Give over talking shite. You are making a complete tool out of yourself. And for what? To prove yourself an FAI soccer head.
I could not care less if those young lads play soccer in Ballygunnerâs GAA facilities. But give over on Joe Duffy shite about U10s. Would the situation be any different if they were U15s? Is rain wetter for U10s?
Itâs the rules of the association kid. Ballygunner broke the rules.
Youâre a soccer man. You support a franchise Manchester City that flaunt the rules, engage in financial doping and have state owners from Abu Dhabi that stone people to death and chop their hands off. Iâm sure itâs a big shock for you to hear that thereâs rulebooks out there that a lot of people have to adhere to.
How many ways do you want me to say the same thing? I have no personal problem with youngsters, of whatever age, playing soccer or whatever in a GAA facility. That Rubicon has long since been crossed. The person who contacted the GAA over the issue had very little to be doing.
My problem is with people like you, people who appear to think Joe Public somehow âownsâ every GAA ground in the country (via that spurious âExchequerâ line). Vested GAA grounds are private property and the GAA â same as every other sport in Ireland â is under no obligation to promote other codes. Here, the GAA is merely the same as every other sports organization and not in any way different. You are asking of the GAA what you would not ask of any other sports organization, which essentially makes you a bigot. What I am pointing out â to your obvious discomfort â is the clear double standard involved. Showjumping and cycling etc.
Hate the GAA away â I suspect, like other soccer heads I have run across, you think being âanti Gahâ gives you some sort of contrarian kudos. But do not think you are anything but a bigot.
We all saw what happened over the Liam Miller Testimonial. We all heard the comments by the likes of Damien Duff and Stephen Kenny. They excoriated the GAA in terms that would have been pilloried if any other sports organization had been in question. The GAA was basically bullied by a media mob into opening up a ground. You can perfectly well agree with the ground being used but deplore the means by which the ground was obtained.
Yet we were told back in the mid 2000s, after rugby and soccer had been played in Croke Park, such comments would never be heard again. The GAA, we were told by idiots such as Martin Breheny, was moving into a brave new era. The GAA would be reap, we were told, a windfall of changed attitudes and perceptions.
So why did we hear, a dozen and more years later, those comments from the likes of Duff and Kenny? Those comments were as if rugby and soccer had never been played in Croke Park. I predicted at the time exactly what transpired. There is a bedrock of hatred regarding the GAA and this seam will always be there, as this thread is proving once more.
The really interesting facet is how little criticism Bohemian FC have received for a lack of facilities.
I merely stated that advertising a facility for lease and then not allowing a code lease it because of a sport they play is narrow minded , closeted and bigoted.
Youâve invented all the other arguments yourself. If you want to argue against points Iâm not making then shoot for the stars, I wonât be defending them
My point on facilities was more related to community than ownership, very often community fundraising helps pay for these facilities, to forcibly remove community from availing of it is narrow minded, selfish and ultimately counter productive
There seems to have been a decent backlash by some non selfish gaa people to this too.
To get back on topic here Nire beat Rathgormack 1-07 to 0-09 in the Senior Football final.
In truth Rathgormack beat themselves with some wayward shooting in the 2nd half.
I already knew you cannot deal with my points, because of the Manchester City-supporting world in which you live. That world is a really narrow place.
Said narrowness really came across via an amusing incident a few years ago in a Kilkenny pub. Teatime and ROI playing the Faroe Islands or some such crowd in some bargain bin qualifier tie. The pub, now sadly closed, was the smallest one in the town. Said tie was on a television high up on the back wall.
I was drinking a pint, reading The Guardian and minding my own business. At the bar, to my right, was one of the most unpleasant latchikos around â a nigh professional soccer head, full of guff about Dah Gah. He began talking loudly about how disgraceful it was that I was paying no attention âto the Irish national teamâ. Without looking up, I said: âI enjoy watching the Irish national team every time it plays Scotlandâs shinty team.â