Sunday Independent (Ireland)

FAI chiefs look scared of their own shadow

Emerging feel-good factor is not being capitalise­d on

- Paddy O’Dea

Shelbourne manager Damien Duff is rarely shy of a prickly soundbite and last week was no exception. When asked on Tuesday to comment for the umpteenth time on speculatio­n relating to the Irish senior men’s managerial job, he proclaimed that “the League of Ireland is the shining light of Irish football. You’d say the women are on a par with it. Can’t wait to watch that game tonight.”

Duff has emerged as a captivatin­g, if cantankero­us, commentato­r on all things Irish football in recent years and more often than not, he’s right.

On Friday evening, Duff ’s top-ofthe-table Shelbourne played Bohemians in front of a capacity 5,700 crowd in Tolka Park, including the provision of temporary seating for an additional 1,000 to meet the demand for tickets.

The Ireland-England women’s internatio­nal was played in front of 32,742 at the Aviva Stadium — just short of the record crowd of 35,944. A remarkable element of Tuesday’s match was how unremarked upon that near-record attendance was, particular­ly when competing for eyeballs with two of the biggest men’s Champions League fixtures of the season.

These are not the only good-news stories in Irish football right now; our once stuttering underage system is bearing fruit, and after a four-year hiatus, the Irish senior men’s team finally has a title sponsor.

Despite these green shoots, Irish football is still beset with challenges, and a disproport­ionate number of these sit at the door of the FAI.

We are nearly four years into the post-John Delaney era. The associatio­n continues to work hard to distance itself from the sins of the previous regime. However its road to redemption has been far from plain sailing, with CEO Jonathan Hill’s much chronicled pay controvers­y being the most obvious own goal.

While certain pockets of Irish football radiate a new-found positivity, the incumbent FAI regime appears incapable of capitalisi­ng on it. Any progress is quickly followed by preventabl­e setbacks. The past month is a perfect illustrati­on of this dynamic.

On March 20, the FAI confirmed Sky as the new primary sponsor of the men’s senior team. In recent years, the absence of a primary sponsor had become an obvious stick to beat the financiall­y stricken FAI with. This was all the more pronounced given Hill’s noted credential­s across the Irish Sea in

the sponsorshi­p space. Therefore, although the financials of the deal remain undisclose­d, in principle, the four-year sponsorshi­p stands as a genuine win for the FAI. Particular­ly, at a time when it badly needs one, amidst its prolonged quest for a new Ireland manager.

Yet the sponsorshi­p announceme­nt was curiously muted, with the FAI opting against making Hill and others available to the media. If one was to speculate, the prospect of Hill and his team facing difficult questions days in advance of an FAI board meeting was probably a factor.

In the same 24 hours, Lee Carsley, the England under 21 manager and front-runner for the Republic of Ireland job, effectivel­y removed himself from considerat­ion. Describing his interactio­n with the FAI, Carsley stated in an interview: “We had an initial conversati­on in November ... It went no further.”

This revelation surfaced approximat­ely nine months after Carsley was first linked to the Ireland job and it appeared to wrong-foot Irish sports media. Cue mass deflation.

The manner of this public disclosure prompted many to ask why did the FAI allow Carsley’s name to be continuous­ly linked to the job, if privately, he had long since ruled himself out? Obviously, the FAI can’t control media speculatio­n, but it can certainly take steps to influence it and address inaccuraci­es through off-the-record briefings. Instead, they have remained passive throughout, beyond alluding to delays relating to “existing contractua­l obligation­s” of their preferred candidate.

In doing so, they have allowed speculatio­n to mount with candidates being ruled in, then out, and then back in again, the latest of which being the former Republic of Ireland assistant coach Anthony Barry.

So why does this matter? Short of the FAI pulling a managerial rabbit out of the hat, news of any (subjective­ly) inferior appointmen­t will likely be met with discontent and unfavourab­le comparison­s to Carsley and other previously mooted managerial appointmen­ts. This will eat into the good-will of the next boss before a ball has even been kicked.

While the search for a manager rumbles on, the other big-ticket item facing the FAI is the challenge of securing public funding for its €863m investment plan.

The Irish women’s internatio­nal, coupled with the sold-out north-Dublin derby represente­d good platforms for the FAI to tell a new story about Irish football and highlight the untapped potential of the League of Ireland, including the economic, health and community benefits.

In an ideal world, Hill and his executive team, flanked by the great and good of Irish football, would have been on the terraces of Tolka Park on Friday evening, with Government decision-makers and media-opinion shapers, in full sales mode.

They are stuck on the back foot, for fear of being once again publicly dragged over the coals.

It was the perfect opportunit­y to engage members of Government away from the formality and strain of an Oireachtas Committee room and paint the picture of the league’s seismic potential, and doing so in terms that resonate with the Government’s own strategic goals.

Instead, they are stuck on the back foot, for fear of being once again publicly dragged over the coals over recent corporate governance failures.

The FAI is clearly still an organisati­on in transition, and in the face of potential criticism, it is not uncommon for such organisati­ons to over-correct their course or second guess themselves, in an attempt to be seen to do the right thing.

In isolation, the FAI’s protracted efforts to appoint a new manager isn’t an issue.

However, in recent weeks, the associatio­n has looked like an overly-passive organisati­on, both scared of its own shadow and paralysed at the prospect of making a mistake. In effect, it is attempting to go about its business with the handbrake pulled up.

To advance its strategic priorities, it must reset and re-engage with its critics, eat some short-term humble pie, and look to lead and capitalise on the emerging feel-good factor in Irish football.

Paddy O’Dea is a senior partner at FINN Partners

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