Bonniedog wrote: » If Dublin has 2,000,000 people in 2030, and the country 6,000,000, the structure of the championship will be the least of your worries. You will be on Ryanair flight if you have any sense!
FrancieBrady wrote: » Yesterday was a bad start for the Super8's which immediately showed up a few issues one of which was how Dublin approached the closing quarter. They basically killed the game much to the disappointment of Donegal fans and a goodly share of their own I would imagine. If they are gonna use this tactic to conserve themselves for the next game then they might as well knock Super8's on the head imo. They are using the superior strength, fitness and conditioning, squad depth etc only they can seem to invest in to their advantage.Nothing you can say is intrinsically wrong/against the rules with that but it will frustrate the life out of this new experiment. Not at all sure what can be done about it but pretending this is not becoming an issue is wrong too. Is the access to larger resources showing as an unfair advantage again?
blanch152 wrote: » It is completely wrong to blame Dublin for the last 15 minutes of the game yesterday. Anyone who was in Croke Park yesterday saw that Donegal just gave up and retreated behind the ball to keep the score down. If you want to criticise a team, you should criticise them for their cowardly approach. Dublin are winners, they have adapted to every challenge put to them so far.
FrancieBrady wrote: » I seen them turn back too often for that contention. It was part of the game plan.
Bonniedog wrote: » The game plan to win! How dare they Perhaps we should revert to having entire team in our own half even when 5 points down, or more traditionally launching mighty boots of the ball into the air not giving a fk once some fine chap from the Kingdom jumps 18 feet into the sky and everyone stands back to admire him. Ah no....
FrancieBrady wrote: » Why so cross? None of us want to see GAA go that way do we? I don't know what the solution is but I have a fair idea why it is happening. They used their superior fitness and conditioning, and they have that superior fitness and conditioning because they have the resources and therefore the time to invest in it. That is not the same for all others.
Bonniedog wrote: » I'm not cross. I am happy Dublin are better team because they have better players and a better management. They all have the same other demands on them as other counties. Do you think Monaghan is example of open exciting football! More hand passes than a gay sauna
Bonniedog wrote: » So how come Tyrone with a smaller GAA playing population has been successful and you have not? And that is an understatement! Or even historically, compared to your other neighbour in Cavan, or near neighbour Meath? Perhaps you are never just good enough?
blanch152 wrote: » What a load of crap. Dublin were five points to the good, thanks to some brilliant high fielding of Donegal kickouts and some excellent kicked points and goals. Having played all of the football in the game, and that is not an exaggeration, they could afford to sit back and wait and see whether Donegal had the balls to come out of their shells. They didn't, so Dublin just played out the game. It will be interesting to see whether Monaghan or Tyrone will take on Dublin. They might never have been good enough, but Mayo at least had the courage to take Dublin on. Most of the others don't and that has nothing to do with strength and conditioning or finances.
FrancieBrady wrote: » IMO you have to be a lot fitter to engage that 'style' of play over 10 to 15 mins. Dublin were constantly turning and going back, they had no interest in going forward, hence my contention it was a game plan. There is a reason the crowd, including a lot of their own decent support boo that type of play. It is lording superior fitness over a team you can see are out on their feet. To me it is just another symptom of the developing imbalance in GAA which is cancerous. Read the article posted above.
dollar bill wrote: » 2019 congress will be open to playing rule changes,After the successful introduction of the mark and the new kickout rule,What would you like to see next implemented
FrancieBrady wrote: » I'd like to see the black card looked at and I would love to see a few hundred thousand invested in group training a squad of championship referees in order to bring some consistency to the game. I would also like a special congress to discuss and analyse why it increasingly seems that Central Council is massively diverging from the GAA grassroots and support base. To me there is a divergence as one part seeks maximum profit while the other seeks a player and supporter centred sporting and cultural organisation.