*Kieran Keating and Deirdre Murphy. Photograph: Gerard O’Neill

GAA CLUBS in Clare need to find a common ground before convening on November 14th to vote on proposed structures for adult championships.

Over 60 delegates were present in Hotel Woodstock on Friday evening for the motions and structures meeting discussing the adult hurling leagues and championships structures review while football clubs entered the debate by voicing concerns on the risk of unequal treatment.

At the June County Board meeting, a seven-person committee was endorsed to review all adult hurling championships. They have proposed multiple recommendations including splitting the senior championship into two tiers, the creation of a premier intermediate plus equivalents at junior b and junior c.

St Josephโ€™s Miltown on the back of this committeeโ€™s review submitted a proposal that the 2024 Clare SFC also be played in a format of two groups of six from 2024 to guarantee a minimum of five championship games.

Opening the meeting, Chairman of Clare GAA, Kieran Keating said they would look for a formal vote on November 14th regardless of how the meeting unfolded.

PJ McGuane. Photograph: Gerard O’Neill

Cooraclareโ€™s PJ McGuane questioned if clubs or the County Board had the authority to vote on something outside of County Convention โ€œto dramatically change the structures of all our competitions. In my view, I donโ€™t think we have, you can decide what you want at a County Board meeting but a motion to Convention can supersede itโ€.

This view was confirmed by Keating who advised that all matters relating to structures had generally been referred from Convention to the January Board meeting in recent years.

Agreeing on a proposal before a Convention was wrong then, in McGuaneโ€™s view, โ€œI think weโ€™re putting cart before the horseโ€. Colm Browne, Chairperson of the Master Fixtures Committee seconded McGuane and said the review was proposing to alter structures and warned that regulation structures would be changed under the review from the hurling committee.

Head of Operations with Clare GAA, Deirdre Murphy told the meeting they had received advice from Munster Council on Friday which was that the Convention dealt with the rulebook or by-laws whereas the โ€œcommon practice in Clare and other countiesโ€ was for structures and fixtures to be dealt with in January.

She said the formation of the hurling committee was approved by the county committee, โ€œthey were sent off to do their work and are now coming back, it was voted on at a county committee. If defeated or endorsed, that body of work is then sent to structures, it will be either adopted or lost on floorโ€.

Clarity was sought by Browne, โ€œyou are suggesting it will be voted on at November and again at Convention, it is changing regulation structuresโ€. Murphy responded, โ€œit is voted on at the November meeting to be implemented or rejectedโ€. He asked if it would be passed then if voted through in the next fortnight to which Keating replied, โ€œunless someone wants to change itโ€. Browne stated, โ€œthat is not my understanding of the rule, it is a structure matter and I think PJ is correctโ€. Murphy said the review โ€œhas to go through the county committeeโ€.

Colm Browne. Photograph: Gerard O’Neill

Browne a club member of the Banner GAA club stated, โ€œIt is important for the clarity of the meeting that both motions which have a big impact on the fixtures calendar which is my main viewpoint, both motions need to be considered together, we canโ€™t have one night deciding on one and another debating anotherโ€.

Changes to the โ€œstatus quoโ€ were questioned by Michael Curtin of Oโ€™Currys. โ€œThe system down through the years has served us well, in January we would deal with motions on structures. What has happened that weโ€™ve to come back for a special meeting, weโ€™ve motions and suggestions from the hurling sideโ€. Curtin added, โ€œthere is no doubt in my mind that it seems a very rushed procedure tonightโ€.

Michael Curtin. Photograph: Gerard O’Neill

Chairman Keating disagreed that it was rushed. โ€œWhether you agree or not Iโ€™m expressing my opinion,โ€ Curtin said to which the Chairman responded, โ€œI tried to give you an answer but you interrupted meโ€ and the Oโ€™Currys delegate clarified, โ€œI didnโ€™t interrupt you, I hadnโ€™t finishedโ€.

Keating told the meeting that the process was not rushed and that it was decided โ€œearly in the yearโ€ to complete a review of the structures, โ€œthis has been in the ether and offing for quite a whileโ€. Examples of other counties who publish their fixtures and calendars for each year in December is what Clare GAA is aspiring to, the Chairman added, โ€œWe donโ€™t need to wait until Januaryโ€.

Michael โ€˜Maltyโ€™ McDonagh of St Josephโ€™s Miltown said their motion was developed by a football review committee in 2016 and that they were putting it back on the table. โ€œIf there are eight games in the senior hurling championship, there has to be eight games in the senior football championshipโ€.

Michael ‘Malty’ McDonagh. Photograph: Gerard O’Neill

Advising clubs why structures were now discussed in November rather than January, Murphy said it came from the views of Tullaโ€™s Brian Torpey at a previous meeting who suggested matters be dealt with earlier to avoid โ€œa hangover in Januaryโ€. The former Clare camogie player said in Cork and Kerry that fixtures and structures are sorted in November with fixtures produced in time for County Convention.

Bringing fixtures pre-Christmas โ€œis the right thing,โ€ Browne agreed. โ€œWe need to deal with what we have now, one motion cannot be decided on in November and another in January, we need to be clear on both motionsโ€.

Pรกraic Boland who chaired the hurling review committee reminded delegates that their report had been with clubs since September. โ€œWe wanted to make sure our competitions were serving their clubs well and our club players well in the best possible way they can. We need to make the most of the that tight window for the sake of the club player,โ€ he added.

Boland maintained that the views the Clare SHC is open and competitive was not accurate. He noted prior to Clonlara, three clubs have won the championship in the last ten years and Clare champions have not progressed beyond the first round in Munster in six of the last eight years. โ€œNearly thirty percent of our games have a nine point winning margin,โ€ he added. A โ€œhuge gapโ€ exists in the Clare IHC, he believed.

Pรกraic Boland. Photograph: Gerard O’Neill

Current senior formats will allow for four groups of four next year. With this he said, โ€œa player only get three meaningful games, the county player comes back to his club and has played no league game, if you donโ€™t get out of the group that player only has three games with their club. Weโ€™re trying to encourage young fellas to get our hurling, we would like to see them as often as we can, supporters want to see them and players want to play against them, it really important to try have as many games as we can without such a tight timeframeโ€.

Keating insisted, โ€œgetting players more games is key, it is something we came across in the process for the strategic reviewโ€. He continued, โ€œThis is addressing that but it is not without its issues, it comes to a limited calendar for these gamesโ€.

Background to the football proposal seven years ago was developed because โ€œwe needed a change,โ€ Malty said. The former Clare GAA Chairman continued, โ€œit will improve the standards, weโ€™re saying two groups of six, every team will get five games. You have to put one with the other, this motion is from the football clubs. How is it going to work out. We canโ€™t leave one side of the county with less games than the other, we need parity. If you develop these proposals you will flog players, if you pass one and leave the other you will leave one side disenchanted and it will cause serious problems for the County Boardโ€.

Anthony Oโ€™Halloran of St Josephโ€™s Doora/Barefield said โ€œthe elephant in the room is the dual playersโ€. He added, โ€œyou flog dual clubs twice as bad, we will be murdered and looking at five games in hurling, five games in football so that is ten games before we get into the knockout, it is grand for the single clubs, they want more football and more hurling but the dual clubs donโ€™t have isolated players, it is going to get tougher and tougher, we will be forcing players to make a decision because they wonโ€™t be able to do bothโ€.

McGuane agreed with Oโ€™Halloran but flagged, โ€œit is not the dual club, it is the dual player, they are all over the county, you have Miltown, Inagh/Kilnamona, we have three fellas from our place missing if there is hurling on, it is the players we are flogging, the clubs will survive but the players will become disenchantedโ€.

Irish and Cultural Officer, Joe Garry told the meeting he was part of the football review committee in 2016. โ€œWe were a bit bolder than Pรกraic and suggested to cut the number of teamsโ€. He voiced his support for Miltownโ€™s proposal to allow for more games but felt neither option was feasible. โ€œWe donโ€™t have sixteen weeks to do this, the dual players and dual clubs, in an ideal world it would be great to have this but the room isnโ€™t there and I canโ€™t see it working, the players are the ones to lose outโ€.

Rory Hickey, ร‰ire ร“gโ€™s delegate said he spoke with over a dozen dual-players from the Ennis club, โ€œit is very tight and I donโ€™t see how we can manage both, it is half grand the way it isโ€.

Ennistymon Chairman, Shane Talty recalled previous debate on a potential clash for the quarter-final play-off in the SFC, โ€œit was clear that night if fixtures went a certain direction that clubs wouldnโ€™t agree to fulfil themโ€. He warned that both the proposal from the hurling committee and Miltown “locks in that potential clash year on year, are we genuinely saying we will lock it in and knowing clubs will not agree, it is head in the sand stuffโ€. The Fianna Fรกil councillor continued, โ€œTo adopt both weโ€™re opting out of Munster club and agreeing to let the U21 championships run into December.. Leaving it as is, we finish on October 19th and are not flogging playersโ€. He felt the hurling proposals was focused on protecting ten teams from relegation โ€œwhich seems bizarre to meโ€.

Every group has a bye โ€œto avoid them being deliberately flogged,โ€ Boland said in response. He said, โ€œtwo or three teams will have a full run of five gamesโ€.

Donal Kelly, Ballyea Chairman pointed out that in the event of a bereavement clubs would be expected to play two games in eight days. โ€œWhat do we want, flog them all together, what is wrong with what we haveโ€.

Club players are not getting enough games, Keating stated. Liam Oโ€™Reilly a member of the review committee said the new proposal has 44 matches whereas this yearโ€™s championship had 41, โ€œthere is three matches in the difference and two less than last yearโ€. Should four groups of four be in place, there would be 37 matches.

Continuing with 37 games would mean โ€œintroducing more meaningless games,โ€ Boland asserted to which Clare GAA secretary Deirdre Chaplin reminded him, โ€œwe only had one this year, oneโ€. Boland then described the Senior B championship as โ€œmeaninglessโ€.

Under the Miltown proposal if Clare were not in the All-Ireland hurling final, the first round of the SFC would start on July 21st and be concluded by October 20th, Keating noted. โ€œIt is fine to say forget about Munster but it matters when someone gets to the final and says they want their shot at itโ€.

Dual concerns were also acknowledged by the Chairman, โ€œten weeks in a row for dual club is a big issue, there is no sugar coating that, we want more games if that is what involved or do we notโ€.

John Meade of Kildysart questioned when proposals to finish the All-Ireland club championship in the one calendar year will be introduced and whether this was factored into the thinking of the committee. The All-Ireland club final will not be brought forward but semi-finals are to be held in December, Keating said.

โ€œIt wonโ€™t work, weโ€™ll flog our dual players,โ€ Malty warned of the proposals. โ€œWe should not be one against the other, we will have more serious problems than we realise, weโ€™re a dual club because we have lads playing hurling and canโ€™t ask them to play 10 weeks in a row, we have a duty of care to players, it wonโ€™t be good to club playersโ€.

Kevin Browne, Chairman of Cratloe GAA club but who was one of the seven on the review committee said that they had between fifteen to sixteen meetings. He noted that their report had been discussed at three County Board meetings, โ€œI canโ€™t remember a single football club saying there should be a football review, Miltown fair play to them, they have a motion based on a committee from seven years ago, should there not be a football committee who have to turn it around in two monthsโ€.

Pitting football against hurling is โ€œextremely dangerous,โ€ Browne warned. โ€œWe have a duty of care to players but also a duty of care to people promoting both codes and protection of thatโ€. He added that the football review didnโ€™t progress for the reason that โ€œthere was insufficient room in the calendarโ€. He referenced a report from Munster Council which said Clare GAA scored 90% on its review but that they were meeting the required amount of games. He said, โ€œif both of these motions pass a dual player will have nine rounds to get to a quarter-final, that is a lot of games for a period of timeโ€.

Aspects of the report are โ€œabsolutely brilliantโ€ according to Oโ€™Halloran but the senior structure needs to be revised.

Ollie Baker. Photograph: Gerard O’Neill

Two-time All-Ireland winner, Ollie Baker was also part of the hurling review committee. He spoke of player retention plus investment in strength and conditioning by clubs. He stressed, โ€œIt is not ten consecutive weeks, weโ€™ve taken consideration, it is not ten successive weeksโ€. Baker added, โ€œOne of the biggest points we discussed at meetings was what we wanted players to have was the ambition to win the competition they enter, to some clubs I know from speaking to, the ambition is not to get relegated, the ambition changes from not to be relegated to be successful in a competition. The tier two pits the same standard of teams togetherโ€.

Oโ€™Reilly said the committee did benchmarking against other counties. He referenced the All-Ireland champions, Limerick who concluded their premier intermediate championship where all eight teams play each other โ€œlast weekendโ€ in time for the Munster club.

St Breckanโ€™s Chairman, Aidan McDermott stated, โ€œAs what is proposed for single club, you will have a month of a break in the summer which is not rightโ€. He felt, โ€œwe are forgetting about the league process which is biggest part of the yearโ€. Oโ€™Reilly responded that the league does not have county players to which McDermott said the inter-county players โ€œhave loads of matchesโ€. He said that the one extra game to find the final quarter-final spot is causing a lot of the problems.

Newmarket-on-Fergus delegate, Pat Keogh paid tribute to the hurling review committee. โ€œSix weeks ago we had a discussion meeting, Pรกraic Boland brought up a great point that this year Diarmuid Ryan and Shane Oโ€™Donnell only played three championship hurling matches with their club which is shameful, I would love to go to see Newmarket-on-Fergus every day but I go to see the other stars we have, I donโ€™t think weโ€™re promoting hurling if weโ€™re sticking to three championship matchesโ€.

Vice Chairman of Clare GAA, Michael Oโ€™Connor suggested that if the four groups of four is retained that the winner of each group progresses to a quarter-final with the second and third placed team advancing to the preliminary quarter-final with the fourth placed team in each group competing in the relegation semi-finals whereas the loser of these face off in a final to determine who drops down.

Sixmilebridge delegate, PJ Fitzpatrick said the review committee was established โ€œbecause of perceived weaknessesโ€. He said hurling or football should not be devalued. โ€œPlaying week in week out, it was awful easy to run it because you had a match, training session during the week, you rested fellas who had done too much and redressed balance of training versus matches, it would be an awful shame to get fellas to go to the ins and outs that we find all the faults, let it go for a year and let football clubs come together to see what they get could come up with. I would love to see the present proposal carried by the committee trailed for a yearโ€.

Seconding this, Bob Enright of Newmarket-on-Fergus observed, โ€œWhat is evident here tonight and maybe it is not for me to say it, there does need to be a football equivalent of what the hurling review committee have done. You wonโ€™t do that in six or eight weeks, it has taken the committee at least six or eight weeks to do what they have doneโ€. He stated, โ€œTrial the recommendations of the hurling committee for 2025 and maybe 2026, while that is going on let the football clubs come together and put a football committee in placeโ€.

Enrightโ€™s views were immediately rebuffed by Malty McDonagh, โ€œThat is not going to work, we need to work in tandem and work with the hurling committee. We will leave our motion stand, it is the best that is there, if you donโ€™t have both working together then you will have problems. We leave our motion standโ€.

Views from Sixmilebridge and Newmarket-on-Fergus for a football committee to be created drew the attention of Joe Garry. โ€œI was on the review, we can review the review if ye want. I havenโ€™t heard any football club wanting a football review so Iโ€™m not sure why Newmarket-on-Fergus and Sixmilebridge are looking for a reviewโ€.

Parteen/Meelickโ€™s Kieran Oโ€™Halloran said they were a dual club already playing games on Sundays and Wednesdays. He voiced frustration with five teams in one group leading to byes in different rounds. โ€œYou will try concertina games in at lower level, it is a tough sit when your bye is in the last ground and youโ€™re sitting on the sidelines, it is a tough stand for a club that has done four matches in a row to figure what has to happen, people will look back at these meeting and say why didnโ€™t someone say itโ€.

Kieran Keating. Photograph: Gerard O’Neill

Getting a perfect system is โ€œvery hard,โ€ Keating acknowledged, โ€œwe have to accept there will be some flawsโ€. Oโ€™Halloran then warned that wetter summers could become more common leading to more cancellations, โ€œweโ€™re trying to pigeon hole but weโ€™e building in no contingency to the planโ€. Keating responded, โ€œWe donโ€™t have windows or timescales for what we have.. The contingency is that we abandon Munster club if it comes to itโ€.

Members of the fixtures committee have โ€œalways tried to provide certainty to clubs on when championships will startโ€. He continued, โ€œClubs want a start date, people will accept if we make an All-Ireland final there will be flexibility, there would be ten rounds for clubs involving dual players in tier two of senior hurling, they will have five rounds in eachโ€.

An appetite for Miltownโ€™s motion to apply to intermediate was voiced by Curtin and supported by David Oโ€™Connell from Shannon Gaels โ€œto have parityโ€.

Kilmurry Ibrickane delegate, John Brew said they were behind the Miltown proposal. โ€œMaybe the elephant in the room has been mentioned and it is the split season, if youโ€™re playing an All-Ireland hurling final in July, it is not 50/50 split, we are hearing tonight managers want county players in December so it is leaving four months of the year for players to be with clubโ€.

Priorities of certain clubs was โ€œvery clear,โ€ Murphy observed. She felt the evening had not been a waste. โ€œPeople have a very clear understanding, it makes no sense not to take them together but it does not make sense to kick this can to Januaryโ€. Deirdre said the November meeting would see a vote on the proposals. โ€œOur wish as a board is to try develop every club in Clare, it is very clear to us and we have to work under remit of what is proposedโ€.

Keating said that none of the clubs were represented at the meeting by a club player โ€œwhich is a pityโ€. He commented, โ€œIt is important that you go back and speak to players in your clubs, do we perceive what we want as administrators. The players are the important people in this, player welfare is a concern and we need to hear what our club players would like to see, discuss with them in your clubs and see what way they want delegate to vote for on Tuesday weekโ€.

If a structures meeting is taking place in November, clubs must be advised โ€œaccordingly,โ€ Browne told the officials.

McGuaneโ€™s call to debate the structures in January did not receive support when stressing the need for parity of esteem. Tubberโ€™s Andrew Monaghan said it was not possible to expect it could be resolved in January if this meeting drew little resolution, โ€œYouโ€™d need January to last for three months to get a consensus, everyone has come in here minding their own back doorโ€. Getting the views of players was โ€œthe most sensible thing said, I canโ€™t see anyone in this room togging out any day soon, they are the people playing it, they are the ones togging out,โ€ he added.

Fiona Whelan of Ballyea touted the potential of following examples elsewhere where either hurling or football is ran off on its own first and then revert to the other code before swapping the order the next year.

Voting on the matter in eleven days โ€œis too big for the likes of us,โ€ said Corofinโ€™s Ambrose Heagney. โ€œPeople talk about welfare, Iโ€™m talking about dual clubs, it has been very difficult to promote and weโ€™re being really squeezed. It is damaging our club, we donโ€™t want to prioritise one code over the otherโ€. Kicking the can down the road is not the answer to this, Keating replied.

โ€œIt has all gone about in good faith, fixtures analysts and committee recommended the hurling committee be set in place, this has evolved as it has all in good faith,โ€ Murphy assured the meeting. โ€œThere is no anti-football agenda as has been suggested,โ€ she stressed. The โ€œdemocratic processโ€ is the best way to solve it without a consensus, she maintained.

Malty McDonagh then called for the hurling committee to meet with their football counterparts from 2016 to try find a solution. โ€œWeโ€™re all fighting for own corner, I canโ€™t see us coming to an agreementโ€.

Keating said they could try to organise such a meeting.

Delegates will return to vote on the proposals at the November meeting of the County Board on November 14th.

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