Rovers beat wexford and Treaty 3 nil each today.
Good to see Aydemo and Conan Nugent both on the scoresheet again this weekend.
I think we will see a lot more of them this season.
Defo yeah. Pats win percentage in pre-season friendlies over the last 10 years is probably around 90-95%. During that time they’ve won everything there is to win but also had many years of being mediocre or very bad. The pre-seasons results have no correlation to those seasons
Paaatrick's Agletic
Rovers beat wexford and Treaty 3 nil each today.
Good to see Aydemo and Conan Nugent both on the scoresheet again this weekend.
I think we will see a lot more of them this season.
#DundalkFC - First Irish club to win an away game in Europe (1963), first Irish club to win points in a group stage in Europe (2016).
Its a bit silly not to be happy sharing and newly renovated municipal ground in a fairly small city. Is their reasoning old differences and if so they should wise up, flegs, or do they think they can do a better job than the Brandywell, its is a bit too big for Institute's needs.
Way too big - even in Irish Premiership they only opened the older stand for 3 or 4 teams and even then rarely more than a block of it. They have the cash to build a ground (insurance payout) - and have eyes on a site - but sure all these things take time. Their old ground was perfect size and could generate decent atmosphere.
And look to grow the fanbase.
Maybe Derry don't fancy sharing the bed
It must be unique in world football. That two teams share a ground and play in different league systems . I’d be surprised if it happens elsewhere.
To be fair to them, Institute aren't from Derry City. They're from Drumahoe, effectively a little village outside the city. The brandywell is out the opposite side of the city, about 5 miles away.
All their support comes from that end of the city, and they're not going to build a support base in the Brandywell.
They had a brilliant little stadium in the Riverside, and if they can salvage any of it towards a new ground they'll be fine. The stadium they had would have been better than several LOI grounds as they currently sit.
https://kesslereffect.bandcamp.com/album/kepler - New music. It's not that bad.
It’s always best to stay close to your support base rather than travel for better facilities. I always found the Longford situation a strange one for example . It’s a fine ground but it’s in the middle of nowhere. The location I’d say has an affect on causal fans , the have a few pints and go to a match on a Friday night types.
Institute are basically Derry's protestant team. They're not going to build a fanbase or grow community roots at Brandywell. It's a catholic area, and Derry City will always have more appeal there. Plus they can't make any money at the Brandywell apart from ticket sales, which by all accounts are very small. So Instituet want their own ground in a protestant part of the city where they can grow a fanbase and have facilities that they can use to generate income from. Which strikes me as a very sensible approach from a small club that will never progress or possibly even survive if its only income is ticket receipts in the Irish League's second tier..
I doubt Derry care to be honest. Institute pose them no threat, and the ground is already used for all sorts of things as it's council-owned.
If anything having Stute at Brandywell probably helps Derry City as they want government funding for the stadium to be finished. Much more likely to get that with 2 senior teams using it than just one (especially if that one plays outside NI and the DUP have any say in the matter)
Stute are from the city, they chose to site their ground there for 'reasons' when seeking to progress from the intermediate league.
With the advent of the NIFL things may have changed, but it wasn't that long ago Oxford United Stars were refused entry to inagural Championship because they nominated the Brandy as their home ground. They did not own or have a long term lease on the venue. Now the apocryphal tale when I was growing was that this rule came about after Derry resigned from the league so that the IL clubs could have something to point to each year when Derry came back looking to reapply.
Now Stute 'own their own ground', or had some kind of long term arrangement. They were warned at the time about the potential risk but pressed ahead. There were better options, but like the Brandy most of the public/recreational space in the city comes with covenants on use or ownership. So they gave it a wide berth.
So whether the rules have changed, or something else has Stute are now eyeing up something closer to where they should have been these past twenty odd years. What comes it of remains to be seen, use and ownership would continue to be issues, but access will likely be a bigger issue than it would have all those years ago. And if that rule, or a variant of it, remains in place then the clock is ticking for them to find their own ground. Because a long term lease on the Brandy is not possible.
With the good talk, before the announcement about POD's business sale, about legacy and infrastructure then the sensible thing for both clubs would be some kind of joint football campus out of town, with a stadium. But thats another can of worms,if as seems likely was on donegal side of border
Derry City fans don't want a stadium on one side of the river and Institute don't want a stadium on the other side. So the two clubs can't and won't have a shared future.
Agree that with a rich Chairman Derry would be sensible to look at getting a stadium somewhere other than Brandywell. It's a very crammed in site, and they can't make any money from it or use it to build community links outside of matchdays as they don't control access.
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