Author of Never Felt Better (History, Film Reviews).
I think this would be a very good idea. A combined league would have the potential to bring in bigger crowds, get better TV deals. More money in the game would inevitably lead to more investment in youth teams -- and it would reduce the need for young Irish players to go to Britain to further their careers.
But I suspect the traditionalists would never have it.
Would it be allowed by UEFA though? If UEFA start allowing x-border leagues - no matter how sensible logistically/culturally/economically - it'd set a precedent for larger countries. Once they do that the biggest European clubs will argue for their own x-border league which would de facto become the Champions League, depriving UEFA of their biggest (or second biggest) asset. The big clubs have lobbied for a breakaway league before but UEFA has fended them off, largely by giving them more money and more games I think.
The whole fabric of European football could change because the income from the Champions League would then be spent outside the elite clubs. If Europe's elite clubs ran their own competition it'd be unlikely that there'd be any downstream distribution of income. The rugby 6 Nations don't pay anything to the rest of European rugby and I think little or no money from the two main club competitions in European rugby goes downstream either. Football would hardly think any differently.
I think something must be done to bring peripheral teams and countries closer to the core. My own preference would probably be for the Europa League to be regionalised with regional winners going into a pan-Euroopean last 16 or last 8. NW Europe, Southern Europe, Central Europe, Eastern Europe. Exact format TBC but you get the gist...
'There are a lot of people saying I went for money. It's got nothing to do with it' http://the42.ie/4147902
Interview with Rooney where he highlights his motives for going to Salford. He mentions he grew up a Manchester United fan and wants to be part of what Salford are doing. I do, however, assume that money was a factor.
In a lot of these retrospective career interviews with Irish players there's a common trend of being signed by one manager before the manager moves on and the player is out of favour. In this piece, it seems to me that Rooney has plenty excuses for his time in England not working out.
Off the mark for Salford: https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/45153363 - Aberdeen manager Derek McInnes said he gave Aberdeen "brilliant value" with 88 goals in four and a half years: https://www.bbc.com/sport/scotland/44897694
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