Hammer Archer wrote: » To be fair blanch, it's been explained several times before that the games development money from the mid 2000s onward was ringfenced for Dublin and was not available to other counties regardless. It had nothing to do with "getting county boards in order", it was only available to Dublin. That's not Dublin's fault but it's a bit disingenuous to claim that the only reason that Dublin got all this money was because their county board was so much better than each of the other 31 county boards.
Happyilylost wrote: » Galway got I think €184,000 in 2018 in games development grants. Over a 10 year period 2007-2017 Galway received €784,077 in games development grants. So yes one of the strongest dual counties in the country has just about got a million. In the same period Dublin got €15 million. Nobody needs to tell Galway people about our county boards past and current. Some of them belong in jail. But those issues are relating to money generated in Galway (gate receipts, fundraisers). Money from Croke Park is thankfully scrutinized down to the last penny. The only hardship Galway clubs currently suffer because of these clowns is a levy each club pays to service a debt we now owe to Croke Park. Its not a lot but it would be better used elsewhere in a club especially smaller ones that are struggling financially. Again. Games development grants have little to do with county boards.
blanch152 wrote: » You can't have it every which way. You can't complain about Dublin spending gdf money on bringing the game to kids in special needs schools and tell us that the gdf money is financial doping. As for schools in other counties? I have been telling you to get your own county boards in order and week after week the evidence keeps coming out about the shambles they all are.
bruschi wrote: » Getting closer now Dots. Although there was a surge the other way recently, very close to a middle ground now I reckon.
grbear wrote: » I've said it before in the GAA changes thread but there needs to be an independent auditing system put in place to ensure County Boards are run properly. Galway got the guts of a million in games development money while there was all sorts of shenanigans going on with regards bookkeeping. If that carry on had been tackled sooner then they'd be in a much better position today.
Strumms wrote: » You can be ‘fairly certain’ that you could ‘guess’ ? I think that’s something of a contradiction or at best a hell of a trick... If it interests you to find out you could always contact the powers that be and find out from the horses mouth. At the very least it might distract you from being happily lost.
Happyilylost wrote: » I wonder how many special needs school in other counties have access to this? Fairly certain I could guess the number.
Dots1982 wrote: » Can’t wait for the “Dublin only win because of theyr unfair advantages” cabal to finally convince the dubs here with their arguments. Bound to happen any day now.
blanch152 wrote: » You can't have it every which way. You can't complain about Dublin spending gdf money on bringing the game to kids in special needs schools and tell us that the gdf money is financial doping.As for schools in other counties? I have been telling you to get your own county boards in order and week after week the evidence keeps coming out about the shambles they all are.
bruschi wrote: » I doubt anything like that has ever been written on this thread already multiple times???? :pac:
blanch152 wrote: » And a recent post has shown that gdf funding per capita is currently higher in other counties - including Kerry and Mayo - than Dublin. I do understand how gdf works. I know how kids in special schools have benefitted from it who have zero chance of ever playing inter-county football. The financial doping argument is rubbish. What is closer to financial doping is having off-balance sheet foundations raising money secretly from millionaires who are then dictating terms to county boards while the money is used for jollies for inter-county players.
ToBeFrank123 wrote: » FFS. The gdf money is ring fenced by the GAA for games development. Even if Dublin wanted to use the money on vanity projects or the senior team the GAA wouldn't let them. The massive gdf funding is a luxury only Dublin have. You don't really understand how gdf works or how it impacts on creating the next generation of footballer. This is the reason people call it financial doping. Its a clear advantage bestowed on Dublin by the GAA over all other counties. In fact it couldn't be clearer. Cue Dubs trying to muddy the waters though.
Rockbeast2 wrote: » I'm sure my point, and the point of quite a few others, is get your house in order. That goes for every county. Did or did not, a tiny town close to the border defeat a Dublin "superclub" recently in a semi-final? Too many excuses. 15 v 15. That's it. That's all it is.
blanch152 wrote: » Neither of your posts in any way address any of the points raised by me. Even if the AIG money was spread out to other counties, the evidence suggests that Kerry, Mayo and Cork at least, would waste it on vanity projects. Dublin don't put importance on any training centres. They train where they can, why would they waste money like other counties? Better off keeping the money for juveniles as Dublin do.
beggars_bush wrote: » When is the money from AIG going to be spread out to other counties?
beggars_bush wrote: » If Dublin were in the connacht championship they'd have to go over every few years. They might actually be able to organise a fundraiser to build their own training centre
blanch152 wrote: » Again, nobody has shown the mechanism whereby funding of mass juvenile participation makes Dean Rock a better player than his dad.