Has to be 10. This present structure has failed before. There is not enough quality for any more than 10 teams in the premier. Fact. Also 36 games is enough for the players considering that most clubs are part time.
KOH
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Has to be 10. This present structure has failed before. There is not enough quality for any more than 10 teams in the premier. Fact. Also 36 games is enough for the players considering that most clubs are part time.
KOH
Wouldn't work - you can't really have a league with an odd number of teams. Come the final day of the season, one team'll have a bye and other teams will then know exactly what they have to do to win the league/stay up/get into Europe, etc.Quote:
Originally Posted by sullanefc
50/50 between the 10-team and the 12-team at the moment...interesting! So much for the comment which triggered this poll that nobody was in favour of the 12-team league!
Typical arrogant Cork nonsense! :rolleyes: Youz haven't beaten us in the last three games, including the Cup last year, as Roo69 pointed out. Our last two visits to Tolka have neded in draws. I hope Dolan writes off us off as easily as you do - should be nine handy points! But then I'd say he's got more sense than that! Which, given his rant at the fixtures, is really saying something!Quote:
Originally Posted by Gary
I think 12 team league this year will be more competitive than previous versions but thats more by luck of the 3 relatively strong promoted teams.
In current format will be difficult to get relegated from Premier & too easy to get promoted from 1st division.
btw i think the results of this poll speak for themselves.
Really? Very easy way to write off the hard work of other clubs. I think it's down to football all over the country getting better, which negates the need for a 10-team Premier. I don't think the 10-team Premier necessarily caused that improvement either.Quote:
Originally Posted by pete
They do. Apart from the "Others", people are almost exactly split. Which isn't what was being suggested (by you?) earlier.Quote:
Originally Posted by pete
Obviously All-Ireland league is at least a few years off, but even with what we've got, a 16-team Premier is an achievable goal.
33 games is very bad because it is open to criticism. It's not that anyone necessarily gets a better deal that anyone else, but the fact that it causes controversy means that you can't have full confidence that the league champions are the best team in the league (unless they win by 10 points!)
I liked the 10 team league. Four games against each club wasn't too many, and the fact that it was tight meant that the competition against other clubs was fierce.
However, it was killing those clubs that didn't get into the Premier. Having only one auto relegation place did mean that it was nearly impossible for clubs in the First division to get into the Premier. It also meant that whenever there was a whipping boy in the Premier, clubs like Shams, SPA and Derry, didn't really need to worry too much about getting relegated.
On this basis, if we don't have a 16 team Prem, we should either have a Premier Div with:
10 teams, with 2 auto and 2 playoff relegation spots, or
12 teams, with 3 auto and 1 playoff relegation spots.
The reason I think there should be so many relegation/promotion spots is so that going down to the First Div shouldn't be a death sentence, like it has been for the last few years. The First Div should be a disincentive to complacency in the Premier, but equally clubs should be able to get out of it relatively easily if they put in a good performance in the First. This would also, I think, add interest to the First Division, because there would probably be at least one or two "big" clubs in there each season.
I can't believe anyone is seriously advocating a 44 game season for a league such as ours. This would saddle our (predominantly part-time) Premier Division players with comfortably the most arduous domestic fixture list of any top-flight league in Europe. Most European leagues of comparable size and stature to ours limit top division fixtures to thirty (or fewer, in many cases) games per club.
MonaghanQuote:
Originally Posted by pineapple stu
Kilkenny
Galway
Home Farm
Athlone
Cobh
All of these teams have been in the premier in the last ten years, and brought nothing. It was always just a amtter of when they would be relegated rather than if. Drogs were very much like that, but the 10 team league made them get their house in order, and fast. Longford tethered in the 12 team, and are now a solid regular Premier Division team.
So rant on. You say us Cork guys are paranoid? :rolleyes:
Well then mention them instead of "dross" with a serious "chasm in class" such as City v. UCD. :rolleyes:
Well some say 16 team All-Ireland League and some say 30 games are too few. What would be wrong with an 18 team League? And say 34 games?
This would be better in an All Ireland League context, but Serie A and Primera Liga's in Spain had this configuration for many years. 34 games is only one more than 33 and everyone would have the same number of home and away games... what do ye think?
In the first season you could have the top 9 from Norn Iron and the top 9 from the el to make up the initial 18 and then after that have two up (i.e. 1 from each) and two down between the All_Ireland Premier and the regional First Divisions which would be divided on a geographic North/South Divide.
So you would have for example Bangor V Dundalk in the Northern First Division
and you would have Cobh Ramblers v Kildare County in the Southern First Division.
Will UCD be challenging for anything more than survival this season?Quote:
Originally Posted by pineapple stu
Will City or Shels be threatened with relegation?
Wasnt being 'arrogant', just stating the facts.
That doesn't show a chasm in class at all. Could be a very tight league, like most here seem to be expecting.Quote:
Originally Posted by Gary
Write us off if you want. I don't mind. In the second half of 2003, we were only 2 points off youz in the form table, drawing both our games. That after the mess Doolin left at the club. If you think that's a "chasm in class", fair enough.
Anyway, drifting off topic here...
To me this seems to be a very good idea, but how far off is an All-Ireland League? It could be years yet. Though if the Setanta Cup is a success it could move a little closer. It seems this idea has a lot of support this side of the border, but I wonder if there is much support for it up north?Quote:
Originally Posted by CollegeTillIDie
Question: What happens if the two bottom teams in your A-I Prem are from the north (or south)? Do they both get relegated or, only one of them and then the next lowest team to keep the divisions geographically balanced?
Think we've had this before. The north/south divisions aren't the North and the Republic, but rather are all the teams split into an equal number by a line through the the country. If it ends up that more Northern Irish or Irish teams end up in the top flight, so be it.Quote:
Originally Posted by Kerry Blue
It's the way the old English Third Division North and South worked, and the way the Conference North and South work in England now. Perfectly possible also for teams to jump between leagues.
I have to seriously consider the grip on reality that some people have here.
How the hell can 15 people vote for a 44 game league????????? Are ye mad???
I'm sure Sligo & Cobh wopuld love to be in the Premier by increasing to 16 or 18 clubs but can another imagine the huge gap in class between current top 3-4 Fulltime squads & what are virtually amateur players? If mid-table 1st division clubs want to play in the Premier division i suggest they get promoted the old fashioned way by beating the clubs in their own league first.
:rolleyes:
It would be better than the current format where come the final day of the season you are playing an extra away game more than your rivals.Quote:
Originally Posted by pineapple stu
Eh? That makes no sense! Playing away when your rivals are playing at home on the last day happens in every league. Having your season finished when your rivals are playing on the last day and know wxactly what they have to do to win the league (or whatever the case) happens nowhere, and hasn't happened since those kind of games started being rigged ('82 West Germany v. Austria springs to mind). I'm not suggesting that that kind of thing would happen here, but can you imagine the reaction from Cork fans if Bohs lost 4-0 at home to Shels (as they did a couple of years ago) when Shels needed to win by four goals to win the league? It just leaves things open to abuse. Odd number of teams is no good at all.Quote:
Originally Posted by sullanefc
consider this:
16 team premier.30 games a year
10 team 1st division.
use the 1st div ,not as a graveyard, but as a breeding ground for ambitious smaller clubs who wish to compete at a higher level. (that includes sh!t teams already in the EL like monaghan btw)
allow ambitious junior clubs access to 1st div. ie allow the likes of kerry league, mullingar utd, birr town, rockmount, newbridge town etc to apply for the 4 vacant spots in the 1st div. to make up 10 teams.
so the premier would look like:
Rovers
cork
derry
longford
harps
bray
ucd
drogheda
waterford
sligo
galway
dundalk
athlone
pats
shels
gypos
bottom of premier automatically down. 2nd bottom (and possibly 3rd bottom [to make it interesting]) play off v 2nd in 1st div for promotion to premier
the 1st div
cobh
monaghan
limerick
kilkenny
kildare
dublin franchise city
kerry league (eg)
mullingar utd (eg)
rockmount (eg)
birr town (eg)
1st div teams play each other 4 times.
champions of leinter senior, munster senior and connacht/ulster senior leagues can gain promotion to 1st div via playoffs v each other and bottom team in 1st div.,subject to requirements (ground etc.). This will facilitate ambitious smaller clubs who want to play at a higher level
if not enough clubs can be found to take a position in the new 1st div. then allow premier clubs put out reserve sides in the 1st.this happens a lot in spain for example.these reserve teams,like in spain, would be barred from playing in the premier if their 1st team already plays in it (which would make promotion easier for the "proper" 1st div teams,meaning it is less likely to result in the graveyard effect than now)
44 League games a season is too much unless all clubs are full time. Just look at the last few seasons Any club that has success in Europe or the cup competitions will end up playing twice a week all season. Two seasons ago Longford ended the season playing 8 or 9 games in the last month of the season. I know 33 league games is unfair to the clubs who play an extra away game but the fixtures reverse the following season so it normally balances out.
As for the first division, the travelling costs are killing clubs. Why not have a first division North (12 teams) and a first division South (12 teams) by bringing in the top Leinster,Munster, Connacht and Ulster senior league clubs who are on a par with the clubs in the bottom half of the first division. The winners of each division could play off against the bottom 2 sides in the premier division in the relegation/promotion play off.
We had something similar last season too