logo
Don't let NIFL's proposal for Sunday football get caught in Irish FA crossfire, urges Gerard Lawlor

Don't let NIFL's proposal for Sunday football get caught in Irish FA crossfire, urges Gerard Lawlor

Two years ago at the Irish FA AGM, the Northern Ireland Football League suffered an overwhelming defeat by 104 to 27 votes on a proposal about Sunday football.
With the thorny subject back on the agenda again for Monday's delayed 2025 AGM, NIFL Chief Executive Gerard Lawlor says he has faith that the football community will make 'the right decision for the good of the game' this time.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

NIFL set for two-tier restructure for 2026-27
NIFL set for two-tier restructure for 2026-27

BBC News

time3 days ago

  • BBC News

NIFL set for two-tier restructure for 2026-27

The Northern Ireland Football League has announced a restructure for the 2026-27 season. NIFL is the body that runs the Irish Premiership, Championship and Premier Intermediate Leagues - the top three divisions in Northern Ireland which each contain 12 teams. However, a restructure will see an expanded 16-team Championship formed and bring an end to the Premier Intermediate League for the 2026-27 a National Conference League will be formed for tiers three to five of the football pyramid in Northern structure of the Irish Premiership will remain unchanged and NIFL says the goal is to have five divisions of 12 teams within "three to four years".At the end of the 2025-26 season, there will be no relegation from the Championship and the top four teams from the Premier Intermediate League will be promoted to the second tier for the restructure. The remaining teams will be part of the National Conference says the move is an "evolution" and chief operating officer Steven Mills said it came as a result of both Irish FA and NIFL strategies. "I believe they create a clear performance pathway for ambitious clubs, while also challenging existing clubs to further develop and progress," said Mills."A lot of work from key stakeholders has gone into this, and we thank them all for their input, most importantly our clubs. "This also further highlights the urgent need for the NI Football Fund to come to fruition and for increased investment to continue growing the game, as our clubs continue to face the evolving challenges and needs of their communities."In addition to the restructure, the NIFL board has a new Professional Game Ground Criteria, which is a five-year plan to raise standards across the Premiership and Championship.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store