FAI Football Pathways Program |
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Faisal978
Joe Lapira Joined: 26 Dec 2021 Status: Offline Points: 4 |
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Posted: 25 Mar 2024 at 10:58pm |
I appreciate the government's financial support of youth sports. Investing in your young is the best way to ensure that you create a generation of healthy, educated individuals. I wish we had known about this when we were kids. We had fewer opportunities back then than children do now. I might have played professional football if we had had such a strong football training programme, but right now, all I identify with football are the Sunday football games I watch on https://sportscore.io.
Edited by Faisal978 - 13 hours 44 minutes ago at 2:18pm |
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Nielnik1
Joe Lapira Joined: 18 Nov 2021 Status: Offline Points: 2 |
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The government's financial support of young sports is something I like. The best approach to make sure you raise a generation of intelligent and healthy people is to invest money in your youth. I wish this had existed when we were younger.
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Saint Tom
Jack Charlton Joined: 03 Jan 2009 Location: Ireland Status: Offline Points: 9986 |
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May as well rip this up. Completely unbackable.
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My destination inchicore my next stop being kilmainham
Where patriots and super saints are the topics of conversation |
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MayoMark
Moderator Group The NEW angrier Freewheeler Joined: 27 Jan 2009 Location: Castlebar Status: Offline Points: 26346 |
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They finally did it man... They killed my f**kin' car...
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BrendanD88
Roy Keane 99% of my posts are emojis Joined: 29 Mar 2013 Location: Co Down Status: Offline Points: 10022 |
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You’ll need it those kids would destroy you.
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MayoMark
Moderator Group The NEW angrier Freewheeler Joined: 27 Jan 2009 Location: Castlebar Status: Offline Points: 26346 |
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GAA has become the ultimate spoofers paradise. Gym sessions for 10 and 11 year olds. Give me strength
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They finally did it man... They killed my f**kin' car...
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Thorn
Joe Lapira Joined: 09 Sep 2023 Status: Offline Points: 12 |
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I could see Sport Ireland having a role in this as an honest broker. Soccer has the biggest numbers of participants so it really should be in a stronger position. Sport Ireland could broker a deal with the GAA and County Boards to avoid fixture clashing.
For instance U14s could be given Monday evenings for soccer nationally and no GAA fixtures for that age group would be scheduled to clash. Training is a different issue and I think it would need to be worked out locally. The kids should be at the centre of this and if they want to play different sports then governing bodies should be looking at how to facilitate it. Having had a few years of summer league I just can't see how anyone would prefer to be playing on grass(muck) in the winter.
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Trap junior
Robbie Keane YBIG Minister of Doom & Gloom Joined: 25 Jan 2010 Location: Irish Riviera Status: Offline Points: 39900 |
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Like the boot of a Renault Megane
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Pied Piper to: Baldrick, Brendan 88, 9Fingers, Borussia and more...
97.6% chance this post will be replied to by Baldrick (source: PWC) |
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Trap junior
Robbie Keane YBIG Minister of Doom & Gloom Joined: 25 Jan 2010 Location: Irish Riviera Status: Offline Points: 39900 |
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If you don't love the GAA can you even call yourself Irish?
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Pied Piper to: Baldrick, Brendan 88, 9Fingers, Borussia and more...
97.6% chance this post will be replied to by Baldrick (source: PWC) |
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The Huntacha
Roy Keane Joined: 27 Mar 2012 Location: Dubai Status: Offline Points: 12843 |
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A gym session (I know they won’t be deadlifting their bodyweight but still) for U-12’s at the expense of a session to develop technical skill is insane
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Jimmy Bullard - "Favorite band? Elastic."
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Thorn
Joe Lapira Joined: 09 Sep 2023 Status: Offline Points: 12 |
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This is my experience in the Roscommon District league. At underage it's a summer league, begins in April finishes September/October. I've coached teams for 10 years. The fixtures are pretty much set in stone, I.e. U14s play Monday evenings, U12's Tuesdays and so on. Fixtures set months in advance.
The league pauses in July/August and 7 a side competitions take over, this compensates for players going on holiday and the league resumes again after that. Last year Roscommon GAA changed some of their underage fixtures so that they clashed with the soccer. The parents put serious pressure on the GAA and they relented and revised their fixtures to avoid clashing. In my experience the kids prefer playing soccer but the GAA has a serious hold over the parents and they are nearly forced to play it. One of the issues is that of the local GAA clubs and their coaches. A local club schedules 2 training sessions & a gym session and a game a week for U12's, also warning the kids if they don't attend all then they won't play. Summer soccer is way more pleasurable for everyone involved, the kids love consistent games, it's easier to train and keep their interest. Unfortunately if it becomes impossible to field soccer teams in GAA strongholds then so be it, but if agreement can be made on the scheduling of fixtures it can be done. Winter football is dead, pitches are unplayable for months at a time and we must do what's right for the game.
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Scissors Kick
500 Club la la la Joined: 10 Jan 2017 Status: Offline Points: 739 |
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A lad in my school, in a pure GAA area, a parish which didn't have or still doesn't to this day have a soccer club, who's father made the county panel in GAA Football & was head neck knees & ankles involved in the local club, chose soccer, and this was twenty years ago. He got UK trials, got a six month contract followed by a three year deal at an EPL club. Made first team, played 21s for Ireland and ended up having a very good lower league career. Is now a manager in English non league. Back then, that area had no soccer level of interest to UK scouting ( and still doesn't ) so he had to commute to Cherry Orchard several times a week, to train and it wasn't a short drive, it was several hours. His father & family drove him. So I don't get it that soccer shouldn't offer those options in GAA heartlands. It won't be easy & there will be casualties, but dig in, offer the pathway, offer credible coaching ( very important ) and compete. There aren't other easier options, if you want to reach out to potential talent outside the big population centers. Edited by Scissors Kick - 21 Feb 2024 at 8:32pm |
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doherty
Jack Charlton Teenage Kicks, so hard to beat Joined: 30 Mar 2015 Status: Offline Points: 7764 |
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GAA is like the mafia. Once you go in you can never get out.
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I love beer gardens
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Tapo
Kevin Kilbane Joined: 21 Aug 2023 Status: Offline Points: 173 |
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Yeah it’s a shame. If both organisations worked together in regions where there’s crossover everyone would benefit
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Maccatacca
Ray Houghton Joined: 01 Jun 2016 Status: Offline Points: 4217 |
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It’s a f**king cult.
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Celticbhoy32
Ronnie Whelan Joined: 26 Nov 2022 Location: Kilkenny Status: Offline Points: 71 |
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as poster above said, hurling is king in Kilkenny. The problem is there's plenty of room for both but a few will try and sabotage kids enjoying and playing "that aul foreign game".
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Tapo
Kevin Kilbane Joined: 21 Aug 2023 Status: Offline Points: 173 |
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Cant be easy living in a hurling stronghold when you’re a football person!! I guess my point was that in the long run it could be more beneficial for the people that choose football from an early age to get a better share of the resources rather than it going to people that will more than likely switch to GAA in the future. I used to know a kid from a hurling town that played football and hurling. He had a close relative that was very active in the League of Ireland. I asked him if he knew whether he would choose football or hurling, it was 100% hurling, even with the relative being involved. He was only about ten at the time, but he already knew what he wanted.
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Baldrick
Robbie Keane Peyton-tly Pedantic Joined: 18 Sep 2008 Location: Ireland Status: Offline Points: 32835 |
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The minute they take their first breath and when they take take their last one.
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AKA pedantic kunt
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