I think you hit the nail on the head in terms of social supporter. These people were never really into sport to begin with but when rugby was so pervasive at its height in popularity it was another casual topic of conversation for them. One where they could not be outed for lack of understanding as rugby commentary only dealt with superlatives and made up phrases that seemed like an in joke for the rugby fraternity.
Iâd disagree a lot of the younger lads who have gone through academies believe they are above playing club. They only see themselves play for the provisional team. There are a few exceptions.
Pro rugby in this country lost the run of itself in the last few years, keeping up with th Jones in the England and France in order to keep key stars is killing them now. The likes of sexton and Murray on massive money is weighing the union down. No player should be on âŹ500k a year. You could have 3 or 4 players for that.
It has plenty of debt obligations around the country. More than enough to concern any of us. Provincial Councils, GDAâs, stadium expansions, loans to clubs, county officers, player expenses across 32 counties and beyond, the overseas units.
Donât fool yourself, the GAA needs its income, and needs it quick.
I think the IRFU missed a big trick in the medium to long term by taking the Heineken Cup off free to air tv. I appreciate that some games are still available between TV3 and Channel 4 but they had a captive audience for this competition at a time when not much else is happening in the sporting world on sleepy Saturday afternoons and evenings in November, December and January.
Would be interesting to see what the viewing figures for a Munster or Leinster European match shown exclusively on Sky are now compared to previously.
You seem to be glossing over the fact that the gaa is amateur fortunately. If it had tried to go professional it would have gone the way of professional club rugby and the AIL.
Very true. I have found recent games without the crowd terrible to watch. The 2 recent club hurling games on tv have on the other hand been very exciting to watch. Who would have thought club hurling would be trumping top rugby games.
Maybe it does but I donât see any gaa clubs collapsing over the covid crisis. Maybe the top brass in gaa will collapse but wonât affect the clubs on the ground.
Keeping Amateurism is one of the best descions the gaa have ever made. Imagine if they had to pay players without gate receipts. Debts and loans can be pushed out, people need their wages weekly/monthly
The arsehole fell out of many clubs in the last recession and needed to be bailed out by the top table. Did you hear about them struggling before the ice started to crack around them?
Yeah I see that. Clubs incomes have dried up but I have also seen resurgence in county draws and lottos etc. I think GAA supporters are never shy from dipping into their pockets and helping clubs/county boards out financially. Tyrone CB managed to raise ÂŁ5.5m to fund centre of excellence albeit they are a large county but Roscommon are relatively small and are able to raise huge sums of money through club Rossie. County boards are nearly becoming like enterprise boards . Wexford have lead the way but Tipperary are not far behind. Tipp CB have raised huge sums of money through weekend passes and streaming services.
You are talking about County set ups, and they will not be let perish.
But if a GAA Club came to melooking to be bailed out, be I a supporter, local businessman or GAA representative, the first thing I would ask is when and how much have you been paying managers over the past 5 years.
If the answer was what I suspected it to be, theyâd get little or fucking nothing off me.