Wise up.
I'll point you to the legions of well qualified intercounty players. I can only speak from a northern perspective but the lads at Queens and J'Town were treated the same as normal students.
No i'm not, i'm saying they are human and trying to manage a full time training regime (and possible fitness schedule or focused training schedule on top of that) and a full time degree is impossible. If they have to try and juggle both for four years then one or both will suffer.
Also, i'm not on about just making up the numbers in class or the pitch, i'm talking about a serious effort at both.
The SFAI are the governing body for grassroots football in Ireland, not the FAI. Its success or the lack of is all down to them.
Wise up.
I'll point you to the legions of well qualified intercounty players. I can only speak from a northern perspective but the lads at Queens and J'Town were treated the same as normal students.
Six years is also far too long for a player to tie himself to any one club. How many players in the league are with the same club six years? If a club releases a player, what happens to his course?
Also, how do you think the UCD players juggle doing a normal full-time college course and what isn't far off a full-time football career (in terms of hours, not money)? Full-time football isn't a 9-5 job.
Has anyone told Delaney and the other clowns at the FAI? A fully pro, 10 team league isn't sustainable - who'd have thunk it?
If you attack me with stupidity, I'll be forced to defend myself with sarcasm.
Extratime.ie
Yo te quiero, mi querida. Sin tus besos, yo soy nada.
Abri o portão de ouro, da maquina do tempo.
Mi mamá me hizo guapo, listo y antimadridista.
Exactly, Aside from travelling & playing matches a LOI fulltime player would not put in anything like the hours of a full-time non-football job. They'd be lucky to spend half a day on football per day. Neal Horgan did a law degree while at Cork City & we would have more travelling than probably any club.
I do understand your point though about clubs driving each other into liquidation in an arms race. It's nearly all over now though. A few years ago we had, Shels, Drogheda, Cork, Pats, Bohs, and to a lesser extent Derry, Galway and Sligo paying ridiculous money to players and driving themselves off a cliff. Now Shels are gone, Pats are back to reality, Drogheda are back to reality same with Galway and Sligo, Cork are about to go under, Derry are cutting back and Bohs are going back part time (if they survive at all that is) The house of cards has fallen in, it's now a level playing field for everyone again - survival of the fittest.
A patriot is someone who knows how to hate his country properly.
I hear you cut back on transfer fees too.
Bohemian FC's future at stake over €58m deal with Carroll
By John Mulligan
Thursday June 25 2009
A €58m deal between League of Ireland champions Bohemian FC and a company controlled by embattled developer Liam Carroll could be increasingly under pressure, raising fresh prospects that the Dublin club may have to resort to rapid financial restructuring in order to survive. It might even contemplate making its players part, rather than full-time employees.
Auditors who signed off the club's recently-filed accounts at the Companies Office, have also expressed uncertainty over Bohemian's ability to continue as an on-going concern after a €1.9m operating loss in the last financial year propelled its accumulated losses to more than €2.6m.
Bohemian FC signed a deal in 2007 to sell its grounds at Dalymount in north Dublin to Liam Carroll's Danninger vehicle. The acquisition by Danninger would include a cash payment of just over €38m and an undertaking to construct a 10,000-seater stadium valued at €20m for the club at Harristown. It's understood that the football club has received fresh offers for the grounds within the past few months and that it would be willing to allow Danninger to break the purchase contract in return for a fee, or possibly to renegotiate the purchase price. While the club has already received €2.6m from Danninger, it's understood that no further payments are due, pending the resolution of a legal battle between the club and rival property firm Albion.
Last year the High Court instructed the football club to hold a portion of its grounds in trust for Albion, refuting a contention by Bohemian FC that no redevelopment agreement had been concluded between the club and the property firm. On Monday, Irish Nationwide commenced legal action against Liam Carroll, claiming he had personally guaranteed up to €60m in loans made to one of his numerous property firms, Aifca.
Danninger has recently had to secure additional bank financing to overcome cashflow issues and has asked creditors to write off up to 40pc of their debts.
In its company accounts, Bohemian directors state that they are confident the club can return to profitability within one to two years and that if its financial health further deteriorates, assets could be revalued to reflect a higher value than that currently on the club's balance sheet.
- John Mulligan
http://www.independent.ie/business/i...l-1789170.html
Bloody hell- it would be some coup to get a fee off Danninger considering Bohs agreed to sell them land that wasn't theirs!It's understood that the football club has received fresh offers for the grounds within the past few months and that it would be willing to allow Danninger to break the purchase contract in return for a fee, or possibly to renegotiate the purchase price.
#NeverStopNotGivingUp
Yes it would . Looking more and more likely that the Irish Nationwide case will have a knock on effect and a deal will be done that allows Danniger to walk away from their agreement on Dalymount, which has ,in reality been a dead duck since the High Court decision.
Will still leave the club with some major financial re-structuring to have a hope of coming within 65% cap this year.
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