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Thread: Trouble in the FAI

  1. #61
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    Quote Originally Posted by harps1954
    There is more to Irish football than Roy Keane and the senior International team. Just coz Roy got his training gear and a business class seat doesn't necessarily mean that Irish Football has improved.
    True, but the profile of eL has improved with more matches being televised.

  2. #62
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    Tom Humphries Locker Room

    Genesis? How about a general exodus?
    Tom Humphries
    25/10/2004


    LockerRoom: Occasionally in The Sopranos some poor sad-sack filled with decency and enthusiasm will join one of the poker games with the boys. He's attracted by the rivers of bourbon and the chips forming lovely alps on the table. The guy loves poker, loves good company and, well hey, these are legitimate businessmen aren't they? A few weeks later, naturally enough, the poor milquetoast will be desiccated and submerged. Debt. Fear.


    Debt. Not enough coming in and more going out than he can afford. He'll be weeping every time he thinks of what will happen if he doesn't come good.

    And people telling him that they told him so.

    I imagine it's a little bit like that becoming a paid employee of the Football Association of Ireland. Of course (we're dealing with enthusiastic litigants here, folks), there's no suggestion of organised crime or indeed of organised anything within the FAI. Nobody gets fitted for concrete boots and nobody wins a free trip to go sleep with the fishes.

    Yet in terms of a man's reputation the first morning in an FAI job involves getting sized up for a concrete blazer for that inevitable day you must walk the plank. By the first afternoon you realise the fishes won't sleep with you anyway. And people telling you they told you so.

    When it comes to disorganisation and chaos, well, with the FAI you're dealing with made guys from the start. The outside world? Fuggedaboudit. Normal business practices? Fuggedaboudit. Knowing who your friends are? Fuggedaboudit.

    The thing is they all seem like such decent, stand-up guys. You'd like to play poker with them. You'd like to work with them. You see them padding about in the hotel in Chiba wearing just shorts and big grins and making with the firm handshakes and happy howyas and you think yes, yes, yes, that would be the life for you. Ba-da-boom! Ba-da-bing!

    You forget the detail really. You forget these were the people who hired Jack Charlton by accident having voted for Bob Paisley. These are the guys who presided over the only international game which any one can remember having had to be cancelled because of a riot. They are the geniuses who put the Combat 18 hooligans upstairs so they could get nice trajectory on their missiles. Then in a spirit of Christian forgiveness they put the chief security officer that night in charge of the whole organisation. Arise, Sir Bernard O'Byrne.

    These are the guys who came up with Eircom Park and still when they are discussing the Lansdowne development will give you the faraway look and say they made a mistake scrapping their own Shangri-La, that they deserve a palace of their own. And you say but Eircom Park was going to cost twice the original estimate and the only place of their own the FAI would have would be in a special edition of Stubbs Gazette. They give you that other look - the You don't understand me anymore look.

    These are the boys who handed over $474,125 worth of World Cup tickets to a chap named (reassuringly) George The Greek. They weren't complete fools of course; for security they got a third-party cheque worth $30,000 made out to somebody they didn't know.

    These are the fellas who in relation to the same matter announced there had been no shortfall in takings from the 1994 World Cup, "not now, not ever", just 48 hours before Joe Delaney announced he had felt "honour bound" to pay £110,000 of his own money to make up the shortfall.

    Maybe they were confused. Not long afterwards, their own chief accountant Michael Morris alleged he had been pressurised into making omissions from the lists of ticket debtors which the FAI had accrued.

    Somebody is always confused. These are the people who flew their World Cup team 23 hours to Saipan, where there was no pitch, no footballs and no isotonic drinks. They are the people who announced after Mick McCarthy's appointment that he hadn't been top of their list but who, just like that, agreed a handsome bonus with him after a match in Japan. For a long time they were the guys in the first-class seats with their players shoe-horned in behind them. They have been hosts to the top 10 most chaotic press conferences you've ever been at.

    These are just the landmark controversies, debacles and mishaps. We can't get into the day-to-day, run-of-the-mill foul-ups, all the days when they've all run to the front door in Merrion Square singing a chorus of "It's raining writs, halleluiah".

    And yet they are all so likeable. If you were writing a sympathetic (or ironic) book about them you'd call it When Bad Things Happen To Good People. Not that you'd write a book. The eminently likeable Brendan Menton wrote a book. He filled it with such bile and bitterness it practically oozed green stuff. Instead of calling it the Merrion Square House of Horrors though, he titled it Behind The Green Door. It sounded like a sequel of To School Through The Fields or a Shakin' Stevens hack biography. Either way it was widely and wisely ignored by a weary public.

    Anyway, why pay for badly-written reminiscence? For anyone interested in reading more, the FAI are more written about than The Beatles. They are a consulting phenomenon. They have been the subject of more reports about reform than Dublin hurling has.

    There was the Bastow Charlton report, which pointed to "a complete review of the rules of the FAI, its council and committee structures and a review of its staff structure". That was eight years ago and it led to the Cass report, which found basic management principles and discipline to be non-existent with the FAI.

    Which brought us up to the Genesis Report, over which there is much blood currently spilling on the floor, even now, nearly two and a half years after Saipan.

    Ah, they are chaotic but they are magnificent. They are incorrigible. They are unreformable. They are themselves and a law unto same.

    I love meeting them, love when they go sotto voce and tap your forearm with a crooked finger and direct your attention to a blazer across the room. "Off the record, between you and me, your man over there talking to your wan, he doesn't know it yet and don't tell anyone but he's for the high jump, he's about to be shafted, heh, heh, heh."

    You look at the guy who's going to get whacked and you realise this is the way of things. It's a jungle out there. He knew the first time he sat down at the table. Didn't he.

    I've thought for a while the only way of saving the FAI is to make it a subsidiary of the GAA or the IRFU; just let some people who know how to run sport administer soccer for a while till there is nobody left alive who remembers the charming era of the Blazer Empire.

    I have received suggestions though that perhaps soccer should be handed to a smaller sports organisation like swimming or athletics because people in those businesses have more specific expertise. They know more about back-stabbing than a veteran murder detective in Limerick does.

    One thing is for sure. As a nation we can't take any more "FAI in crisis" headlines. No more Prime Time specials. No more reports, recommendations or promises. No more resignations. No more press conferences. No more nights of the long knives. No more Merriongates.

    The people who pay the money through taxes and tickets and replica jerseys deserve more. The players who play the game and love the game deserve more. The spirit of the game itself deserves more. Any player who slips on a green Irish jersey deserves more.

    The FAI will never reform itself. Time to tear it down and build from the ground once more. No more decent skins. No more goodfellas. No more blazers.




    © The Irish Times

  3. #63
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    Quote Originally Posted by Robinski
    I'd hate to see Rooney go, I think he's doing a great job......
    The only thing Delaney is good at is backstabbing. If he gets Fran's job, we are all in serious trouble.
    More importantly, in the short time he has been there Rooney has done more for fans, especially increasing the number of tickets available for fans (under the EL scheme) than anyone at FAI has done previously.

    Delaney is an arrogant, slimey bo*l*cks who does not give a f*ck about anyone only himself (and his old man's tarnished reputation) and doesnt care who he shafts to get his own way.

    As for his Waterford mate, Milo Corcoran, surely it is time for him to skulk off back to Heiniken.

    Why do the FAI diehards want Peter Buckley appointed as Finance Director? He hasn't done such a great job managing the Association's finances over the years. If he had the likes of Joe Delaney and Sean Connolly would never have been allowed to access to funds to misappopriate in the first place. I suspect they are afraid a new face would uncover more cans of worms.

    Despite this, I don't think Rooney will go without a fight, I think he is keeping his powder dry and intends to reveal all to the full FAI council. If the FAI Board do get rid of him later this week, I think you will see an injunction preventing them from doing so on the basis that Rooney has not been given the opportunity to respond to the 'charges' against him.

    No matter what the outcome, the whole affair is a scandal.

  4. #64
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    Good article by Tom Humphries there, I agree with a lot of what he says. The FAI is so corrupt and Soprano like that its unlikey ever to reform.

    Rooney was a honest guy and sucessful at his job before he went to Merrion square. He didn't start making bad managerial decisions overnight nor was his own personal style something that stopped him from being very successful up until he went to the FAI.

    I think it is partly to do with Rooney not appoininting Peter Buckley as Finance. Scummy FAI

  5. #65
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    I remain unconvinced by Rooney & wasn't exactly delighted with his appointment initially. He is all image & sometimes no substance behind it - just look at the amateur manner the new image/web site was launched...

    Rooney is on a big salary + bonus so all he cares about is keeping his job & looks like he looking at govt to help him hang onto it...

    God knows what the FAI cronies want.


  6. #66
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    Quote Originally Posted by pete
    I remain unconvinced by Rooney & wasn't exactly delighted with his appointment initially. He is all image & sometimes no substance behind it - just look at the amateur manner the new image/web site was launched...

    Rooney is on a big salary + bonus so all he cares about is keeping his job & looks like he looking at govt to help him hang onto it...

    God knows what the FAI cronies want.

    I disagree. He's the only one in there that doesn't need the money or the job security.

  7. #67
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    Quote Originally Posted by pete
    just look at the amateur manner the new image/web site was launched...
    The launch of the new brand was not amatuerish in any manner whatsoever. There were problems and there continue to be problems with the website and while they are solvable they are not Rooneys doing. I think I should know

  8. #68
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    Quote Originally Posted by soccerc
    The launch of the new brand was not amatuerish in any manner whatsoever. There were problems and there continue to be problems with the website and while they are solvable they are not Rooneys doing. I think I should know
    In fairness you can hardly blame Rooney for the FAI webmasters problems.

  9. #69
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    Quote Originally Posted by Robinski
    In fairness you can hardly blame Rooney for the FAI webmasters problems.
    I shouldn't blame the webmaster either, just in case he reads this and PMs me.

    My point is that Fran's got bigger fish to fry, especially at the moment.

  10. #70
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    I dunno if anyone could be entitled to say Rooney is 'doing a great job' with any great confidence but it's important he remains for the simple fact of what he's NOT - i.e. a Nosferatu Blaxer type with only me fein in mind.

    The turkeys are never gonna vote for Christmas so it'll take govt pressure to ensure that change happens and the natural turnover of personnel happens after the full implementation of Genesis.

  11. #71
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    Quote Originally Posted by soccerc
    The launch of the new brand was not amatuerish in any manner whatsoever. There were problems and there continue to be problems with the website and while they are solvable they are not Rooneys doing. I think I should know
    What about all the non-umbro merchandise commissioned with the new logo which was put together at a cost of €150K ish and which is lyingin a warehouse someplace and will never see the light of day unless umbro get compensated?

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