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The Irish in Britain, including those of Irish descent, make up a significant part of the UK population. Here, you will find news, entertainment, events, sports and features from the local Irish Post newspaper.

 
 
 
 
Time for sexy marketing from sexy thing Mooney

SOME people arrive with tremendous fanfare. Others, well, you don’t know they’ve arrived until it’s about time they grabbed their jacket and left.

Were the Eircom League of Ireland a person they would be…. ok let’s stop this right now before it descends to the rung of the infuriatingly obvious. Why is it obligatory to begin newspaper columns with a facile analogy dressed up as an “intro”?

You know what kind of the person the Eircom League would be: Someone you barely notice. The League kicks off this week with roughly the same hype that greeted the All-Ireland camogie final.

In both cases more should be made of what could be great products. And while we can’t claim to have really done our bit for the camogie showcase we have stepped up to the plate for the League of Ireland.

Turn the page and you’ll see an in-depth interview with Noel Mooney the chap whose (tough) job it is to get the League off its knees. Now Noel talks a decent game. In fact when you’re finished reading his comments you may well believe there’s a nice little upward curve happening in the realm of domestic soccer.

Noel paints an alluring picture but as someone who has stood on the terraces for over a decade, I have to say that it seems a bit like sleight of hand; it seems a bit like the illuminated photo of the double-bacon cheeseburger on the wall, compared to the somewhat dissimilar reality.

I don’t know, perhaps I’m just being cynical.

Perhaps a little of that cynicism stems from Mr Mooney himself. A couple of the dozen or so seasons I spent standing in the Shed at Turner’s Cross were behind the great man himself when he was the Cork City goalkeeper.

Mooney was immensely popular with the supporters. He was a decent shot-stopper but there was more to it than that. He was a country boy from Cappamore in Co. Limerick and had some amusing idiosyncrasies. Most notable among these was his bounding running style.

Whenever he had to break into a trot to retrieve one of the many efforts that had whistled several metres over his crossbar the mirth would begin. Mooney looked like a man running on the moon. Huge, prodigious, leaping strides carried his earnest frame towards the ball while all behind chanted “boing, boing, boing,” in time with his hilarious gait.

Even when he was patrolling his area with play far up the pitch the “boing, boing” chorus would go up again. This in itself isn’t all that hilarious but what gave us a laugh out of it was that Mooney seemed completely and blissfully unaware of the hilarity and did nothing to correct his moon leaps. Then again perhaps he was just concentrating on the game!

Funnier was the time City’s No. 1 turned up with his black hair bleached flourescent yellow. Here was a rural lad really getting into city life and for the rest of the season the chant from the shed was: “I believe in Mooney, where you from? You sexy thing!”

Again, what made it amusing to the easily-amused behind the goal was that we were never quite sure if Noel got the irony. Looking back I reckon he must have although sometimes he would raise his hands above his head in appreciation with the chant. Yes, damn it, I am a sexy thing.

It’s a similar situation now listening to Mooney bang on. He makes the right noises about there being much work to do and clubs being the focal point of their communities but I’m unclear as to whether he sees the true depth of the shambles that is all around him. Does he really see what’s going on?

League of Ireland football is something the FAI and we as Irish soccer fans should be truly ashamed of. Forget everything and just consider one fact: Soccer in Ireland is bigger than the GAA. It is. More people play it, more watch it on telly and there is a bigger latent audience for live soccer than there is for the All-Ireland Championships in Croke Park. And you have Noel Mooney saying Rome wasn’t build in a day and we need to get 3,000 to 5,000 as home gates in a couple of years… Where to start?

Start by saying that is not ambitious enough. Shoot for the stars and the sky is a realistic target. Mooney talks about making clubs the focal point of their communities. That’s sound thinking, it also sounds platitudinous. It is standard practice for local papers at home to put the tagline “at the heart of the community” under their masthead. It looks good, it costs nothing to put there but 90 per cent of the time it means nothing. Unless players are regular, not just occasional, visitors at schools and they actively want to be there, this is a waste of time.

Connecting with the local community is also only a small part of creating a thriving sports business. To get the turnstiles clicking you have to do the stuff which you won’t find in the marketing handbook, the really important stuff. You must generate crossover appeal. You must engineer a situation where even people who aren’t actively interested in League of Ireland know who the protagonists are; you must make the players famous.

Regardless of whether you even like sport or not who doesn’t know Seán Óg Ó hAilpín? Who doesn’t know Ronan O’Gara? Who could name three Eircom League players?

These are young men with stupid-looking haircuts and gold boots. They are your primary product. Get a tabloid snapper to catch them coming out of a nightclub or two. Get them a date with a struggling popstar and watch both their profiles soar. Get people gossiping about domestic soccer players.

The four Ps of marketing have long been product, price, promotion and place. In the last decade or so packaging has become the fifth P. In many cases it has even supplanted the original four in terms of importance. One of those cases is Ireland — a land where people will pay a fiver for a smoothie containing a quid’s worth of fruit, a land where people will pay twice as much for half the sandwich just because it’s called a Panini, a land where people will pay a tenner for a five-mile return bus journey because it’s ‘park and ride’.

It’s time to take off the tattered old paper and put a couple of frilly bows on the League of Ireland. With one boing, Mooney could be free.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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