So, when our Irish players are "good enough" to go abroad, should they be allowed!?! If we barred foreigners coming in, foreign teams would have no choice to bar Irish players, surely?
CSFShels summed it up, ridiculous thread!
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So, when our Irish players are "good enough" to go abroad, should they be allowed!?! If we barred foreigners coming in, foreign teams would have no choice to bar Irish players, surely?
CSFShels summed it up, ridiculous thread!
I think we're crossing threads here but since you went to the bother of writing such a detailed post I'll run the risk of being accused of going of topic.
Surprise surprise I agree with you on this one. Ridiculous as this thread seems to be to some people it is pertinent. Tonight we have the crazy situation of an Inter Milan team tonight with no Italian in it. Indeed there were only two Europeans in it. I wonder how many LoI supporters would welcome if the same thing happened with our clubs. Where would the platform for Irish players to play at the highest level possible in Ireland be then?
Turkey has a population of 74m Greece has 11.25m but that isn't to say that we can't improve here and for sure the League could do a lot better.
sounds a bit like an anti-British rant if you don't mind me saying. My son isn't that good so it's not relevant but as a concept I would love if the Irish football scene could support all of our best players playing for LoI clubs but it will never be.
The FAI are not blameless but solutions to most problems are to be found within. If the LoI needs to 'placed' at the top of the pile then it doesn't deserve to be there. Everything in life must be earned. At the risk of repeating myself any improvement in the LoI fortunes must be driven by the clubs. Everyone has a role to play but primarily the clubs must lead.
[An aside: Maybe those that run this forum might consider putting up a sticky thread for LoI fans entitled: What I Did to Promote/Help the League of Ireland This Week]
I'm just curious about this, if it's only 10,000 then LoI fans are a tiny minority of the number Irish people that watch football every week. Is everybody else wrong? As a matter of interest my son isn't playing this season as he's doing his Junior Cert (not my idea btw) but I still help out with the training and cheer the team along at the matches. It ain't LoI but it is live and it is passionate.
Wishing it, won't make it so. If you want anybody to change you've got to give them an incentive - especially since in most cases you are trying to change the habits (or more correctly - non-habits) of a lifetime. Adopting a superior attitude to people that won't "get off their holes" is likely to alienate people further.
You know SkStu there's probably not that much of a difference between us. We both want a vibrant LoI. You want it by the sheer force of your will. I think it will take some persuasion and the people that have most to gain i.e. the clubs are the ones that should be moving heaven and earth to get people through the turnstiles. Thanks again for your considered response. Now I'm back on topic.
How is it anti British to say that we should we developing our own players, not relying on a failing, underpressure UK system? We should be developing our own players, feeding them into our own leagues. The success rate of kids going over was always poor, in recent years it's a good deal worse. The only long term viable solution is to keep children at home and develop them here, to our own structures. How many "Kevin Doyles" went over at 15, didn't make it and are lost to football forever, whereas if they'd stayed developed here could be at least making a good living as a pro in the leagues here, even if they never made the move abroad, never mind late developers? The best players will always go, that's inevitable.
They're wrong that they're "supporters", and they're most definitely short sighted as they don't see the impact of their choices - on playing standards, and ultimately on the National Team.
SoccerMom, i wont be getting into this argument with you as i have come to realise the futility of such debates and i honestly have posted on this topic so many times i (and im sure other posters) have grown tired of it.
I do want to point out a couple of things. As Macy has pointed out, my point is clearly not an anti-British rant. Im a bit disappointed that you dismissed it as such and didnt take the point on face value. I hope you can see the benefits of keeping our kids at home as long as possible. The FAI's "strategy" is the complete opposite i.e. allow english clubs to poach our youngsters as young as 14 and hopefully enough make the breakthrough into premiership and sure we can always supplement with a few catholic nordies and some english and scots under the FIFA rules. Wow, what a strategic commitment to Irish football. Its simple, funnel as many of those kids through the league as possible. Sure, the most gifted can still move at a young age (18 would be my preference) but the biggest success stories at the moment are players who stayed in Ireland or returned at a young age to play LOI (Stephen Ward, Keith Fahey, Gary Deegan, Niall McGinn etc). Long term, it is the best and only viable way forward in my opinion.
I still think that the greater Irish sporting public must shoulder a lot of the blame and accusations of laziness or calls to get off their arses are valid. I dont expect it to change anytime soon and i think it will take the clubs making a breakthrough and generally improving and adhering to licensing rules for this to happen. Less apathy from the public, media and FAI would make this job a lot easier for the clubs and it is a pity and unfair that they are so often saddled with the blame in all this and requested to justify their existence. Actually reading that, its quite incredible that we are obliged to do that.
Anyway, as i said, im not going to get into all this again. Good luck to you and i hope you find the answers youre looking for. Id like if you committed to going to 5-10 games yourself this season and see if you are not drawn in by the quality of football, the craic and the passion of the fans for their local team. Thats all it took me.
I apologise if I came across as being dismissive. Of course I agree that we should keep players at home as long as possible if only - at the very least - to earn a signing-on fee which could be pumped back into the clubs. The reality though is that most teenagers aspire to play in England. Even Roy Keane (I am not carrying a torch for him) admitted that his desire to play for Ireland's u15s was just so that he would be spotted by an English scout. His antipathy towards the FAI stretched back that far as he blamed his, relatively late, breakthrough into English football on the FAI for not picking him for the Ireland U15s. The reality is - whether we like it or not - today's teenagers do not aspire to play in the League of Ireland.
The calls to people to go to LoI matches may be valid but it won't make it happen. The Giles/Rovers project in the late 1970's fell flat through lack of support. People put it down to lack of success on the pitch but Giles was followed by Jim McLaughlin who won the League four years in a row. Louis Kilcoyne is on record as saying that attendances had fallen to just 300 during the four-in-a-row season. The point I'm making here is that the problems of lack of interest in the League have been a problem for decades and simply wishing for an increase in attendances won't cut it. Over the years the owners of various clubs have brought the League into disrepute and stumbling from crisis to crisis makes it easy for potential fans to ignore the League. It is going to take positive action by the FAI and the clubs to turn things around. The fans will need to be enticed. Shamrock Rovers is an example of what I mean. They have reached out and the fans (my son now included) have reacted positively. The FAI needs to harness and co-ordinate this type of approach throughout the League.
I doubt if my personal situation will allow me to get to as many as 10 matches but I guarantee that I will get to a minimum of five - but I'm not necessarily the problem. It's the masses of people that are blind to the LoI that needs to be tapped. That's the challenge for the FAI and the LoI. I'm still inclined to the idea of putting up a sticky thread with the title What I did to promote my club / the League of Ireland this week. It may seem a bit banal but it can't do any harm.
Do you not also think that maybe Irish people are just not really interested in football? Or sport in general? More the Irish public than the product
Look at Portsmouth, Gretna, any league in the world - they are all having problems not just our league - at least this season Cork and Derry got their just rewards, the LOI is moving in the right direction.
You can only do so much - horse to water and all that
isnt gretna a village with only 400 people living there? no hope that club would survive once the owner died.. and portsmouth was a case of redicilous spending and the owner getting sick aswell?