Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

When the sun finally sets on this grim virus, GAA has to expect a strange new dawn

- BERNARDFLY­NN

FOR obvious reasons football has been on the backburner for the last couple of columns.

And I’m delighted to say that after 11 days in isolation, my test result for Covid-19 came back negative.

Thank God. It was a great relief to finally be home.

Sport, including Gaelic football, is on the bottom rung of the ladder in terms of priorities now but that will change in time.

In my opinion, this frightenin­g way of life will – unfortunat­ely – get worse in the short term. We ain’t seen nothing yet.

This deadly virus is going to shape our lives forever more. The way we live will change.

And that’s why I believe the GAA and Gaelic games will also change forever more.

The GAA’S existence is important to our society but it won’t be crucial in the whole scheme of things. When we do get back to some semblance of normality, the associatio­n will become very much a part of our lives again.

However, I believe it will no longer be all-consuming.

The time afforded to our games will become shorter and there will be less money spent on both the club and inter-county scenes.

And so this pandemic will have serious ramificati­ons for the future of our clubs and our county boards.

It will represent a watershed moment for the GAA, one which will require a total re-evaluation of what and who it stands for.

Fundraisin­g for clubs over the next few years will be very difficult, nigh-on impossible.

There won’t be any bailout for clubs in the aftermath, no financial assistance.

Who will pay the bills? It’s a major problem that should scare the living daylights out of those running clubs and county boards around the country. So the coming months should be used by the GAA to slash all the fat off the club and inter-county games.

There should be a proper condensing of both and it’s something that should be implemente­d as a matter of urgency.

Those running the show have a chance now to display some real leadership.

The runaway train that was the inter-county game has come to a standstill.

Now is the time for Croke Park and county boards to regain full ownership on their own terms, not on the pre-existing terms of managers and their entourages.

Gaelic games won’t survive otherwise – and survival is the number one priority for all concerned when we wake up from this nightmare.

We have no comprehens­ion in terms of what’s ahead of us on a monetary scale.

So it’s time for action. The GAA must wipe the slate clean, ripping up all deals with inter-county management and club mercenarie­s. All bets are off.

When things eventually settle down it will be a real test of everyone.

It will separate the volunteers who truly love the GAA from those who love the money that goes with their involvemen­t.

This will be a once-off opportunit­y for the policy makers in GAA Headquarte­rs, at county board level and club executives to end the hijacking of our games, to flush out the mercenarie­s who have infiltrate­d it and perform a full detox.

Cleansing the associatio­n will be for the best and give clubs and counties a reasonable chance to survive.

We have no comprehens­ion in terms of what’s ahead of us on a monetary scale

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? SKY’S NOT THE LIMIT A new and very different outlook awaits the GAA once virus has abated
SKY’S NOT THE LIMIT A new and very different outlook awaits the GAA once virus has abated

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom