From what little I now know, it seems as though the demise of ECI was partly due to too much ambition, if indeed you can have too much, and maybe in this case it was.
ECI certainly set their stall out early on by the way they organised and conducted themselves. They wanted to get to the top, that was their goal, that was their entire reason for competing.
Sounds good, really good, but for one thing, the 'top' is by definition an elite location and only a privileged few can ever hope to inhabit it.
ECI certainly went about it the right way in terms of training, organization and aspiration but I'm afraid the path to success is littered with those of good intention.
Basically, ECI seem to be a victim of one of their own virtues.
Ambition is a virtue, especially with the competitively minded, it provides goals and sustenance for the long haul ahead.
But in ECI's case, the driving ambition paved the way for a huge disappointment in just missing out on qualification to the SPL.
Dave, the team's owner and driving force was the focal point of the team, it was his ambition that infected and drove the team forward but he proved to be a double-edged sword.
As much as he was the team's inspiration, he was also the guy who was most affected by his team's failure (as he saw it) to qualify for promotion.
Truth is, they didn't fail at all, they were just unlucky in that a couple of their key players got injured at a critical time and as everybody should know, losing two key players out of a five man team is gonna kill ya.
And so, circumstance and maybe too much ambition provides the answer to yet another UK demise.
I did wonder if the team could continue by maybe lowering their expectation and in that way being able to accept disappointment a little easier but it seems Dave felt unable to do this.
I don't really know this Dave but I do know we need people like him in the UK paintball, he inspires others, he leads people, he has direction, all he needs is to slide back down that ambition scale a little.
Not a good day for UK ball