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Page 19 - O'Neills Blog

Welcome to O'Neill's Blog, your destination for exploring passions, refining skills, and discovering the trailblazers and products shaping the future.

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  1. Live Life Like Lisa Orsi

    This Saturday, October 29, a group of fifty Gaelic footballers, hurlers and camogs representing GAA clubs from Derry and Donegal, as well as a local youth training organisation will set off for China and the Asian Gaelic Games.

    They are travelling as part of the Live Life Lisa Foundation to celebrate the life of 22-year-old Lisa Orsi, the young Singapore Lions player, who died in March 2015.

    Lisa Orsi passed away in March 2015 after suffering extreme high altitude sickness on a volcano trek in Indonesia. Lisa was a physio working in Singapore, and originally a player with the Ardmore GAA club in Derry, she played football for the Singapore Lions club and had been part of the Asian Championship winning team in 2014. The Cup was renamed in her memory.

    Following her untimely death, her organs were harvested and donated to help save the lives of others. Her father Dennis paid tribute to his daughter at the time saying: “Lisa was extremely fit. She enjoyed her nights out, she enjoyed a pint

  2. Around the Globe With the GAA

    More than ever the GAA is going  global. With the growth of the World Games and new clubs popping up wherever two or three Gaels are gathered, the Association has never been stronger outside Ireland, offering a home from home for Irish abroad and new sporting opportunities for the communities where they find themselves. And, wherever the GAA is, O’Neills are, proud to be associated with new and established clubs worldwide. Here we present a focus on five of our partners worldwide.

    Connemara Gaels

    Connemara Gaels has long been one of the first posts of call for the Irish emigrant landing in Boston. Given the name of the club and its history it has a particular resonance for folk of Galway and Mayo stock. Founded in 1961 the club is one of the oldest in the US.

    The Gaels won the North American Football Championships in 1973 and they have a fair few Boston championship titles under the belt. The Club was founded in Doggins pub in Southie and have built a strong reputation. This year they

  3. Anthony Foley: A Warrior's Passing

    “Then his warriors laid him in the middle of it,

    Mourning a lord far-famed and beloved...

    ...They were disconsolate 

    And wailed aloud for their lord's decease”.

    From The Funeral of Beowulf, Seamus Heaney

    Voices cracking with emotion, former teammates and opponents paid tribute to their fallen comrade Anthony Foley. 

    Ronan O’Gara, Peter Stringer, Will Greenwood, Martyn Williams, on-field friends and foes respectively talking of this stellar rugby human being. Brave, fearless, intelligent and humble.

    The heartrending posts from men who soldiered in the fields of France, in England, Scotland and in the cathedrals of Irish sport, in Croke Park, Lansdowne Road and his spiritual home, Thomond Park. 

    Most of all, thoughts go out to Anthony's wife Olive and their two young sons, Tony and Dan. His dad Brendan and mum Sheila, and his sisters Rosie and Orla.

    One of the most poignant images of recent days show Anthony standing helping his son attach the straps on his hurling helmet at Smith O'Brien's

  4. Tough Love. The Club Championship

    It all starts with the Club. And ends with the Club. So we are told. This week the Dublin GAA players didn’t have long to digest their two in a row success before its back to basics. Likewise the gallant Mayo GAA men don’t have time to wallow in defeat, they return to the warm embrace of their club and the championship.

    Training Under Lights

    You know you’re doing something right if your club training is still going strong into the fading Autumn evening and the floodlights are switched on. There’s something about that pool of yellow light, looks like success.

    The Food Rota

    In some clubs the grub’s laid on year round for the players. In some clubs, but in most outfits when success arrives it comes in the form of a tray laden with sandwiches, smoking tea and a few healthy snacks after training. Usually the mothers, fathers, brothers and sisters will take up a rota of preparing the grub. Brown bread, chicken, tuna or cheese and ham. One lad we know makes a fantastic sandwich, the flavours explode

  5. Higher, Faster, Stronger at GAA World Games

    Salim Al Rahbi plays for Oman GAA. He's as proud a Gael as any clubman. The German hurling team have 21 out of 26 players that are native Germans. Juan Patricio Wade plays for Argentina. It could be the Olympics we’re talking about but it’s the GAA equivalent, the World Games, that drew to a close this weekend in Croke Park. It was a massive success with native and Irish teams living the GAA dream.

    The GAA scene is flourishing worldwide. In the States this week NFL draft prospect, kicker Patrick Murray who plays The Gridiron game with Fordham talked of the influence and inspiration Gaelic football has had on him. "I try to watch as much Gaelic football as I can, it is my first love." As expats and first generation Irish continue to spread the games as well as their songs and music, the GAA is flourishing like never before.

    World Games

    The GAA World Games ended with the finals on Friday in Croke Park. Over 1,100 people from 56 teams and 20 countries played in the tournament. Team from

  6. Wearing the Jersey, Living The Dream

    This week on social media Tyrone GAA player Cathal McShane posted  a picture of himself in 2003 with Mickey Harte, juxtaposed alongside a shot taken with his manager in the aftermath of last week’s Ulster Final.  In 2003 as a youngster McShane would no doubt have had among his heroes the likes of Peter Canavan, Owen Mulligan and Sean Cavanagh.

    They say you should never meet your heroes. But here is the young Cathal McShane playing alongside a man he likely idolised and for a manager he dreamt of player under. His short Instagram message said “20013-2016 – 13 years. Always work hard towards your goal in life. Unbelievable.” It’s good when a plan comes together.

    The one thing about the GAA, among all the slings and arrows that point in its direction, is its ability to take a lad from the club at the end of a narrow winding lane and transport him all the way to Croke Park by virtue of hard work and dedication.

    In 2014 Lester Ryan of the Clara club in Kilkenny captained his county to their

  7. #COYBIG Ireland’s Sporting Moments

    Joxer went to Stuttgart in his Ireland Retro jersey, half the country went to Poland and turned Poznan green. Even taking the Irish team all the way to Korea and Japan didn’t stop the Credit Unions stumping up for the hordes of Irish invading Asia.  There’s men still order noodles with their chips on a Friday night. What sort of country is it anyway? Sports mad. There’s wiser eating grass.

    Nothing brings the country together like a bit of success on the sports field. With Ireland North and South heading for the green fields of France, it’ll be lonely round the fields of Athenry, Antrim, Ballymena and Ballymun with menfolk and womenfolk loading up the camper vans, jumping on Michael O’Leary’s finest or paddling their own canoe.

    The effect of sport on the national character is unreal. Bruce Springsteen may have had the Taoiseach playing air guitar but after a result or two in France, we reckon we’ll have him logging in to oneills.com for one of our Ireland Soccer jerseys as he relives

  8. The Sweeper. The Man Who Can’t Be Moved.

    Clare GAA and Waterford on Sunday. It'll likely be a cagey enough affair until a game of hurling breaks out. Central to the whole affair will be the current bête noire of hurling traditionalists. The Sweeper.

    The third high profile game between the two teams in six weeks, it has enough intrigue to keep the pundits going.

    We all remember the first league final provoked a bout of introspection tactical analysis usually reserved for football. Cagey stuff, the first half was damned as heralding the death of hurling because both teams used the dreaded S man. The Sweeper.

     

    The Sweeper

    The sweeper is the seventh defender who plays between the lines and covers space. Traditionally in hurling the no6 fulfilled the role of covering in defence and combined it with a marking job on the opposing 11.

    The job of the 11 would be to break the ball on puc outs and try to shift 6 from the central channel. Often 6 was the Man Who Can’t Be Moved as he sat and anchored defence. If the opposing 11 dropped off

  9. 7 GAA Fantasy Auction Items

    What is your most prized piece of sporting memorabilia? A jersey signed? A ball? An autographed photo

    This week Brazilian soccer legend Pele is in the news as he auctions his most famous memorabilia. Among the most sought after items in the auction room is a one off replica of the World Cup Jules Rimet trophy presented to him in 1970. This was in recognitions of Pele featuring in three world cup winning teams.

    Also up for sale are his World Cup medals from 1958, 1962 and 1970. Other items include New York Cosmos jerseys, the ball with which he scored his 1000th goal and the boots he wore in the film Escape to Victory.

    This got us thinking, in your fantasy auction, what would be among the most sought after items in the GAA? If they still exist and we could get our hands on them!

     

    Original Cork Jersey

    Cork GAA teams wore this jersey in blue fabric with an embroidered 'C’ until 1919. During a raid on the Cork County Board office, the British army confiscated the jerseys, never to have been