The single biggest improvement the FAI could make to the LOI - and the one that would have the greatest impact - would be to substantially increase the prize money pot for all participants.
The wide-ranging benefits of that move would include :
- Make the league more inherently viable at a basic financial level.
- Make success less dependent upon qualifying for Europe and the vast, unbalancing riches that entails.
- Improve the quality of the league, by enabling better players to be signed/retained.
- Improve performances in Europe.
- Keep good players here for longer, thereby aiding in their development.
- Enable clubs to improve their facilities - including youth development.
- Make the league more attractive to sponsors and broadcasters.
- Arguably improve the international team.
- Encourage more intermediate clubs to be interested in league membership, by reducing the financial suicide aspect of it.
One change that the FAI could easily afford, which would have the potential to make significant improvements in domestic football in Ireland.
Anyone for central contracts? Scrap the 1st division has to be the starting point(i.e. a one division league). Also geographical factors have to be a guiding principle of any structure that league comes up with. Need Derry/Harps, Galway/Limerick, Cork/Waterford, Dundalk/Drogheda playing each other in meaningful games every year. Try an incorporate the GAA county structure in the feeder leagues already mentioned above.
A bit of realism in relation to tv deals would help, I am sure if a broadcast company is willing to pay a couple million for rights to the LoI, the FAI is not going to refuse it.
In relation to the FAI buying all the clubs a 50 seater bus, Brian Clough at the start of his managerial career used to drive the Hartlepool coach to away games. In reality he only did it a few times in order to get publicity, but no reason why our guys could not do their psv licence along with their coaching badges.
Reading that again I am beaten down
On its own, it'll do little.
It would only work with other factors - no First Division, decent Premier Div prize money for all positions, no league fees, TV games, a team on a bit of a local high after winning promotion (rather than being invited in), even the idea of entering a Europa League play-off for finishing as low as 12th, as in the PCA document.
So imagine Tralee getting promoted by winning the MSL - there's a bit of local interest built up, they're live on telly away to Cork in their first match, maybe home to Dundalk early on as well, the club know they're guaranteed 100k prize money minimum, and if they finish 12th, they enter a Europa League play-off. They wouldn't win it of course - but imagine Tralee in Europe! That's all with the idea of helping create local interest to (a) encourage new clubs to want to step up and (b) create local interest when they do.
This is vital because if nothing else, we're running out of clubs at the moment. But you also want to strengthen the bottom of the league to help the better clubs; Athlone and Wexford bring nothing to the league on the pitch at present, with all due respect to them. Matches against them are almost a waste of time. Strengthening the bottom of the league is more important than strengthening the top of the league (Dundalk and Cork can look after themselves fine), and a stronger league would benefit everyone anyway.
Obviously there's big political blockers, which is why I'd favour LSL/MSL/CSL/USL as the First Division over Nigel's idea of a new First Division North/South - you'd keep the LSL/etc identity as intact as possible.
But we're about the only league in Europe with no pyramid. Scotland and Holland are among those to have changed in recent years. England changed in the 80s to huge success in the lower leagues. You have to give new clubs and people an opportunity to join, and you have to have relegation to the fifth level (or whatever) as a stick.
Don’t they have to have two divisions to qualify for UEFA grants?
I believe so. All the more reason to get new blood in. But the second flight can be regionalised, as in Wales.
Genuinely think it would take a few consecutive catastrophic campaigns from the senior mens national side - and I'm talking, like, 4th/5th place "Kosovo might fancy it" catastrophic - for the FAI to look at the issues with the league seriously, since that's where so much of their focus is. As long as Ireland remain reasonably competitive, and Irish clubs continue to do moderately well relative to their size in Europe, and there's a few senior internationals in the EPL, then the Bray/Limerick situation is just something to be handled, not reacted to. I agree with a lot of what has been said above, especially regards regionalised pyramids and getting the junior scene on-side and prize money, but it's just so hard to see it happening right now. We need a real once-in-a-lifetime revolutionary impetus to get LOI the help it needs. Perhaps some kind of fan-driven campaign/association to lobby political powers that be on a continuous basis would be beneficial.
Author of Never Felt Better (History, Film Reviews).
Heighten the profile of the League - ROI senior squad to attend an LOI match each weekend they are getting together. Advertised and promoted, An hour Q&A, signing stuff would bring crowds (that might not usually attend) to a game. whether we like it or not the senior team is the most successful football brand available and most players would have no problem giving an hour o the Friday/Saturday they are here. FFS the open training session they (senior squad) do at lansdowne gets bigger crowds than many LOI games. Also very attractive to younger fans and as would act as a good introduction to their local LOI club.
Get decent T.V. coverage and a proper structured package. there may not be much money available from RTE (and little interest from elsewhere) but focus must be on 'selling' the league. A match day advert made by Boh's (and another I recall by Shams) was better promotional material than anything RTE have done in years.
Registration fees to prize money ratio in LOI is a joke, this must change to attract any potential new clubs.
Overall, an actual plan - other than it will be 'alright on the night' would help, a plan that involves, and has potential benefits for all clubs not just 2/3 that qualify for Europe.
.......otherwise its three Hail Mary's and an Our father that we get through a full season (sure, its 'worked' to date)
I'd argue the opposite tbh.
If the national team hit a wall, far from cajoling the FAI to divert their gaze to the league instead all it would do would be to :
a) See them focus and obsess even more on the senior men's international team, as that is where the organisation's psychological and financial interests lie.
b) Result in less money within the FAI, which would reduce the opportunity of decent prize money in the LOI even further.
I would argue that a financially flush FAI represents the best chance of proper investment in the league, and that the only way to get that is through international success - not failure.
They were punished for joining the A league. That's one of the problems with football in Ireland.
Lots of local leagues with no joined up thinking & no cooperation between them.
Its all me me me.
You & me both
Excellent points there stu.
Only one I would differ on is doing away with the 1st Div.
All that would do is make the difference in standard between the Premier div & the next level far greater than it is at present.
At the moment the difference in standard between the Premier Div & the various Senior Leagues is huge.
That is a problem similar to what we have at present with players from the Under 19 League unable to make the step up.
Have a Premier Div.
Two 1st Div's, North & South.
!st Div North fed by Connacht & Ulster Senior Leagues.
1st Div South fed by Leinster & Munster Seniors Leagues.
The local Senior Leagues fed by the various local Junior Divisions.
Yes there will be problems with the above but they can be overcome with some joined up thinking.
The main thing is that all the various leagues around the country must talk to each other for the overall benefit of Irish football.
Of course that's never going to happen, at least in my lifetime so the above ideas will remain just that, ideas
You're then in a Catch 22 I think. A financially flush FAI - with a decent national team, by definition - can dismiss the LoI. A broke FAI with a poor national team needs the LoI to deliver players, but as you say, can't afford to invest. We're very much going towards the second outcome, as some of the charts in the PCA report show.
Last edited by pineapple stu; 18/07/2018 at 12:42 PM.
Yeah, that's entirely fair. I don't think either solution is ideal - you'll struggle to find teams for your FD North/South because they'll all identify as LSL/MSL teams. It's tricky either way.
I'm happy to accept Dundalk 6-0 Tralee/Cobh/whoever on the grounds that bringing in new clubs is a medium-term project which would benefit football across the country. Teams pushing each other to improve, more clubs developing players for the national team, etc.
Sadly, I also agree with your pessimism around it ever happening...
There must be something in a strategy of embarassing the national psyche with how sh!t our football teams and facilities are compared to other nations that we would consider ourselves to be 'better' than.
With the financial crash fading into memory and the Irish economy booming again, we're back to attracting lots of economic migrants and a general belief that we're a pretty successful little place again. Our club football is one of the few consistent non-economic comparitors we have on the international stage (that and Eurovision, which no-one wants to win any more anyway). So the question is - how do we use the state of it to embarass the country into thinking we really should be doing a lot better than we are (and thereby creating pressure on politicians and particularly the FAI, as guardians of something that people will think we're failing on) ? Delaney won't want to be the head of something that is seen as a source of embarrassment for a prospering Ireland.
I think we're headed for another crash again soon tbh, but that's a matter for another thread!
Though in that case, the crisis is that we lose 2 or 3 clubs entirely and suddenly don't have a national league with a second flight, as UEFA I think require.
Last edited by pineapple stu; 18/07/2018 at 12:43 PM.
The problem with a pyramid structure in Ireland is that we are not populated enough nor have we enough heavily populated areas to have a pyramid structure. Suppose Rugby had a pyramid system, do you think Cork Con or Blackrock or Marys or CY would ever reach the levels of best in Europe/The world arguably? Not a hope.
What support would they have? Would people from outside of Blackrock identify with a Blackrock team? Absolutely not. So what Rugby did on the conversion to professional from amateur was to go to broader areas such as provinces. That way you could have big teams in existence that could compete at the top.
I know Munster and Leinster already played matches but it was them that went professional, not Cork Con or Marys. I'm not saying we need to go to a provincial system or a system where we merge clubs to create "Dublin FC" or "Louth FC" or anything like it. That would never work.
So fair enough, Athlone don't really add much to the league at present. So the winners of the LSL Premier division gets promoted. So that's St Mochta's based on a quick google search. What would Mochta's bring to the league? They're another Dublin team and they'd be competing with establish LOI clubs with players and new supporters.
So suppose the next year Wexford get relegated and the top team gets promoted. (So let's assume the team that finished second last year then wins it the following year) and now you have Bluebell too. Another South Dublin team. So the Dublin teams within two years would be Bohs, Rovers, Shels, UCD, Cabo, Pats, Mochtas and Bluebell. That's hardly sustainable and it is what will happen with a pyramid system. The heights Dublin teams reach will be limited and ultimately, all jokes aside, that's a bad thing for the league.
So suppose a munster team get relegated, Cobh, and the team that wins it Tralee Dynamos. Great, a Kerry team. But now we go back to the first paragraph. We've essentially a Blackrock or a Cork Con and Tralee won't offer a whole bunch more than Cobh. But suppose we made a Kerry team, which is what is the case in the underage leagues as well as a Mayo team and a Cavan-Monaghan team, then all of a sudden you might have a whole county behind you. Let's say Westport get promoted for Galway for some bizarre reason. Will Westport add anything to the league?
Let's say Westport get 1% of population of Westport at their games. That's 60 people. Suppose Mayo FC can get 1% of the county to go that's 1,300.
Similar let's look at Killarney. Killarney has a population of 14,000, Kerry has a population of 140,000. So I think going for the wider team name opens up potential for much more support.
If Bohs we called Phibsboro or Pat's called Inchicore they'd both be in the LSL. At least here we can try get a few thousand through the gates.
The way forward is to create county-wide teams starting at underage level (13s maybe) then give it a year and you have a 15s team and do that all the way up until you have a senior team with a presence in the community, where the kids in the county grow up wanting to be good enough to make the their LOI team (which has the county's name for new clubs)
Carlow/Kilkenny, Kerry, Mayo and Monaghan/Cavan are currently the teams in the LOI underage leagues without a senior team and you'd think Carlow and Kilkenny could possibly be explored by themselves and not with each other so that would be five county wide teams which would be fantastic to see added to the league. Given time, a Clare, Tipp and maybe Kildare team should be given a good go at underage levels too
Last edited by David BOHie; 18/07/2018 at 12:56 PM.
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