Paul Earley International Rules Manager

Started by Rossfan, February 05, 2013, 04:20:52 PM

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Rossfan

I know most of the Ulster folk who form the majority on this board have no regard for the Int Rules game but a great honour for Paul and Roscommon to see him chosen as Irish team manager.
Comhgáirdeachas Paul and best of luck to one sound chap.
Davy's given us a dream to cling to
We're going to bring home the SAM

Syferus

Up the Gortha.

The Aussie Rules games can be fantastic if we find the right balance between physicality and player safety. Good luck, Paul!

rodney trotter

Quote from: Rossfan on February 05, 2013, 04:20:52 PM
I know most of the Ulster folk who form the majority on this board have no regard for the Int Rules game but a great honour for Paul and Roscommon to see him chosen as Irish team manager.
Comhgáirdeachas Paul and best of luck to one sound chap.

You must have spoken in great detail with every member from Ulster on here.

Good luck to Paul Early.


muppet

Paul Early is a gentleman.

Best of luck to him.
MWWSI 2017


Rossfan

Quote from: rodney trotter on February 05, 2013, 05:18:08 PM
Quote from: Rossfan on February 05, 2013, 04:20:52 PM
I know most of the Ulster folk who form the majority on this board have no regard for the Int Rules game but a great honour for Paul and Roscommon to see him chosen as Irish team manager.
Comhgáirdeachas Paul and best of luck to one sound chap.

You must have spoken in great detail with every member from Ulster on here.



No Rodney - just recalling all the disparaging terms used about the game here over the years.
Also 4 posts in over 24 hours  would suggest a total lack of interest here. ;)
Davy's given us a dream to cling to
We're going to bring home the SAM

ross4life

Well done to Paul & best of luck to him. This appointment is probably the last thing on his mind, his mom passed away at the weekend RIP Kitty.
The key to success is to be consistently competitive -- if you bang on the door often it will open

From the Bunker

#7
Congrats to Paul on the honour of Managing his Country. Have to say you don't have to be from Ulster to not care about the game. Total waste of time. The Aussies either send a team that don't care or care too much and beat the crap physically outta us. The disgust either way has turned me off of it. Time and energy would be better spent on promoting the game in Britain, Europe and beyond. There's loads of great work going on around the world that goes untapped.

Beantown

Quote from: From the Bunker on February 06, 2013, 07:22:14 PM
Congrats to Paul on the honour of Managing his Country. Have to say you don't have to be from Ulster to not care about the game. Total waste of time. The Aussies either send a team that don't care or care too much and beat the crap physically outta us. The disgust either way has turned me off of it. Time and energy would be better spent on promoting the game in Britain, Europe and beyond. There's loads of great work going on around the world that goes untapped.

+1

Waste of time and effort. Lets promote OUR OWN games!

tommysmith

It's a joke of a game surely its time to give it the boot.

orangeman

It's on its knees. Not much interest after the slapping and bating was banned. Time to send for Canavan, Geraghty,Lyons and boys like Mc Gilligan.


The GAA have not been approached officially or informally by the AFL about the possibility that this year's international rules series could be contested by a team exclusively composed of indigenous footballers.

According to the AFL website, the idea surfaced on Australian television yesterday when AFL chief executive Andrew Demetriou told Channel Nine's Footy Show : "Yes, it is one of the options we are now considering. We have canvassed the views of indigenous players."

He added that the Australian football authorities hadn't discussed the matter with their Irish counterparts.

Pat Daly, Croke Park's director of games development and research who is also the principal technical liaison with the AFL in respect of the international series, confirmed that the initiative hadn't been floated over here in advance of next October's series but that the question of an indigenous Australian team had arisen in another context.

"The involvement of an indigenous Australian team has been under consideration in the context of a cultural event, which the GAA are looking at holding in Sydney. The whole concept of international rules is very much rooted in sporting culture and heritage and recognising indigenous players would obviously be in keeping with that.

"But look, we've heard nothing about this in relation to senior internationals so we're not in a position to comment on it."

A similar weekend of cultural events was organised in Ennis last October around the staging of the hurling-shinty international series against Scotland.

Waning public interest
Although nothing has been concluded in Australia the floating of the idea has come against the backdrop of waning public interest in the internationals Down Under.

Attendances at the series in Australia have been in decline for the past 10 years. From a position where aggregate crowds of over 100,000 attended the two Tests in Perth and Melbourne in 2003, the numbers fell by almost two thirds to 35,466 when the series was last played there, in Melbourne and the Gold Coast, two years ago.

The primary problem then was that the home challenge was very poor with Ireland winning both Tests overwhelmingly. Interestingly Australia's biggest win in 2005 came about as a result of a selection, featuring an emphasis on indigenous footballers, whose speed and ball skills then coach Kevin Sheedy believed would be ideally suited to the game.

It's not clear what the impact would be on the series in Ireland if the Australian team is perceived not to be representative of all of the best players in the AFL.

GAA director general Páraic Duffy said in Melbourne in 2011 that the series would not have a future unless interest amongst the AFL public picked up because Irish crowds wouldn't continue to attend in numbers if it became clear that there was no longer reciprocal interest:

Attendance figures
"When you have only two countries involved in a competition and in one attendance figures suggest a certain apathy, it does certainly raise questions long term."

The AFL website also reports that this year's series will be played as a tribute to former Dublin minor All-Ireland winner and Melbourne Brownlow medallist, the late Jim Stynes, who played international rules for both countries and after whom the medal for the best AFL player over the two Tests is named.

Daly also confirmed that the standing committee on the playing rules, of which he is the secretary, would not be deliberating on further rule changes for the foreseeable future – unless an emergency were to arise.

"The proposals of the football review committee accepted for introduction next year are in the pipeline and until we've had a chance to see how they bed in, there's unlikely to be any further proposals.

"In relation to hurling we've had the findings in recent years of the hurling rules committee chaired by Simon Moroney that there were no major issues that needed addressing as well as the standing committee, which pretty much decided the same thing.

"One of the big arguments for the FRC proposals was based on them having nothing to do with hurling because those involved in hurling were strongly of the view that the game didn't require rule changes. So that's the situation at the moment unless something unexpected arises."

Hardy

QuoteThe whole concept of international rules is very much rooted in sporting culture and heritage

Sure it is.

Jinxy

I'm glad they're sending an ingenious team.
The last crowd were useless.
If you were any use you'd be playing.

Qwerty28

Be a hard sell for the 2nd game in Croker if the first game is a completely lob-sided, a couple of thousand at that would surely signal the end to the series

orangeman

Quote from: Qwerty28 on May 13, 2013, 09:47:44 PM
Be a hard sell for the 2nd game in Croker if the first game is a completely lob-sided, a couple of thousand at that would surely signal the end to the series

Don't forget the next series would be in Oz so the plane will be full.