So Offaly's interest in the Championships ends for another year. There'll be plenty of opinion about how we performed and where we go from here from others on this site I'm sure and I'll leave that to them. Suffice it to say that we're at a low ebb, but then we've been there and back before. What's on my mind, and it's been underlined by today's results in a way, is the absolute folly of the championship structure as it now stands, particularly in hurling. When the straight knock-out system was scrapped it was ostensibly to help "weaker" counties by giving them a second chance, as well as provide more games. It has certainly provided more games but if anything, the stronger teams have benefited to a much greater extent. Take Cork for instance - they could potentially lose two games this year and still be All Ireland champions. I'm not interested in Offaly being given an easier ride than anybody else, the system should allow the best team in the country be crowned champions at the end of the year and clearly we're not there yet. But there has to be fairness and rationality in the system or the risk is that hurling at the very highest level will be reduced to an even smaller group of counties than it already has. How is it right, for instance, that points difference be used to seperate teams in the league? Never mind the effect it had on Offaly, how can the GAA say with a straight face that it wants to see counties like Down, Laois or Antrim grow in strength when the system encourages stronger teams to go all out to humiliate them, make them wonder why they even bother? Or take the case this year in Leinster. By virtue of being drawn in the weaker side of the Leinster championship, Wexford beat Dublin in the last minute, surrender abjectly to Kilkenny, and find themselves in the All-Ireland quarter final, against a Tipp team who will have played 7 matches in as many weeks. Offaly, to get to the same point would have had to have either beaten Kilkenny, or beaten at least one of Tipp or Cork as well as Dublin, who tonight they overcame with much greater ease than Wexford did. How is that right? You can say it's the luck of the draw but it's completely arbitrary, and not the way to encourage teams to rise up to the level where Waterford and Kilkenny find themselves. I know this has all been thrashed out at GAA Conferences and every now and then somebody has a similar rant to this one in the paper, but surely it's not rocket science to fix things so everybody gets
a few games to see where their level truly is and both players and fans get a decent summer? With that in mind, here's my two cents about how to fix all the problems in hurling overnight. I expect it to be shot down, but sure who cares?
1. Keep the league short, have a Division 1 A + B again and let the table toppers in both play a straight final. Never mind the messing with quarter finals. Let teams use it to blood players and experiment and give the spare time to the clubs.
2. Let them keep their beloved Munster Championship (which we shouldn't forget wasn't always in such rude health as it seems to be now, and may not always be...) Play it off on a league basis. 5 teams, 4 good games each, anybody might win it.
3. Have Leinster, Ulster and Galway amalgamate into a tri-provincial championship, call it what you want. Play that off as a league as well. Kilkenny might at present win it handily, but from an Offaly perspective
games against Galway, Wexford, Laois, Dublin, Antrim would give us a fairer test and a better idea of where we really are. And who knows, maybe not such a bad taste in the mouth when it's all over.
4. When it gets to the nitty gritty you could have the group winners straight into All-Ireland semis, with the second and third teams to play off against the opposite group for the chance to meet them. Or top teams meeting second teams in semis, whichever. I think in my very humble opinion that you'd get a better championship all round like this, every team could expect to see a win or two or at least some close games, and at the end of it all you could have no complaints with who won out.
I could get started on the football and the Tommy Murphy/ Division 4 fiasco but I'm tired now and I want a drink.
Fair play to the hurlers tonight by the way, and please God let the U21s get the break that the seniors "can't seem to buy" these days!
