Antrim, the way forward

Started by Milltown Row2, October 30, 2015, 09:53:31 AM

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bannside

Unfettered canvassing! If that's pointed in my direction I need to emphasise once again, I'm totally neutral. I don't represent anybody but my own views. I'm not on the board, don't want to be on a board, never will be on the board. That's a promise.

But what I do represent is ONE opinion that we have by far the best ever "county management committee" that I have seen in over 30 years....speaking as an Antrim gael hoping that our generation can make some meaningful difference.

Just a few years ago things looked depressingly bleak. Half a dozen men got together and said let's do something about this. After two years I am extremely encouraged  with their progress and confident that if they can hang around for another few years Antrim will find itself finally in a strong position.

Most of the work going on is quiet and behind the scenes, but being done in a professional manner with the mutual respect of Ulster and Croke Park officialdom. Why would anyone even think about jeopardising this? Anything else would be like a turkey voting for Christmas.

bogieman

Quote from: bannside on November 27, 2017, 11:01:32 AM
Unfettered canvassing! If that's pointed in my direction I need to emphasise once again, I'm totally neutral. I don't represent anybody but my own views. I'm not on the board, don't want to be on a board, never will be on the board. That's a promise.

But what I do represent is ONE opinion that we have by far the best ever "county management committee" that I have seen in over 30 years....speaking as an Antrim gael hoping that our generation can make some meaningful difference.

Just a few years ago things looked depressingly bleak. Half a dozen men got together and said let's do something about this. After two years I am extremely encouraged  with their progress and confident that if they can hang around for another few years Antrim will find itself finally in a strong position.

Most of the work going on is quiet and behind the scenes, but being done in a professional manner with the mutual respect of Ulster and Croke Park officialdom. Why would anyone even think about jeopardising this? Anything else would be like a turkey voting for Christmas.

The states voted for Trump.
We voted for Brexit.
This is not Irish dancing. -RH

north_antrim_hound

Imm not that well informed on what the new CB have been up to since they took over but I think they are not in long enough to implement their objectives
Let's afford them at least half the time the last bunch of monkeys got
Don't think Antrim's internal affairs will ever be transparent to the people on the ground whoever presides over us so a certain amount of mistrust is always a given

There's a man with a mullet going mad with a mallet in Millets

theskull1

The CB is too Belfast centric in their objectives in my opinion ("The Belfast Plan" and "Lets build Casement" being the glaring examples), and this myopia makes it difficult to sell themselves to those of us who live "beyond the street lights" . A more joined up strategy that every area/club can buy into and see the logic in (from a whole county perspective) needs to be considered as the way we move forward collectively IMO.

After all the talk and PR .... I still don't believe Casement is a ground that will suit Antrim GAA at all. It'll be completely over-sized for Antrims needs. We NEED our own 'Parnell Park' to call home IMO and should've been planning that when ever the Ulster Council wanted to spend the free 70M.... pity that strategic perspective couldn't have been made prior to buying Dunsilly  :-\

It's a lot easier to sing karaoke than to sing opera

paddyjohn

From todays Irish News. Hopefully they will do a balanced article and interview those who are running against the current board.

With Antrim's county convention scheduled for Monday week, Saffron Vision county board members Collie Donnelly (chairman) and Terry Reilly (vice-chairman) face challenges for their positions. Brendan Crossan speaks to both men...



Brendan Crossan: You've been at the helm for two years. A criticism of the county board has been a lack of communication with the clubs...

Collie Donnelly [chairman]: I think the first thing that needs to be acknowledged is what we inherited wasn't great. What people need to understand is it was like taking over a distressed business.

Six weeks into the job people on the executive committee had to put their hands in their pockets to pay salaries. Now, that's not something you want to tell the world. So it was a very low base, no structures. No disrespect to what went before, but it was in poor shape.



BC: Was that not generally acknowledged by everybody?

Terry Reilly [vice-chairman]: It was far worse than you could imagine. It was very, very poor.

CD: When you're trying to build or revive something we had to work out how we were going to do that. We tried to attract people.

Of course the first issue was finance, so we put together the Saffron Business Forum and I think people can see the success of that.

We have over 90 members that give £1,000 per year. Last year we had Bill Wolsey [Merchant Hotel owner and entrepreneur] for a breakfast morning.

We had the magnificent AP McCoy day – supported by over 500 people, and we had a terrific breakfast morning with Ciaran Barr. Within those rooms it was really encouraging to see the people who wanted to support Antrim from the corporate sector.



BC: When you became chairman you mentioned that Antrim's sponsorship drives had to move beyond the generous contribution of the local chippies and Chinese takeaways. It seemed hand-to-mouth existence...

CD: That's correct and those people were very good to Antrim. At that time every penny was a prisoner.

But if we're going to move the project on we have to tap into the corporate sector and the Saffron Business Forum has managed to do that. They've done a power of work.

Our main sponsors have increased their sponsorship – Creagh Concrete and Northern Property. There's more money for our championships too.

TR: And also the contribution from the Casement Park social club. They have raised £40k this year and £25k last year.

CD: So, from the financial side of things, we're breathing new life into Antrim again.



BC: Relations with the Casement Park social club had broken down a few years back. What changed?

CD: We met people and I think we reached out to them. We convinced them that we seen the social club as part of Antrim GAA and an important element to our fundraising. And they have demonstrated that.

There is a good working relationship there and we see them as part of that going forward and being part of the new stadium.

TR: We were elected in the first week of December 2015 and on January 6 2016 the social club had their AGM. We attended that and we attended it on the basis that whatever went before we weren't going to be critical of.

Going forward, we were going to try and repair the relationships with them.

We spelt out what we wanted to do and the important role of the social club in helping Antrim GAA. It was cagey at the start but Collie and I being west Belfast people, we understood a lot of the challenges; we knew a lot the personnel and the true Gaels in the social club.

That went a long way in them accepting us... They have been allies of Antrim GAA.



BC: Since taking charge two years ago would you do anything differently? The messages you hear is the lack of communication from the county board to the clubs...

CD: I think what we would do differently is concentrate on monthly newsletters and telling the public what we're doing, through social media and using our website about the projects we're involved in. But we haven't done that particularly well.



BC: Would that quell dissent in the county?

CD: I think over the last few weeks we've been doing that. People have been saying to us: 'We didn't know the state we were in. We didn't know the work that you were doing.'

So, we've learned from that. When we took it on, we were in the minus. At convention this year we will report a healthy turnaround.



BC: In some ways, Antrim GAA has been viewed as a bystander in the Casement Park project. How have you tried to involve Antrim Gaels in this process?

CD: We've been discussing different elements with the Ulster Council about the project. There were historical financial issues, which took a lot of time to sort out, and we reached a satisfactory conclusion to that just recently.

That took the best part of 18 months. There was Antrim's status going forward and how Antrim will be fixed in this new world – and that is at the latter stages. Then, there was the social club.



BC: You say things are looking much brighter in Antrim. So why do you both face challenges at convention?

TR: We haven't spelt this out. Our biggest strength is also our biggest weakness. We don't throw flowers at ourselves and promote this.

But as convention will see, Antrim GAA is better off to the tune in excess of £200,000 per annum from private ventures that we have encouraged and attracted people to.

CD: In my experiences, when you're in a position of leadership and making decisions, and when you're trying to govern you can't please everybody. We've tried to change structures, put governance in place, we've tried to change old habits – and that gets resistance.

We're also involved in some delicate negotiations; very, very sensitive stuff, and you just can't share that information with everyone. So there's probably a little bit of: 'Oh, they're not sharing information with us.' And I can understand that.

Some people think because they're elected to a role they demand to know instead of concentrating on the role that they were elected to do. The reason why we've managed the progress is because of people like Terry and Pol Mac Cana because they have the skill sets to get the job done.

And that's the only way Antrim will progress.



BC: Do you both feel deflated that there is a challenge to your positions so early in your roles?

TR: I feel it's everybody's democratic right under the processes we have for people to put themselves forward. I genuinely believe that.

But I feel let down that these people have not acknowledged where we are at.

The people that are running against us have been in office previously and they should understand the challenges and they should most certainly be in a better position than most to acknowledge the progress that we have overseen.

Now, you asked the question in relation to communication. There are very sensitive negotiations in and around Casement Park.

Now, I know James [McClean] in particular, who is running against Collie, felt outside of that loop.

But if you stop to think for a minute that if you share some of that information you are breaking people's confidence... People sometimes don't understand these sensitivities and it's important that is contextualised.



BC: What was your feeling on facing a challenge for the chairmanship after two years?

CD: Everybody's entitled to put their hand up, but my feeling would be - you've had your chance, you've done your time.

When we were elected we also reached out to some of those people. I can quote you an example of asking to be brought up to speed with the historical Casement Park stuff, with two senior people.

I drove from Dublin at 4pm to meet with two of these people at six o'clock before a management meeting at 7pm. And these two gentlemen walked in together at seven o'clock. So you think to yourself: 'Why are you here? Are you really here to benefit Antrim?

TR: The people who are running now, if they would have come to us and said: 'Lads, we see what you are doing, it's very progressive for Antrim; it's going to take us forward. We would like to inherit that and shadow you and come along with you.'

But I see it [the challenges] as trying to capitalise on the gains that we have made.

CD: The people who we have talked to said: 'We will commit to Antrim but we need the right team in place.'

TR: For the Belfast Urban Plan, we had to have in place a Human Resources committee that would do the recruiting because the GAA would not commit huge funding [to Antrim]. We were able to get an employment law barrister, people from a business and legal backgrounds [on the committee].

Central Council sat down with us to see what we were doing and they said that we were way ahead of them. But we haven't spread the good news.



BC: Did you realise how big the job was going to be?

CD: Because I come from a playing background the other [administration] stuff is just an extension of my job. It's problem solving, it's commerce... but you couldn't do this job if you didn't have support from Terry, Pol [Mac Cana, Treasurer] and the team because this is a million-pound business and it takes a bit of watching.

We're running a business with no headquarters. People understate the fact that we've no home. We're like nomads. The cost and the logistical work to run Antrim GAA are huge.



BC: Casement Park was closed much too early. Why was it closed?

CD: It was crazy. It must have been the worst decision in Antrim's history. I have to say that. And in relation to the Casement Park project, if you were trying to do 10 things wrong they did them all.



BC: When do you see Casement Park being built?

CD: We are very hopeful that construction will start within the next year and we will be in Casement Park in 2020.



BC: What is the main obstacle?

CD: We're hoping for planning at the end of the year and then there is a 90-day window for objections and hopefully this time the project board has been working on the safety elements. I'm quietly confident. We're supporting everything for the stadium but at the same time Antrim GAA will have to be catered for.



BC: When is the £1.5m from Central Council for the Belfast Urban Plan going to be rolled out?

CD: We hope to be able to announce that at convention.



BC: How many coaches will this yield for Belfast?

CD: The top post is Urban Development manager and then there will be eight coaches in Belfast.



BC: How much of a difference do you think that will make?

CD: It's a start. There is no quick fix. We are going to have sell Gaelic Games back into the primary schools. We now have additional resources and we have 4G facilities in Belfast that were funded by the council and the GAA.

The participation levels of Gaelic Games in Belfast are pretty low, so we've a big task ahead of us.



BC: If you both don't get re-elected what's the ramifications?

CD: I think it would be a backward step. We would still be Antrim men on Tuesday morning. We want Antrim to do well. We're only on the project and we have a few things to finish off.

We are involved in Casement Park, the Belfast Urban Plan and the Saffron Business Forum. And there is also the Dunsilly project.

They handed us the keys... We were under pressure from the local council, so that was on our lap.

We managed to spend the best part of £60,000 to extend the car park to meet the planning [criteria]. We've also spent the best part of £25,000 to re-seed the pitches to bring them back to life. Floodlights are the next thing on our agenda at Dunsilly.



BC: You say all this: why are there contenders for your positions then?

TR: We inherited a lot... As far as our finances, you will see post-convention how healthy we are. Now, we haven't been shouting that from the rooftops and that's why people are challenging positions.

The other reason why we're facing challenges is they see the kudos in the good work that's being done.

I'm annoyed because I entered into this with people, Antrim Gaels, who had a bit about them, who had a bit of nous. I was asked to go along on this journey.

The people that are running for positions, I would like to know if they are willing to sacrifice half of their work lives every week – night and day...

I know the guys that are running for position can't give the same sacrifice. If they were to succeed [at convention] – which I don't think they will once the clubs know Antrim's [financial] position – Antrim would be set back.

CD: They call us the Saffron Vision. I can see a new Casement Park, I can see Gaelic Games in Belfast improving and I can see our teams climbing the tables.



BC: In fairness to Gearoid Adams, he was aware of the perception that the hurlers were being treated better than the footballers. He didn't agree with it and could've made capital out of it, but didn't.

TR: Can I say, I wish we were in a better position to help them, financially. Our cash flow was always negative (it's now positive) which meant we couldn't afford things for Frank [Fitzsimons] and Gearoid. It was exactly the same with the hurlers.

We were coming from a very low base. Because there has been a massive turnaround doesn't mean to say we're making loads of money - it has been spent.

We are like pilots on a 747, pulling the plane out of a nosedive and the important bit about this is we need to level it out before it goes up. Our income is up massively. We have far better governance in the county.

We have a chartered accountant, making sure that everything is done correctly. Our good governance has been reciprocated by Croke Park.



BC: Could Frank Fiztsimons' exit as senior football manager been handled better?

CD: In hindsight, we should have had more frank conversations with Frank.

The lads had asked for an extension [towards the end of the NFL] and we said we'd need to speak with county management.

TR: We decided we would carry out a review of our county football and our county hurling [teams]. We tasked two committees with carrying out reviews and they fed that information back to county committee.

The hurling review committee came back and recommended the group stays in situ. The Football review committee came back with their findings and recommended we go outside and look for somebody else.

Management committee ratified that position. Once that was the case, the following Monday I articulated that position to Frank and Gearoid.

BC: There was a deadline set August 13 for nominations and Frank was the only name that went forward...

TR: Our sub committee was tasked with going outside and finding nominations as well as seeking out interested parties.

The date for nominations closed on a specific date but they were tasked with seeking out people and if they weren't satisfied they could go outside that.

That's important to note that.


BC: But delegates were up in arms about how Frank's position was dealt with?
CD: Frank's father was and I can understand that. There were three or four people annoyed. When you make decisions like that, some people will be annoyed.
TR: I would like to acknowledge the work that Frank and Gearoid did in bringing a lot of the young players through because they put in a power of work.

BrendanAntrim


theskull1

#336
You would say that  ;)

Not bad I guess.. progress being made ... but its not making me think any different in regard there being a geographical skew that will limit their ability to carry the whole of the county with them in their endeavors.
It's a lot easier to sing karaoke than to sing opera

country bumpkin

#337
Quote from: theskull1 on November 28, 2017, 10:50:10 AM
You would say that  ;)

Not bad I guess.. progress being made ... but its not making me think any different in regard there being a geographical skew that will limit their ability to carry the whole of the county with them in their endeavors.

U have hit the nail on the head methinks and despite the huge PR being employed I cannot detect any semblance of feel good in our beleaguered county.

That insult aimed at Frank Fitzsimmons in the latter stage of the 'interview' when suggestion was made that only his father and a few others cared was nothing short of despicable.

Have never seen a vice-chairman having such input afforded prior to Convention before....and indeed hasn't this individual sat on the CB for years...

BrendanAntrim

The Vice Chair? No, he wasn't on CB before 2015 convention.

country bumpkin

Quote from: BrendanAntrim on November 28, 2017, 11:49:48 AM
The Vice Chair? No, he wasn't on CB before 2015 convention.

Meant Co Comm and sub committed.....

Belfast GAA man

Quote from: BrendanAntrim on November 28, 2017, 10:29:48 AM
Good piece.
Very good piece but seems that is has taken a challenge to CB positions for us Antrim gaels to get any information on the progress the county is making. The culture of secrecy about finances turns people off and while of course we don't need to know people's salaries etc hearing the broad numbers of our finances is really encouraging to hear - end secrecy now!

paddyjohn

Quote from: country bumpkin on November 28, 2017, 11:57:02 AM
Quote from: BrendanAntrim on November 28, 2017, 11:49:48 AM
The Vice Chair? No, he wasn't on CB before 2015 convention.

Meant Co Comm and sub committed.....

He sat on disciplinary committees before.

Whoever is in charge of the media campaign deserves a pat on the back.

Suprised they've not stolen Trumps slogan, "MAGA". Make Antrim great again. 

Getting away from the politics of it, has anybody saw a list of motions yet? Potential league changes?

north_antrim_hound

Quote from: paddyjohn on November 28, 2017, 12:26:34 PM
Quote from: country bumpkin on November 28, 2017, 11:57:02 AM
Quote from: BrendanAntrim on November 28, 2017, 11:49:48 AM
The Vice Chair? No, he wasn't on CB before 2015 convention.

Meant Co Comm and sub committed.....

He sat on disciplinary committees before.

Whoever is in charge of the media campaign deserves a pat on the back.

Suprised they've not stolen Trumps slogan, "MAGA". Make Antrim great again. 

Getting away from the politics of it, has anybody saw a list of motions yet? Potential league changes?

Surely your club delegate has all that info
There's a man with a mullet going mad with a mallet in Millets

paddyjohn

Quote from: north_antrim_hound on November 28, 2017, 12:29:16 PM
Quote from: paddyjohn on November 28, 2017, 12:26:34 PM
Quote from: country bumpkin on November 28, 2017, 11:57:02 AM
Quote from: BrendanAntrim on November 28, 2017, 11:49:48 AM
The Vice Chair? No, he wasn't on CB before 2015 convention.

Meant Co Comm and sub committed.....

He sat on disciplinary committees before.

Whoever is in charge of the media campaign deserves a pat on the back.

Suprised they've not stolen Trumps slogan, "MAGA". Make Antrim great again. 

Getting away from the politics of it, has anybody saw a list of motions yet? Potential league changes?

Surely your club delegate has all that info

Likely has info and?

bannside

Haven't seen them yet tbh PJ. Must be due out soon.

Good read in today's IN. Highlights just how precarious the situation was when they took over. No exaggeration to say Antrim GAA was on its knees. What has been done in two short years has been nothing short of excellent.

The finances are returned in surplus, Dunsilly project further developed, business community on board, credibility established at provincial and at Croke Park, a Belfast regeneration programme, Casement Park social club fulfilling its potential, a chartered accountant as our treasurer, and Casement Park project going through the processes.

Now that SV has put their foundation in place the next few years should see even further progress, which hopefully will include improved structures in coaching and games development amongst others.