Dublin City take on Leeds
Premier**** club Leeds United will pay a visit to Dublin on Friday 3rd August when David O'Leary's exciting young guns take on a selection from the eircom Leagues new club Dublin City FC with an 8pm kick off at Tolka Park.
It is a massive fixture which will see Dublin's best pit their skills against Champions League semi-finalist losers. Tickets are available from Ticketmaster Nationwide.
Dublin City will also play host to Coventry City on July 19th and Ipswich Town on August 7th.
All you ever wanted to know about.....
"Dublin City vowed that they would pursue promotion next season, and they have certainly shown their intent by snapping up five new players......Robbie Farrell, Brendan Markey, Graham Doyle, Stephen Gifford from Bray Wanderers and Shane Jackson from Shamrock Rovers"
And the money men behind.....
The long-awaited arrival of a Dublin City Football Club has become a reality, as the Eircom National League has included the name in its list of clubs for next season.
Or has it? The staggering inclusion among the list of registered names may become the arrival of a new, revolutionising force in Irish football, but it is also an audacious name-change by one of the city's most traditional old clubs.
Home Farm is renowned as Dublin's most respected football nursery, which developed world famous players such as Liverpool's Ronnie Whelan and Leeds United's Gary Kelly.
Although they have only won one trophy, the FAI Cup in 1975, they have been a steady side in the first division in recent years, a small, well-run club.
Yet now the club is hoping to break away from the connotations of their famous name. 'Home Farm Fingal', as they have been known of late, have ambitions far beyond their reputation as simply the "famous academy" of Farm's old boys.
These are the plans: They are going to play in the Champions League as "Dublin City" within five years. They'll be wearing Dublin navy-and-blue colours. And they hope to play in the new Stadium Ireland - in front of 80,000 fans.
"It's new, it's fresh and everybody wants to be a part of it", says club secretary Ronan Seery. "We want to promote Dublin City as the football club of Dublin.
"The city is a massive resource for support. In future, we want all the young people in Dublin to have the ambition of playing for Dublin City in Europe. Everyone, from Bray to Balbriggan!"
The official launch of Dublin City will take place in four weeks' time. The club will hope to unveil some exciting new sponsors, and they have already arranged an impressive curtain raiser with David O'Leary's Leeds United in August. Captained, of course, by Gary Kelly.
"Nobody's taken the step and we said let's go for it," explains Seery. "The interest and support we have had is huge."
"We're hoping to be an Eircom Premier club with a huge support, hopefully playing in Abbotstown and in Europe within five years.
"There's no reason why it won't happen."
The club, its secretary and its supporters can only be congratulated on the vision and ambition revealed by this venture. They're not naive. Rather they're trying to launch something that all Dublin football people know has been needed for many years, our own European Champions League club.
Ronan Seery knows it's a massive challenge but, on the other hand, any entrepreneur is aware that the possibilities in terms of TV sponsorship, marketing and supporters catchment in Dublin are as great as anywhere in Europe.
Yet he hopes the new 'City' can be more than that, a team founded in Dublin for Dubliners to support. With none of the ambiguities of a phoney "Dublin-Wimbledon".
The sceptics will say that it is just another marketing ploy by the Whitehall club. But it should be said that the 'Everton' name change was forced on Home Farm, and the Fingal tag was not designed to have anything like the effect that is intended by this change.
Maybe, just maybe this will turn out to be the venture that will bring players like Roy and Robbie Keane home in years to come - to play international club football from an Irish base.
That's the dream, but it's not to say that club secretary Seery isn't keeping his feet on the ground.
"The players [currently at the club] are thrilled," he says, before immediately putting the remark into a realistic football context.
"Mind you, they'll all be in looking for new contracts tonight!"
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