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Article: Players may have to look abroad as recession hits county stars

  • 02-04-2009 1:52pm
    #1
    Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,908 ✭✭✭


    WATERFORD HURLER Eoin Kelly has made the disturbing revelation that he may be forced to consider emigration if the country’s unemployment crisis doesn’t improve sometime soon.

    Kelly recently lost his job in the building-related sector and the feeling is he’s far from the only high-profile county player to find himself in such a worrying situation.

    “Two weeks ago, unfortunately, I was let go,” he said. “The building industry has gone down at the moment. I was doing sales with Brooks in Waterford. Hopefully, something will come up in the near future. But it’s hard to see where it’s going to come up.

    “We’re lucky enough down in Waterford that not too many of us are struggling right now. A few though, with jobs and that, and it’s not a nice situation to be in.

    “If an opportunity aboard came up them you’d have to look at it. Bills have to be paid. You have to put food on the table. I’m not going to be doing that if I’m not working. It’s something that I don’t want to look at. But if it needs be then I’ll have to look at it further down the road.”

    Kelly was speaking at yesterday’s meeting of the Gaelic Players Association (GPA), where a petition seeking the retention of the Government grant scheme, and signed by members of every football and hurling squad in the country, was submitted to the Minister for Sport, Martin Cullen.

    Kelly was one of several county players present. The 26-year-old two-time All-Star, who was top-scorer in last year’s hurling championship with a superb tally of 7-43, wasn’t necessarily volunteering the information about his own work situation – but in the discussion about the possible cutting of the grant scheme, in an already difficult economy, it was inevitably raised.

    Having a young family to look after puts further pressure on his situation, yet Kelly says the grant scheme is as much about some small recognition as it is about helping in some small way with paying the bills.

    “It’s a show of respect first of all for the players and what they’re doing. The soccer players bring 60,000 to Croke Park. The All-Ireland final brings 80,000. And the difference in payment there is a massive gulf.

    “So it’s a bit of recognition that we doing something for the country. So, hopefully, it would continue, especially the way the work situation has gone. People are losing their jobs and players are losing their jobs. So this is just something small at the end of the day that gives you a helping hand in life, more than anything.

    “We all love play hurling, but sometimes it does cost you money to play it. It’s a huge commitment. You have to look after your family, number one. Hurling comes number two. At the moment I’m a full-time hurler, unfortunately.

    “But that’s the way things can go, and there are more players like that around the country. So it’s hard to combine the two, because at the end of the day you have to look after your job.

    “In this day and age players have to be looked after a small bit. Because what’s going to happen is that they’re just going to leave.They’re going to go to Australia and Canada and these places. And you’re going to lose the best players in Ireland to this. But on the other side, the whole country is suffering, not just players.”

    Even the old idea of county players being well looked after in terms of employment appears to be a thing of the past: “Well that never happened me. It’s probably still a bit relevant, and some players were looked after over the years. But fair play to them, they put in a lot of effort and fair play if they get a helping hand.

    “But the grant is just a small thing at the end of the year, helps if you’ve a few bills to pay, or whatever. It would be devastating if even those things were taken away.

    “We don’t mind taking a small cut, but I think it’s definitely necessary for it to keep going. The GPA have put in endless hours of work on this, and it’s only a small token of what we should be getting, I think, anyway.”

    Kelly’s thoughts on hurling, meanwhile, are entirely focused on Sunday’s meeting with Limerick, now managed by their former manager Justin McCarthy.

    “The way it’s looking both teams are safe from relegation, so I won’t say there’ll be a whole lot shown this Sunday. I’d say it will be fairly lukewarm. It’s June 14th that matters. There are no medals given out in March or April.

    “But Justin is a proud man and would like to get one over us. The players here still have great respect for him and wish him well with Limerick. Just not against us.”


    Published in the Irish Times this morning.


Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,258 ✭✭✭✭DARK-KNIGHT


    :mad:Come on guys surely now is the time for the GAA to consider paying players I cant believe that article i`m a kildare man and it saddens me to see eoin kelly in this situation!

    So lets see the GAA step up to the mark then ok??

    any more views?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 300 ✭✭superweld


    yeah it's gone well beyond a joke at this stage.

    the gaa has needed a drastic overhaul for years


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,366 ✭✭✭IIMII


    Problem is that it's a voluntary organisation, though I do agree with expenses


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 17,789 ✭✭✭✭keane2097


    Lads in fairness, calling for players to begin to be paid now is just so futile - the whole reason the grants are being taken away is that the money isn't there for them, never mind to be paying players a full wage...


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,258 ✭✭✭✭DARK-KNIGHT


    keane we dont mean a full wage but have them down as part time professionals and to be paid accordingly!

    look at croke park i mean is it 83000 fill the ground? along with tv rights etc etc advertising the GAA are cleaning up and local clubs see feck all from it, clubs depending on sponsorship from companies that in a lot of cases are struggling with recession so eventually who will buy kits, who will pay for buses and who will pay to keep the grounds? i fear for our great sporting organisation.

    a worried kildare fan:confused:


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 17,789 ✭✭✭✭keane2097


    keane we dont mean a full wage but have them down as part time professionals and to be paid accordingly!

    look at croke park i mean is it 83000 fill the ground? along with tv rights etc etc advertising the GAA are cleaning up and local clubs see feck all from it, clubs depending on sponsorship from companies that in a lot of cases are struggling with recession so eventually who will buy kits, who will pay for buses and who will pay to keep the grounds? i fear for our great sporting organisation.

    a worried kildare fan:confused:

    I just think hoping for the government to go from wanting to scrap grants to giving the players more is just wishful thinking of the most ridiculous kind.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,895 ✭✭✭Poor_old_gill


    I think people are missing the point here.
    They are calling for payment on the premise that soccer players get less crowds for an Irish international than the GAA do for an All ireland final (cos thats the only time it is filled outside of Dublin matches).
    For a start soccer players are played by tehir clubs and not their country so using an international game as an example is ridiculous.
    How could a club be able to pay its players in the GAA?
    Also most county boards are losing money and the fact that it is in reality a one country sport means that their is no big tv or sponsorship revenue(in relation to other sports)
    The GAA cant afford to professional simple as and if they were looking to then the money would have to come out of the paying customers pocket- lets see how everyone would like that.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 143 ✭✭Benhonan


    IIMII wrote: »
    Problem is that it's a voluntary organisation, though I do agree with expenses

    The problem is these expenses lead to most county board chairmans never having to pay for a dinner in their term and getting massive milage expenses. On top of this most inter-county managers are getting an extremely comfortable wage for their work with the team. So it's not a case of pouring more money into the organisation, just distributing it a bit better.

    The GAA just does not care about its players They claim this is because it's an amateur organisation but the irony is this just leads to them demanding a higher level of commitment from their players than professionals, as can be witnessed from the huge levels of burnout in the organisation. But then when players look to have a bit of autonomy and look to be treated properly they're spat on by the same people who are getting rich off their backs. Then when they retire they have precious little to show for it. I just hate the mentality in the GAA, and I'm a diehard hurling fan.


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