Donegal v Tyrone Ulster Championship

Started by give her dixie, October 04, 2012, 08:24:18 PM

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give her dixie

Might as well get a thread started on this game, seeing as it's only 'round the corner.....

Big game ahead for Tyrone, and sure we owe them a beating at this stage !!

Tyrone by 4....
next stop, September 10, for number 4......

theticklemister

ye are a w**ker for starting this so early

J70


theticklemister


give her dixie

Quote from: theticklemister on October 04, 2012, 08:27:03 PM
ye are a w**ker for starting this so early

Sure it will get us through the dark days of winter !!
next stop, September 10, for number 4......

Aaron Boone

The teams will already have met in the league by then, and maybe McKenna Cup too.

theticklemister

Quote from: give her dixie on October 04, 2012, 08:38:25 PM
Quote from: theticklemister on October 04, 2012, 08:27:03 PM
ye are a w**ker for starting this so early

Sure it will get us through the dark days of winter !!

I may have to give ye my apologies because I am in England and missing the GAA like hell, so any we thing to keep the spirits up would be great!

J70


RMDrive

Quote from: J70 on October 04, 2012, 08:44:49 PM
Quote from: theticklemister on October 04, 2012, 08:30:58 PM
Quote from: J70 on October 04, 2012, 08:29:54 PM
Ballybofey or Omagh?

Clones

It's a quarter final. Unless they're expecting an early start to the bandwagons?

There'll be massive interest in this one. Donegal AI champs ... closest game in 2012 against Tyrone ... Master tactician Harte vs up and coming Jim ... Tyrone (hopefully for them) without this years injury setbacks ...

I hope it's in Ballybofey but Clones is likely I'd say.

theticklemister

wont matter at all about all the crying from donegal wans to host it at the 18,000 seater sean mccaumhill; this wan is going to clones, they will easily get 36,000 for this one.

I think the ground at Ballybofey has to be the worst in Ulster

RMDrive

McCool park capacity down to 12-13k afaik. Clones seems certain.

drici

Quote from: RMDrive on October 04, 2012, 09:08:42 PM

McCool park capacity down to 12-13k afaik. Clones seems certain.


Donegal v Derry Saturday 16th June 2012 in Ballybofey: Attendance: 11, 207


http://donegalnews.com/2012/03/04/ballybofey-could-lose-so-much-more-than-capacity/
THE recent news that Sean MacCumhaill Park in Ballybofey is to have its capacity dramatically slashed to 12,250 is worrying on so many levels.

The cut in the capacity of Donegal's number 1 county ground comes as a result of the Slattery report. The Slattery report was conducted by a body commissioned by the GAA to look into the health and safety aspects in 35 intercounty GAA grounds.

A cumulative 27 per cent decrease in capacity across the board has been recommended by the authors and it leaves the GAA down more than 200,000 places in terms of capacity.

MacCumhaill Park was one of the last to learn its fate. Previously, Kerry chiefs learned that Fitzgerald Stadium in Killarney would be cut by 13,000, the same with Cork's Pairc Ui Chaoimh. Connacht grounds were particularly badly hit as Roscommon's Hyde Park drops by around 15,000 and Pairc Sean MacDiarmada in Leitrim will shed some 9,331 places – more than a third.

This news serves as a hammer blow to Donegal GAA officials – who were gearing up for a possible home game in MacCumhaill Park for the seventh year in a row. The way the Championship draw panned out, Donegal were handed a preliminary round game away to Cavan. The reward for a win at Breffni Park was to be a home game in Derry, the Ulster Champions Donegal set for home advantage with the side they defeated in last summer's final – a game that would have attracted a sell-out crowd to the Finnside venue.

"I don't want to tempt fate, but if we overcome Cavan, I'm not sure if we could hold the Derry game in Ballybofey," was the grim confirmation of Donegal Chairman PJ McGowan last week.

"We have a big support and we are the Ulster champions and Derry have a reasonable good support too.

"It's a repeat of last year's Ulster final and given our run last season, there will be a big interest in that game and 12,000 capacity may not be enough to accommodate all those wanting to got to the game.

"If we were to draw say Tyrone or one of the big teams in the championship, there is no way we would be able to stage the game in MacCumhaill Park. It simply would not have the capacity."

This comes just a couple of years after massive upgrade work was done at the venue. Over half a million was spend upgrading the venue to have a capacity of 21,385, but now just over half of that figure would be permitted to attend the ground on any one matchday.

When it was last transformed, a once dishevelled-looking stand was turned into a modern facility, complete with bucket seating – and the splendid green and gold seating now really adds to the look of the place. In addition to the much-needed surgery to the stand, a whole host of other works were carried out to bring MacCumhaill Park up to spec: a VIP block was added to the rear of the stand, the River End terrace was reconstructed; new ball stops were erected; additional toilets were added to the stand side; toilet facilities were upgraded at the River End; a new turnstile block was installed on the terrace side; with a new-fangled computerised turnstile system put in place.

That was just three years ago and that work was carried out to bring the ground up to scratch in order to host the first round championship clash with Antrim. Now, it seems, as if the work was in vain.

It is hard to fathom that the health and safety of the ground deteriorated so much in three years. "While I don't want for one minute to take health and safety issues lightly, I find the decision surprising as we made improvements to the ground to meet the required standards," said PJ McGowan.

Indeed, it is hard to find fault with that. It should be noted at this point that the ground is in need of some repair, however. The exterior of the ground and the approaches to the turnstiles could be doing with a much-needed facelift – what a covering of tarmacadam would do for the carpark at the dressing rooms/club house end.

And the exterior of the ground on the Stranorlar side would also benefit from a little clean up, but that isn't the core issue here. It is that the venue's capacity has been cut on health and safety grounds by some six thousand.

I am a regular attendee at Sean MacCumhaill Park and find it hard to see where that figure is plucked from. It doesn't, to me anyhow, seem

unsafe. But for a few tweaks, minor ones at that, it's hard to see how the authors of the report could come up with such a cut. On the face of it, would it be unreasonable to suggest that it is Health and Safety gone a step too far?

I haven't seen the Slattery Report's findings mind you, so perhaps this column could be torn to pieces by those who penned it.

But it will be a sad day for the GAA in Donegal if we arrive at a time when Sean MacCumhaill Park is no longer fit for the purpose of staging a Championship game.

It will be sadder too for Ballybofey as a whole. Indeed, the Twin Towns of Ballybofey and Stranorlar benefit so much from the staging of a big game in the summer it would tear away one of the core fabrics of the towns – which were recently classed by former Mayor of Donegal Cllr Cora Harvey as 'the sporting capital of Donegal'.

Ballybofey is a town, like many others of its size, in decline in many ways. It has suffered from the closure of many establishments which seemed at one time to be 'part of the furniture' and now the absence of Championship Sunday would come as a telling blow to many of its remaining businesses.

Ballybofey on Championship Sunday is a heartening sight, which outlines on so many levels the goodness that sport can bring to a town.

Tommy Gallen of the Villa Rose Hotel on Ballybofey's Main Street says that Championship Sunday when Donegal are in MacCumhaill Park is their 'biggest day of the year by a mile'.

He says: "It is the biggest for bar trade, the biggest for food, everyone gets a turn out of it – that is the beauty about it. No matter what team comes, Derry, Tyrone, Armagh, whoever, there is no doubt that it's the biggest day of the year."

Hotels, shops, bars, B&Bs, everybody right down to the chip van, the ice cream man would suffer without that.

The day when the cries from those poor souls whose offerings of 'hats, flags, caps and headbands' remind us that the big show has come to town as we filter over the bridge, down the Main Street or across from Chestnut Road are no more will be a lamentable one.


endk17

Making it an all ticket event would sort out any over crowding issues, Has be to Ballybofey

theticklemister

Quote from: endk17 on October 04, 2012, 09:26:01 PM
Making it an all ticket event would sort out any over crowding issues, Has be to Ballybofey

i think there would be a lot of disappointed people if this was the case. but only having 12,000 people into see this fascinating game would be shooting themselves in the foot. If the match went to Clones could the Donegal board still not get all the gate receipts? They would get 36,000 easily.

Im over the moon that we are at home, Celtic Park to my knowledge has not been packed since 1994 for a game, when indeed we played Down! this game may not be a sell out but it'll be the best crowd we would have had for years.

ONeill

Would love this to take place in Ballybofey.
I wanna have my kicks before the whole shithouse goes up in flames.