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Published 18:00 30 Jul 2015 BST
Updated 21:02 30 Jul 2015 BST
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The U17 national league begins on August 9 and will feature 22 teams, 19 of whom will be SEE Airtricity League clubs, competing against each other on a national level.
Dokter sees the league as a bridge from schoolboy football, a pathway to elite adult football and a competitive alternative for those who've yet to move to clubs across the water.
Despite the new venture being divisive among schoolboy clubs and leagues, the Dutchman said there’s “huge appetite for change” among clubs, and now is the time for unity of purpose.
In addition to attempting to foster an unprecedented level of collaboration, Dokter said a change of mindset is needed.
He cited the benefits of reorganising the football calendar in line with the Airtricity League, how playing during the summer months is more fun for players and spectators, more practical on a windswept rock on the edge of the Atlantic ocean and how, since switching to summer football, Mayo have doubled their participation numbers.
“It’s not about winning games,” Dokter said, “because winning games is for players, if you work with children, you are an educator. You have the responsibility to develop all your players.”
However, will Dokter’s admirable rhetoric and ambition yield the desired results? Or is Irish football doomed to repeat the failures of the past, continue to be seeded fourth in qualifying draws and sit behind Cape Verde in world rankings?
And what does the U17 national league mean for in the greater picture of Irish football development?
We’ve looked at a number of different issues raised by Monday’s launch, and what they could mean for the future of Irish football.
There should be a clear path for players to progress, from schoolboy to junior to senior football, but none exists. Collaboration entails cooperation and compromise. When asked if the various leagues were open to compromise, Dokter said it was "a process".
It’s going to be slow and painful process.
Roy Keane with Fran Gavin[/caption]
Ireland will have 65 Uefa Pro licences by the end of the year, up from 45 two years ago. In 2013, there were 183 holders of the A licence and 488 with the B licence. Unsurprisingly, in Europe, Spain lead the way in Europe, with 12,720 Uefa A level coaches. Germany have 5,500 and England 1,178. For the Pro license, Spain have 2,140, Germany over 1,000 and England 203.
Dokter said there are 9,000 people annually take coaching courses in Ireland, but it’s evidently not enough.
In relative terms, Spain had, in 2013, one Pro licence per 21,824 people, and one licence per 3,670 people. Ireland had one Pro licence per 100,000 people.
Nothing will change in terms of Irish football development, and, in turn, the fortunes of the Irish team or the quality of Irish players in other leagues, as long as there’s such a dearth of qualified coaches.
UEFA European Under 17 Championship 2015. Corey O'Keefe and Layton Ndukwu[/caption]
However, good intentions will only get you so far. In the past ten years, the association has cut its development and operating grants to grassroots affiliates in by 50 per cent, from €2.2 to €1.1 million.
This contradicts player development plans, and weakens attempts to make serious change. The scarcity of qualified coaches could be due to qualifications being markedly more expensive to gain in Ireland, and England, than on the continent.
In Germany, the A licence costs €530, €1,200 in Spain and €2,350 in Ireland. The pro licence can cost €7,500 in Ireland. To improve the standard of coaching, which will, in-turn, improve young players, improve the national team and Irish players going abroad, one would imagine qualifications will have to be made more financially accessible and/or compulsory.
Galway minors celebrate[/caption]
Most importantly though, if we were to wake up tomorrow and there were no Gaelic games or rugby, and every child who played those sports suddenly flocked to football, the same problems would still exist. Some naturally talented players would break through, but there still wouldn't be enough coaches to properly teach them.
Physicality would still be favoured over creativity, risks would still be minimised, and skilful players would still largely be discouraged. The players deemed to be the best would move to England in their mid-teens and most would be home, or drop down the divisions, by the time they’re 20.
[caption id="attachment_34062" align="aligncenter" width="474"]
Roy Keane with Ruud Dokter[/caption]
In relation to numbers, the problem is not the amount of people playing football in Ireland, it’s that, despite there been many dedicated coaches, there’s, as we've seen, not enough Uefa licensed coaches.
That being said, Irish football isn't helping itself with some of it archaic practices. Compared to central Europe, Irish players during the ages of six to 16, the crucial ages of development, touch the ball, on average, 14 times less. This lack of playing time leads to many leaving the game, many by the age of 11.
Irish football is, in many ways, it's own worst enemy.

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