we wont. Not for a while anyway. We're just a microcosm of the attitude of the clubs themselves who are out for themselves and themselves only.
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UCD won the IFA intermediate cup in 1914, the FAI intermediate cup in 1945, were invited to join the original LOI and participated in the LOI senior cup in the 30's and 50's.
I don't think any UCD or Mons fans criticised Fingal's crowds. We do question how they can sustain the level of spending they've become accustomed to without a fanbase to generate revenue to replace Gannon's donations.
You can take it as some sort of personal dig at dfc if you like , it wasnt by the way . I was using you as an example as to how there are no big clubs in the loi imo . How do you judge who is a big club and who is not ? There are clubs who have consistently been in the top flight etc and have always been challenging for trophies but even some of these clubs get very poor crowds , St pats for example . Waterford where thought to be a big club once upon a time ! Sorry for going off topic ..
as usual mar you chose to mis read what someone has posted my problem is that a football club was parachuted into the loi without any underpinning structures by a person or persons with no interest in the LOI and only motive was to build a property portfolio in fingal.
now i know its hard for you to acknowlege overspending by a club without building from the vbottom up but thats what happened here but then expecting a bohs fan for sound fundamentals in running a club was asking to much.
But nobody's suggested they can sustain the level of spending they've become accustomed to - you're questioning a position that nobody has put forward to begin with.
It's fine to have objections to Fingal and to perceive them to be "skipping the queue" or whatever, but the one thing that can be said of them is that they've operated more or less within the means that have been allocated to them. They could easily have pushed the boat out further and paid over the odds for every player but the people running the club do seem to have stuck to a model that can adapt to the withdrawal of funding. Pat's famously didn't do this and their fans are paying for it now, while Bohs and Drogs fans are paying for their clubs' excessive borrowing against imagined future revenue.
Any football fan can see that Fingal's business model to date has been a quick fix, and it's unfair on those clubs that they've leaped over, but the level of animosity the club invokes in some LOI fans (not you) amazes me sometimes.
By reading peaders post he never mentioned success as his criteria for his qualification of being a 'big club'
Im not sure we are considered a big club in LOI terms but our real success is to survive for over 80 years in a town with less than 20.000 people,
a complete outpost for football.
We've always paid our bills and 80% of the time have always drawn decent crowds despite our lack of sucess in terms of silverware.
Also, imo derry are a big club.
This thread is rapidly becoming the "Why your club is fcuking just the besht ever,and should be up with there with the immortals of loi" thread.
Also,i love derry to. so good they named it twice!!
UCD is a public body. Should they not be allowed in the league as well? What is the problem with being owned by a county council anyway? You say it is not providing a level playing field. Surely no two football clubs operate on a financially level playing field? Sure look at Man City in the EPL getting Arab oil money to fund them. Look at Bohs drawing down money from the sale of Dalymount to fund the playing staff. That is a financial disadvantage to clubs who don't own a football ground in a prime location.
The only way you create a financial level playing field is if every team has the exact same budget. And thats hardly fair if one team creates far more revenue than another team.
Hint: Football is rarely fair. Get over it.
Did the Fingal CoCo say there was a "high" demand for LOI football in the area? Surely there is no area in Ireland that has a "high" demand for LOI football. But maybe there was a "low/average" demand. Why not set up a football club? There are no other LOI clubs in the area so why not? Maybe they can grow there fan base over time and win over the locals? How do they win over the locals? By being successful. And how do they do that ... etc etc.
I think the bit in bold in the quoted post is what is bothering most of the naysayers here. Football fans are jealous of Sporting Fingal, and that's the bottom line. Many of the reasons for bad mouthing Sporting Fingal could be applied to many other clubs. Mervue and Salthill are two new clubs in the league in an area that already has a LOI club, why not dis them? Because they haven't spent money? They are not a threat to your club so you don't criticise them? Sporting Fingal have spent their way to an FAI cup and Europe and have passed out other clubs. Fans of these other clubs are just jealous.
Because both are long established clubs who have climbed the ladder? And even then there are plenty of discussions here (and elsewhere) about the merits of their LOI ambitions
Personally I'm ambivelent enough about them. I liked some of the work they put in around the community there and they were far more active than msot in this area. I've a lot of time for Liam Buckley too
On the other hand it does seem like a bit of an ego trip for some people and the move to Dalymount doesn't reflect their "for Fingal people" ethos.
I also have a huge problem with some within Fingal County council and their push for independence. I see the football club as a part of this.
I also have a huge problem with some here seemingly forgetting that we're in a competive sport. The idea that we simply have to support all clubs and wish them all well is completely bizarre. So what if someone dislikes a club because they signed good players?
I don't see being "long established" as being a reason to like/dislike a club.
This is all inter-Dublin politics. Something I wouldn't really care about being from Cork, but other fans from outside the pale still take issue with them.
This is a proper and the real reason for disliking them IMO. Fair play to you for being honest enough to say it.
UCD isn't in the league. UCD AFC is. And the club isn't a public body. Nobody owns it.
I don't really agree with this. Firstly, Kelleher put his money where his mouth was in fairness, and when he pulled out (as he more or less seems to have done), Pat's could cope precisely because they hadn't borrowed against imagined future revenue. I'm not sure how you can put Pat's in the same group as Bohs and Drogs (or Cork or Derry or Dublin City). Secondly, Fingal made a E75k loss in 2009 despite winning the Cup; it's debatable as to whether that constitues operating within the means allocated to them. For any LoI club, that's a big loss. We don't know how they fared in 2010. Thirdly, I don't think there's any evidence whatsoever (either way) that SFFC can adapt to the withdrawal of funding. All that's tangibly happened so far is that several players have left and no-one's joined. That could point either way (all players are leaving, or maybe they're just getting rid of some players to replace them with u-20s), but it certainly can't point definitively to them being stable or unstable.Quote:
Originally Posted by Charlie Darwin
Also, this -
Quote:
Originally Posted by Dodge
It doesn't matter what you think. It is absolutely a reason why some dislike Fingal. Count how many times the word Franchise is used
Again, it doesn't matter what you think, its just another reason why some dislike themQuote:
This is all inter-Dublin politics. Something I wouldn't really care about being from Cork, but other fans from outside the pale still take issue with them.
To be clear, I don't dislike Fingal (as explained above) and I couldn't dislike a team simply because they had better players.Quote:
This is a proper and the real reason for disliking them IMO. Fair play to you for being honest enough to say it.
I must have the wrong end of the stick - I was under the impression Pat's had up to a million in debt - I must have been thinking of a budget deficit. If Kelleher paid that out of his own pocket then fair play, it's the same as Fingal and Pat's have shown the foresight ability to slim down considerably.
Well I can't say for sure since I don't know the ins and outs, but they were able to release a lot of players this year, presumably at little or no cost, and have hung onto the ones who have theoretical cash value. I know the club organised jobs in sports development for a couple of the players instead of offering them full-time contracts, so they do seem to have at least had a contingency in place for the withdrawal of funding. Again, compare it to Bohs who can't get rid of any of their high earners.
At the same time, I do know of players who turned down contract with Fingal in the first division because they were only offering full-time.