No problem with one man one vote. On that basis all should be fine, only so many small minds.
The statement released was unanimous at least. I'm presuming though that 1st Division clubs had a vote and then majority becomes policy for all? It could become messy very quickly if there wasnt a united front after a vote but at the same time I do think that the result of a vote should be made known if not unanimous. In a very small league like with 9 teams it woulnt be too hard to have a voting block that could make life very difficult.
I take your point, but there is no automatic route of progression from the LSL to the LOI. Teams from there can only step up if there is an opening and they get a license, even if they wanted to go up (which they clearly don't). Whereas - in the absence of relegation from it, the First Division is entirely about progression to the next level. Every year.
True - though there's been expressions of interest sought a number of years and nothing doing.
I agree with what you're saying of course; this is just semantics really. Don't blame any club for not wanting to jump up into the First Division either.
Also vocal giving out to players from the stands for lack of effort on weeks they weren't paid. Not sure why he bothered going to the AGM, it will be nothing to do with him soon enough.
Author of Never Felt Better (History, Film Reviews).
Looks like it's going ahead anyway, with a Rovers B team making up the numbers in the first division.
The idea that Rovers B would get in when the division 1 clubs are unanimously against it is absolutely abhorrent to be perfectly honest.
#NeverStopNotGivingUp
The League of Ireland is beocming the living embodiment of Groucho Marx's famous quote.
We only want those who don't want in to join.
How unanimous really though? Yup I get that there is likely an agreement that a majority vote becomes a united stance but if it was 5-4 then I can see how the decision could be railroaded through irrespective of the 'united' policy. There is the possibility of some clubs being more equal than others as unfair as that would be, and very much of 'Old FAI', it could be a reality!? i've just had one of those awful flashbacks to being an ignored 1st Division club so I agree, based on Dundalk's experience alone, it's an awful way to administer a division irrespective of whether I myself think 'B' teams should/could feature in lower tiers.
If there was truely unanimous opposition to it then surely the clubs hold all the power, If the FAI were going to ignore the clubs and put Rovers B in anyway then would the 1st division clubs not then make it clear that they will all refuse to fulfil fixtures against Rovers ?
Which would make the thing such a massive sh1tshow that there would be no other option than to scrap it.
From my understanding of it even if the first division clubs are all opposed its going to be carried as theres I think a NLEC which consists of seven loi clubs-two of them in the first so the first division will be outnumbered altogether. There was a very good piece by Aidan Fitzmaurice today regarding this!
Gary Cronin is he the right man to manage Longford Town?
Online anywhere?
*nevermind link here https://www.independent.ie/sport/soc...-38839860.html
Last edited by Nesta99; 07/01/2020 at 4:38 PM.
Personally I didn't care too much last time they were in it and don't really care now. Obviously it's far from the ideal solution but as everyone has said already there is no queue of teams looking to join.
Upwards to the vanguard where the pressure is too high.
1st division clubs considering legal action or possibly of all clubs agreeing not to play fixtures against rovers B
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