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Tiered Championship

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Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 26,658 ✭✭✭✭OldMrBrennan83



    Because the financial doping of Dublin over a period of 15 years has made the Leinster championship so uncompetitive that no one, including Dublin fans, wants to watch it anymore?

    A combination of Dublin being good and everyone else not bothering abd turning to rubbish.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,083 ✭✭✭Farawayhome


    I haven't blamed any county, whether 'strong' or 'weak'. The remaining Leinster championship games before the final (regardless of Dublin being present or not) are all double headers this year. Why do you think that is?

    The Leinster championship is dead. Why that is has been well documented at this stage. Maybe that's what should be tackled instead of punishing the 'weaker' counties.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,083 ✭✭✭Farawayhome



    Because the financial doping of Dublin over a period of 15 years has made the Leinster championship so uncompetitive that no one, including Dublin fans, wants to watch it anymore?

    Sadly, you speak the truth.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,970 ✭✭✭✭Bass Reeves


    The Leinster championship is dead. Why that is has been well documented at this stage. Maybe that's what should be tackled instead of punishing the 'weaker' counties.

    What is happening at present is punishing weaker counties. They get 2-3 championship games a year and then that is it. Many weaker counties considered DIV 3 or 4 title now more important than championship. Most are struggling to get players to play for them. Last year something like 50 players that were approached by the Limerick football management refused to make themselves available to play for the county. One the main reasons is that playersknow taht they have to train for 8-10 months of the years for to arrive in a mismatched competitions.

    This year we will see few football games on TV until after the hurling round robin is completed. Again because TV has no interest in mismatched games that mean nothing until the Super 8's starts. I was not in favor of the S8's but we have them now and have to get on with it. But we need to find a solution for counties that cannot compete in the super eights.

    As can be seen more and more lower division managers also are of the opinion that change is needed. It makes no difference to the stronger counties they will continue to have the S8's Teams that win All Ireland do not come from nowhere. Tyrone, Armagh and Donegal were winning Ulster titles and getting to semi finals before they won there titles.

    If a team is promoted from Tier2 to Tier1 they will have the winter to prepare themselves for T1 championship and the same with T3 going into T2. Under the present structure a weaker team getting to S8's like Kildare and Roscommon last year will always struggle. Tipperary making the semi final a few years ago is also an example a weaker county under the present system can only advance so far before being beaten.

    If there was 10 team in the top tier it would give those teams that are promoted a chance to consolidate. Where round robin is played in County championship promoted teams are seldom relegated straight away again. You see team going from Junior grade to senior grade in 2-4 years and often being competitive at senior level. In counties that play either knock out or 2nd chance teams find it hard to progress as survival becomes more important.

    Slava Ukrainii



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,083 ✭✭✭Farawayhome


    What is happening at present is punishing weaker counties. They get 2-3 championship games a year and then that is it. Many weaker counties considered DIV 3 or 4 title now more important than championship. Most are struggling to get players to play for them. Last year something like 50 players that were approached by the Limerick football management refused to make themselves available to play for the county. One the main reasons is that playersknow taht they have to train for 8-10 months of the years for to arrive in a mismatched competitions.

    This year we will see few football games on TV until after the hurling round robin is completed. Again because TV has no interest in mismatched games that mean nothing until the Super 8's starts. I was not in favor of the S8's but we have them now and have to get on with it. But we need to find a solution for counties that cannot compete in the super eights.

    As can be seen more and more lower division managers also are of the opinion that change is needed. It makes no difference to the stronger counties they will continue to have the S8's Teams that win All Ireland do not come from nowhere. Tyrone, Armagh and Donegal were winning Ulster titles and getting to semi finals before they won there titles.

    If a team is promoted from Tier2 to Tier1 they will have the winter to prepare themselves for T1 championship and the same with T3 going into T2. Under the present structure a weaker team getting to S8's like Kildare and Roscommon last year will always struggle. Tipperary making the semi final a few years ago is also an example a weaker county under the present system can only advance so far before being beaten.

    If there was 10 team in the top tier it would give those teams that are promoted a chance to consolidate. Where round robin is played in County championship promoted teams are seldom relegated straight away again. You see team going from Junior grade to senior grade in 2-4 years and often being competitive at senior level. In counties that play either knock out or 2nd chance teams find it hard to progress as survival becomes more important.

    What's your angle here? Are you really interested in the health of football in the 'weaker' counties? Are you from one of them or a 'stronger' county?

    Again you are just talking about division 4 teams, do you just want the 8 of them demoted? Using Limerick as an example isn't wise after they just destroyed Tipperary. There is no preparing over the winter to get ready for tier 1, why aren't they doing it now if it was so easy? The truth is, you knock a team down a level, that becomes their level. Look at Offaly in the hurling.

    You mention player dropouts but if this travesty is introduced, watch players from counties just outside this 'top 10' leave in huge numbers.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,909 ✭✭✭Coillte_Bhoy


    Regarding the lack of exposure for the lower tier Hurling cships, and the obvious fear that this would happen too in a tiered football cship, this is surely largely the GAA's fault. Apart from doing their own promotion and marketing they could insist on a certain level of coverage from the TV companies when negotiating the deals for the big games. The FAI used to insist RTE show so many LOI games as part of their package for the internationals.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,497 ✭✭✭ArnoldJRimmer


    What is happening at present is punishing weaker counties. They get 2-3 championship games a year and then that is it. Many weaker counties considered DIV 3 or 4 title now more important than championship. Most are struggling to get players to play for them. Last year something like 50 players that were approached by the Limerick football management refused to make themselves available to play for the county. One the main reasons is that playersknow taht they have to train for 8-10 months of the years for to arrive in a mismatched competitions.

    This year we will see few football games on TV until after the hurling round robin is completed. Again because TV has no interest in mismatched games that mean nothing until the Super 8's starts. I was not in favor of the S8's but we have them now and have to get on with it. But we need to find a solution for counties that cannot compete in the super eights.

    This is because the current TV deal is not fit for purpose and RTE have always had a hurling fetish. If there is football on the TV, people watch it. I have no interest in watching Dublin games early on as there's no point, but the rest of the Leinster championship tends to be good, Connacht tends to have 3 strong teams and Ulster is great entertainment even if the spread of winners has been narrow for a long time now.

    If RTE are to continue to have the main rights, the argument about them looking to maximise viewership is nonsense. People in Ireland pay an extortionate sum for a TV licence, people in the counties with the bottom sixteen should have the right to see their county in action. This simply will not happen with a tiered championship. The only thing both RTE and John Horan care about is money


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,909 ✭✭✭Coillte_Bhoy


    This is because the current TV deal is not fit for purpose and RTE have always had a hurling fetish. If there is football on the TV, people watch it. I have no interest in watching Dublin games early on as there's no point, but the rest of the Leinster championship tends to be good, Connacht tends to have 3 strong teams and Ulster is great entertainment even if the spread of winners has been narrow for a long time now.

    If RTE are to continue to have the main rights, the argument about them looking to maximise viewership is nonsense. People in Ireland pay an extortionate sum for a TV licence, people in the counties with the bottom sixteen should have the right to see their county in action. This simply will not happen with a tiered championship. The only thing both RTE and John Horan care about is money

    No they dont have any 'right' as such. Thats a ridiculous notion. Most of these counties will rarely be seen live under the current system anyway.

    And our licence fee isnt really extortionate in comparison with other European countries but thats off topic i suppose


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 26,658 ✭✭✭✭OldMrBrennan83


    People from the bottom 16 counties, or any others, could always get up off their holes and actually go to the games if they want to see them.


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  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 1,074 ✭✭✭LoughNeagh2017


    All it would take for Leitrim to become successful is for 20 Dublin players to move there, stranger things have happened


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,497 ✭✭✭ArnoldJRimmer


    No they dont have any 'right' as such. Thats a ridiculous notion. Most of these counties will rarely be seen live under the current system anyway.

    And our licence fee isnt really extortionate in comparison with other European countries but thats off topic i suppose

    If the people in Ireland are going to be subjected to a communist policy, then they should also get the benefits. RTE currently grudgingly show highlights, and used to feature smaller teams in their live coverage of the provincial championship. You only have to look at the lack of respect they show the Joe McDonagh Cup, which has been excellent, to see the road football will go down


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 184 ✭✭Donald Trumped


    Very disappointing to see RTE having a biased view about the "positive merits" of a two-tiered football championship. They should be ashamed of themselves in Donnybrook, when you consider how much they have turned a blind eye on the likes of the Joe Mcdonagh, Christy Ring, Nicky Rackards and Lory Meagher cups, in hurling's lower tiers. There is enough to suggest that our national broadcaster will do something similar if these controversial plans are set in stone in football come 2020 and beyond.

    What will happen to the Ulster Championship and other provincial championships, if this proposal gets the necessary support at Congress? I can guarantee you one thing though. Expect a mass exodus of young inter-county footballers post-League to pastures new, outside of the Emerald Isle or in some cases in particular the counties who are involved in "Tier 2", won't commit at all to the county cause in any circumstances. In my opinion the provincial championships should do this.

    In Leinster put the likes of Dublin, Kildare and Meath in one group with the top 2 in that group qualifying for the Leinster semi-final. The second pot should contain another 4 teams and the third pot contain 4 teams also. The teams are ranked in order of their finishing position in the league of that same year so you could have 4 teams from divisions 2/3 in the league group 2 and 4 other teams from division 3/4 in group 3, depending on how they finish in the league. The top team in pot 2 automatically qualify for the semi-final, while the 2nd team in group 2 meet the top team in group 3 to decide the 4th and final Leinster semi-finalist.

    I think that this format should be modeled in the other 3 provinces. In Munster have Cork and Kerry or the last 2 Munster finalists of the previous year, play a preliminary round, with the winner gaining automatic qualification for the Munster final. While the other 4 Munster counties play-off in a round robin championship, with the winner of this play the loser of Cork or Kerry for a place in the Munster final.

    In Connacht I would remove New York from the championship. Therefore you will have Galway, Roscommon and Mayo in group 1, with the top team qualifying automatically for the Connacht final. In group 2 you will have London, Sligo and Leitrim with the top team here playing the second team in group one for a place in the Connacht final.

    In Ulster I would have 3 groups of three. Group one would contain the top 3 in the position they finish the league, in this year's case it would be Tyrone, Donegal and Cavan with the top 2 in that group qualifying for the Ulster semi-final. In group 2 that would contain Armagh, Donegal and Fermanagh. Group 3 would have Down, Antrim and Derry. The top team in group 2 also qualify for the Ulster semi-final while the top team in group 3 would play the second team in group 2, the winners of that qualifying them for a Ulster semi-final place too.

    Personally to say I'm not a fan of the two-tiered championship would be an understatement. My proposals in the above may be ridiculed or praised. But in light of the reasons that I explained in the first two paragraphs, then I feel that any plans for a two or three tiered championship must be resisted. The ideas that I suggested in the above could benefit football in general and ensure more coverage of football in the early part of the championship, both on the broadcast and newsprint media and will also ensure that the provincial championship can be viable and ensure more competitive games which all GAA fans want to see. I look forward to see what other posters think.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,909 ✭✭✭Coillte_Bhoy


    If the people in Ireland are going to be subjected to a communist policy, then they should also get the benefits.

    As an old school leftie im intrigued by this, this seems to have passed me by :confused:

    RTE currently grudgingly show highlights, and used to feature smaller teams in their live coverage of the provincial championship. You only have to look at the lack of respect they show the Joe McDonagh Cup, which has been excellent, to see the road football will go down

    Im not sure they did feature smaller teams, when exactly? And really its up to the GAA to insist on coverage of the lower tiers as part of the overall package


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,083 ✭✭✭Farawayhome


    It's time for people to admit their motives. What do you want? Why is this being pushed? Is it a breakaway attempt, offload the 'minnows'? A lot of those who have gone to the media about this are from the 'bigger' counties. Do they have the interests of the lower ranked teams at heart? Then there are those from some division 4 counties who support it, counties like Wicklow, Waterford etc offloading 5 or 6 teams from there won't make a difference.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,909 ✭✭✭Coillte_Bhoy


    It's time for people to admit their motives. What do you want? Why is this being pushed? Is it a breakaway attempt, offload the 'minnows'? A lot of those who have gone to the media about this are from the 'bigger' counties. Do they have the interests of the lower ranked teams at heart? Then there are those from some division 4 counties who support it, counties like Wicklow, Waterford etc offloading 5 or 6 teams from there won't make a difference.

    From my point of view (Mayo btw) its not necessarily about helping the weaker counties its about correcting the imbalanced and ridiculous structure of a championship which was designed to suit the needs of the 1880's ffs. I want to see the best teams fighting it out over the summer with big games every weekend. All the top temas should have exactly the same route to the super 8's/semi finals, whatever. I also want to see extensive promotion of and reasonable TV coverage of the second and third tiers, there would be some cracking games in these. The provincials need to go and teams need to be graded according to ability. I cannot think of any other major sport in any country that runs their main championships in such a ridiculous manner.

    And yes, if Mayo fall behind in 5 or 10 years time then i would be happy to see them compete in a second tier and fight to get back to the top table as obv relegation and promotion will be part of a any new structure.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,909 ✭✭✭Coillte_Bhoy


    Problem with round-robin is eventually attendances will significantly drop,Supporters are ruthless and want big knock out games - Whatever format is trialled will need to reduce the amount of dead rubbers as possible and try and keep games as important as possible.

    Well thats simply not borne out by the increasing attendances in the NFL over recent years. I do however agree that the amount of possible dead rubbers needs to be minimised which shouldnt be that difficult to do.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,497 ✭✭✭ArnoldJRimmer


    As an old school leftie im intrigued by this, this seems to have passed me by :confused:




    Im not sure they did feature smaller teams, when exactly? And really its up to the GAA to insist on coverage of the lower tiers as part of the overall package

    I won't derail the thread by talking about the outdated notion of a state sponsored station ;).

    Found two examples off the top of my head, in 2007, I see Longford, Fermanagh, Leitrim, Waterford, and a D3 Cavan. In 2013, Tipperary and Wicklow. And I remember a ton of teams being shown in various qualifiers too, like Antrim, Sligo and Offaly. The only complaints I remember hearing at the time was about the over saturation of the Ulster Championship rather than poor quality games

    https://www.rte.ie/about/en/press-office/press-releases/2007/0405/292245-tvsportapril2007/

    https://www.sportsnewsireland.com/gaa/rte-announce-gaa-championship-coverage-for-2013-2013-05-13/

    And agreed on your last point, thats up to the GAA. But I wouldn't trust them to do so for one second. If properly promoted and supported by the GAA, I think a secondary competition would be great, but where's the money in that?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,083 ✭✭✭Farawayhome


    From my point of view (Mayo btw) its not necessarily about helping the weaker counties its about correcting the imbalanced and ridiculous structure of a championship which was designed to suit the needs of the 1880's ffs. I want to see the best teams fighting it out over the summer with big games every weekend. All the top temas should have exactly the same route to the super 8's/semi finals, whatever. I also want to see extensive promotion of and reasonable TV coverage of the second and third tiers, there would be some cracking games in these. The provincials need to go and teams need to be graded according to ability. I cannot think of any other major sport in any country that runs their main championships in such a ridiculous manner.

    And yes, if Mayo fall behind in 5 or 10 years time then i would be happy to see them compete in a second tier and fight to get back to the top table as obv relegation and promotion will be part of a any new structure.

    You don't have to boot teams out to change the structure of the championship. Teams who are not deemed worthy of sharing a pitch with the big dogs will struggle big time. For some there will be no way back. It will end their chances of competing at the top permanently. What we have here are people looking for a short term fix. It might excite you for a few years but what it will effectively do is create a mirror of the hurling championship. It will be a disaster.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,413 ✭✭✭✭Fr Tod Umptious


    You don't have to boot teams out to change the structure of the championship. Teams who are not deemed worthy of sharing a pitch with the big dogs will struggle big time. For some there will be no way back. It will end their chances of competing at the top permanently. What we have here are people looking for a short term fix. It might excite you for a few years but what it will effectively do is create a mirror of the hurling championship. It will be a disaster.

    But some teams in the current structure have never competed at the top

    Leitrim have advanced beyond Connacht twice in 92 years
    Sligo have won three Connacht titles in 91 years

    A sound beating in an All Ireland quarter final in 2011 by Kerry is as far as Limerick have progressed in 123 years.

    Clare have done a little better by getting soundly beaten in a QF in 2017, between that and their first Munster title in 1917 then won a single Munster championship.

    I could go on.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,083 ✭✭✭Farawayhome


    But some teams in the current structure have never competed at the top

    Leitrim have advanced beyond Connacht twice in 92 years
    Sligo have won three Connacht titles in 91 years

    A sound beating in an All Ireland quarter final in 2011 by Kerry is as far as Limerick have progressed in 123 years.

    Clare have done a little better by getting soundly beaten in a QF in 2017, between that and their first Munster title in 1917 then won a single Munster championship.

    I could go on.

    No you couldn't. Clare are a division 2 team, they've made great strides. Are division 2 counties getting the chop now? It's like Brolly talking about Roscommon getting booted out last year after taking a few beatings. They were a division 1 county this year, they've won the Connacht championship recently. The callers for the monstrosity are all over the place.
    The truth is that there are not many counties who have been consistently struggling. Dropping those teams won't make a difference.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,083 ✭✭✭Farawayhome


    Just have a look at division 3 and 4 teams from this year.

    Division 4
    Derry - All Ireland champions in the 90's. Regular Ulster champions.
    Wexford - Struggling now but were getting to Leinster finals and the latter stages of the All Ireland in the recent past.

    Division 3
    Westmeath - Leinster champions in the 00's, Leinster finalists for a few years in a row until last year.
    Laois - Basically the same as Westmeath
    Down - Kick them out with their history?
    Louth - Last winners of the Leinster championship apart from Dublin

    I could go on! These counties shouldn't be punished because the 'big' counties view them as an inconvenience.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 26,658 ✭✭✭✭OldMrBrennan83


    Just have a look at division 3 and 4 teams from this year.

    Division 4
    Derry - All Ireland champions in the 90's. Regular Ulster champions.
    Wexford - Struggling now but were getting to Leinster finals and the latter stages of the All Ireland in the recent past.

    Division 3
    Westmeath - Leinster champions in the 00's, Leinster finalists for a few years in a row until last year.
    Laois - Basically the same as Westmeath
    Down - Kick them out with their history?
    Louth - Last winners of the Leinster championship apart from Dublin

    I could go on! These counties shouldn't be punished because the 'big' counties view them as an inconvenience.

    Meath were the last non Dublin Leinster winners. Beat Louth in the final that year, was the run-in goal robbery I think.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,083 ✭✭✭Farawayhome


    Meath were the last non Dublin Leinster winners. Beat Louth in the final that year, was the run-in goal robbery I think.

    Yes, I've awarded that title to Louth.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,413 ✭✭✭✭Fr Tod Umptious


    No you couldn't. Clare are a division 2 team, they've made great strides. Are division 2 counties getting the chop now? It's like Brolly talking about Roscommon getting booted out last year after taking a few beatings. They were a division 1 county this year, they've won the Connacht championship recently. The callers for the monstrosity are all over the place.
    The truth is that there are not many counties who have been consistently struggling. Dropping those teams won't make a difference.

    Ok lets look at Clare
    Then have risen from Div 4 in 2014 to spending 2017 and 2018 in Div 2
    Good progress in the league obviously

    But lets look at their Championship record in that period

    2014 - League = Promoted from Div 4
    Championship
    Lost to Kerry (Div 1)
    Beat Calrlow (Div 4)
    Lost to Kildare (Div 1)

    2015 - League = Div 3
    Championship

    Beat Limerick ( Div 3)
    Lost to Cork (Div 1)
    Lost to Longford (Div4)

    2016 - league = Promoted from Div 3
    Championship

    Beat Limerick ( Div 3)
    Lost to Kerry (Div 1)
    Beat Laois (Div 2)
    Beat Sligo (Div 3)
    Beat Roscommon (Div 1)
    Lost kerry (Div 1)

    2017 - League = Div 2
    Championship

    Beat Limerick (Div 4)
    Lost Kerry (Div 1)
    Beat Laois (Div 3)
    Lost Mayo (Div 1)

    2018 - League = Div 2
    Championship

    Beat Limeick (Div 4)
    Lost Kerry (Div 1)
    Beat Offaly (Div 3)
    Lost Armagh (Div 3)

    So with the exception of beating Roscommon in 2016 they have done very little other than beat teams in the same or lower division and lose to teams in higher or lower divisions
    Even though they beat Div 2 Loais in 2016 Laois were relegated from Div 2 and Clare promoted to Div 2 , so there was little between them.

    So the great strides they made were in a tiered competition (the league) and not the major competition


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,083 ✭✭✭Farawayhome


    Ok lets look at Clare
    Then have risen from Div 4 in 2014 to spending 2017 and 2018 in Div 2
    Good progress in the league obviously

    But lets look at their Championship record in that period

    2014 - League = Promoted from Div 4
    Championship
    Lost to Kerry (Div 1)
    Beat Calrlow (Div 4)
    Lost to Kildare (Div 1)

    2015 - League = Div 3
    Championship

    Beat Limerick ( Div 3)
    Lost to Cork (Div 1)
    Lost to Longford (Div4)

    2016 - league = Promoted from Div 3
    Championship

    Beat Limerick ( Div 3)
    Lost to Kerry (Div 1)
    Beat Laois (Div 2)
    Beat Sligo (Div 3)
    Beat Roscommon (Div 1)
    Lost kerry (Div 1)

    2017 - League = Div 2
    Championship

    Beat Limerick (Div 4)
    Lost Kerry (Div 1)
    Beat Laois (Div 3)
    Lost Mayo (Div 1)

    2018 - League = Div 2
    Championship

    Beat Limeick (Div 4)
    Lost Kerry (Div 1)
    Beat Offaly (Div 3)
    Lost Armagh (Div 3)

    So with the exception of beating Roscommon in 2016 they have done very little other than beat teams in the same or lower division and lose to teams in higher or lower divisions
    Even though they beat Div 2 Loais in 2016 Laois were relegated from Div 2 and Clare promoted to Div 2 , so there was little between them.

    So the great strides they made were in a tiered competition (the league) and not the major competition

    So you're confirming that you want to cut division 2 teams as well? Only division 1 teams will make the cut? Are you from a division 1 county?

    In 2013 Clare lost to Cork by 9 points and Laois by 16 points. In 2012 they beat Limerick, then lost to Cork by 12 points and Kerry by 19. In 2011 they lost to Cork by 13 and then to Down. In 2010 they lost to Waterford and then Offaly.

    That's the level they were at, they were whipping boys. They hadn't won a game outside Munster since 2006 (they were booted out into the Tommy Murphy Cup in 2007 and 2008)! They have made huge strides to get to the level they are at. What was the point in the effort they put in if they are going to be demoted now? Was the Tommy Murphy cup any use to them or did they make improvements by competing in the real championship?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 26,658 ✭✭✭✭OldMrBrennan83


    I quite like this layout and calendar. Plus the naming is right as it's what has worked for decades at club level.

    https://www.rte.ie/sport/gaa/2019/0524/1051431-future-of-football-blueprint-for-a-3-tier-championship/


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,970 ✭✭✭✭Bass Reeves


    I quite like this layout and calendar. Plus the naming is right as it's what has worked for decades at club level.

    https://www.rte.ie/sport/gaa/2019/0524/1051431-future-of-football-blueprint-for-a-3-tier-championship/

    Brain fart. County players would be involved with County from start of year until July. Teams qualified out of the league system would have use provincial championships to get ready for all Ireland series. Looking at the club calender they would have to play there total County championships in 3-5 weeks.

    Leave existing league alone. Abolish provinvcial championships. Use his senior, Intermediate and Junior groups as an example split each group in two and play round robin. Then you have two choice.

    Out of the senior groups top two teams play finals and semi finals,

    Other choice winner of each group go straight to semi finals. Second placed senior teams play Junior and Intermediate champions for other two semi final spot. Flaw in this is that it is unlikely either of these would ever beat a second placed team

    Normal promotion and relegation between grades will allow teams to progress over time Ideally you would like 12 teams at senior grade as well. This would allow you to have winner progressing to semi and 2nd and 3rd placed teams playing for other semi final spot. But you would have some dead games like a in Lenister hurling Carlow V Kilkenny and Galway

    6 teams would allows 5 rounds of games with quarter finals, semi and finals it could be run over 11-12 weekends and still allow county managers a 2-3 week preperation period in May/early June if All ireland Final was the last Sunday in June or 1st Sunday in September.

    This would take away time pressure from the system. Loads of people fail to grasp that most clubs play without County players in Club league already. The system proposed by Aidan O'Rourke would mean all Club championships would have to be played on a knockout basis. U20 championship would be virtually impossible to hold only for Senior Counties as mosut Intermediate and junior counties would strip any successful U20's team of players.

    Slava Ukrainii



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,497 ✭✭✭ArnoldJRimmer


    Both Carlow and Antrim taking hammerings at the moment, with Louth to come. Brolly will be more insufferable than usual tomorrow night if he's on the Sunday Game


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,083 ✭✭✭Farawayhome


    Here it comes, you all ready for Brolly? Yes, you did just hear him despair at Rory Gallagher telling his Fermanagh players that they are not good enough. Up next you will hear him tell the Antrim players, the Louth players and more than half the counties of Ireland that they are not good enough and must be dropped out of the real championship.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,243 ✭✭✭C__MC


    Any idea when a championship restructure is happening


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,758 ✭✭✭Laois_Man


    Revisionist nonsense of the highest order from RTE.....using the Longford/Kildare draw to strengthen their arguments that counties of a similar grade give exciting games. Not one of them would have put Longford in the sane tier as Kildare when the championship draw was made last November. Nor probably Roscommon and Mayo for that matter!


  • Registered Users Posts: 384 ✭✭vapor trails


    Since when is it a problem for a team to take a beating? The championship structure evolution is starting to resemble Father Ted with the small hammer trying to tap out a dent. The super 8's has destroyed All Ireland Semi's, the qualifiers destoryed the sick nervous gut feeling of an early championship exit that I can barely remember now.

    Once you decide that drubbings are not allowed or are bad for the game, just redraw the county boundaries becuase All Ireland success is not entirely but largely related to population.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    C__MC wrote: »
    Any idea when a championship restructure is happening

    Not until 2021 at least. Current structure has another year to go.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Here it comes, you all ready for Brolly? Yes, you did just hear him despair at Rory Gallagher telling his Fermanagh players that they are not good enough. Up next you will hear him tell the Antrim players, the Louth players and more than half the counties of Ireland that they are not good enough and must be dropped out of the real championship.

    Well what your solution to whats happening then? Louth et al will never win a senior grade All Ireland. I’m sure these players want to have a realistic chance of winning a competition they are involved in. Otherwise whats the point. Hurling is facing these issues, why can’t football?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,083 ✭✭✭Farawayhome


    Well what your solution to whats happening then? Louth et al will never win a senior grade All Ireland. I’m sure these players want to have a realistic chance of winning a competition they are involved in. Otherwise whats the point. Hurling is facing these issues, why can’t football?

    Louth have won 3 All Ireland's. Hurling has a limited number of teams that compete in the real championship, this is not a good thing. Why do you want the same for football?
    People have to keep in mind that this will be a permanent split. There will be no recovery from this. The teams clamering to be separated from the rest will push further and further ahead.
    It would be absolutely disastrous for Gaelic football in the counties booted out but also for those wanting to boot them out. It's short term thinking. You have visions of non stop top class games, full houses to watch Kerry v Dublin every year.
    The novelty will wear off, the crowds will dwindle. Something has to be done to up the standards of football in counties not at the top. Give them a plan and finance to implement it. This is the way forward, demoting them is not.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 21,399 ✭✭✭✭dxhound2005


    Well what your solution to whats happening then? Louth et al will never win a senior grade All Ireland. I’m sure these players want to have a realistic chance of winning a competition they are involved in. Otherwise whats the point. Hurling is facing these issues, why can’t football?

    They have a realistic chance of winning their League division, or getting promotion. The best team in the country should not be determined by a knockout competition. Certainly not one with unequal provinces. Having a knockout competition where everyone gets at least two chances is as good as it gets. A big improvement on what went on for the previous hundred years. The Tommy Murphy Cup proved that the weaker teams are not interested in a B championship

    It should be a home and away league, giving every team 14 meaningful games. If that means four divisions with some teams never getting out of the bottom two, that is just what happens in sport.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Louth have won 3 All Ireland's. Hurling has a limited number of teams that compete in the real championship, this is not a good thing. Why do you want the same for football?
    People have to keep in mind that this will be a permanent split. There will be no recovery from this. The teams clamering to be separated from the rest will push further and further ahead.
    It would be absolutely disastrous for Gaelic football in the counties booted out but also for those wanting to boot them out. It's short term thinking. You have visions of non stop top class games, full houses to watch Kerry v Dublin every year.
    The novelty will wear off, the crowds will dwindle. Something has to be done to up the standards of football in counties not at the top. Give them a plan and finance to implement it. This is the way forward, demoting them is not.

    Two of those were in 1910 & 1912, the last in 1957. Louth will not win an AI again in the current setup. Promotion in any tiered proposal gives counties a chance to aim for the top tier and relegation will ensure less chance of dead rubber games happening. All finals to be in Croke Pk on AI weekend as well to give them meaning for the players.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,083 ✭✭✭Farawayhome


    Two of those were in 1910 & 1912, the last in 1957. Louth will not win an AI again in the current setup. Promotion in any tiered proposal gives counties a chance to aim for the top tier and relegation will ensure less chance of dead rubber games happening. All finals to be in Croke Pk on AI weekend as well to give them meaning for the players.

    Yes, so it's possible. Dublin had won 1 All Ireland in nearly 30 years, now look at them. How did they improve? Now do the same to the rest.
    You think there will be no more one sided games in this breakaway championship? Did you see the super 8's last year? Roscommon and Kildare got some batterings. Do you want to make it a 5 or 6 team breakaway?
    Meaning for the players? Promising to play on All Ireland weekends? That's been heard before. Let me ask you, how much of the Westmeath v Kerry Joe McDonagh cup game did you see on the Sunday Game last night?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,909 ✭✭✭Coillte_Bhoy




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  • Registered Users Posts: 24 wellpastit


    Yechampionship? Did you see the super 8's last year? Roscommon and Kildare got some batterings. Do you want to make it a 5 or 6 team breakaway?


    Dont think Kildare took some batterings last year. Lost by 2 pts to Monaghan,lost by 3 after losing D flynn to a red when they were very much in the game maybe even on to. Had Kerry by the town halls at half time without d Flynn suspended and a stupid red card changed the whole game.
    I can see the point you are trying to make but that example is simply incorrect


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 8,722 ✭✭✭nice_guy80



    He's completely out of touch with the majority of counties
    easy when he is involved with a Dublin club

    Louth is a very urban county, population wise
    What strategy have the GAA funded to improve the GAA in both the large towns there?
    Same with the large towns in Westmeath, Laois, Kildare, Wicklow
    answer? sweet feck all


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,083 ✭✭✭Farawayhome



    There's an appetite for it amongst the 'bigger' counties. Let's not forget that the GAA is all about money these days, it's run as a business. That's the angle they're taking on this. They see the 14,000 who showed up for a double header including Dublin, they see the dwindling attendances. That's why the super 8's were introduced and that's why this is their next step. We have to stop them, everybody should be against this, even the 'bigger' counties. Let's tackle the real problem.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,083 ✭✭✭Farawayhome


    wellpastit wrote: »
    Yechampionship? Did you see the super 8's last year? Roscommon and Kildare got some batterings. Do you want to make it a 5 or 6 team breakaway?


    Dont think Kildare took some batterings last year. Lost by 2 pts to Monaghan,lost by 3 after losing D flynn to a red when they were very much in the game maybe even on to. Had Kerry by the town halls at half time without d Flynn suspended and a stupid red card changed the whole game.
    I can see the point you are trying to make but that example is simply incorrect

    They lost to Kerry by 12 was it? That's a battering. I was including that and Roscommons.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,619 ✭✭✭harpsman


    You don't have to boot teams out to change the structure of the championship. Teams who are not deemed worthy of sharing a pitch with the big dogs will struggle big time. For some there will be no way back. It will end their chances of competing at the top permanently. What we have here are people looking for a short term fix. It might excite you for a few years but what it will effectively do is create a mirror of the hurling championship. It will be a disaster.

    For those people against a tiered championship are you against the senior, intermediate, junior structure in your own county? Have intermediate clubs disappeared, never to be seen again? Have intermediate and junior clubs no interest in playing at level 2 or 3? Does every player in the county have a right to play for the senior county title? Certainly Sean Cavanagh seemed enthusiastic enough about his intermediate titles


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,083 ✭✭✭Farawayhome


    harpsman wrote: »
    For those people against a tiered championship are you against the senior, intermediate, junior structure in your own county? Have intermediate clubs disappeared, never to be seen again? Have intermediate and junior clubs no interest in playing at level 2 or 3? Does every player in the county have a right to play for the senior county title? Certainly Sean Cavanagh seemed enthusiastic enough about his intermediate titles

    You're comparing apples and oranges. The inter county game is one where everyone has competed at the top level and where the huge majority have had some form of success. If we go back to the 90's and 00's, the amount of counties challenging for honours was huge. We had a vibrant competition. That's what we should be aiming for. Let's look at what's changed since then and tackle that problem.


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  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Let me ask you, how much of the Westmeath v Kerry Joe McDonagh cup game did you see on the Sunday Game last night?

    Thats not a problem with the Joe McDonagh cup itself, more a problem with the TV rights and how they are structured.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    harpsman wrote: »
    For those people against a tiered championship are you against the senior, intermediate, junior structure in your own county? Have intermediate clubs disappeared, never to be seen again? Have intermediate and junior clubs no interest in playing at level 2 or 3? Does every player in the county have a right to play for the senior county title? Certainly Sean Cavanagh seemed enthusiastic enough about his intermediate titles

    Yep. Westport won the club football Intermediate AI in 2017. I was in Croker for it. The celebrations were fantastic.

    Richie Power's reaction to winning the hurling equivalent that year: "outweighs anything that I’ve ever done before", despite him having 9 senior inter-county AI's with Kilkenny. Players WILL buy into tiered competitions if they are structured and marketed properly.

    https://www.rte.ie/sport/gaa/2017/0218/853689-richie-power/


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,083 ✭✭✭Farawayhome


    Thats not a problem with the Joe McDonagh cup itself, more a problem with the TV rights and how they are structured.

    The other tiers in hurling were promised what you said would be promised for the football counties demoted, we can see from the hurling what the reality will be.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,083 ✭✭✭Farawayhome


    Yep. Westport won the club football Intermediate AI in 2017. I was in Croker for it. The celebrations were fantastic.

    Richie Power's reaction to winning the hurling equivalent that year: "outweighs anything that I’ve ever done before", despite him having 9 senior inter-county AI's with Kilkenny. Players WILL buy into tiered competitions if they are structured and marketed properly.

    https://www.rte.ie/sport/gaa/2017/0218/853689-richie-power/

    Another Mayo poster advocating the tiered championship. It's mostly coming from the so called stronger counties. They want to remove the 'weaker' counties out of their way so they can get their big days out in Croke Park without any hassle. After the weekend you're thinking if only Roscommon were removed from the championship.
    That's the reality of it, why are supporters and officials from these counties being so vocal? What's in it for them? They don't care about the health of Gaelic Football in the 'weaker' counties. They're out for themselves and that's why those not apart of the 'elite' need to stand together and put a stop to this.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,083 ✭✭✭Farawayhome


    Yep. Westport won the club football Intermediate AI in 2017. I was in Croker for it. The celebrations were fantastic.

    Richie Power's reaction to winning the hurling equivalent that year: "outweighs anything that I’ve ever done before", despite him having 9 senior inter-county AI's with Kilkenny. Players WILL buy into tiered competitions if they are structured and marketed properly.

    https://www.rte.ie/sport/gaa/2017/0218/853689-richie-power/

    And by the way, the B championship was tried already. They also tried the Tommy Murphy Cup. Players DIDN'T buy into that and they won't this time either.


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