Bromley management team quit over uncertainty at Hayes Lane
BOBBY Bowry has told the News Shopper both he and player-manager Simon Osborn are quitting Bromley, writes Paul Green.
The Lillywhites signed off their campaign last Saturday with a disappointing 1-0 home defeat to Dorchester, but it is the long-term future of the club which has led to the exodus from the dugout.
Player-coach Bowry said: "It is true both myself and Simon are leaving the club.
"I don't intend to continue playing next year anyway and we've been told by the chairman the club is up for sale and this didn't really say to me they wanted me to stay.
"The chairman has looked after me very well, but football can be a selfish game sometimes and I've got to make the right move for me."
Osborn, who took on the position midway through the season from Mark Goldberg, confirmed he was leaving and said uncertainty over the club's long-term future had played a key role in his decision.
He said: "I wanted to try and take Bromley to the next level, but financial constraints and Jerry Dolke's decision to sell the club means this will not be possible.
"I didn't just want Bromley FC to become an also ran.
"Jerry couldn't promise or guarantee us a new owner wouldn't come in and get rid of us and change everything, but we agreed to stay on until the end of this season."
Goalkeeping coach Derek Parnham is also set to leave the club.
Bowry and Osborn are not expected to be the only departures from Hayes Lane during the summer with former Margate striker Danny Hockton already being linked with a move to Chelmsford City.
Bromley chairman Jerry Dolke told News Shopper his decision to put the club up for sale was one of the hardest he has ever made.
Mr Dolke has held the position for seven years and transformed the Lillywhites from a side struggling at the wrong end of the Ryman first division to Conference South play-off hopefuls.
Off the field, Hayes Lane has been rebuilt with the portacabins replaced by offices and a brand new club bar to make Bromley an attractive proposition for any future investor.
Mr Dolke said: "It has been seven years of hard work and emotion, but I felt I've been neglecting my family and particularly my 10-year-old daughter with the amount of time I've been devoting to the club.
"I've got a business in Greenwich which is nearing completion as well, so really it is a combination of circumstances.
"What we've created at Bromley is a first class business from something which started out as a hobby."
He added: "Somebody needs to come in now and take the club to the next level which to me means full-time football.
"I look at what Ebbsfleet have achieved by making the step up to full-time and I know it is going to take a lot of time and energy for Bromley to make the same step up.
"It is a big decision for me and a very hard one to make because I love Bromley FC.
"I've left the club in a very healthy position financially because there aren't many clubs up for sale which are not in administration or in debt."
Mr Dolke reassured Bromley fans by stating he will not be simply selling out to the first bidder.
He explained: "I'm prepared to wait as long as it takes to get the right person who I feel can take the club forward on the pitch.
"Whoever does come in will be getting a first class business which is ideally located in one of London's richest boroughs, so it is certainly an attractive proposition.
"I know what it will take to win this league and it needs the right person to come in and make sure this can happen."
Articles courtesy of www.newsshopper.co.uk