I wouldn't be totally in favour of somewhere like Monfort coming in to research this as we have plenty of quality expertise in Ireland, in fact we have far better expertise than in the UK. It doesn't matter what is done, whether by a private company or University or Barack Obama, Irish football is extremely dysfunctional and the FAI have neither the will nor the bottle to take on constructive changes. As everyone who has posted here, and on other threads, has agreed, changing the league structure means nothing if it's just moving clubs from one division to the next or into one big dollop of a division. The only thing that matters is having a viable, sustainable and productive league system - which feeds up into the national team and generates opportunities for those not fortunate enough to get full-time contracts abroad (this is a hot topic admittedly).
The first step the FAI needs to do, in my opinion, is extremely radical, may well be contended by me feiners under EU law, but one which will generate income to support football in the country and not destroy young footballers as it does now. Each footballer, no matter where they're from in the country, is contracted to the FAI. If the FAI own the contracts of each player in the country (Irish) then they can ensure proper treatment, the self-generating publicity seekers in the PFAI are redundant, and clubs cannot overspend as all contracts are centralised.
How is this good?
1. It helps simplify licencing - the FAI knows how much each player gets, the clubs know it too, so there's no discussion (feeling sad already for Sligo and Rovers fans if this is the case), it also allows for a proper salary cap.
2. It prevents schoolboy clubs (I almost said "prostituting" but that's too harsh) youngsters out to English clubs and grabbing what they can. Any player who leaves, the fee comes back to the FAI who can then divvy it out, as well as keep a chunk for general development.
3. It builds a development system in and of itself - which flows over into the game.
The FAI is our governing body, it is a mish-mash of "stakeholders" who have their own vested interests, not football, and not the healthy development of it's participants. They have a real chance to do something now, make a real difference and deliver.
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