Originally Posted by
dcfcsteve
To be honest - with the exception of Shamrock Rovers and maybe one or two other teams, I'd say thgere has been a significant increase in support levels for the league over the last 10-15yrs. I can remember a time in the 90's when teams like Bohs, Cork, Pats, Longford, had much lower average support than they do now. But that's an aside.
Network 2 showed live English football on Saturday afternoons back in the late 80's/early 90's. I rememebr distionctly watching games, and the fact that publicans in England were going crazy trying to get big enough satellites to pick the channel up at the time....
Regardless - City played on a different day than Premiership games. As we still do (as in, fact, all EL clubs do).
Linfield aren't the thing that'd make an AIL proposal work. The key thing is the prospect of a professional sports promotion business (i.e. one that knows how to promote sport) with a direct financial incentive in the league succeeding (because they make more money if it does) putting what one would expect would be a relatively substantial sum of money into professionally promoting the league. Something that has never happened before, and is extremely unlikely to happen under eithe rthe FAI or IFA independently.
If you refuse to accept that that has the potential to have a significant and noticeable impact on attendances at Irish football, then we may as well all give up - as to believe that would be to believe that there is effectively no future for Irish football beyond the medicore product we currently have.
That is why I can see an AIL causing a significant uplift in attendances across the board. Currently, I can see no other alternative way of doing it in any sort of sensible time-scale and across the board. Can you ?