Have a look at the Dutch system if you think it's bad.![]()
I think kdjaC is spot on. There'd be uproar if Celtic got an advantage over Rangers or vice versa, which obviously happens with a 33 game league.
Have a look at the Dutch system if you think it's bad.![]()
I think kdjaC is spot on. There'd be uproar if Celtic got an advantage over Rangers or vice versa, which obviously happens with a 33 game league.
Dutch system is utter nonsense. Doesn't make the Scottish system any better though!
Celtic and Rangers will never get an advantage like I noted because there would be uproar, and rightly so. The other teams are irrelevant in Scotland, so can be messed about with as I've shown.
Ah, come on. Of course it does.
I'm still not actually persuaded that the EL system is better. You pointed out that Aberdeen played one extra home game and Inverness played 1 extra away game than the rest. Fair enough, that's a little unfair but that's about all that we're likely to get with the SPL system.
Derry have to travel twice to Drogheda, Sligo, Waterford, Galway, Longford. They only have to travel once to Bray, Cork, Pats, Rovers, Bohs and UCD.
That's 16 away games and 17 home games. Look at the teams that they only have to play away once.
That's a league winning advantage, without a shadow of a doubt. If, for example, Cork finish 2nd to Derry by 3 or so points this season I'll be thinking it could have been a lot different with the luck of the draw. The same can't be said about the Scottish system, so far at least.
Last edited by eirebhoy; 22/03/2007 at 9:33 PM.
My brain hurts
The main reason for getting rid of it here was that nobody could be arsed going to bottom six games after the split.
The split system is not perfect (or even that desirable), but it IS better than the 33-game eL league.
No need for hypoyheticals, though. Don't mean to sound bitter, but in 2005 the games between Derry and Cork were all won by the home team. Derry finished one point behind Cork having had to play them away twice.
Aren't we moving to 10-teams in a year or so anyway (and so 36 games)? I'm not sure how I feel about the 10-team league as it was a couple of years ago (more fixture chaos and playing the same teams over and over again).
As a completely radical solution, how about considering inter-league play.
The idea would be that each Premier Division club would play each other home and away (i.e. 22 games each). To augment this total each Premier club would play each First Division club once (home or away, 9 games). The total would be 31 games, just two less than the current 33. There would be equality between the teams battling against each other for the league (except for how they play the teams in the first division, but they should expect to be beating them anyway home or away!)
The 1st Div teams would have to play the 2+1 system (plus 1 home or away v PD teams), but who cares its the 1st Division?Plus, they would get to play the big teams on a regular basis, it would reduce the gap between the two divisions and mitigate against the death sentence that the 1st Div can become for some clubs. Just a suggestion
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I would like to see each team play each other twice a season rather than three times. I would like to see the fixtures spread out over the season, allowing a weekend for the League Cup and FAI Cup. Instead of teams having to play matches every few days for a number of weeks, cut the amount of games and spread them evenly over the season. Thats what i'd like to see. Also the SPL starts early and ends late. July to May is a very long season with a winter break. That would be too much for the part-time teams in the leagues
Ah well then I don't even understand the Scottish system myself.
If it was to go the way I said (you play each team in your half twice home, twice away by the end of the season)...
After the split last season Celtic should have played:
Hearts (a), Rangers (h), Hibs (h), Aberdeen (a), Kilmarnock (h).
Hearts should have played:
Celtic (h), Rangers (a), Hibs (a), Aberdeen (a)*, Kilmarnock (a).
Rangers should have played:
Celtic (a), Hearts (h), Hibs (a), Aberdeen (h), Kilmarnock (a).
Hibs should have played:
Celtic (a), Hearts (h), Rangers (h), Aberdeen (h)**, Kilmarnock (a).
Aberdeen should have played:
Celtic (h), Hearts (h)*, Rangers (a), Hibs (a)**, Kilmarnock (a)***.
Kilmarnock should have played:
Celtic (a), Hearts (a), Rangers (h), Hibs (h), Aberdeen (h)***.
---
So basically Hearts should have had to play 4 away games which they thought was unfair. To make up for it they changed their game with Aberdeen to a home game (*). And to make up for that they took a home game off Hibs and Kilmarnock and gave it to Aberdeen. Eh, ok...![]()
I just wanted to check the SPL fixtures for this season. Again, if teams were to finish the season having played all the teams in their half twice home and twice away this would be the fixture list after the split:
Celtic:
Rangers (a), Aberdeen (h), Hearts (h), Hibs (a), Kilmarnock (a).
Rangers:
Celtic (h), Aberdeen (a), Hearts (a)*, Hibs (h)**, Kilmarnock (h).
Aberdeen:
Celtic (a), Rangers (h), Hearts (a), Hibs (h), Kilmarnock (h).
Hearts:
Celtic (a), Rangers (h)*, Aberdeen (h), Hibs (h), Kilmarnock (a).
Hibs:
Celtic (h), Rangers (a)**, Aberdeen (a), Hearts (a), Kilmarnock (h).
Kilmarnock:
Celtic (h), Rangers (a), Aberdeen (a), Hearts (h), Hibs (a).
----
Celtic, Rangers, Aberdeen and Kilmarnock would finish the season with 19 home games and 19 away games. They'd have played each team in their half twice home and twice away.
Hearts and Hibs are different. With the above fixtures Hearts would have played 20 home games and 18 away games. Hibs would have played 18 home games and 20 away games.
To solve this problem I assume the SPL had to look for a team that have to play Hearts away and Hibs home and switch those fixtures around. It was a choice between Aberdeen and Rangers. Rangers are 13 points above Hearts while Aberdeen are closer at 6 points ahead. They just use common sense and switch the Rangers fixtures.
OK, this means that Hearts will have played Rangers away 3 times in the season while Hibs will have played them 3 times at home. That's 1 fault in the whole top 6. Surely better than the Eircom league system?
there is merit in that theory. i know stephen kenny has stated many times that they will have more games with the teams they are fighting relegation with after the split. meaning a victory will mean so much more.
there are problems with both (eL & SPL) systems.
the only fair way is to play every team in the league an equal amount of time home and away. whether that means a larger league of say 16 teams and play each other twice or a smaller league of 10 and play 4 times.
personally would love to see a 16/18 team all-ireland league with 2 games each but thats a whoooooooooooooole other arguement!!
We're going back to a 10 team league after next season, it's hardly worth debating.
About the nonsense that the league is won by teams being at home more than away, the league is settled over 33 games. If you have done your stuff, you deserve to win the league over 33 games. If you haven't, you don't.Originally Posted by eirebhoy
Changing to a 10-team league will lead to fixture chaos, where 30-40 games will be postponed during the season, and when you have teams playing twice a week, every week, in the run-in. Carnage. This is what the "We care about Irish football" institute have insisted upon, knowing that the experiment was a disaster before, and will be no better, when we're shoehorned into that shy-te system again in 2 years time.![]()
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