As the KC Stadium celebrates its 10th anniversary, Richard Sutcliffe meets the man behind much of its undoubted success. At various times over the first decade of the KC Stadiumâs life, Adam Pearson has been at the helm of Hull City, Hull FC and the management committee running the entire complex. It is ironic, therefore, that when the 48-year-old, who at the time was Leeds Unitedâs commercial director, first considered getting involved in East Riding sport, his grand vision involved bringing all three bodies under his own control. âMy plan when I first looked at Hull City in 2000-01 was to own the Stadium Management Company, the football club and also Hull FC,â says Pearson. âThe same administration team could have run both clubs and operated a really slick set-up. It would have worked well. We got City but, unfortunately, couldnât agree a price with the then owners of Hull FC. At one stage, we were only small figures apart from agreeing a deal, but then everyone became quite stubborn and the chance was gone. âWe kept it quiet at the time, but did manage to get due diligence on the rugby club done. It was just before everyone moved into the KC. By that time, Iâd been at City for a few months and could see for myself the huge potential of Hull as a sporting city. âGetting the football club and Hull FC under the same ownership at the KC Stadium would have been great for the city, but, unfortunately, we couldnât pull it off.â The KC Stadium opened 10 years ago this week, Sunderland providing the opposition for a friendly on December 18 that was followed eight days later by its first league game as Hartlepool United were beaten 2-0. A new and exciting chapter in Hullâs sporting history had begun. Funded entirely by the City Council through its windfall from a partial flotation of Kingston Communications in 1999, the £44m all-seater venue not only transformed the fortunes of the two tenant clubs but also the mindset of a region. Hull, then in the basement division, would be in the Championship within four years and playing in front of attendances that simply could not have been accommodated at their previous home, Boothferry Park. The rugby club, too, enjoyed a major lift as crowds doubled and a first Super League Grand Final appearance followed in 2006. Pearson, who chaired the Stadium Management Company for the first six years, recalls: âThe building of the KC definitely changed the mindset of Hull. âWhen I was looking on from afar, Hull always seemed to be a city fighting with one arm tied behind its back. There was such disunity, particularly in sport. All the clubs were separate and didnât get on. The facilities were awful and the crowds disparate. âEverything needed bringing together and the KC did that. It made people proud of their city and regenerated it. Both clubs have benefited hugely from the KC. âMind, when we first looked at Hull City and spoke to the council about the proposed new stadium, they were still talking to Hull KR about being a tenant. âIn the end, it was just Hull FC and Hull City but can you imagine how good it would have been to have all three of the cityâs clubs based in one venue, even if Iâm not sure the pitch would have been too great.â Built on the site of the former Circle cricket ground that had once staged County Championship cricket, the KC quickly became an iconic image for Hull on a par with the Humber Bridge. However, Pearson admits the original plan to kick-start the regeneration of the surrounding area has not been realised. âThe Council took the long-term view and wanted to build a legacy with the KC dividend windfall money,â he says. âBut the disappointing thing â and this is as much down to me as anyone â is that we didnât develop it out in the boom years going up to 2007. âThe casino licence was won and we had hotels falling over us to get involved. We should really have done that then because it would have finished off what the council wanted â to regenerate the whole of West Hull. âIt was supposed to start off with hotels and restaurants, alongside the casino. There would have been a conference centre and then it would have levitated out towards smaller shops and into the residential areas. But it never quite took off, which is a shame. âIt would be difficult to do it now as well. The casinos have gone, and so have the hotel chains. It could still be done but it would need someone of great wealth to do it.â Another part of the grand vision for the KC that has not been maintained is the staging of major music concerts. In the early years, the SMC that Pearson headed brought the likes of The Who, Elton John and REM to East Yorkshire. Lately, however, the shows have dried up and the Hull FC chairman, who is no longer involved with the SMC, admits that is a shame. He said: âThe problem is they became harder to put on, particularly in terms of fitting them into the playing schedule. âAt the start, it was quite a new concept and the artists didnât really catch on for a few years as to how much money we were making. âBut then after two or three years, they caught on and it swung the other way. I remember putting on Bon Jovi. It was a big risk as we paid about £1.1m. And in the end we only grossed just over £1m.â Future developments are a contentious issue with the Allam familyâs attempts to buy the KC having been rebuffed earlier this year. Just this week, chairman Assem Allam, who saved the football club in 2010, questioned whether the Tigers would be able to stay at the Stadium if they won promotion without owning the 100 per cent freehold that is currently in the hands of the council. Pearson said: âThe problem at the moment is that the KC is a public asset. It has become a stand-off but, hopefully, things can be resolved. âIt needs people to want to do it and maybe there isnât that desire at the moment. I hope something can be done as, to me, the KC Stadium is, like the Bridge and The Deep, a beacon for Hull.â http://www.yorkshirepost.co.uk/spor...provides-a-beacon-of-unity-for-hull-1-5245265
Given our records, it's also wrong to say KC attendances couldn't have been accommodated at Boothferry Park.
A good read. I remember the Mrs, dragging me along to the REM concert. The only time I've stood on the pitch. It chucked it down !
and as far as I know, he has never intimated a wish to live here. He is also a good businessman who knows a good opportunity when he sees one, and these facts should help remove those mythical angel wings some seem to insist on giving him. We should thank Adam Pearson but we should also remember that nobody gets out of bed in a morning to lose money for fun. Not even Assam Allam for that matter!!!
I always thought the KC windfall money should have been used to give the city lasting legacy. The stadium was a fantastic idea but fell short of fulfilling the KC share money potential. I would have liked to have seen something built that would have been instantly recognisable as belonging to our city. Maybe some sort of tower with a 'wow' factor - the tallest in the north of the country, that sort of thing. Something to bring tourists in and be visible as you approach the city from all directions. It could have been built on Walton St and the stadium could have been part of the complex. Can you imagine driving into Hull on the A63/Boothferry Rd, arriving on the ferry or crossing the Humber Bridge and your eyes fixated to a 50 storey tower with a hotel and conference facilities, dominating the skyline and dwarfing every other building in the city? It could have been magnificent. Magnificent.........
Self-criticism, openness, vision and a 'can do' approach. Sadly lacking from those currently involved in the KC spat.
sounds a bit of an idiot tho when saying its a shame the Hotels weren't built on Andleberry Road ! I mean whats the point of building them for them to be unwanted and unused 2-3 years later . . Until there is vision to bring attractions to the city and surrounding area , there just wont be that need - even Premier league football wont bring that long term - plus Prem football is never guaranteed
A guy I know - Dave Whatt - suggested that the council demolish the City Hall, the Town Docks Museum and the Ferens Art Gallery. This would produce three spaces, upon which could be erected a very large golden tripod, crowned by a golden bull-dozer. This would thus point up the City Council's attitude to development....
I don't think it's a big secret, I think we got a few grants and funding from national lottery etc. Trevor Brooking I think it was, tried to refuse the funding because he thought little old Hull would never need a stadium bigger than 15,000.