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Hurling

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A Look Behind the Ancient Irish Sport of Hurling

It’s a little like lacrosse, a bit like field hockey, and even has a smidgeon in common with baseball. It’s ancient, it’s Irish, and it’s one of the fastest-moving games—and at times incredibly physical—in all of sports.

It’s called hurling. I arrived at Mander Playground in Fairmount Park one warm spring night to learn what I could about the game.

Out on the field, about 20 members of the Philly team, Na Toraidhe—Irish Gaelic for “the pursuers”—are running back and forth in organized drills. They’re smacking a small ball called a “sliotar”—about the size of an American baseball—with flat-bladed bats called “hurleys.” They’re tossing the ball back and forth to each other. They’re almost effortlessly picking up the ball with the front edges of their hurleys.

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Sports

On to the North American Finals!

Up in the air

Up in the air

It might be the first time I’ve heard anyone so excited about a trip to Cleveland.

But there they were, a disorderly pile of screaming, red-shirted Young Irelands stacked up at midfield, celebrating a shocking Division 1 football win on Sunday over the previously dominating Donegal St. Patricks. The Young Irelands earned the win by a razor-thin margin, 1-13 to 2-9. At the half, the St. Patricks enjoyed a 2-4 to 0-5 lead and seemed to be coasting, continuing to rack up points in the second half. But the Young Irelands chipped away at that lead, sealing the deal with a goal and a point in the final minutes, to exultant cheers from fans on the sidelines.

The win earned the Young Irelands a trip to the North American GAA Finals over the labor day weekend.

In an earlier Junior B matchup, the St. Pats notched a win over the Kevin Barrys, 4-13 to 1-6.

And in the first game of the afternoon, Philly’s Na Toraidhe hurling club won handily over a hard-working team from Allentown. The guys from the Lehigh Valley fought all the way, and never gave up. But in the end, Na Toraidhe’s Kieran Donahue said, superior conditioning won the day.

“Our fitness level wasn’t where it needed to be (last year),” Donahue said. But this year, he added, conditioning was a priority, and it showed as the game progressed. “In the second half, that’s where our fitness level really paid off.”

We have tons of photos. You can see the Young Irelands-St. Pats photo essay up top.

Here are the two others:

St. Pats-Kevin Barrys
Na Toraidhe-Allentown

Sports

A Long, Bruising Afternoon of Hurling and Football

One of Sunday's hard-fought games.

One of Sunday’s hard-fought games.

There came a moment toward the end of the matchup between St. Patricks and the Young Irelands when even the most casual bystander has to realize: These guys are deadly serious. That moment came when a St. Pat’s player hit the ground near the opposing goal face down, writhing in agony for what seemed like ages. The diagnosis, once he’d been hauled off the field, was a broken knee.

The St. Pats won 5-23 to 0-6, but at some cost. Gaelic football is no game for the delicate.

There were three other games at Cardinal Dougherty that afternoon, one additional football match, Kevin Barrys v. Tyrone, and two hard-fought games of hurling, Philly’s Na Toraidhe vs. the DC Gaels, won by the local boys, and the Allentown Hibernians against the Baltimore Bohemians, won by Allentown.

We have—would you believe it?—more than a hundred photos.

There’s one at the top of the page, but you can get to all four of them here:

 

Sports

This Is Your Brain on Philadelphia Hurling

Hurling on ThingLInk.

Hurling on ThingLInk.

If you’ve never watched the ancient Irish game of hurling, it can be a lot to take in. It’s described as the fastest moving field game in all sports. That might just be the Irish saying so, but still … catch a game, and you’d be hard-pressed to argue.

At its simplest, hurling is about using a flat-bladed bat (the hurley) to slam a small ball called a sliotar (pronounced “slitter”) past a goaltender. But of course, it’s never that simple.

To get to the point where you can actually attempt a goal, you just might need to run at breakneck speed down the field, balancing the ball on the end of the bat, through heavy traffic, and trying not to allow your hurley-slinging opponents to confuse your head with the ball. Think Harry Potter’s quidditch, but without the brooms.

So we could keep on telling you, but we thought it would be better to just break down and show you. Roll your cursor over the interactive photo below, and you’ll see what we’re talking about. And thanks to the Na Tóraidhe Hurling Club for posing.

Na Toraidhe hurlers in motion

Na Toraidhe hurlers in motion

Kieran Donahue, public relations officer for the Na Tóraidhe (na TOR-ig) Hurling Club, is still breathing heavily as he comes off the Northeast High School soccer field. Donahue’s a young guy, as are the dozen or so teammates who are taking a break during a practice game. They’re prepping for the beginning of the Philadelphia Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) season, just around the corner. It’s a game played at breakneck speed, but he recovers quickly, and you can tell that it’s with some pride that he talks about the team, its devoted players, and the future of hurling in Philly.

There was a time in Philly’s GAA past when putting together a hurling team was not such an issue, given the vast numbers of Irish who moved to America in the ’50s, ’60s and ’70s. Those times are gone, but Donahue is hopeful that Na Tóraidhe will grow and prosper.

“There are five Irish guys on the team, and all the rest were born here,” says coach Kieran Donahue. “We seem to be attracting local guys. This year, we have two new guys who are really adding to the team.”

And that’s good, Donahue says, for without enthusiastic Americans, Ireland’s ancient national game has no future in Philadelphia.

Na Tóraidhe has about 25 players, 14 of whom are on the field for this practice session.Saturday’s practice is a family affair. Wives and girlfriends–and one toddler, Liam, the son of player Frank O’Meara–sit along the sidelines, sheltered from the sun by a couple of canopies. They keep an eye on the game, but it’s also an opportunity to chat. Picnic fare is set out on a folding table, waiting for the end of the game. This is how Donahue likes it. “We meet, we set up the tents. The family comes out. There are some drinks. There is a lot of food.”

Of course, the team is always on the lookout for new blood. The game can be a bit intimidating at first, Donahue says, but it doesn’t take long or the Yanks to see that, while hurling is not for the faint of heart, it also happens to be huge fun. “It’s interesting for the guys who have never played before,” says Donahue. “They think we’re crazy.”

We have photos from the weekend practice. Check them out, and “like” the team on Facebook.

They also have a website.

Here’s a video from last season.

May 16, 2013 by
Sports

Tuesday Night Lights

Matthew Quigley

Matthew Quigley belts one.

It’s 7:30, and daylight is already giving way to twilight over the athletic field at Northeast High School. Out on the freshly mown grass, about a dozen sweat-soaked young guys are running, jumping, and batting a ball. They’re trying to get as much practice time in as they can, before it gets so dark that they run the risk of beaning somebody.

Unlike the kids on the adjoining diamond, these mostly 20-something athletes aren’t playing baseball. They’re tthrowing themselves, body and soul, into a sport that is said to have originated over 3,000 years ago–the mad, bruising, distinctly Irish game known as hurling. The team goes by the name of Na Tóraidhe (na TOR-ig), meaning “pursuer” in the old Irish language. The word originated with a band of Irish guerrillas who battled (who else?) the British in the Irish Confederate War in the mid-1600s. The modern-day Philadelphia “pursuers” are sponsored by The Bards.

Over on the sidelines, assistant coach Kieran Donahue, one of only two Irish players on the team alternately shouts words of encouragement or mild exasperation.

“Great strike, Mike, use your hand now!”

“Hold on there a minute!!! Does everybody know where they’re supposed to be???”

“Beautiful, man! Lovely!”

“You gotta concentrate!!! This ain’t that complicated, and we’re (bleep) it up!!!”

Most of the players come to the game with a history of participation in American sports like baseball, football and hockey, says Donahue, and in spite of the occasional correction from the sidelines, he says they’re fast learners. They’ve already competed a bit, and will continue to play teams from other cities, like Washington or Baltimore, throughout the summer.

Some of the faces on the field seem familiar. We’ve seen them before—as members of Philly’s Shamrocks hurling team. Last year, the Shamrocks didn’t have enough manpower to compete much,  so the purpose of last season was to rebuild. Somewhere along the line, the name changed.

“The Shamrocks didn’t field a team last year in the North American Championships,” says Donahue. “They did continue on with training, and they also played some travel games. They used last year to recruit as many guys as they could to keep hurling alive in the city. Most are completely new to the game, and we’re in the process of teaching them. We got a lot of new blood, and so we said, ‘Why don’t we re-brand ourselves?'”

With so few native Irish available to keep hurling going in the Delaware Valley, American recruits are indispensible. Says Donahue: “It’s the only way hurling will survive.”

You can help keep hurling alive in Philadelphia. For details, visit the club’s website.

And if you want to see how the game is played, check out our video (above) or watch our big photo essay.

Sports

An Ancient Irish Sport, American-Style

Joe Harrington takes a swing.

Joe Harrington takes a swing.

It’s a quiet late summer night at Northeast Philadelphia High School. The only sounds are the rubbery whirr of tires as traffic passes by along Algon Avenue, and the occasional “clink” of an aluminum bat as someone gets a hit during a pickup game up on the school’s brightly illuminated baseball diamond.

And down on a hardscrabble pitch just below the diamond, you can hear one other particular noise from time to time, best described as a “clop.” It’s the distinctive sound of the Irish sport known as hurling.

As dusk descends over the city, seven young members of the Philadelphia Shamrocks hurling team are charging up and down the field, attempting to hit a small white ball with a flat-bladed wooden bat. The ball is called a sliotar (pronounced shlitter); the bat, which looks like a giant cheese spreader, is a hurley. As with most field sports, the goal is to drive the ball through a goal. Every time a hurley makes contact with a sliotar: “clop.” (Learn more here.)

A nearly full moon hangs over the field, casting just enough light so that you can make out the shadowy outlines of the players as they charge back and forth. Finally, out of the darkness, there comes a slightly different sounding “clop,” followed by a sharp expletive. In the dark, a player has evidently mistaken another player’s helmet for the ball. The guys quickly huddle around the fallen player to make sure he’s not badly injured. He slowly pulls himself up off his hands and knees, yanks off his helmet and gingerly rubs his sore head. He says he’s OK. With that, they all decide that this would be a good time to end practice.

Hurling has a long history in Ireland. In one form or another, historians say, the game has been played for 2,000 years. And unlike your average American football game, which some historians say lasts about the same number of years, hurling is lightning-fast. Games last 60 minutes, 30 minutes a half, but it’s all over before you know it.

The game is also also a little nuts. It’s brutally physical, a tangle of hardwood sticks and straining limbs locked in a struggle to the death, all to gain control over a tiny ball. Hockey-style body slams aren’t allowed, but maybe the Irish just have a different name for the high-speed collisions that regularly leave players sprawled on the ground like squashed bugs.

Players wear no padding. Helmets were not required until 2010. Hell, it only took 2,000 years.

Naturally, the Irish play this sport beautifully, effortlessly.

For the Shamrocks, though, it’s a different story. When the team formed back in 1985, it was mostly Irish guys out on the field. Now, all but four of the players are Yanks.

The Irish start to learn the sport practically when they’re still in nappies. “We’re not starting to pick it up until we’re in our 20s,” says Shamrocks player Fiachra (FEE-kra) Malone. “We’re at a disadvantage.”

For the American guys, who grew up loving and playing American sports, at least some of the rules and playing techniques of hurling are counter-intuitive.

Joshua Burns, the team PR guy and a regular player, offers a case in point: The way you grasp a hurley. When you hold a baseball bat, your dominant hand is on top, says Burns. With a hurley, it’s the opposite: dominant hand on the bottom.

“You’re reversing everything you thought you knew,” Malone says.

Picking up hurling takes about three years, Burns says. “Your third year is when you’re about as good as you’re gonna get.” And that would be OK except for one thing: high turnover. The longest-tenured Shamrock has been on the team four years.

In spite of the obstacles, the Americans who play for the Shamrocks are fully committed gung-ho types. There are 24 of them altogether, and they’re dedicated to sport, hoping to raise its profile in the local Irish community.

Coach Frank O’Mara, who first started playing the game when he was a 10-year-old boy in Tipperary, thinks he understands why such a rugged, demanding sport might be a draw for Americans.

“They’re at a point where they’re not really playing any kind of organized team sports like they might have done when they were in school,” O’Mara says. “Now they see this new sport as a challenge. It has the eye-hand coordination of baseball, the physical contact of hockey, and it appeals to them.”

If hurling is going to remain a viable concern in the Philadelphia Irish community, it’ll be up to the Americans to make it happen. “We know we either have to appeal to a broader audience, or the club could fold. We’ve always wanted to attract Americans. We’re looking to get everybody we can to come and play.”

The Shamrocks are considering starting a fall league, so now’s a good time to pick up a hurley.

Learn how to play. Visit the Shamrocks’ Web site.

Sports

Hurling in High Heat

A Shamrock hurtles downfield.

A Shamrock hurtles downfield.

What was the final score?

Blame the hundred-plus-degree heat out on the field at Northeast High School, but the end of Saturday’s game, no one seemed to know. Or care.

After the final whistle, the exhausted players of the Philadelphia Shamrocks and the Worcester (Mass.) Hurling Club dragged themselves off to a little corner near the pitch to sit in what little shade there was to be had. They stripped off their sweat-streaked jerseys, dropped to the ground and started to put away many icy bottles of water and Gatorade.

Everybody knew the away team had won handily, but no one knew by what score.

Frank O’Mara, captain of the rebuilding Shamrocks, suggested his own final tally. “Just say it was a draw,” he quipped. “These boys are from Massachusetts. They’re never gonna read it, anyway.”

When we weren’t sitting under a tree and drinking our own water and Gatorade, we headed out to the sidelines for some pictures.

Here they are.