Surely the point is that if a town like Galway isn't capable of supporting two, never mind three, Senior clubs, then it should not be permitted to? That is, the weakest one or two should be replaced.
The real problem lying not with Galway itself, as in the fact that the FAI doesn't have any suitable replacements lined up, essentially because they lack any mechanism to produce more Senior-level clubs. Which for a wealthy country with a 5 million population which has long been very interested in football etc should ordinarily be puzzling.
Except that to this outsider, it's not puzzling at all. That is, the FAI/LOI seem somehow incapable of adopting, or unwilling to adopt, the method that just about every other comparable country does when seeking to expand its domestic club game i.e. a pyramid system.
In fact I'd guess it's worse again in that it's probably both. That is, if you're the FAI it's much too difficult and long term, also a distraction from their "real" business (international football), while if you're an existing Senior club you probably don't want the added competition.
Meaning that if ambitious Junior/Intermediate clubs aren't getting any lead or encouragement from the FAI and LOI etc, then they will look to grow in other ways. Which brings us back eg to Mullingar Athletic, who look to have settled on the Community route for growth, rather than the Senior route.
Which when you think about it, is worse again, since there is no good reason why a competitive Senior club cannot also have a thriving Community presence, as at least some existing Senior clubs presumably already have.
Now what was someone saying about an AIL?
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