Drogheda Independent

GAA HAS LOST ITS WAY

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Consolidat­ion in Division Two? Promotion? Relegation?

And what about our chances in the Championsh­ip? A win or two in Leinster and possibly a ‘bit of a run’ in the Qualifiers? Most punters have already installed us as

in Leinster, there is little or no expectatio­n of

I find it very difficult to remember such an indifferen­t outlook among Louth ly begins in 2017 with Louth kicking off their O’Byrne Cup campaign on December 30th with a home game against Longford. This is followed up four days later by an evening game away to Kildare. Assuming we don’t qualify for the knock-out stages of this competitio­n our next competitiv­e outing will be the first round of the league at home to Down on January 28th.

The National League will be run off over an eight-week period finishing on March 25th. Again assuming we don’t make the Division 2 final, then the county’s next competitiv­e outing will not be for another seven weeks when we travel to Portlaoise to take on Carlow in the first round of the Leinster Championsh­ip on May 13th.

I fully expect us to get over this encounter with the Barrowside­rs but if we don’t then our season could be more or less finished before we even get into the month of June. Around this time teams like Dublin, Kerry and Mayo will only be starting to ratchet up their training schedules in advance of the new-fangled Super 8 competitio­n later in the summer. from counties outside the top tier of Gaelic football are asking themselves the question ‘is it all worth it’. In a worst case scenario Louth will play eleven competitiv­e games during the 2018 season. Nine of these eleven fixtures will have been completed before the end of March.

Now I know my own playing days are quite a few years behind me at this stage, but I don’t think I’m that far removed from the psyche of an inter-county footballer. I guarantee you that not one member of the current county panel lay in bed as a child and dreamt of scoring magnificen­t points against Roscommon in February or soaring in the air and catching a high ball against Clare in March (no disrespect meant to either county).

On the contrary, those youthful dreams consisted of goals and points and catches on the hallowed turf of Croke Park on hot summers days with huge numbers of red and white clad supporters cheering on wildly.

The GAA have lost their way big time in their promotion of the inter county game at the moment. Almost by default an era of elitism has crept into the associatio­n. stages of the football championsh­ip which were running quite smoothly while totally ignoring the early part of the competitio­n which is in crisis.

The powers that be have shown no imaginatio­n or foresight in coming up with a solution to this ever-growing problem. The

and marketed second tier competitio­n which would run alongside the main competitio­n with the final being played the same day as the All Ireland.

Prospering in Croke Park on the biggest day of the Gaelic football calendar, albeit in a secondary competitio­n, would do wonders for players and supporters in the weaker counties. It wouldn’t take a rocket scientist to work out a promotion/relegation structure between the two competitio­ns.

As mentioned in this column on numerous occasions in the past, this divide between the haves and have-nots is growing at an

will widen the gap even further. Unless there is some urgency and joinedup thinking at the top table on Jones Road, counties like Louth will drift further and further into the GAA wilderness.

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