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McGee hits web for fans’ ideas

The GAA’s Football Review Committee (FRC) will next month throw it out to the world to have its say on the state of Gaelic football.

A website will shortly be launched to gauge the opinions of people across the globe about the game. As well as featuring an in-depth and extensive questionnaire about football, it will also let supporters submit recommendations on what ways, if any, the sport can be improved.

FRC chairman Eugene McGee said the feedback will be vital in obtaining a consensus.

“The website will be crucial because it will give anybody and everybody, those who write to newspapers and journalists and so on, the chance to submit their opinions on Gaelic football in email or whatever.

“It’s a good democratic process and we’ll see what happens. We will study and read them all — thousands of them, whatever it is.”

Since their establishment shortly after Congress in April, the FRC have held four meetings, the latest coming last weekend.

McGee revealed he has already received 200 observations on Gaelic football via email directly to him or the GAA.

“It just emphasises the enormity of this task because there’s a huge divergence of view on Gaelic football.”

He hopes to be able to put forward recommendations to the GAA by November at the latest.

“We were asked by the president [Liam O’Neill] to finish by the end of October because he wants to take it to the next stage and start a national debate on football.”

National referees’ committee chairman Pat McEnaney was one of a number of people the FRC met with last week. McEnaney suggested a new advantage rule would benefit the sport but McGee would not be drawn on whether the idea had merit.

“My personal views are irrelevant, even though I have obviously expressed many of them in newspapers and TV over the years.

“Myself and the other guys, we have to adopt a code of total neutrality. It’s not my job to say, ‘I want an advantage rule’ or ‘I don’t want an advantage rule’.

“We have to hear what hundreds and probably thousands of people want to say about these things.

“At the end of it then, we’ll look at a consensus and propose things to the president but we’re not the decision-making body. We’re the information-making body, really.”

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