do the fai/ifa need a kick up the backside? Yessssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss ssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss ssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss ssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss ssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss ssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss ssssssssss
I think its dead in the water for the near future however in a couple of years time and some proper all inclusive planning it just might work but the present proposals were far of the mark.
I wish i did not know then what I dont know now
Has there been a foot.ie poll on this? If not, would it be a good idea? A simple yes/no/neutral should do it.
"Intransigence"? Where is your evidence of this? If you're referring to the IFA, I would point out that they have been cooperating closely with the FAI for some years now, on a number of matters (including the Setanta All-Ireland Cup), despite the offence caused by the FAI's having gone back on their prior agreement not to select NI-born players.
And part of this cooperation has been meeting with the FAI and Platinum etc to see whether an AIL could be further progressed. However, the IFA is slap bang in the middle of the biggest re-organisation of their own domestic League set-up in over a quarter of a century. Therefore, in the clear absence of any bad-faith on the IFA's part, any reasonable observer would accept this as their stated reason for not proceeding with this proposal in the short-term.
As for a "breakaway", there is no chance of that happening now. Quite obviously the IFA would never support this, it seems clear that the FAI will row in with them, and UEFA will never go over the heads of their two Member Associations.
After all, even the mighty English clubs were not prepared to risk a true breakaway when the English Premiership was set-up - they accepted that it could only be done under the auspices of the FA. And somehow, I suspect that teams like Man U and Liverpool have somewhat more clout than the likes of Galway United or Drogheda....
Dont think it will ever happen, too much standing against it for it to go ahead.
Well if the prize money is £50k for the team that comes last then let them says its £50k, and stop £150k PR crap. This is just spin that is meant to mislead. They appear to plan to give money and then take it away, or is it take it away and give it back? Like will a club have to actually pay £100k a year or do they just say 'take it off our prise money'
Well, put it this way, will they line their pockets or are they just doing all this because of their love of the game. I am of the view that there are people involved here that envisage a capital gain at little or no risk to themselves. I'd suggest that all the risk is with the clubs and the associations, who in fairness are telling these guys to get lost. Unfortunately, they are saying it too politely
The league at this moment in time is being marketed and while it obviously isn't being done to your satisfaction, reasonable people will recognise the effort that is going into marketing. MSN didn't just happen and don't under-estimate the leverage that the International game has in getting a good deal for the local game. I also think you're over-estimateing the value of marketing. A match between the club that came 10th for the previous 3 season and the club that came 9th for the previous 3 seasons will be an unattractive fixture that nobody will want to see no matter how much quality marketing is done.
I wasn't claiming that the figure was too low. I was just highlighting that these guys to date were projecting the financial benefits without saying too much about the costs.
Of course the Governments fund sport and I expect they will cintinue to do. However, what they NEVER do and will never do, is provide funding for the day-to-day operation of sport clubs. The clear impression given in yesterday's article was that the Governments were a possible source of funding for the operation of the clubs and the league. That will not happen, north or south.
Well they focused on it which does show a bit of desperation on their part. Clubs at this moment in time are free to arrange friendlies with whoever they like. Why friendlies were introduced as an incentive to enter an AIL league will mystify many. As for representative matches against the SPL do I have to waste my time pointing out the stupidity of this?
Because the SPL couldn't even pull together a team even if they wanted to. The full Scotland team can't even get SPL players to play in full friendly international. Do you reckon we'd see Barry Ferguson and Jackie McManus over playing a selection from 10 clubs in Ireland? This is delusional stuff!!
You along with FD and JR need to get real. How can a 10-team league with no P&R remain competitive? Why should the FAI and the IFA hand over control of the domestic game and places in European competitions to a self-appointed body that appears to have absolutely no interest in the many hundreds of football clubs north and south of the border that the FAI and IFA have jurisdication over.
Personally I'd love to say to the 10 clubs; away you go and form your own league without any european places and just watch these giant egos trying to make a go of it.
Anybody is free to come forward with a proposal and have that proposal fairly evaluated and assessed. However, what is not right is that we have a self-appointed body going around meeting clubs behind the associations backs and meeting players behind the clubs back and making all sorts of promises. Football on this island is under the control of the FAI and the IFA and it is up to those two bodies to bring an All Ireland League Proposal forward when the time is right and to do so in a way that protects the interest of the game at all levels in this country.
Delaney, Wells, Gavin have told this group to get lost. Why aren't they getting the message?
Last edited by SMorgan; 04/07/2008 at 6:46 AM.
Fundamentally, an all-island league would produce a top tier on the island with better clubs, better players, and better facilities. However administratively inconvenient, that is what we should be looking for.
There will of course be bureaucratic inertia, but we should try to overcome that. The blazers might be opposed, lower-ranked clubs might be opposed, but we need to get away from the parochialism that currently allows the game to be so easily dismissed.
The idea that a fan of a club that was bailed out of becoming a 'lower ranked club' so recently thinks it's okay to look down their nose at these clubs is what's wrong with this league. When we need to work together everyone just seems to pull things further apart, this AIL proposal is one such occasion
Sorry if you've taken offence Jebus. I think the proposal to have an AIL is probably more achievable in our lifetime than the abolition of league tables.
Dont know if it has been posted here already, but GUFC has told the FAI that they will no longer be considering themselves for the AIL but still back it 100%.
That's a bit of a strange position to be taking, is it not, Terry?
"We support it, but go ahead without us".
Has anybody seriously considered that implications for GUFC of an AIL without GUFC? I don't think so!!
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