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Thread: Why Ireland are Crap at Soccer

  1. #61
    First Team smellyfeet's Avatar
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    Just reading this post now and Ireland are crap at the moment but we haven't always been crap, only in the last few years we have. It's down to the players and Managment that are picked/selected to produce the goods.

    I think we could be alot better if the proper players are picked to start games and if we had a different Manager, any Manager...
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  2. #62
    Seasoned Pro dfx-'s Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by backtowalsall View Post
    The Ireland team on display, with Doyle and a small few recent exceptions aside, have nothing to do with Irish football. They were trained and make their career in England, and have succeded in spite of the structures here, not because of them.
    I'll highlight that bit again to see if you can get my point which is embedded in it. There are no structures in Irish football. The Irish performances and side have nothing to do with Irish football. So contrary to convenient belief, if Ireland are doing well, that doesn't mean Irish football is in good health.

    If there's one thing that awful disgrace of a thing that is the GAA proves is the capability of Irish people to devote themselves to a local cause.

    If there's one thing that the detestable Leinster Senior Schools Cup proves is that if you have a sport strong locally in schools, you develop a national team that is well respected and rated highly. Denis Hickie and his 30 international tries for Ireland played in that.

    Neither of these are present in Irish football and that is why we are crap at football. To have solid foundation to build anything you need determination, willing and a bottom up approach. All missing from Team Ireland.
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  3. #63
    Seasoned Pro backstothewall's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by robbiesdrogs View Post
    right so im biting too.geography???3 belfast teams 4 dublin ones is hardly a great spread,you could have one from louth(ahem) meath(if the stadium goes up) longford sligo kilkenny waterford wicklow donegal.then you mention finance and include shelbourne and mention grounds too.well not alone are they broke but there off out to morton soon.
    The reason for the spread was the million people east of the Bann, and the almost 2 million in Dublin. Longford has a population of only 31,000, Sligo 58,000 Kilkenny 80,000, and the counties bordering Dublin are for good or ill now Dublin's commuter belt. That means good roads to the Dublin teams, who they can watch with their mates from work.

    I take the point though about a team in the Boyne Valley. That greater boyne/oriel area has Drogheda United, Dundalk, Newry City and Armagh City quite close to each other. But i only named 10 teams in a proposed 14-16 team league, and with a 10,000 seater stadium, Drogheda would be impossible to turn down. I was actually in united park about ten years ago, to see Drogheda play Ason Villa. I think a guy playing for Villa called Staunton arranged it, his brother was playing for the Drogs. If google earth is recent it hasn't changed much. But Dalian Atkinson kicking the ball completly out of the stadium and down the road really sums up the problems of football in the country. It should be a lot harder to kick the ball out of the stadium completely.

  4. #64
    Now with extra sauce! Dodge's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by tetsujin1979 View Post
    Dublin regularly sell out Croke Park, that's 80,000+ fans. How many of them go to any of the Dublin-based soccer teams?
    Isn't that the point I'm making? I can guarentee you there's more football fans in Dublin that GAA, there's more football players in Dublin than GAA. What are you arguing with?

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  5. #65
    Coach tetsujin1979's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Dodge View Post
    Isn't that the point I'm making? I can guarentee you there's more football fans in Dublin that GAA, there's more football players in Dublin than GAA. What are you arguing with?
    I'm not sure to be honest, I guess that if the GAA with a smaller fanbase can regualarly sell 80,000 tickets to Dublin fans, why isn't the combined total of attendances at home soccer games even close to that?

    PS just using soccer to distinguish between football and gaelic football, I rarely use that term
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  6. #66
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    If an All-Ireland league were to be pursued, it would have to reflect the real clubs with existing support and try to build on it. It wouldn't work with forced regional clubs like the mentioned Connacht FC which Sligo wouldn't support because they have a rivalry with Galway and would reject a Galway based team. Here is a 4 tier idea with the fourth tier really just being regional leagues that could go deeper:

    IRISH PREMIER LEAGUE

    Linfield FC
    Ballymena Utd FC
    Glentoran FC
    Dungannon Swifts FC
    Coleraine FC
    Portadown FC
    Cliftonville FC
    Derry City
    Shamrock Rovers
    Bohemians
    St. Patrick's Athletic
    Cork City
    Waterford United
    Galway United
    Sligo Rovers
    Drogheda United

    Promotion / Relegation: [three up (one via 3-4-5-6 playoff) from First Division, three down]

    IRISH FIRST DIVISION

    UCD
    Longford Town
    Bray Wanderers
    Cobh Ramblers
    Finn Harps
    Dundalk
    Limerick 37
    Shelbourne
    Monaghan United
    Glenavon FC
    Newry City FC
    Lisburn Distillery FC
    Loughgall FC
    Armagh City FC
    Larne FC
    Institute FC

    Promotion / Relegation: [three up (one via 3-4-5-6 playoff) from Second Division, three down]


    IRISH SECOND DIVISION


    Kildare County
    Athlone Town
    Wexford Youths
    Kilkenny City
    ROI TEAM (Castlebar Celtic?)
    ROI TEAM (Fingal FC? Letterkenny Rovers?)
    ROI TEAM (South East FC?)
    ROI TEAM (Clonmel Town?)
    ROI TEAM (Kerry League?)
    Crusaders FC
    Limavady Utd FC
    Donegal Celtic FC
    Ballymoney Utd FC
    Ballyclare Comrades FC
    Ards FC
    Bangor FC

    Promotion / Relegation: [two up from Regional division playoffs, two down]

    Below this point it goes regional, four divisions Ulster, Connacht/Ulster (includes all of Connacht parts of Ulster in ROI), Leinster, Munster. Four division winners play playoffs to see who gets the two promotion spots into Division 3.

    Used the IFA team rankings from the thread in the Northern Ireland league section here to determine the Northern team splits. Each of the top 3 tiers gets 16 teams, 9 from ROI leagues 7 from Northern Leagues. Derry City being one of the teams in the Premier League would give it an 8/8 split of teams based in ROI and Northern Ireland in the opening year. Where teams fall in subsequent years is based on their performance.

    5 Filler ROI teams in Second Division are just ideas based on what was speculated for LoI "A Championship" teams in other threads.

  7. #67
    First Team endabob1's Avatar
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    4 tiers is way too much for a country our size, 2 tiers is probably too much if you want your top tier to compete at a reasonable level in Europe.
    I don't think an all-Ireland league is a reality so I would suggest a top tier of 10 (ideally professional) teams where you can have 10 genuinely competitve teams, a bigger (16 team) second level where teams are semi-pro / Amatuer.
    Below that the provincial senior leagues which can feed into the second tier where required.

  8. #68
    Seasoned Pro backstothewall's Avatar
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    I would go for 14-16 with not promotion or relegation ever. But 2 tiers would be plently, with no promotion or relegation for the first couple of years to allow it to bed in.

    There reaches a stage with the likes of clonmel town and ballyclare comrades where their lot in life is provincial amateur leages. Tthey will probably be the best sides there, but to maintain even semi-professional football puts a strain on the finances which will damage youth development in the long run. If those sorts of towns develop a player they need the club focusing on getting them to league football. Not holding them back waiting on transfer fees and trying tohold on to them for to long in the hope they can get them a promotion which they will never be able to maintain

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