€20 is too pricey for a county final

The Galway county final was on last Sunday in Tuam Stadium and it ended in a disappointing draw, Corofin 0-9 and Mountbellew/Moylough 0-9. The replay is on Sunday week.

The standard of fare on offer was very poor and despite splendid weather conditions for football, none of the Mountbellew forwards could manage a single score from play in the entire 60 minutes and the Corofin forwards weren’t much better, hitting nine wides in the first half alone and only scoring 0-3 (1f ) in the second.

Only the closeness of the contest provided anything to get excited about, and like dismal sex, that excitement didn’t last too long either.

Since the game, a huge number of disgruntled and annoyed Galway GAA people have been onto me about the entrance price and the price of the programme.

Some even took the time to email me and phone me to voice their displeasure about the fact that it cost €20 for adults and €10 for students to get into Tuam stadium last Sunday.

And there was also a lot of disquiet about the fact that the Luach for the Clár Oifigiúil was a saucy €5.

As one dedicated, decent and munificent GAA woman who attended the game as a neutral pointed out to me early on Monday morning at work, it had cost €50 for herself, her husband and their Leaving Cert daughter, to get in the gate, a tenner for two programmes and two euro to park in the Tuam mart.

This was her viewpoint, and it reflected many other peoples who have contacted me during the past few days and it has a high degree of credibility;

“For €62, you’d want a lot better value than we got from the game. We definitely won’t be going back for the replay. €15 would have been plenty rather than trying to skim the last few euro off those that are good enough to go. And a fiver for the programme is completely excessive. They’ll be going on until they kill the golden goose.. It was a very poor game and they’d want to ease back the prices for the replay. Do they not know that we are in the middle of a recession, an awful lot of people are out of work and finding it hard to make ends meet and a lot of people cannot afford that kind of money?”

She makes some very valid points and patrons were in effect paying €20 for one match as most people wouldn’t have had much interest in the Junior B county final that preceded the game or vice versa.

Likewise the five euro for the programme was far too much. There were 58 pages in it last Sunday, but over half of them were advertisements. You know the type of stuff that you’d want to be paid to read, rather than pay to read it.

All-Ireland football final programme was only €5

The All-Ireland final programme was €5 this year and had 98 pages in it and for many it is a collector’s item and a souvenir of the day out. Likewise the programme for the 2009 Connacht football final was only €4. So how can a county board charge €5 for an inferior publication?

GAA people know that it costs a colossal amount of money each year to run county teams, and no doubt the next few years will be very expensive ones for Galway football, however there is a balance that has to be maintained and I think that €15 to get in and €3 for a programme would have generated a bit of goodwill rather than leaving people feeling like they had been sheared.

Sheep don’t mind being sheared for their wool, but people react badly to it, especially if the clippers pinch the skin.

Joe Kernan will pick the Galway captain in 2010

In a change with tradition in Galway, the county manager will pick the county senior team captain from now on. There was a rule change at county board level recently and no longer will the Galway county champions nominate their choice for the team captaincy. It is probably a better system as it allows the team management pick the candidate that they feel best fills the role.

No doubt Kernan will be weighing up the Galway panel in New York this weekend to see if he can identify any player with Kieran McGeeney type characteristics.

 

Page generated in 0.1513 seconds.