Very interesting thread, prompting a few thoughts, as follow.
1. If NI can have a pyramid from Junior, through Intermediate, to Senior, then there is no good (stress) reason why ROI cannot:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northe..._league_system
Even the women are getting in with it, with the Premiership currently comprising 8 teams (due to expand to ten), with 7 divisions beneath that (last two regionalised):
https://www.niwfa.org/ (Click on "Leagues")
2. Even the original pyramid builders 4,000 years ago knew that you build from the bottom up, not from the top down. In particular, for new clubs to commit to achieving and maintaining third tier status, they must know that there will be the safety net of a fourth tier.should they go through a bad spell and get relegated.
While promotion from beneath is the best way of ensuring sustainable competitive standards throughout.
3. The LOI's proposed schedule seems unfeasibly rushed:
"Commence consultation on the formation of an Irish football pyramid by Q4, 2022 with an agreed and transformed football pyramid structure in place by 2025"
https://www.fai.ie/domestic/news/fai...-2025-launched
It has taken the IFA/NIFL twenty-odd years to get to the present state, with continuous development, evaluation, and reform along the way. Here, for example, are the latest Licensing criteria for clubs wishing to play in the third tier or above, an 86 page document(!):
http://www.irishfa.com/media/37056/i...ion-manual.pdf
(Note the minimum stadia requirements in Annex D, from page 63 onwards)
4. I really don't understand how artificially elevating Youth Leagues can lead to consistent, sustained, country-wide clubs at adult level - at best it might lead to one or two teams emerging and becoming established (Kerry? Mayo?), but a lot more are surely needed for a third tier, never mind a supporting Intermediate level beneath.
5. There is no mention of how to get round the problem of summer/winter leagues, as it effects promotion and relegation to and from the third tier.
Now I should add, that I'm not saying any of this in order to "big up" the system in NI, never mind "do down" that in ROI - God knows we've got plenty of problems of our own in NI, while the existing LOI has many credits over the NIFL, not least playing standards and attendances.
But I have to say some of the suggestions for expansion seem to me to be far from reality. For example, I took a quick look at Athboy Celtic's Facebook page. They've got a nice, shiny new Clubhouse, overlooking a fine looking pitch, with two 6-a-side all weather pitches adjacent. And there's probably hard surface parking for 30 or 40 cars. All very good in itself, but there are absolultely no facilities for spectators, indeed not even a rope round the pitch.
Now I get that no-one is taking this particular proposal seriously, on here or elsewhere, but the fact that a former CEO of the FAI could even suggest it, without being laughed out of town, is closer to Father Ted than the Premier League.
And before anyone comes back to have a pop, I might add that as well as having a general nerd's interest in such matters, I am also thinking ahead to a possible All-Ireland league etc, which if properly done could help domestic football on both sides of the border. But before this latter could happen. both the LOI and the NIFL need to get their acts together.