But isn't the whole point about a pyramid that there shouldn't be too much of a gap between the different tiers, so that it isn't too much of a shock for teams moving up or down between them?
Presently your top tier is mostly f-t professional, while your second tier is basically p-t professional.
But if your third tier is little more than geerously-expensed amateur, the problem will come when the winners get promoted to the second tier and second tier clubs get relegated to the third.
How much money will this third tier generate, over and above what is needed for mowing pitches and hiring the team bus for away games? Sponsors aren't likely to flock to a brand new club in a small provincial town, nor paying spectators either, especially if the club is near the bottom of the league, losing more than they win. Nor are you likely to have many club stalwarts who will volunteer their time selling raffle tickets and organising social functions etc to raise money etc.
Where are you going to find 10 new stadia of a decent standard, with stands, turnstiles, floodlights, media facilities etc? Training facilities to senior standard? Sure you might have 2 or 3 Tralee Dynamos or Monaghan Utds who could step up, or the odd Cabinteely who might transform from youth to adult. But 8, 10, 12 such clubs?
While without the basic infrastructure of finance and facilities etc, the better and more ambitious players and coaches will likely be tempted away very quickly to bigger clubs who have the money and resources to allow them to progress their careers in senior football, especially if their existing club doesn't have the pull of being their long-established, home town club where their dad, uncles and mates etc all played down the years.
By contrast, if you look at eg the IL third tier, the youngest club is already 40 years old, while the oldest date from 1880, with all bar PSNI established in its own city/town/village, rather than a (vague) region:
https://www.nifootballleague.com/pre...022/standings/
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