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19th October 2016
05:42pm BST

"There is an imbalance in both the number of counties and in the relative strength of counties within provinces," Duffy agreed before offering nothing to help. "We must accept, therefore, that more games are required to win in some provinces than in others. This is an unchangeable fact, so let’s move on from it. "In addition, the Association’s members have made it clear that they wish to continue with the provincial system."Where do you even start? Why must we "accept" that there is an imbalance in the number of games and standard? Why? Tell me. It doesn't make any sense. That is only "an unchangeable fact" because the GAA have decided that it is. https://twitter.com/SportsJOEdotie/status/764113938648883202 Duffy says his proposal is to ensure that the strongest teams advance to the latter stages of the competition and yet he's happy to risk some of the strongest teams knocking each other out long before the quarter-finals. One of Tyrone or Donegal, for example, will find themselves in round three of the qualifiers. It can't be seeded up north like it is in other parts of the country because it's too competitive up north but the GAA will do absolutely nothing to rectify the problem.
"No one is claiming that this is the perfect solution, or that it is a panacea to address the perceived ills of the football championship structure..."Then just stop talking. Please. What is the point of all of this if it isn't to address the ills of the championship? The only real problem is that the provincial championship is directly affecting the All-Ireland series. That creates an imbalance in numbers and an imbalance in fairness. What some teams have to do to get to the same stage as others is a bloody joke. Unfortunately, to the GAA, that's just "an unchangeable fact". The GAA Hour podcast is out every Wednesday. Subscribe here on iTunes or listen on Soundcloud. https://soundcloud.com/sportsjoe-gaa-hour/the-great-ken-mcgrath-in-studio-and-a-new-club-players-association-on-the-horizon
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