry (the event with the most competitors) in the last year the event was held at NWSC:
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Colin Williamson
Colin Williamson@williamsoncolin·
@mstewart_23 You’re aware a few clubs do this kind of thing? QOTS in Hamilton, for example, and nobody kicks up a fuss til now?
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Michael Stewart
Michael Stewart@mstewart_23·
Inverness Kelty Thistle 🤔 Difficult times and no easy decisions but this sure as hell is not the answer. Ripping the club out of its home. Losing touch with the soul of the community. Utterly bizarre.
Inverness Caledonian Thistle FC@ICTFC

Club Statement As one major part of our planned strategic restructure of the club, ICTFC are delighted to announce an innovative agreement with League 1 side Kelty Hearts which will see the club move our training base to the Fife club’s New Central Park Stadium. This creative partnership will mean that we will hire their excellent facilities which include a 3g pitch, onsite grass pitches and offices for our coaching staff, as our training base during the week starting from this coming pre-season in June. The last few years have seen the geographic challenges in getting players to move to the Highlands become ever harder for a number of reasons. Caledonian Stadium will always be our home, but other factors in Scottish football have changed and where we train should not be an impediment to the quality of the players we can attract to Caley Thistle, or to our potential to progress. The commercial success of the city of Inverness – which will always be our home - both as a tourist destination and a place to live, has led to very high prices for the accommodation we require to house players. In addition to these high costs which our competitors do not carry, the extremely limited housing stock in Inverness continues to be both a challenge and a huge factor working against us. Increased playing budgets in and around the central belt has meant that on many occasions, even when we have offered players more favourable terms than our competitors, sometimes even agreed deals, we have then been told that the player has changed his mind due to challenges relocating their families. Support structures in and around the families of players may all be in and around the central belt, partners will have jobs where they live and moving kids schools to the Highlands and moving home itself can just be seen as impractical for a one or two year contract. It makes it particularly challenging for us to sign senior players, a category which through no fault of our budget, or of previous ICT Managers, we have struggled to attract in the last few seasons. Similarly, our location means that we miss out on the opportunity of signing promising players from the larger clubs in Scotland, on loan or otherwise. For the avoidance of any doubt we absolutely intend to continue to develop our own homegrown Highland boys and we will take the appropriate steps to make sure that by being creative, innovative and practical, they do not miss out on the chance to have a pathway to first team football with their team. We have a proud tradition of introducing local players in to our first team and this will absolutely continue. We obviously never intended to be in the same division as Kelty when originally exploring this concept, but football throws strange things at you sometimes and having reassessed the proposition and judged that the pros still far outweigh the cons, we would like to thank the Board of Kelty Hearts and MD Stefan Winiarski and his management team for considering this unique to the SPFL partnership, and then seeing and agreeing on the possibilities and benefits for both clubs. To reiterate, by moving our footballing department's training base to central Scotland, both the club's Board of Directors and the club's First Team Management feel we give ourselves the best possible chance to attract the highest quality players to the club, allowing some of the players we sign to also live in and around the central belt while playing for ICTFC. We now look forward to taking further positive strides on and off the pitch to address the football and financial challenges we face we believe this exciting opportunity to help us attract players previously not available to us and build a better squad, is one of the first steps we can make and we hope to develop further innovative partnerships. Inverness is and will always be our home. The Caledonian Stadium will always be where we play our football. We hope this venture will help us achieve our goal in giving our supporters a team to be proud of.

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Colin Williamson
Colin Williamson@williamsoncolin·
@TEnglishSport Queen of the South train in Hamilton. Able to attract central belt based players. Not that wild.
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Tom English
Tom English@TEnglishSport·
This is wild! From home stadium to training base is about 130 miles. Identity? Culture? Accessibility in the community? 🤯
Inverness Caledonian Thistle FC@ICTFC

Club Statement As one major part of our planned strategic restructure of the club, ICTFC are delighted to announce an innovative agreement with League 1 side Kelty Hearts which will see the club move our training base to the Fife club’s New Central Park Stadium. This creative partnership will mean that we will hire their excellent facilities which include a 3g pitch, onsite grass pitches and offices for our coaching staff, as our training base during the week starting from this coming pre-season in June. The last few years have seen the geographic challenges in getting players to move to the Highlands become ever harder for a number of reasons. Caledonian Stadium will always be our home, but other factors in Scottish football have changed and where we train should not be an impediment to the quality of the players we can attract to Caley Thistle, or to our potential to progress. The commercial success of the city of Inverness – which will always be our home - both as a tourist destination and a place to live, has led to very high prices for the accommodation we require to house players. In addition to these high costs which our competitors do not carry, the extremely limited housing stock in Inverness continues to be both a challenge and a huge factor working against us. Increased playing budgets in and around the central belt has meant that on many occasions, even when we have offered players more favourable terms than our competitors, sometimes even agreed deals, we have then been told that the player has changed his mind due to challenges relocating their families. Support structures in and around the families of players may all be in and around the central belt, partners will have jobs where they live and moving kids schools to the Highlands and moving home itself can just be seen as impractical for a one or two year contract. It makes it particularly challenging for us to sign senior players, a category which through no fault of our budget, or of previous ICT Managers, we have struggled to attract in the last few seasons. Similarly, our location means that we miss out on the opportunity of signing promising players from the larger clubs in Scotland, on loan or otherwise. For the avoidance of any doubt we absolutely intend to continue to develop our own homegrown Highland boys and we will take the appropriate steps to make sure that by being creative, innovative and practical, they do not miss out on the chance to have a pathway to first team football with their team. We have a proud tradition of introducing local players in to our first team and this will absolutely continue. We obviously never intended to be in the same division as Kelty when originally exploring this concept, but football throws strange things at you sometimes and having reassessed the proposition and judged that the pros still far outweigh the cons, we would like to thank the Board of Kelty Hearts and MD Stefan Winiarski and his management team for considering this unique to the SPFL partnership, and then seeing and agreeing on the possibilities and benefits for both clubs. To reiterate, by moving our footballing department's training base to central Scotland, both the club's Board of Directors and the club's First Team Management feel we give ourselves the best possible chance to attract the highest quality players to the club, allowing some of the players we sign to also live in and around the central belt while playing for ICTFC. We now look forward to taking further positive strides on and off the pitch to address the football and financial challenges we face we believe this exciting opportunity to help us attract players previously not available to us and build a better squad, is one of the first steps we can make and we hope to develop further innovative partnerships. Inverness is and will always be our home. The Caledonian Stadium will always be where we play our football. We hope this venture will help us achieve our goal in giving our supporters a team to be proud of.

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Daniel Spring
Daniel Spring@fatsculler·
The difference between going to the Olympics and not going to the Olympics…7/100th of a second. Heartbreak for @usrowing LM2X
Daniel Spring tweet media
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Colin Williamson
Colin Williamson@williamsoncolin·
Jack Butland deserves a better Rangers team in front of him.
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Broken Oars Podcast
Broken Oars Podcast@brokenoarspodc1·
: The Boat Race. Loved National Institution or anachronistic hangover from the days when the upper class changed the narrative so they could continue to compete in sport? You decide.
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Colin Williamson retweetledi
Heart & Hand Podcast
Heart & Hand Podcast@ibroxrocks·
A reminder that the all-encompassing and deeply pervasive pro-Rangers conspiracy has resulted in us winning a whopping 1 out of 12 titles. But yeah, you know, conspiracy. Sure.
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