LAST UPDATE | 7 Feb 2022
THAT THE MENโS senior international team qualify for Euro 2024 and that Vera Pauwโs womenโs team qualify for either the 2023 World Cup or 2025 Euros are among the medium-term targets set out in the FAIโs latest strategic plan, stretching from this year to 2025.
The strategy document has been put together following consultation with all sections of the game in Ireland, and is described by CEO Jonathan Hill as the โdocument that will shape the future of Irish football over the next four years and beyond.โ
โWe are looking to build a new future for Irish football and for the FAI together, an exciting future, we hopeโ, said Hill. โI ask you now to work together, to come together as never before, to deliver on the promises and targets in the strategy document. We owe that much to the nation and to Irish football.โ
The FAI are vowing to create a new, third tier league in the menโs League of Ireland by 2023, and a second tier for the Womenโs National League by 2025, all with the ultimate aim of instituting a โtransformed football pyramid structureโ in Irish football by 2025.
Among the more ambitious targets is that the menโs League of Ireland is ranked among the top 30 leagues in Uefa: it is currently ranked at number 40.
They are also targeting a sold-out menโs FAI Cup final at the Aviva Stadium by 2025, and a sold-out Tallaght Stadium hosting the womenโs FAI Cup final by the same year.
Further attendance ambitions include a minimum of 75% attendance at womenโs senior international matches, and the FAI are also seeking the peak TV audience on RTร to exceed 750,000 for a womenโs national team fixture.
The FAI are also targeting a consistent top 30 world ranking for the menโs and womenโs senior international teams, and a consistent top 20 ranking for the underage international teams.
There is also a target to secure a primary sponsor for the menโs senior team this year.
Away from the elite of the game, the FAI are aiming to have 300,000 registered players by the end of 2025, with an increase of 50,000 female players and 28,500 male players. Further to that, there is an ambition to have 3,000 registered referees in the system and a 50% retention rate year-on-year of newly-qualified referees.
There are also financial targets: the FAI are aiming for turnover to exceed โฌ50m by end of 2025, with deferred income below โฌ10m and cash reserves of at least โฌ6m. They also aim to grow broadcast/content revenue and commercial revenue by 50% by 2025.
The Association have built their strategy around six key โpillarsโ. They are:
- Transform football facilities and infrastructure
- Drive Grassroots football as the heart of the game
- Nurture Football Pathways for All
- Develop the full potential of football for Women and Girls
- Frame a new future of the League of Ireland
- Build for International Success
As CEO Hill outlined in his presentation, the FAI say these will be achieved by:
- Building a best in class, fit for purpose organisation
- Embracing Digital technologies
- Building a trusted and respected brand
- Driving investment to achieve our Strategy
- Developing a collaborative and inclusive culture
As regards the first of those pillars โ improving facilities at League of Ireland stadia and training grounds โ Hill said the FAI would work with national and local government along with Uefa to source the necessary funds to do so.
He did add a note of caution: โWe are wholly aware of the challenges of sourcing and driving this investment, but we are totally committed to taking our vision to central government and other stakeholders to positively make our case, but we recognise this will be an ongoing project.โ
The FAI say they will commit to an audit of facilities around the country this year, in order to develop an Infrastructure Plan for the League of Ireland to be published and implemented next year, at which point the investment will be sought.
On player pathways โ and against the backdrop of a fraught and ongoing fall-out between the schoolboy and LOI academy constituencies over the altered start date of the U14 national leagues โ Hill again sounded a clarion call for unity.
โWe must all work together and forget our past differences and allegiances to enable every player, coach, referee and volunteer regardless of age, ability and gender to reach their full potential and enjoy their football. This will require a lot of open debate, soul-searching and sacrifice in the coming years.
โFor our most talented players this is even more significant now as we come to terms with the realities of Brexit.โ
The FAI have not entirely ruled out a national academy at Abbottstown, saying it will be kept under review and analysed according to โneed and affordability.โ There will also be a fresh, refined Player Development Plan, to be delivered later this year and led by the Associationโs Director of Football, a role that is currently vacant since Ruud Dokterโs exit at the end of 2020. The FAI are currently advertising for the position.
The entire Strategy document can be read here.
Yet another wonderful plan
We have barely a 9 team second tier at present , and these geniuses want to create a third!
I know itโs only a plan and historically the fai canโt be trusted but at least its encouraging. Hopefully itโs not all talk as per usual and some of it is put into action, because we deserve a league with a good standard and up to date facilities. Football in Ireland has huge potential plus it can only improve the international set up with having a stronger domestic league. The standard is improving but it can be so much better if more people starting investing in itbin whatever way possible. That can be as simple as buying merchandise from your local club or going to a game to at least give it a go. I implore people to get involved!
@John Kelly: stop with the positivity, your kind arenโt welcome around here. You have to moan about John Delaney and blazers and our poor team. Itโs all about the thumbs donโt ya know.
@Gerry McCaughey: I wasnโt talking to you anyway ya pleb
The last line to me (quote regarding Brexit) epitomises the FAI for me.
The fact they have relied far to heavily on another football association to nurture our own talent and wash their hands of creating a viable league system on a divided island suddenly shifted into a blinkered vision of what they dillusionally โwishโ to achieve.
Kids playing matches every weekend on waterlogged pitches that often are not even flat. Long ball is all they can play. When they go to school its GAA and Rugby.
@Mogh Roith: our pitches are grand; youโd want to see what they have to play on in Brazil, and yet look at what they produce.
@Philip Fox: Brazil also has a population of over 200 million
@Philip Fox: Croatia is the like for like example. Similar populationโฆ.much stronger league abd under a weak FA.
We need to aim higher avd longer term than 3 years away.
@Mogh Roith: totally untrue to say โlong ball is all they can playโ You obviously havenโt been to watch schoolboy football in recent years.
@Sean Coady: ah ya sure pass and move is grand when you avoid the puddle. You obviously havenโt a clue yourself.
When are they building Eircom Park?
@Genera L Consensus: Where oh where is our Bertie Bowl?
Believe all that bulls,,t and you will Believe anything
Targetting 50% retention rate of new referees is low. They need to crack down on clubs to manage the sidelines to ensure refs are not abused or harassed the way they are.
What about an all island league, FAI COUNTY TEAMS??
@David Crosbie: How many changes have been made over the last 10 years by the GAA to the league and championship? 140 years on the go and they are STILL trying to get a county based system right!
@sean oโdhubhghaill: maybe the GAA should look at the AFL format,
Would love to see it happening. We can live in hope.