As @Cheasty has pointed out here any number of times and Donal Og did last night, Hurling and the GAA in general had a window in the sporting calendar pretty much all to itself from late May through to early September. All the big games were shown as there was little other sport on.
You move out of your window and you find that television stations are not all that interested in your niche sport of hurling, which to large swathes of the island of Ireland is viewed as as a quirky minority sport akin to shinty, lacrosse or curling.
The GAA is only a pastime as well and not a professional sport. Broadcasters will inevitably opt for a global sport like rugby, and a big South African Northern Transvaal v Western Province, Currie Cup clash, or a Scotland v Ireland, Wooden Spoon decider in the Ladies Six Nations or even Paddington The Bear over local rivalries like Clare v Limerick or Cork v Tipperary.
Paddy GAA fan needs to wisen up to the fact that if heâs going to have his split season and move the inter-county Championships to a spring challenge mini blitz format that heâs giving up the competitive advantage he had in the summer as regards unfettered live television coverage.
It would be a bit like @Fitzy arriving home from Australia for Christmas and complaining that the weather is very cold and wondering why he canât eat his Christmas Turkey on Curracloe beach.
All games bar the 2 All Ireland finals and maybe 1 football semi were already played in peak holiday season in Ireland. They have always been summer sports
Iâve asked this question previously. Few people want to answer it. I donât believe a club should be guaranteed any more than 3 games in a championship at most. Iâd be of the view that Tyrone have it right - they take their 15 game league very seriously, it feeds into the championship but the the championship is pure knockout, and itâs the best one in Ireland.
It would be incredibly expensive for the GAA to fund the streaming of all games without charging for GAA Go. The panel, the camera operators, director, sound engineers etc etc etc.
In order to do so free to air they would have to sell adds, but then they would need to start a whole TV add sales department from scratch.
Even at that they would need mutiple TV channels as many games are on at the same time.
GAA TV, if it comes, will need to be behind a paywall as well.
Thatâs little to do with the format itself though, itâs a shambles because of the paucity of quality in the group right now. Leinster was a shambles in the 2000s too when nobody was within an asses roar of Kilkenny. It was very exciting in the round robin era in 2019 when Galway were gone in the group stage and Wexford won their first title in 15 years.
No I understand that they have to charge for it. I just think it has to be as easy as paying your subscription and then turning on the TV and its there
A lot of people are tied into August holidays. August is peak holiday season. Split season zealot @the_man_himself was even advocating here last year that families take their kids out of school to go on holidays in June in readiness for the big club season kick off in the month of August.
Has any other major sporting organisation ever permanently shifted its major fixtures to a different time window in the year like this?
Like, could you imagine if the NFL decided the Superbowl would be played in November or the October Classic of World Series baseball moved to July? Or the AFL Grand Final moved to December?
Rugby League might be the best comparison I can think of when they moved to summer. I lost pretty much all interest in that sport after that. Rugby League in England used to have a good platform with regular live games on Saturday afternoons on BBC1 through the winter, and the Challenge Cup final at the end of April/early May wasnât that far off the FA Cup in terms of the national exposure it gave the game. Ashes Series were a big deal. All that ended when Super League came along. The game sold its soul.
Club action had already probably started in the 95% of counties that had been knocked out of the championship by August under the old format. The only difference now is that you have actual dates at the start of the year to plan around. Before, you could have a holiday planned and the CCCC in whichever county would go off an organise a championship fixture with 2 weeks notice.
Eire moved their domestic soccer league from the traditional European soccer season August to May to February to November. I donât think Paddy Footix bothered with it in either format. A League of Ireland soccer man like @Little_Lord_Fauntleroy and a rugby man like @Tim_Riggins immediately get it though as to what utter nonsense the GAA split season is.