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Published 18:55 25 Jul 2016 BST
Updated 19:24 25 Jul 2016 BST
This is what Donegal had to do.
Whatever about the standard of opposition, the fact that the men from the hills had to play 100 per cent more games than Mayo to get to the same stage as them is a joke. The fact that it continues as the norm without so much as a raised eyebrow is frightening.
It would be a shame to lose the provincial series entirely. There's still something so natural - even if it is just romantic - about fighting for that pride of place before moving on to try and conquer the whole island. But in its current state, it can no longer impact the All-Ireland series. Not when there's six teams in one province and 12 in another.
Imagine we had never known the provinces like they are. Imagine we had a blank canvas with no history or tradition. Then imagine trying to pitch that idea now. Trying to suggest having six teams compete for a quarter-final place from the Munster competition and 12 teams compete for a quarter-final place from Leinster. You'd be laughed at. And rightly so.
And, no, it doesn't exactly help the like of Kerry either. Natives of the Kingdom aren't thrilled at having been tested by just Clare and Tipperary before having to go to war in the All-Ireland semi-finals against some of the best in the country (if they get there).
https://twitter.com/tomas5ky/status/757169598571618304
There's no camp happy with this structure as it is. There's no way it can keep going on as it is.
So the proposal for a new championship is this:
If the new championship structure was to start in 2017 - and the groups were ranked based on having a team from each division - it could look like this.
Suddenly, it's a hell of a lot more interesting.
If New York travel was an issue, then the bottom-placed Division Four side could play them in a play-off to enter into the 32-team championship.
If the seeded teams were to emerge, this is how the knockout stages could unfold.
Players of weaker counties don't like the idea of a split in the championship. Sponsors sure as hell wouldn't like it either.
There's an apathy at the moment around the provincial structure and qualifier format but a proper round robin summer tournament could really invigorate the whole country. It would be a serious spectacle, there'd be more meaningful games and teams would be targeting fixtures with all their might, fancying their chances of emerging from the group stages.
Either way, they're getting three bites of the championship cherry too and that's a lot more for what can be said for some at the minute.
Most importantly, this round robin tournament is fair and balanced. The current structure is anything but. It would be madness to let it continue.
https://soundcloud.com/sportsjoe-gaa-hour/munster-football-domination-and-jim-mcguinness-the-movie
