I’ve no interest at all in the GAA growing globally. I would like its entire focus to be in Ireland.
Am I alone in thinking this?
They have been at the US thing since the "American Invasion" of 1888, but have little to show for it. Having New York and London in the "All Ireland" competitions is a distraction.
Incorrect on a number of levels.
Gaelic games were played in the states since before the GAA existed, to say nothing of the American Invasion.
Today 1 in 5 GAA members are based outside of Ireland. There are about 450 clubs outside of Ireland, and they're increasingly appearing in places where there's no tradition of large scale Irish migration, some clubs started by people with no connection to Ireland. The growth of Gaelic football in Brittany and Galicia is remarkable, driven pretty much exclusively by French and Spanish people who are keen to carve out a distinctive identity for their respective regions. In 2003 there were two GAA clubs in Brittany and one in Paris. Now there are nine clubs in Brittany (where Gaelic football is now part of the school curriculum) and 25 in France.
The youth movement is going from strength to strength. The biggest GAA youth tournament in the world is the North American Continental Youth Championship that has grown to a 4-day event attended by 2,500 kids and their families.
There's plenty to show for it.