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Hurling

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A Labor Day of Love for the Region’s GAA Teams

The Young Irelands (in red) and the Kevin Barrys (in yellow) are piped onto Cardinal Dougherty Field for Sunday's championship. Photo by Eileen McElroy.

The Young Irelands (in red) and the Kevin Barrys (in yellow) are piped onto Cardinal Dougherty Field for Sunday's championship. Photo by Eileen McElroy.

While the rest of us are having burgers and corn on the cob and not going in the ocean (thanks, Earl) this Labor Day weekend, many of the region’s Gaelic Athletic Association players are in Chicago at Gaelic Park for the 2010 North American County Board championship playoffs.

There are 78 teams representing 22 cities—including Philadelphia and Allentown—in Chicago today (Friday, September 3) for the games, which is the biggest GAA playoff event ever in the US.

The teams from the region participating include:

  • The Philadelphia Shamrocks, Junior B Hurling
  • The Kevin Barrys, Men’s Senior Football
  • Young Irelands, Men’s Intermediate Football
  • St. Patricks, Men’s Junior A Football
  • Young Irelands, Men’s Junior B FootballSt. Patrick’s Men’s Junior C Football
  • Allentown Hibernians, Junior C Hurling
  • Mairead Farrells, Ladies Sr. Football
  • Notre Dame, Ladies Intermediate Football

Philadelphia’s teams will also participate in All-American teams in several rounds of football (including against the Chicago Fire Department team!).

Check out the action from last Sunday when the Kevin Barrys won the city championship over the Young Irelands in these photos by Eileen McElroy, who is both a talented photographer and a player (she’s with Notre Dame ladies’ football club).

Sports

Last Summer of Kicks and Sticks at Cardinal Dougherty

Irish football is clearly a full-contact sport. (Photo by Gwyneth MacArthur)

Irish football is clearly a full-contact sport. Click on the photo to see the full slideshow. (Photo by Gwyneth MacArthur)

It’s the last season of Philly Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) football and hurling at Cardinal Dougherty High School, now that the venerable Olney institution is closing its doors.

(It was once the largest Catholic High School in the world, with more than 6,000 students, but has fallen victim to falling enrollments. The Archdiocese is shutting it down in June.)

Next summer, the hurling and Irish football are set to move to a new facility at Sanatoga and Longview Roads in the Upper Montco town of Limerick.

It’s a bittersweet moment for those who have played, coached or cheered along the sidelines at Dougherty over the last nine or 10 years. “They were pretty good facilities,” says Tom Higgins, a longtime Philly-area GAA player and coach, although he adds that Dougherty was somehow never as attractive to fans as the previous field at Leeds Junior High in Germantown were. “We had great crowds there,” he says. “That was just a super setup. The second we went to Dougherty, the crowd dropped off.”

The GAA has broken ground at the site in Limerick and is in the process of trying to raise $250,000—to be matched by the GAA in Ireland. “I believe it’s going to be ready for next year,” Higgins says.

For now, though, all of the adult games and a few of the youth games will play out the 2010 season on the field at Dougherty. “We had a talk with the priest there, and we knew our lease was good,” Higgins says—though the arrangements will be a little less convenient. “After the end of June, we won’t be able to use the dressing rooms. Through July and August, we won’t be able to use any dressing or shower facilities there.”

And so the season will end. But … there’s still a lot of hurling and football to be played. Games are scheduled every Sunday in June and July, and three Sundays in August.

If you’ve never taken in the fast-paced, full-contact sports of your forebears, you simply must head out to Dougherty. (You might rub shoulders with the Korean athletes who occasionally stop by to watch hurling or Irish football after their soccer game is over on an adjoining field. They clearly know a great sport when they see it.)

In fact, the games have already gotten off to a head start. We dispatched our intrepid photographer Gwyneth MacArthur to Cardinal Dougherty last Sunday to take in a cluster of games. She took more than 50 action-packed shots. Want to see what you’re missing? Click on the photo at upper right.

[googleMap width=”600″ height=”600″]6301 North 2nd Street, Philadelphia, PA 19120[/googleMap]

Sports

A Saturday Full of Gaelic Athletics

Action from Saturday's games.

Action from Saturday's games.

Cardinal Dougherty High School field was filled with non-stop action Saturday, including the battle for the McCartan Cup in junior football. 

Teams from throughout the Eastern Seaboard duked it out under clear skies and hot, hot sun.

The D.C. Gaels beat Philly’s Eire Og in the final to win the McCartan Cup. Washington won hurling against the Allentown Hibernians. The ladies from D.C. beat Philadelphia’s Notre Dames in football.

We have shots from the day’s games.

Sports

Hibernian Hurlers Win Trophy Match

Orange facing a wall of green.

Orange facing a wall of green.

The Allentown Hibernians are headed to the North American County GAA Finals in Boston, following their hurling victory Sunday over the Philadelphia Shamrocks.

With their 3-8 to 1-3 win, the Hibernians also claimed the Hurling League Cup and the Philadelphia Junior C Championship trophy.

Not too shabby for a team that was brand new to hurling last year.

The Hibernians put on the pressure and kept it on from beginning to end, entering the half with a 1-6 to 0 lead. The Shamrocks came out for the second half clearly determined to get back into the game. They battled valiantly, but the Hibos offense was too much for them.

Pat O’Donnell, the Hibernians’ team captain said this year’s team was very different from the first-year squad, which often struggled to get consistent attendance at practice. That’s changed in 2009. “For a second-year team, everybody’s stoked to play all the time,” he said.

Over the Labor Day weekend, Allentown will give Beantown their best. “We’re going to go up to Boston,” O’Donnell said, “and hopefully have a good run up there.” 

We’ve got game-day photos.

View photo essay: http://www.flickr.com/photos/irishphiladelphia/sets/72157621733679279/

View as slideshow:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/irishphiladelphia/sets/72157621733679279/show

Sports

Hibos Triumph Over Pittsburgh

It’s been a long time since we checked in with our hurling friends. Saturday, the Allentown Hibernians hosted the Pittsburgh Hurling Club in action at Haines Mill Fields, within screaming distance of the Dorney Park coaster.

On a sun-soaked afternoon, the home boys rolled over their rivals 3-17 to 0-3.

For those who can’t get enough hurling, there’s much more action in coming weeks, according to the Hibernians’ Jeff Purtell:

“Our next match will be against the Philadelphia Shamrocks on Saturday, July 11th, 4 p.m., at the same field (Haines Mill Fields, Allentown).  That game will be the first of the best of three games for the Joe Lyons Cup.  The second game is scheduled for Sunday, July 26th, Cardinal Dougherty HS, time to be announced. The third and final game (if necessary) is scheduled for Sunday, August 16th at Cardinal Dougherty.”

We have pics from Saturday’s action.

Sports

Kicking Off Three Days of Championship Youth Football and Hurling

The team from San Francisco making their way up Gay Street.

The team from San Francisco making their way up Gay Street.

Tracy Guerriero was wandering down Gay Street in West Chester, her maple-leaf flag of Canada draped over her shoulder—and looking a bit at half-mast herself.

Guerriero, accompanying the Brampton, Ontario, Rebels, had only just arrived in West Chester that afternoon after a long bus ride. They had just marched in the parade to kick off the Gaelic Athletic Association’s Continental Youth Championships. All the kids had taken off in search of pizza or burgers or whatever they could find to eat.

Leaving Guerriero holding the flag, and with a severe case of bus lag.

“We left this morning at 4:30,” she said. “Ten hours on the bus with the kids—and one bathroom. We’re all a bit punchy.”

Looking only slightly less bedraggled were N. Martin and Miriam Skelly of the Gaeil Colmcille na nOg Club from Kells, County Meath. They’d just flown in from Dublin to Philadelphia the night before. Like all the other teams post-parade, they were checking all of the Gay Street restaurants—opening doors, looking, and seeing huge crowd. Places like Vincent’s, Peace a Pizza and Kildare’s were doing land-office business. The Skellys were hoping for a quick bite before heading back to the hotel. Other than the parade, they hadn’t yet had much time to sample Philadelphia hospitality. “We went to the films this afternoon,” said Martin Skelly, still looking a bit done in.

As night fell—and it was falling pretty quickly even as the parade wound down and the last team made its way up Gay Street escorted by local pipe bands—the town was crawling with kids and families from Ireland, England, and from as far away as San Francisco in the U.S. Ask them what they want to see and do, and the answers are predictable. Like the kid from Chicago standing in line at the Sprazzo gelato joint, who hoped to see the Liberty Bell.

For the group from Brampton, one stop seems essential: “We want to run up the Rocky steps,” said Guerriero. “And we have to have a cheesesteak.”

Of course, the main attraction for the 1,700-plus athletes is the Continental Youth Championships, held today, Saturday and Sunday at Greater Chester Valley Soccer Associations’ Line Road Complex in Willistown, Chester County. For details, visit the CYC Web site.

If you want to see the future of Gaelic athletics in the United States, this is where to see it. The CYC happens but once a year, and this is the first time it has been held in Philly. Check out the games and support the cause of Irish athletics on your home turf.

Sports

Hurlers Play Fiercely to a Tie

I don’t know what Frank O’Meara said to his Shamrock hurlers at half-time on Sunday, July 13, at Cardinal Dougherty field, but they came roaring back from a scoreless first half to tie the match against the against the Allentown Hibernians. Final score: 3-4 Shamrocks, 4-1 Hibernians.

These two new teams—some of whose members had never heard of hurling until this spring—are improving by literal leaps and bounds. Allentown had come off of two losses for the tie. “We’re happy with a tie game,” says team member Jeff Purtell who, a PGA golf pro, might see a little of the “good walk spoiled” in hurling, in which the ball, called a sliotar or sliothar, is often walloped at 90 miles an hour more than a 100 yards down the field.

But there’s no leisurely putting in hurling. In fact, there’s no leisurely anything. “It’s a full 60 minutes,” says Purtell.

There are two more local games on the roster—August 3 and August 10—then both hurling teams will go to the North American Champsionship near Boston August 29-31.

Sports

Hibernians Get Ready for Next Match-Up Against the Shamrocks

Figure you’re the ’62 Mets. Your record is 40-120. Now imagine that, through some amazing disruption in the space-time continuum, you somehow wind up in the World Series.

Well, the Allentown Hibernians are hardly in the same league as the ’62 Mets, universally regarded as the worst team in Major League history. Still, they’re the closest thing to an expansion team the Irish sport of hurling has to offer—in that, not all that many months ago, many of the team members had never even played the game before. They’ve played only two games, both against the Junior “C” Philadelphia Shamrocks, and they’ve lost both. And yet, because there are so few teams playing the sport in the U.S., they’ll get a shot at a local championship—and maybe something even bigger down the road.

Pretty cool, huh?

Allentown’s Jeff Purtell is looking forward to the next match-up against the Shamrocks, scheduled for a 2:30 p.m. start at Cardinal Dougherty High School, 6301 N. 2nd Street, in the city’s Olney section.

“We’ve only played two games so far but we have practicing and scrimmaging two-three days a week,” says Purtell. “Our record is 0-2 but we’re steadily improving our skills. We’ll have portable Gaelic games goalposts in a few weeks and are making tentative plans to play Pittsburgh—possibly in a neutral location. They are another newly-formed hurling club in Pennsylvania.”

The Shamrocks’ Frank O’Meara likewise eagerly anticipates the weekend pairing. “We can never take them for granted as they have a fine team and are very competitive,” he says. “Our next game will be very close and only the gods can predict who will win.”

Despite the Shamrocks’ two victories, O’Meara notes that his team is also pretty new to hurling. “The Shamrocks Hurling club is made up of two teams: one, largely experienced, and the other, new players that are from the Philly area. While the Shamrocks (as an organization) have been around for a while, the Shamrocks team that plays against Allentown are all-American lads and, for the majority, this is the first year for them to play hurling.”

The upshot? The Hibos could surprise you. (In a way that the ’62 Mets never could have.)

Regardless of who wins this Sunday, August 3 and in the local championship game August 10, both teams will go on to play in the Boston suburb of Canton at the North American Championship August 29-31. “The Philly 1 and Philly 2 teams (Hibernians and Shamrocks) in the schedule will be determined after the outcome of the championship game. Including preliminary games in Canton, we could be playing Chicago, St. Louis, or Indianapolis in our first game at NACB (North American County Board) Championships.

“The championship game will be a great experience as we prepare for the NACB GAA Championships. It should prepare us for a higher level of competion against other teams across the U.S.”

Also playing this Sunday will be the Shamrocks Junior A team (mostly Irish-born). They’ll be up against the the D.C. Gaels Junior “A” team for the Joe Lyons Cup Championship.