Is there a future for small rural clubs?

Started by LooseCannon, July 11, 2019, 11:09:20 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

Heshs Umpire

Quote from: LooseCannon on July 11, 2019, 11:09:20 PM
From a thread that I've started on uibhfhaili.com.

Just saw that Edenderry's junior team received a walkover from Clonmore Harps, having got one from Ballyfore the week before, with neither side being able to field teams.
It's a sad sight. I wouldn't know too much about either, but I get the impression that mere existence is becoming challenging.
Unfortunately, things aren't looking to positive into the future for small rural clubs. In a few years time, we realistically could be down 4 or 5 clubs in quick succession.
This is happening all over the country. Meanwhile, the GAA seem content with the Super 8s and don't give a tuppenny about the grassroots.

Just my few thoughts. Feel free to throw in your own thoughts. I'm just vexed with the GAA, standing idly by as clubs are falling into the abyss of non existence, day by day


Apologies for initiating this amidst the super 8s, but I'm bloody well pissed off.
Very sorry to hear that about Ballyfore and Clonmore. Would know of their struggles in recent years.
I haven't heard of any Laois club in that position this year but it's fair to say that the likes of Kyle and Barrowhouse who are stuck in corners bordering other counties are always under pressure.
Underage amalgamations are necessary in nearly every football club in Laois. Maybe 6 or 7 stand alones.
Well I could keep it above
But then it wouldn't be sky anymore

LooseCannon

I'll let Bracknaghboy set the scene from uibhfhaili.com. There's more to it than meets the eye, going back years.
"Ballyfore have been relying on lads to tog recently who backboned the team 20-25 years ago. They must be abstaining a lot there because they have produced almost no young lads at all to fill the boots. Also they used to pick up a few disillusioned Edenderry players but that seems to have dried up. Of course they had an intercounty player a couple of years back who choose to leave and seek glory with Edenderry and Clonmore Harps would have had two intercounty players had they not sought glory with Rhode as well (remember all that??).........when guys do that it has a really negative impact on the future of the small club.
I know folk from both Clonmore and Ballyfore and it'll be tough if these clubs go under as there are people at both clubs who have poured their heart and soul into it but things look bleak now for them."

There's a good few more going to go from talking to people from various clubs, including former Offaly players and all Ireland winners. Generally the clubs are on or near the periphery of the county.
Realistically in ten year's time, we could be down 7 or 8 clubs. Unfortunately, that's being realistic.

Ringfort

In fairness I think throughout the history of the GAA rural clubs have come, gone or amalgamated depending on local, national and international economic realities. Rural depopulation is far from being the GAAs fault and it's not really the governments either. That whole picture is far bigger.

Not from the club but was looking at Kilmore (RN) history recently. For outsiders (and no offence to any kilmore people who might be reading) this is a place in the back arse of beyond, sandwiched up in north Roscommon in a corner against the Shannon and with no through traffic on the road to no where. Agricultural land is marginal at best and when I played on the pitch as a young lad it was growing reeds and rushes as much as grass.

But in the early days of the association a few different entities operated as clubs in the current Kilmore area. They came and went and Kilmore itself almost went in the post war period only resurfacing as an adult team in the 70s. It's a very proud club to this day but is fielding amalgamated teams at underage in recent years as population problems hit again for a second time in their history. Maybe in years to come Carrick will explode and Kilmore will benefit from an overspill and the numbers will swell again. Or maybe the club will dissolve or merge with the likes of Shannon Gaels, or Kilmore lads will end up playing with Strokestown or Elphin depending on which end of the place they come from.

Point being it's happened before and will happen again. It's not anybody's fault as such, certainly not the GAAs , the wheels of history turn and rural clubs like this will come and go.

GalwayBayBoy

#18
More and more underage amalgamations on the way I imagine. Often between neighboring clubs who would traditionally be big rivals. And then those lads go their separate ways as they get older and are expected to knock seven bells out of each other. Changed circumstances for sure. I know in Galway probably the most well known of the amalgamated clubs is Northern Gaels up in rural north east Galway. Who are actually an amalgamation of 3 clubs let alone 2.

QuoteThree parishes came together recently in Glenamaddy Community Centre for the launch of the new Northern Gaels GAA Club. The club is an amalgamation of Glenamaddy, Williamstown and Glinsk GAA clubs at underage level under new chairman, Alphie O'Brien and his hard-working committee.

PRO Anne Marie Crehan said the move was necessary in order to provide regular football for young players locally.

  "We have Glenamaddy, Williamstown and Glinsk. The three have come together out of a need for more players at underage level because none of the three have had adequate numbers for the last few years and they've had to concede games.

  "Williamstown and Glinsk had come together in the last two years but then decided that even with two teams together there still weren't sufficient numbers so they decided to bring Glenamaddy on board as well," she said.

  A committee of 12 was formed last September and has met regularly since. The committee has been working behind the scenes in order to ensure the amalgamation went as smoothly as possible.

  "As you can imagine there are politics involved (laughs). When you have two clubs there's a certain amount of politics, but when you have three even more so. We formed a committee that was made up of an equal proportion of representatives from each of the three parishes," said Anne Marie.

  Every aspect of the new club was looked at including Northern Gaels' new club colours and identity.

  "No club wanted to have just their colours involved so we came up with a brand new jersey and a brand new crest.

  "We have (come up with) a new name because we found it was going to be very difficult to put together Williamstown, Glenamaddy and Glinsk so we just decided to go with something completely different to form a new identity so that all of the three parishes felt equal in it. Because we're north-east Galway we went with Northern Gaels. It sounded like a good name and everyone seemed happy with it".

Jayop

There's so many factors in this that the gaa have zero control over. Rural depopulation is the biggest I think. Competition from other sports bigger now than ever. Other non sports pass times are more widely available. Xbox, TV, youth clubs, so much choice. My young buck is eleven, played under 6 and 8 but was onky going because I wanted him to and he doesn't any more. I'm still hoping he decides to go back but it's unlikely. You cant blame the gaa for that.

The gaa though does have other things it can control and they don't do a good job of that. Fixtures are the no1 issue. Over training, shite football. Maybe drop the numbers to 13 a side and smaller clubs will find it easier to fill a team.

It's tough.

BennyCake

Id imagine expense is a big thing nowadays.

Years ago you only had a field to maintain, and changing rooms mightn't have been much, an old portacabin maybe. And before that, behind a hedge.

Nowadays, it's floodlights, coaches, clubhouse, management teams, gym, ice baths, social club, bar staff, insurance, running costs etc. That's a lot of money for a small rural area to constantly maintain.

thebackbar1

#21
Rural clubs are a vital part of the GAA and its simply not good enough for the association to ignore them

* make it easier to run clubs, simplify the job of being the secretary etc of a club

* preparation of teams nowadays is becoming more and more time consuming, this means more and more people are saying no thanks to getting involved with teams. This needs to be examined seriously.

* the association should give smaller towns more matches, the galway v mayo match should have been held in roscommon Town last weekend

Rossfan

Should HAVE >:(.
It certainly should gave been but that still wouldn't enable St Ronans or Kilmore or Ballinameen or the others to field their own underage teams.
Is there an optimum population to sustain a vibrant club?
Davy's given us a dream to cling to
We're going to bring home the SAM

manfromdelmonte

The GAA is becoming more and more a 'top down' organisation whereas it was always a bottom up organisation

Solutions to the rural club issue have to come from the clubs.
Amalgamations cause an issue of the less capable players dropping out earlier. They might have stuck at playing with their own  club and friends, but once it goes into a bigger group, a higher standard of play and training you will see a lot of kids stopping playing around 14.

Years ago clubs ran more social tournaments - 7 a side etc. That seems to be totally gone.

There definitely seems to be less and less support coming from the parents for the club and the young players.
People are time poor.

The GAA are implementing policy now where you cannot give a trophy out at an U10 tournament, or they won't grant permission for it to be run??
You cannot run your own summer camp unless you host a Cup Camp first???
Clubs are being dictated to far too much

thewobbler

Quote from: thebackbar1 on July 13, 2019, 09:08:26 AM
Rural clubs are a vital part of the GAA and its simply not good enough for the association to ignore them

* make it easier to run clubs, simplify the job of being the secretary etc of a club

* preparation of teams nowadays is becoming more and more time consuming, this means more and more people are saying no thanks to getting involved with teams. This needs to be examined seriously.

* the association should give smaller towns more matches, the galway v mayo match should have been held in roscommon Town last weekend

1. I'm not sure how the GAA can make it easier to run clubs. In my experience it's internal politics, desires, conflicts and occasionally ignorance, that take all the time.

2. The clubs have created this beast themselves, and whether you like to hear it or not, is the result of progress. Clubs no longer hope for success; they will invest every available hour and euro in pursuit of success. There is genuinely nothing that the centralised GAA can do to prevent this.... and let's think about this, would we really want to limit progress?

3. If there's 7 boys in a primary school class, then it wouldn't matter if Jim Gavin and his back room team spent the next 10 years in that parish; they're still going to lose the numbers game.

—-

Amalgamations are essential.

Hawkeye9212

There is a future for a lot of small rural clubs but not all. A lot of clubs within commuting distance of a city or large town will survive. I don't see an issue with amalgamation in sparsely populated areas. The aim is to preserve Gaelic games in these areas.

Itchy

Every club should be asking themselves these questions...

1- how many u6s are in our schools this year and are we getting  them all out. Are we doing enough to get them all out.
2- from last yrs u6s, how many are still with us at u8
3- from last yrs u8s, how many are still with us in u10

And so on.

Too many clubs are failing at this level, they have not recognised that they are competing for hearts and minds where once upon a time they didn't have to.

The number of clubs that simply don't have numbers to harvest us very small in my opinion but those should look to amalgamate with a similar small club if possible.