Menu

Show posts

This section allows you to view all posts made by this member. Note that you can only see posts made in areas you currently have access to.

Show posts Menu

Messages - Applesisapples

#1
When you see how the Dubs use dominance as they did against Meath chipping over points, you'd be right to worry for Armagh. For all the good forward they possess they do not score enough even against light weights.
#2
Neil Young like Dylan has written so many good tunes, hard to pigeonhole him in a genre, he was grunging long before Grunge, his country stuff is awesome as well. Not a classic guitarist he none the less knows how to get it done. Check out Cortez the killer great guitar intro and a telling commentary on the invasion of the Americas by Europeans.
#3
Quote from: AustinPowers on April 09, 2024, 06:48:29 PMReady for another?

Suggestions welcome
Neil Young
Like a Hurricane
Cortez the killer
Harvest
#4
General discussion / Re: The Masters - 2024
April 09, 2024, 11:36:45 AM
Scheffler and Bhatia will be there or there abouts.
#5
Quote from: bennydorano on April 05, 2024, 07:15:40 PM
Quote from: JoG2 on April 05, 2024, 06:32:15 PM
Quote from: bennydorano on April 05, 2024, 05:19:09 PM
Quote from: Tones on April 05, 2024, 05:08:34 PM
Quote from: tbrick18 on April 05, 2024, 04:09:57 PM
Quote from: bennydorano on April 05, 2024, 01:55:34 PMSure the lucks been hanging out of the penalty Kick Champs (X2), why change anything? just go full of the bull until it goes pear shaped and then think about it.

Any examples of when other Ulster teams didn't go all out to win Ulster and as a direct result they won an AI?


In the second year if the current competition?
Tyrone had a fair degree of ambivalence to the USFC in noughties. But I'm sure that's the response you were waiting for to refute it.

Harte and the players?

"A couple of years we were of the mindset that we were going to win the All-Ireland and were beaten in the first round. It didn't do us any harm. We went on to win it from there twice."

https://www.belfastlive.co.uk/sport/gaa/gaelic-football/tyrone-legend-sean-cavanagh-issues-28938977#google_vignette


A quote from Sean Cavanagh today funny enough.
Cavanagh is becoming the new Joe Brolly.
#6
Celtic will not have lost this league because of Old Firm results. If they lose it it will be because they did not have replacements for key players like CCV, Rio and to a lesser extent McGregor. That's on the board/recruitment director.
#7
General discussion / Re: The Late Late show
April 08, 2024, 09:24:20 AM
I think the late Late missed a trick here. I don't know why Marty was freezing his bollocks of in Longford. There should have been a greater celebration of Clubs, a nod to John  McKillop would have been nice. I am also sick of the sight of Staunton and Jacob, surely there are better female role models out there? I saw Michael Dara in a new light, Brolly was mildly entertaining in a boring uncle sort of way. Perhaps a longer show?
#8
The shock horror is coming from the Nolan led BBC and unionist medja.
#9
Quote from: tbrick18 on April 05, 2024, 10:29:24 AM
Quote from: clonadmad on April 04, 2024, 03:48:39 PMHaving read through the 11 pages of the actual report,it would be handed back to an Economics Undergraduate and He/She would be told to consider another career route

The Authors base their case for starters on an assumption that they know the amount of UK subvention into NI every Year,which is news to anyone versed in these matters as the UK government has never stated an exact total or given an exact breakdown

They then assume that a UI would need to match the current NI contribution to a UK defence Budget,(no thanks Lads,We wont be paying for Trident or Aircraft Carriers)or continue to pay a pro rata portion of UK Debt AFTER NI had left the UK or that the UK would reneage on pension contributions by NI workers paid into the UK pension pot when NI was part of the Uk.

Those 3 areas alone come to anywhere between £5 and £7 bn per annum.

it also assumes that growth rates and productivity are stuck to the floor over the next 20 years, takes no account of the savings or synergy brought about by an All Island Economy and takes no account of inputs from the likes of the EU or FDI going into the 6 counties at 26 counties levels.

This is the type of scrutiny that should be published in the media, but it doesn't make a good headline.
I know for a fact, there are quite a few large multi-national's investing in setting up offices and expanding existing operations in NI as a direct result of Brexit and the finalising of the Windsor agreement. An NI business in Finance/Captial Markets and IT has access to GB and EU markets whilst taking advantage of generally lower salaries and operating costs than in GB and ROI. We're talking high value jobs being created here and the impact of those jobs on the NI economy remain to be seen.
But I don't hear anyone in the media talking about that.
To be fair the Irish  Times has a piece in it today which  looks critically at the report.
#10
I do not see where all this optimism around Donegal comes from, they struggled to beat a poor Armagh by a point. Monaghan and Tyrone are ahead of either Donegal or Armagh in my view. The Draw should see Armagh in the final. Derry's UC will depend on what store they place in a third, but Harte  likes to win everything he plays for.
#11
General discussion / Re: The DUP thread
April 05, 2024, 10:05:43 AM
Quote from: imtommygunn on April 05, 2024, 09:54:11 AMIt's the stuff round bloody sunday etc that gets me on her. The whys and wherefores of the whole thing aside it's just so antagonistic and disrespectful.
She is a product of her upbringing and background. Though they would try to say otherwise the DUP's demographic is a mirror image of SF's which includes ultra loyalist/republican opinion through to more main stream. Like many SF politicians Lockhart panders to that loyalist bloc   for votes.
#12
The bottom line is the government in the South needs to start working toward unity so as not to repeat Brexshit. This will inevitably London, though that will be sensitive.
#13
Quote from: weareros on April 04, 2024, 04:29:39 PMJohn Doyle from DCU did a full study on that - showed that Irish gov would only incur about £2-3bn of the UK subvention cost when you extract the security/defence costs, NI's contribution to UK national debt and pensions.
It was John Doyle who presented at the conference I attended. He said their work is ongoing. The  biggest challenge will be upping productivity in the North which is between 40 and 60% behind the South.
#14
Quote from: clonadmad on April 04, 2024, 03:48:39 PMHaving read through the 11 pages of the actual report,it would be handed back to an Economics Undergraduate and He/She would be told to consider another career route

The Authors base their case for starters on an assumption that they know the amount of UK subvention into NI every Year,which is news to anyone versed in these matters as the UK government has never stated an exact total or given an exact breakdown

They then assume that a UI would need to match the current NI contribution to a UK defence Budget,(no thanks Lads,We wont be paying for Trident or Aircraft Carriers)or continue to pay a pro rata portion of UK Debt AFTER NI had left the UK or that the UK would reneage on pension contributions by NI workers paid into the UK pension pot when NI was part of the Uk.

Those 3 areas alone come to anywhere between £5 and £7 bn per annum.

it also assumes that growth rates and productivity are stuck to the floor over the next 20 years, takes no account of the savings or synergy brought about by an All Island Economy and takes no account of inputs from the likes of the EU or FDI going into the 6 counties at 26 counties levels.
Kevin Meagher has said much the same, I think he called it a nonsense.
#15
GAA Discussion / Re: Division 2 2024
April 04, 2024, 04:20:02 PM
If Oisin O'Neill plays in and around Midfield you play Rian FF. Oisin has a knack of finding Rian. Get the other two togged out as well😂