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All things Gaelic Games.

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  1. 10 Things to Know About the GAA World Games

    This summer sees one of Ireland’s largest Sporting & Cultural festivals coming to Waterford, when the third GAA World Games sponsored by Renault arrives July / August! And as World Games kit suppliers we are full steam ahead getting ready, with the sunny south east set to see an array of brand new O’Neills jersey designs during the summer. So, here’s ten things you need to know about the GAA World Games.

     

    When Are the Games On?

    Between the 28th July and August 1st the tournament is hosted at Waterford Institute of Technology's Sports campus, with matches in the WIT Arena and the finals being played at Croke Park on August 2nd, 2019.

     

    Va va Voom

    Renault Ireland has been announced as the title sponsor of the 2019 GAA World Games, which will bring 1,300 players from 10 regions around the globe home to play this summer.

     

    Where Will They All Stay Say Their Mammies

    Where will they all stay?? Not to worry, they’re staying in student accommodation around WIT. There is a Twinning event for

  2. Hail Glorious St Patrick’s Day Club Finals

    St Patrick’s Day means one thing in the GAA calendar: a celebration of the club jersey and all who play in it. And if some of the media coverage is to be believed the finals could be shifted leaving a major hole in the traditional national Saint’s Day celebrations. Of course the finals weren’t always played on the 17th March, but they’ve been there for long enough to be considered a GAA institution, sacred cow and immoveable feast but could become a Shibboleth as the season is subject to serious restructuring anytime soon. This year the county jerseys represented by their club champions are Galway, Kilkenny and Kerry. Not many surprises there.

     

    And as one of the show pieces of the Club scene we all crave good games. After a few years of fairly one-sided matches in the football, bar Dr Croke’s two point win against Slaughtneil a couple of years back, supporters will be hoping for a decent competitive game in the football final.

     

    Last year Corofin were magnificent to watch for sure but

  3. Sarah Rowe: An International Woman of Sport

    For International Women’s Day we caught up with Mayo and Collingwood star Sarah Rowe who’s living the life of a professional athlete in Australia.  Exclusively for O’Neills Sarah talks 20x20, women’s sport on the rise and the absence of Coppers in Oz!

     

    You coping with the lifestyle there ok?

    The lifestyle is great, I’m not working over here, so I’m in the club every day, well five or six times a week anyway, using all the resources so it’s great.

    We train Monday evenings, Wednesday evenings, Friday and Sunday and the other two days you’ve to get a gym session in. So quite similar here to home.

    I go in to training about half three and don’t get home to about half ten at night. It’s a bit longer than at home, I suppose people work part-time and then train too, but the lifestyle is great.

    It comes with its pressures. There’s a bit of pressure when you’re getting paid to play. I suppose there’s a different dynamic compared to LGFA but the pressure for performance is that bit greater. It’s

  4. Football’s Coming Home. So Is Hurling and Camogie for World Games

    All roads lead to Waterford this summer for the Renault GAA World Games. Around 1,300 Gaelic footballers, hurlers and camogie players from 10 regions worldwide are coming home to Ireland for the 2019 Renault GAA World Games in Waterford. And as part of the games O’Neills are delighted to be official kit partners, supplying the jerseys to participating teams as well as the official World GAA Games jersey and associated GAA clothing.

     

    The GAA are expecting 100 teams from over 20 countries to rock up to Waterford Institute of Technology’s's Sports Campus for a week-long festival of Gaelic Games activity between July 28th and 31st. After the groups stages at WIT, the finals are penciled for Croke Park on August 2nd.

     

    The decision was made to host the last edition of the games in Ireland, where they were hosted at UCD after having been inaugurated in Abu Dhabi the previous year.  It was subsequently agreed to hold the tournament  every three years in Ireland with Waterford has been chosen

  5. Lidl National Football League Wrap

    Lidl National Football League wrap

     

    Compiled by Declan Rooney

     

    Galway and Donegal continue to light up the Lidl National Football League as the top flight’s runaway leaders both maintained their perfect starts to the season.

     

    Sarah Conneally’s goal helped Galway to a convincing Connacht derby victory against Mayo at MacHale Park, while Karen Guthrie, Róisín Friel and Geraldine McLaughlin all found the net for Donegal in their two-point win over Tipperary in Convoy.

     

    Victories over Mayo in last year’s Connacht final and the All-Ireland quarter-final meant Galway entered this league clash high on confidence, and once again Tim Rabbitte’s side didn’t disappoint.

    Playing into a strong wing Galway still led by two at the break, while Conneally’s goal ensured there would be no Mayo comeback.

     

    In Convoy all the significant action happened in the second period when two quick goals from Guthrie and McLaughlin opened out a ten-point lead. Tipp charged back thanks to goals from Anna Rose Kennedy

  6. Ulster GAA Conference on Coaching the Coaches

    For 200 local coaches eager to learn, Cookstown was the place to be in November as the 15th O’Neill’s Ulster GAA Coaching and Games Development Conference took place in the Glenavon Hotel.

     

    The theme of the 2018 conference will focus on the Player Development Pathway. The latest event from the Ulster GAA coaching team highlighted once again the need for continuing coaching to keep our amateur club coaches up to speed on the latest thinking and ideas in preparing players to be the best they can be. Ulster GAA’s coaching director Dr Eugene Young said:

     

    “We were delighted with the attendance of 230 coaches at the conference. It shows there is still an appetite for learning and it bodes well for the future development of our young players and the next generation of GAA players. Coaches want to learn so that they know how to do the right work with players at the right age group.

     

    “I want to thank all the Ulster GAA staff, all the coaches and players that took part and the coaches from club

  7. Ten Reasons Why The Club Championship Is Special

    The GAA says the club is the most important unit of the Association. It’s where we start and where we end. The highlight of the Club year is the championship and if you’re lucky enough to be involved at the business end it can be a truly special time for players, supporters, mentors and the wider community. But why?

     

    The Club Jersey
    You’ve lived with that jersey since you were a youngster, the older players you looked up to wore the same club jersey as you did. Seeing it now on the big day, brings a lump to the throat.

     

    The Buzz in the Local Paper
    Seeing the lads in the paper, the slagging, the made up profiles... First medal won? Men’s Wimbledon Singles. Biggest Influence On Your Career? Tony Hawk. We get to know who has the biggest collection of cosmetics in the kitbag, who snores, who is a torture to sit beside on the bus and who’s the biggest slabber in the dressing room.

     

    Food After Training
    Players can eat what they want all season after training whether that’s Benny’s Burgers

  8. Record Breaking Ladies Gaelic Football

    In September 2018 the All Ireland Ladies Football final attracted a record attendance to Croke Park of 50,141 people to watch the players of Dublin, Cork, Meath, Tyrone, Limerick and Louth contest the Senior, Intermediate and Junior All Ireland Finals. It was a festival of football, full of colour, noise and spectacle. It was also packed with skill; athleticism and passion from six highly motivated and dedicated teams of ladies footballers.

    Attendances for the ladies football final have been rising incrementally over recent years but to put the most recent final in perspective, the attendance is greater than the 23,771 full house that watched the recent headline grabbing Naomi Osaka / Serena Williams US tennis open final, and for women’s sport, the event comes close to the 53,341 who were at the women’s soccer World Cup Final in 2015. Mayo ladies footballers along with Ulster LGFA teams like Antrim, Armagh, Derry and Donegal ladies have played their part in increasing interest in the

  9. In Conversation with Lee Chin, O’Neills Ambassador

    We spoke to our O’Neills ambassador Lee Chin who’s getting himself into Championship mode with Wexford. In his first conversation with O’Neills, Lee shares his memories of growing up in Wexford, starting out in his hurling career with his hurling club Faythe Harriers and his thoughts on trying to balance hurling and football in the modern game.

     

    Wolfetone Villas
    I played all sports growing up. It wasn’t any different to any other childhood that any person had I suppose. I grew up in Wolfetone Villas in Wexford, it was a very family oriented estate, and pretty much everyone that lived there when I was grown up was born there. You could head away for a holiday for a weekend and leave your front door open it was that kind of place. My mother grew up in the estate. Growing up there we got up to everything out on the street hurling, football, soccer, tennis basketball, my childhood memory is that you would be out on the street with your friends organising games. There were times we’d organise