I was reading it and kept having to remind myself it wasn't an article from Waterford Whispers News. Cringe Factor 10!
Oh god, that's dire:
"Our teams" indeed.Originally Posted by Barry McStool
I thought perhaps it was an article borrowed from an English news service, as is sometimes, the case, then got to the last paragraph:
A couple of short sentences would pretty much win you a game of Barstool Bingo. Just a reference to crappy facilities and you'd have a full house.Originally Posted by pure ****e
I was reading it and kept having to remind myself it wasn't an article from Waterford Whispers News. Cringe Factor 10!
A natural expression of our humanity.... Mother of jaysus.....
So disrespectful and ignorant toward football in this country. Come to expect little else from the majority of journos here though.
https://kesslereffect.bandcamp.com/album/kepler - New music. It's not that bad.
I would think that Lynch's piece was dripping with irony until the sub editor got his hands on it
Lynch is a long time Athlone fan, would have seen him at lots of other LOI ga mes too
https://thetirconaillview.wordpress....et-revolution/
A loosely related article to this thread. Why are more people not watching a team top of the league while 15,000 travel to Croke Park and more travel regularly to England and Scotland?
Thought it was a well written article and deserved a few more readers.
https://kesslereffect.bandcamp.com/album/kepler - New music. It's not that bad.
I like high energy football. A little bit rock and roll. Many finishes instead of waiting for the perfect one.
In all fairness, most Scandinavian and Dutch lads have an English team they support pretty rigorously.
Even a surprising amount of people in the more traditional footballing nations support a foreign team (along with their domestic team). I've seen Italians in Rome wearing West Ham kits, presumably due to the Paolo Di Canio link - that's as tenuous as it gets.
I mean there are bigger things to laugh about than young Johnny supporting Crewe Alexandra. Half the people in the country under the age of 30 - and virtually the entire non-inner city Dublin female population - speak in an American accent. I think that's pretty embarrassing.
It's hard to sustain any kind of fanbase when the G.A.A. has an iron grip on things, the stadiums are worse than English Conference and Scottish League Two stadiums and emigration is culturally ingrained - particularly in the most attractive market segments.
Last edited by TheOneWhoKnocks; 06/08/2015 at 8:32 PM.
http://www.theguardian.com/football/...es-high-800000
The number of overseas fans visiting England to watch Premier League matches rose to 800,000 last year, contributing a collective £684m to the economy, according to new research.Though most of the visitors were from the Republic of Ireland (121,000), the league also drew 93,000 from Norway, 58,000 from Sweden and 53,000 from the US.
Manchester United were the most popular destinations, with Old Trafford and the Emirates both receiving 109,000 international visits last year. Liverpool rank not far behind on 99,000, with 89,000 visiting Chelsea, 51,000 Wembley, 40,000 Tottenham, 33,000 Manchester City, and 30,000 Fulham’s Craven Cottage.
The research, undertaken on behalf of VisitBritain by the Office for National Statistics, also indicated that football-related tourism is responsible for one in 10 visits to the north-west, and one in 20 trips to the north-east.
The overall £684m economic gain represents a 15% rise – or an increase of £89m – compared to when the research was last conducted in 2010, when 50,000 fewer overseas fans visited.
While Richard Scudamore, the Premier League’s chief executive, welcomed the numbers as “very encouraging”, some fans groups remain concern that increasing demand will serve to drive up ticket prices still further. Last season fans stagedorganised
protests against prices in the Premier League, while a Guardian survey this month found adult prices in the Championship will regularly surpass £35 – with Sheffield Wednesdaycharging £52 for certain games.
Sean Bones, the Manchester United Supporters Trust vice-chairman, told the BBC: “It’s good for the country when additional funds come into the economy but we need clubs to reward the long-term loyalty of our supporters.”
Tracey Crouch, the tourism minister, welcomed the figures as proof of “the positive role football is playing in showcasing key destinations in many different regions … It’s great for local economies, great for football and great for the UK’s tourism industry.”
We're winning...
Here on a technicality.
That's over 1/3 of the entire League of Ireland attendance for the 2014 season across 20 clubs.
https://kesslereffect.bandcamp.com/album/kepler - New music. It's not that bad.
Reading comments on this made me feel really depressed this morning. "10% of them in LOI grounds" "10% of the revenue for LOI clubs..." Can anybody imagine the absolute carnage and apocalypse were 12,000-odd extra heads were spread across our games? And worse, a couple of million extra slosh around LOI clubs? Chaos. Our clubs are not built (with very, very few exceptions) to handle money, they're not even able to negotiate as a collective, nor handle TV coverage. It's terrible that this came out the same moment as the Rovers plea to RTE.
http://www.championat.com/bets/artic...r-week-16.html
Giving the Russians a weekly taste of our glorious LOI!
I have officially seen it all now.
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