I should add I don't ever remember seeing groundstaff working on the pitch before a UCD match. But we've never once had a game abandoned, and I can only think of one other game postponed for rain (against Rovers in 2011). There was a couple of other games postponed where all the league fixtures were cancelled (stuff like Storm Emma or Hurricane Ophelia)
It's usually a decent playing surface too once the egg chasers bugger off.
So when a game gets abandoned for the first time in 44 years of league membership, was it (a) amateur hour stuff or (b) exceptional weather conditions?
The first pitch inspection only took place at 7:30 so far as I'm aware, so presumably the refereeing panel had no issues with the pitch up until that point. The rain only started getting really heavy about 20-30 minutes before kick-off.
Last edited by pineapple stu; 19/08/2023 at 2:11 PM.
Footage of UCD bowl last night...no effort made with the pitch indeed
https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x17teib
(I also love this old classic from The Oval when the orange ball burst, just a pity it cant ...yet... be included in the GLITW archive. None of this unplayable pitch rubbish! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d48a6MDmCBM )
Last edited by Nesta99; 19/08/2023 at 5:54 PM.
Very easy win for bohs in awful conditions Friday, Rockmount to give them their due credit we’re on a hiding from ko with that gale lashing down and only just starting their season.
Keeper pulled off a couple of fine stops too, and the two centre backs kept Afolabi quiet for 20 minutes anyway( with extreme difficulty)but a 3-0 ht was kind to them, as was the final score.
Home draw next is all I’d like, don’t fear anyone left, our names on it anyhow.
That gale was actually at Rockmount’s back for the 1st half but it didn’t make any difference. They could barely get out of their own box, never mind their half. I know they’re in preseason but the standard of even the best intermediate teams seems to be miles below LOI. And they’re the best intermediate team in Munster…
https://kesslereffect.bandcamp.com/album/kepler - New music. It's not that bad.
I fully understand your point, but if I was the manager of a non league team in the FAI CUP, I would have started training earlier, played additional friendlies and possibly trained 3 or 4 days a week. I know it's easier said than done but you have to do something to ensure you are not on the end of a drubbing. Everyone knows when the cup matches are on and has the opportunity to do something about it. Unfortunately the gap in quality is to big for many to do something so they just don't bother. In saying that Rockmount were well set up but lacked fitness and quality.
Its interesting to see the gap between LoI and non=league sides growing. There wasnt such a gap in days of yore were a shock result happened (Ashownvilla/Malahide/Drogheda still hurt as a Dundalk fan). Id imagine it is to do with the increase of full-time training for starters, that the seasons are not aligned with non-league preseason. Any other opinions on things? Does it erode a powerbase, influence the argument to align seasons. It seems to me that the arrogance from some quarters of inter/junior game that they were just as good as LoI and dismissive toboot. Any statos that would have the records of non league v senior in the FAI Cup, mainly in the days of the old winter season? St Francis obviously being the high watermark in reaching the final.
Harps are no great shapes currently yet were ridiculously superior, Bohs a very good side so less of a surprise to be do dominant but as Philosiphiser suggests, considering the weather, a goal kick with a gale behind a team should have opposition turnng and heading deep toward their goal. Thoughts? could it influence a seachange in resistance to restructuring the wider setup?
Moving this table to the top again since the LOI Vs Non league debate is being discussed. It’s quite clear that LOI has pulled away significantly in the last 5 years.
You may well be right.
As against that, recent LOI experiences in Europe may suggest otherwise, so that it is in fact the Intermediate sides are regressing? (Or a bit of both?).
Either way, this can't be good for the overall health of football in ROI, if only because it makes it even harder for Intermediate clubs to bridge the gap and "keep the Senior clubs honest".
And I have to say, for all the other advances domestically in the LOI (most notably attendances), for a country with your tradition, resources and potential only to support 16* Senior sides seems less than optimal to me.
All of which for me hardens the argument against the Irish League (only) moving to a summer season, as some in NI are advocating.
* - Not counting 2 amateur sides (Treaty and Kerry), a University side and DCFC.
St Patrick’s CY seem to have gave Wexford a decent game even if the result didn’t go their way…
Irish by birth ,Harps by the grace of god.
Tbh I hadnt really considered a regression of non-league rather than progression of professionalism at senior level. If this is the case what would be the cause. It isnt levels of participation, coaching standards have likely improved. So are LoI now skimming the cream of the crop. Are the introduction of new sides ie Kerry, Wexford and Treaty relying more on local talent, ditto Harps with a longer term vision on developing local youth. Clubs like Cork, Longford, Athlone (maybe) among others that have to be pragmatic on a budgetry basis and not just take on the fringe players from say Dublin academy players. I dont intend to tease out issues that I already have a notion of here, Im genuinely out of the loop and interested in the changing enviornment of the game here at all levels. National youth leagues will have a bearing but cant just be this. There were non senior teams that were a right nuisance to draw in the past, full of ex LoI players often with an axe to grind. Could it legitimately be the basis of an argument or even leverage to drag them along with wider FAI reform of the admin of the game? Im also thinking less about potential senior clubs and more about the greater development of talent - players that are late developers getting a shot etc.
Interesting thoughts there.
Might it also be that in the absence of a realistic chance of attaining Senior status, clubs are instead concentrating on expanding their community involvement - boys/girls/women/Football For All etc? So that if they do raise a bit of money (Social club, sponsorship, advertising etc), rather than paying 1st team players a wage, or investing in the stadium to attract extra spectators etc, they instead divert it towards subsidising membership, or extending playing facilities (eg artificial training pitches)?
Also, may it be harder now to attract players from GAA, if there is a barrier to how far they can go in our code? Am open to correction here, but if GAA is raising its game generally (no pun intended), including improving facilities and (shall we say) pushing the boundaries of Amateurism etc, might it be that Intermediate soccer is now less attractive by comparison?
Derry dominated for the first 35 odd minutes but Pats had 2 good chances towards the end of the half there,decent game…..
Irish by birth ,Harps by the grace of god.
You mentioned Ashtown Villa. They had a centre half called O Brien who's brother was Rocky O Brien who was with sligo I believe. Ashtown O Brien was on more money than Sligo O Brien and played in leinster, while Sligo played nationwide. I think that gap has now been reversed and widened even with the part time top level clubs as the Harps game proved.
LOI tv stream cuts off just after the start of extra time in Pats v Derry. WTF ? Infuriating.
Out for a spell, got neglected, lay on the bench unselected.
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