I'd agree that expunging the games played would be fairer than extrapolating the results (or even leaving whole . That said, I'm pretty sure I remember some teams bitching like hell when they lost points after Dublin City's (or "Sea Day" as their fans used sing) results were expunged.
The FAI seem to be happy with the ten team division for now - "The current structure lends itself to a concentration of the top talent in a smaller number of clubs which improves the standard of those teams. This should help those teams continue to improve the playing standard in this country and also allow clubs to enhance their European performances which have been excellent over the past few years... We will continue to monitor the structure of the League to ensure at all times that the set up is the most appropriate one for the development of both the player and the League as a whole." This from
Padraig Smith's Q&A. Doubtless, they'll have a similar argument when they switch back to a 12 team division, but if that's representative of their thinking, I'd expect them to reject a 16 team division out of hand.
If someone consistently uses
tae in English, it's not an Irish word, but a dialect word in Hibernian English. The phrase, "Cup of
tae" is not Irish.
Some people like to be able to read the argument without wincing.
Some people have learning difficulties, no doubt, but others are just too lazy to write correctly. The only dyslexic person I've ever discussed this with admitted that he took great care writing his posts, proof reading them before he posted out of respect for those who would read them. His posts are consistently clearer and better written than almost anyone else I know.
There are spell checkers built into Firefox (and presumably other browsers by now). There are grammar checker plug ins. There's no excuse for almost all of the people who type badly. That they dismiss criticism with politically correct references to learning difficulties disrespects the efforts of those who actually have them to overcome their limitations.