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Thread: The Standard

  1. #21
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    Quote Originally Posted by Dodge View Post
    Recently been watching a lot of the Championship. There is no style. Birmingham in 2nd play awful football.
    It might be a cliche but the Championship from what I have over the last few years is long ball i.e. little passing in midfield.

    Based on recent season the LOI Premier would range from League One to Conference standard. By 'n large we probably play more passing football.
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  2. #22
    Reserves Angus's Avatar
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    I agree when folks say that this is a pointless exercise - abislutely correct - it serves no other purpose than barstooling and is in the same vein as "the Man U team of 99 would beat the Liverpool team of 79" etc etc

    However, there is some method to my whatever

    If we get a ballpark consensus of the level - let's assume it is League 1, there is then a valid comparison to be made around attendances and fundamentally how one attracts more people to the LOI

    I am convinved that attendances at LOI is only partially related to quality and is in fact down to other "non football" factors

    Hartlepool, Lincoln, Northampton all have attendances that LOI clubs would kill for - and if we are saying the quality is about the same, then the natual next step is to figure out what else keeps people away in their droves.

    Assume somethign ridiculous (among a growing list of ridiculous things in this post) - if the LOI became Championship quality tomorrow, would attandances increase materially ? I don't think so - I think they would increase all right but not to the same degree as, say, Leinster, in the fizzy league in the p***ing rain.

    So, where I end up is that there is a limited appetitie in ireland for a "fan" culture i.e. tipping up every week - we love events, we love Waterford hurling and Dublin football but they only play 5 meaningful games a year.

    http://www.european-football-statist...andcontent.htm

    so, yes I am going completely mad....
    Last edited by Angus; 25/02/2009 at 1:22 PM.
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  3. #23
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    Spot on Angus. Great post.

  4. #24
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    Quote Originally Posted by Angus View Post
    we love Waterford hurling and Dublin football but they only play 5 meaningful games a year.
    That line sums up the general Irish sporting public!
    [/B][I]P.Esc.

  5. #25
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    100% agree, we just love to cherry pick our sporting highlights, from interviews with alex ferguson on irish morning radio to around 10 big gaa football games every summer, to only big irish international football games, and the less than 5 big home rugby international games - to the champs lge final - a great chat at work about english football - then all major golf finals (but only the final day - same for wimbledon) to the grand prix season - actually anything but committ to supporting a club and going week in week out.

    This is why we will never compete with the wonderful fans of the clubs mentioned above like Northampton, Hartlepool and Lincoln, etc whatever their position and previous result, they will still pull in 5,000 + week in/week out

    Fickle.ie
    #DundalkFC - First Irish club to win an away game in Europe (1963), only Irish club to win a game / points in Europa League Group Stage (2016).

  6. #26
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    Quote Originally Posted by Angus View Post

    Hartlepool, Lincoln, Northampton all have attendances that LOI clubs would kill for - and if we are saying the quality is about the same, then the natual next step is to figure out what else keeps people away in their droves.
    Fair enough points being made, but in relation to England, and specifically the three examples given, you would have to take population into consideration. They seem to range from 100K to over 200k population.
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    Looking at League 2, Braford have the highest attendance, at 13000 average, from a metropolitan area of 500,000, the greater Cork area has a population of about 400,000

    Looking down the league, the Luton area has a population of about 230 000, and they average 6000, Port Vale are located in Stoke-on-Trent, with a population of about 350 000, and have to compete with Premier division Stoke City, who draw 26000+ each week, they get crowds of about 5500. It goes on like this

    All of these clubs have to compete with far stronger teams in their own country, sometimes just up the road, and they are in the fourth tier of the national league. The LOI Premier averages what, about 1300?

    The main point is, Irish fans are ridiculously fickle. In the 2002 World Cup Campaign, we would have filled Croker 3 times over for the Cyprus games, now we're not winning, everyone is a rugby supporter. If we lose at that, they'll support bogball.

  8. #28
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    Quote Originally Posted by noby View Post
    Fair enough points being made, but in relation to England, and specifically the three examples given, you would have to take population into consideration. They seem to range from 100K to over 200k population.

    This is a question I and another Limerick fan were asking each other a while ago.

    What is considered a good percentage of the catchment area to get going to a game? I know that being in a higher division and having support bases overlapping means that fans can and do travel to support teams much farther away than their local team, but there must be a number that clubs should aim for.

    In a town/city of say, 50,000 people, with another 50,000 outside the city in the surrounding areas, how many fans can a club reasonably expect to get on a consistent basis?

    I mention this because sometimes on foot.ie there is talk of a glorious future where we all get crowds of 5 / 7 / 8 - 10 thousand for games, but I always think that is an impossibly high percentage of the number of people in the catchment areas of some clubs.

  9. #29
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    Quote Originally Posted by osarusan View Post

    In a town/city of say, 50,000 people, with another 50,000 outside the city in the surrounding areas, how many fans can a club reasonably expect to get on a consistent basis?

    5% would be a great, but very optimistic, target to have.
    2% should be more achievable.

    Waterford city has a population of around 50K, the county is the same. If we were to get 2% of the city and 1% of the county that would be 1.5k per game. We were closer to that level a few years ago.
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  10. #30
    International Prospect osarusan's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by noby View Post
    5% would be a great, but very optimistic, target to have.
    2% should be more achievable.
    They seem realistic enough. Are those targets just your ideas? Or did you get them somewhere?

  11. #31
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    Straight from the top of my head. Impressed?
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  12. #32
    International Prospect osarusan's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by noby View Post
    Impressed?
    Very much so.

    Would I be right in saying that in your opinion at least, crowds of 2,000 consistently would be as good as Waterford could really hope for?

  13. #33
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    Also rememebr that in the UK most clubs have a strong local following - even in the lower divisions that is a few thousand a week. That is because that is the no.1 spectator sport in th UK.
    In Ireland the no.1 spectator sport is the GAA - That is why you will get those few thousand a week going to league games with the sunshine supportes out in force for the Championship games.
    The problem we have with the league of Ireland is that we do not have these few thousand to go weekly. You have a limited amount of committed sports fans in any country and they generally will follow only 1 sport strongly (ie. go week in week out).
    Therefore the standard is pretty irrelevant - You will generally get the same supporters anyway

  14. #34
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    Quote Originally Posted by osarusan View Post
    Very much so.

    Would I be right in saying that in your opinion at least, crowds of 2,000 consistently would be as good as Waterford could really hope for?
    If it was consistent I would be delighted.
    Maybe not as good as we could hope for (never say never), but something to aim for. It may seem a world away from recent crowds, but in the last ten years we were regularly topping 1000, even in the first division.

    Of course you get to 2k, then you start thinking about 2.5k etc. etc.
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  15. #35
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    Just a rough stab at catchment areas, from the census website-

    Cork- ~200 000
    Shams- ~200 000
    UCD- ~175 000
    Bohs- ~165 000
    Pat's- ~165 000
    Fingal- ~150 000
    Galway- ~145 000
    Derry- ~135 000
    Shels- ~125 000
    Bray- ~120 000
    Limerick- ~115 000
    Waterford- ~100 000
    Kildare- ~100 000
    Tralee- ~90 000
    Drogheda- ~85 000
    Castlebar- ~80 000
    Sligo- ~70 000
    Dundalk- ~60 000

    I just looked at the towns themselves, then at any towns within about a 15km drive, not closer to any other clubs. Shels got a little screwed over because they're sandwiched between Bohs and the sea!

    In the UK, there is a culture that you go and watch your local team on a Saturday afternoon. It comes from back in the industrial era when there was literally nothing to do but watch the football when you got out of the pit/factory. We don't have that culture, for whatever reason, probably because we didn't have the industrial drudgery or urban lifestyle that would generally spawn loyal following of a local team. The GAA doesn't help though!

  16. #36
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    Attendance levels are a pointless waste of of time when trying to compare standard of leagues.
    http://www.forastrust.ie/

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