54 Crew-Finn Harps FC Supporters Club
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Okay guys...give one another a quick text there and you can iron out your difficulties regarding insurance companies
Does anyone know where I can get information re: applying for a club license?
I'd also be interested in hearing how that voucher system works from any Rovers or Limerick fans. That sounds like an excellent way of doing it.
Extensive research reveals the following alcohol restrictions in Irish grounds:
Ferrycarraig – fans may only drink Chianti Riserva purchased from Mick Wallace. If ordered through the Dáil bar, no excise is liable.
Gortakeegan – fans may take as much water as they like into the stands. Rod will turn it into wine. After he's finished walking on it.
Tallaght Stadium – any potent cocktail with an umbrella for decoration.
Richmond Park – only as much liquid as can be carried in an open hand. There hasn’t been a cup seen there in years.
Terryland – home fans of both clubs share a single pint. Always plenty to go round.
Dalymount – drink up! The barmen are looking for their win bonuses...
Other grounds – occasionally large quantities of bitter (depending on recent form, refereeing decisions, John-Delaney-hates-us navel-gazing psychosis etc).
Any club managed by Damien Richardson – the question of whether to partake in the act of imbibing a beverage of an alcoholic nature or otherwise is fundamental the personal ethic of the imbiber, and the milieu in which he finds himself at a specific juncture in his existence...
Any club for which Dave Rogers ‘moonlights’ – bottoms up!
Hello, hello? What's going on? What's all this shouting, we'll have no trouble here!
- E Tattsyrup.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2011_UE...a_League_Final
The 2011 UEFA Europa League Final was a football match played on 18 May 2011 at the Aviva Stadium in Dublin, Republic of Ireland.Aviva Stadium, renamed to "Dublin Arena" for the 2011 UEFA Europa League final
Sporting F*ck All!
It's a long standing debate within many clubs really regarding the opening of bars. On the plus side you obviously have great financial returns but on the downside it's very expensive initially to apply for a license and then you have the potential for one or two acting the maggot at games as they say.....
BetweenTheStripes.net - Home of Between the Stripes LOI podcast.
So it'll be called by the name you currently use to refer to it in perpetuity?
And say if you looked at a diffent wiki page the parent company - Lansdowne Road Stadium Development Comapany - won't be looking for new corporate sponsors in 5 or 6 years?
I won't say there is any law in Ireland saying you can't drink at football stadiums, it would be just ground rules like no flares or pyrotechnics.
Conditions are harder now to get an actual licence, and depends on the local regime to a certain extent. Apparently why we can't get one is to do with access to the toilets, when it would be no different to the likes of Tolka. I've no doubt it'd be a money spinner at most clubs, and also opens up other income streams such as functions.
The thing about "not within site of the pitch" is the UK law for football only. Doesn't apply to rugby, and never did. Before redevelopment Lansdowne wouldn't let you in with drink even for the Rugby (at the games I was at at least). Now they do - but I guess it's all seater now which could be part of it. Easy enough around it anyway, even in the UK. "I'll have a coke, and a double whiskey, please"
L.T.F.C. get over yourself. It was always Lansdowne, always will be. No matter who sponsors it. Fans aren't bound by the same bs rules as the media. Do you always insist on Flancare Park rather than the Flansiro?
If you attack me with stupidity, I'll be forced to defend myself with sarcasm.
The bar in United Park has been closed the last 2 seasons, mores the pity. Supposedly the rates or licence fees or whatever are too expensive for the actual take at the tills.
Dundalk 1 - "the worst team to ever play in the premier" 2 :D
You can drink in the stands in the USA and Italy, where people go around with drink in a tray for ya, although it is a little expensive and with little choice of drink.
I think i seen somewhere but there is some Irish law against Football Association clubs selling alcohol within view of the pitch although this law does not apply to GAA, Rugby, Cricket, Basketball etc. Cos no GAA fans would be drunk and disorderly at a Leinster final in Football and attack a ref. Only Football Association fans are hooligans.
west cork district league
west cork commandos
Not sure there is a law as such in Ireland. I think certain grounds (Aviva/Lansdowne, Croker) choose not to sell alcohol when hosting football matches (they are all mad you know). I think the pitchside ban is a club rule to (a) stop people taking out glasses (and leaving them out) and (B) prevent some numpties from throwing bottles/glasses on to the pitch - or at people. There may also be some advice/orders on the matter from our old friends the Gardai.
Surely it wouldn't be that difficult to get a couple of those rocket lads to go around selling plastic bottles of Carlsberg. There has to be some sort of legal reason stopping them, probably a prohibitively expensive license and/or need to grease palms.
CD I know they operate (rocket lads type operation) at music (and other) gigs in the O2. I think they are covered by the licence operating on the premises so need no additional licence. I suspect the boys in blue (not the Dubs ) may take a hard line on the matter (especially in Dublin grounds) under public order provisions. Seem to recall bars were always shut in Croker for footie games and think most still are in Aviva/Lansdowne (as appropriate) except at corporate levels. This most definately not the case for rugger/bogball games.
It'll be Flancare Park as long as Flancare continue to sponsor it. Flansiro is a nickname of Flancare park, which I thought was fairly self-explanatory. Regardless, if it wasn't for their sponsorship we wouldn't be as well off as we are. But if someone comes along and sponsors the ground in the next few years, I'll call it whatever.
In the US, they stop selling for the last quarter of NFL, the last twenty mins of a football match, and after the seventh inning of a baseball game.
Sporting F*ck All!
Not sure that bar licences (issued by the courts) would differeniate between football matches and those of rugger/bogball ? While there can be specific conditions attached to individual licence(s) I doubt a prohibition on footie games would be one.
More likely "advice" from Gardai and/or club decision not to serve/allow drink near playing area. May have emanated from EUFA ruling for european ties which precludes (I think) serving of drink during the game, possibly extended to domestic games.
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