ANOTHER week, another controversy for the Welsh Premier League which continues to crawl from one public relations disaster to another.
It is hard to enter the mindset of the administrators who called off Bala Town's match with Llanelli last week due to Llanelli's fears over players safety due to bad weather in South Wales.
To say the decision made the look look amateur is an understatement. If Llanelli could not get their strongest squad to travel they take their strongest possible squad. It is why Llanelli has a reserve and youth set-up. Over 30 players can represent Llanelli at any given time.
So by allowing Llanelli not to travel for this reason the Welsh Premier has now legalised clubs picking and choosing when it will fulfil fixtures. What is stopping a Welsh Premier team using the same excuse in the future when they cannot take their strongest team on an away day.
Llanelli should be embarrassed that in the history of the league their club will forever be associated with one of the most potentially damaging decisions ever made. It was in their name that the Welsh Premier lost even more of its credibility this week.
But the Welsh Premier was not done yet. Oh no the stablemates of the even more conrtroversial Football Association of Wales had many more PR potholes to fall into head first.
The league cup final saga was finally concluded after two date changes. Two games were postponed for the original date which was then cancelled after the lague realised it had forgotten to clear the date with its sponsors. Then a second date was scrapped after the league realised it was after the end of the season and it had already ruled there would be no extension.
Now the TNS v Rhyl showpiece has been given a midweek date and poor old league secretary John Deakin has been forced to talk up the new date in light of the "fine April weather."
I'm afraid no amount of sun can deflect the shameful way this showpiece date was arranged. Clubs were treated worse than dirt and if I was the man signing the cheque from sponsors Loosemores the 2010 I would certainly not be reneweing my association with the cup.
As for the clubs involved, TNS and Rhyl will not get the big gates a weekend game would generate. Hosts Airbus will not enjoy the same gate receipts while poor old Carmarthen Town and Welshpool (scheduled to play Rhyl and TNS on the original date) have also been hit in the pocket.
For Welshpool this pill is particularly bitter considering last season the Welsh Premier did exactly the same thing - costing the club £2000 in sponsorship. With this in mind it is no wonder I suppose that Welshpool are making no effort to make the Super 12.
After 15 years the Welsh Premier should be settled and a respected competition in its own right but it has been so poorly handled over the past two years it is not hard to see why the league is in danger of imploding.
Graham Breeze came out and said what 99.9 per cent of Wales thought this week by slamming the Welsh Premier as a "laughing stock."
I have known Graham Breeze for over 10 years and I know he is big fan of the league so coming out with such a statement would not have been a decision he would have made lightly.
But Breeze, like thousands of others, have had enough of the shambles that is Welsh football. Poorly organised and massively underfunded with a complete disregard for its own clubs and worryingly they seem to be getting worse rather than better.
However the outburst from Graham Breeze has struck a chord across Mid and North Wales which reads; "WE HAVE HAD ENOUGH."
I have no doubts whatsoever the Welsh FA in general and Welsh Premier administrators will not give two hoots about the thoughts of anyone but their own staff or council but that is not the point.
We must register our objections for future generations to know that we did not sit idle and watch our national game be destroyed.
Welsh football is going down such a road of self destruction that clubs will soon be regularly considering legal action.
We all know that UEFA detest law courts getting involved football matters but if Welsh football continues to attract almost weekly national controversy that is the future we face.