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Hurling

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Hurling, Football Results and Pictures from Sunday’s Games

That's why they call it football.

That's why they call it football.

It was a close one for the Philadelphia Shamrocks hurling team who went up against the Allentown Hibernians again at Cardinal Dougherty High School on Sunday, June 1. The Shamrocks won 3-5 to 3-2.

The Shamrocks team, like the Hibernians, is a brand new bunch of guys, many American who are just learning the game. “We have a stronger team as well, largely Irish, who are going up against Washington, DC, later this year,” says Frank O’Meara, team captain. The other hurling team in Philadelphia, the Brian Borus, folded this year because of lack of players.

Also on the field: The Kevin Barrys GFC trumped the Young Irelanders 1-11 to 1-8 in a fierce game that left three footballers with minor injuries.

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  • Sports

    Shamrock Hurlers Christen the Allentown Hibernians

    For the Hibernians, it was a baptism by fire.

    For the Hibernians, it was a baptism by fire.

    No one expected the Allentown Hibernians to win their first hurling match ever. But in the new team’s debut Sunday against the Philadelphia Shamrocks, they sure made it interesting.

    The Shamrocks finally put the team from Lehigh away, 1 goal and 4 points to the Hibernians’ 1 goal and 1 point.

    (In hurling, a goal equals three points. It is scored when the ball, or sliotar, sails into the net between two uprights. A single point is scored when the ball goes over the net but between the uprights. So another way of looking at the score is: 7-4.)

    The Shamrocks’ team captain Frank O’Meara likes to win, but he was nonetheless pleased to see a new team come out on the field with such fire and give his players a real run for their money.

    “They did very well,” he said. “I was very impressed with them.” More important, he added, they seemed impressed with themselves, and their fine performance ought to encourage them to keep learning and refining their game.

    Not bad for a bunch of athletes who, not all that long ago, wouldn’t have known what a sliotar was if it smacked them in the head. (They know now, though, I bet.)

    The Hibernians will get another chance at the Shamrocks on Sunday, June 1, part of a round-robin tournament that could include a team from D.C.

    As for the team from Allentown, their first hurling match left its mark.

    The Hibernians’ Chris Farrell, who was making something of a reputation for himself (albeit involuntarily) for injuring his teammates during practice, got a taste of his own medicine Sunday on the field at Cardinal Dougherty. “Before the game (teammate, no relation) Joe Farrell told me they had taken to calling me “the hatchet man” because of the injuries I’ve caused in practice,” Farrell said. “Ironically, I took the chop during the game when one of the Shamrock players chopped right on my knee joint with his hurl, following through on a shot that I was just a split second too late for (apparently). Hurts like hell and it’s pretty swollen today, but I don’t think any permanent damage was done and I will be back to fight another day.”

    O’Meara, for one will be heartened to see them back out on the field. It’s tough keeping this native Irish sport going here in the States, but with the addition of an eager new team—and continuing dedication on the part of the 20 Americans on the Shamrocks’ team—”the thing is going to purr like a kitten. And we’re going to make sure that it does.”

    Sports

    How To Hurl

    The Shamrocks hurler holds the sliotar in one hand and the hurley in the other during last year's championship game.

    The Shamrocks hurler holds the sliotar in one hand and the hurley in the other during last year's championship game.

    Once you get past the jokes (“Hurling? Sure, I can do that! One night of drinking and I’m there”), hurling is an ancient game that encompasses many aspects of soccer, hockey, lacrosse, a little baseball, cricket, and, as one wag put it, “assault with a deadly weapon.”

    The deadly weapon in this case is the hurley, the axe-shaped stick the players carry and use to hurl a small ball called a sliotar (prounounced slitter) between their opponents’ goal post—either over the crossbar for one point, or under it into a net guarded by a goalkeeper for three points.

    You can catch the ball with your hand but you can’t carry it for more than four steps before you either have to strike it in the air or on the ground with your hurly. You can kick or hand-pass it to another of your teammates. If you want to carry the ball for more than three steps, you need to bounce or balance it on the end of your stick. You can use shouldering, as long as it’s side to side (no charging or tackling allowed). Usually the players don’t wear protective padding though many wear a helmet (sometimes with a faceguard). And the pace? Fast. It almost makes ice hockey look a game of golf.

    Check out more photos of the 2007 championship (won by the Philadelphia Shamrocks).

    Sports

    Sunday Hurling Match Pits a Brand New Team Against Philly’s Shamrocks

    Neophyte hurler Christopher Farrell: Be afraid. Be very afraid. Photo by Michele Horon

    Neophyte hurler Christopher Farrell: Be afraid. Be very afraid. Photo by Michele Horon

    Fair warning to the Philadelphia Shamrocks hurlers: The Allentown team you’re facing on Sunday, May 18, at Cardinal Dougherty High School may be brand new, but they’re dangerous.

    Take just one player for example. That would be Christopher Farrell, at 45, playing a game that, until recently, he’d never heard of. “My first two practices with this team, oh man, I knocked a guy’s shoulder out of its socket and the second practice I hit a guy square in the face with the ball.” Actually, what he did, he told me later in hurling language, was “hit a sliothar (ball) straight into his nose — it was a bloody mess.”

    And the guy he hit is the only Irish-born member of the new Pennsylvania Hurling Club’s team, the Allentown Hibernians, Joe Farrell (no relation), and the only one who’d ever played the game before but who wasn’t wearing a face guard at the time. He’ll never do that again.

    “My main thing is bicycling,” says Christopher Farrell, by way of an apology. In fact, Farrell is seriously into racing, which he does regularly at the Lehigh Valley Velodrome, with its banked tracks and, quite often, Olympic level athletes. A “recovering fat guy,” Farrell lost 45 pounds while cycling, making him a poster child for his employer, Rodale, Inc., publisher of health and fitness magazines such as Men’s Health and Bicycling.

    Oddly enough, Farrell got interested in hurling because of Irish stepdancing. His two youngest daughters are involved on a competitive level with the O’Grady-Quinlan Academy of Irish Dance in Lehigh County. Another “dance dad,” Jeff Purtell, a PGA golf professional for a decade, had gotten interested in hurling and figured that he might find some like-minded guys among those who spend weekends driving long distances to watch their daughters jig in $600 dresses. “I ran into Jeff at an event a couple of months ago, around St. Paddy’s Day, and he asked me if I’d like to try it out. They really need guys and I really need the exercise so I said okay.”

    Farrell is the “old guy” on a team that also includes high school and college players, as well as 44-year-old Dublin-born Joe Farrell of Whitehall Township, their one experienced player. He admits he’s never even seen a hurling game “except for some low res” films on YouTube. “It looks fast,” he says. Farrell and his wife have five kids and he’s completing his master’s degree “so I really don’t want to get injured.”

    Given his performances at practices, it seems like it’s the Shamrocks who need to be worried about that.

    Come out and support hurling and see all the action on Sunday, May 18, at Cardinal Dougherty High School Field, starting at 4 PM.

    Sports

    Shamrock Hurlers Off to the Windy City

    A stormy afternoon for Brian Boru.

    A stormy afternoon for Brian Boru.

    By Paul Schneider

    OK, so there was a little bit of rain.  OK, make that a LOT of rain.  But for the Shamrocks and Brian Boru hurlers, that just didn’t seem to be enough reason to postpone last Sunday’s Joe Lyons Cup final.

    One after another, Shamrocks coach and goalkeeper Eamonn Lyons dripped the reasons why:  “There was no lightning,” he said.  “The field was in good condition.”  And finally, “We’ve all played in worse conditions at home.”

    This was Sunday afternoon, some time after the Shamrocks broke a 4-4 deadlock midway through the first half to romp to a 2-11 to 0-4 victory, and minutes after Philadelphia GAA chairman Eamonn Tohill had awarded them the Joe Lyons Cup.

    On a day that seemed to favor slower, heavier teams, it was the fleet of foot who came through.  Bobby Rea, a whippet on the front line, alternately was picking himself up off the turf or scoring points.  He finished with the Shamrocks’ two goals and placed another four through the uprights.

    Frank O’Meara added another three for the winners, who also got strong midfield play from Benny Landers, whom Lyons dubbed the day’s MVP.  Lyons himself provided key goalkeeping, particularly in the critical early going. 

    When Landers, netminder on last year’s Shamrock squad, opted to play in the field this season, Lyons stepped in to fill the nets on a temporary basis.  “I kept waiting for someone to take the position, but nobody wanted to, so I stayed,” he said.

    Next stop for the Shamrocks are the North American GAA Championships in Chicago over Labor Day weekend.  With any luck, maybe there’ll be a little rain?

    Sports

    Irish Eyes on the Prize

    By Paul Schneider

    It’s not time to load the bus to Chicago, but you can’t blame the Brian Boru hurling club if they’re looking ahead.

    Two years after winning the North American Gaelic Athletic Association Junior A hurling finals – and less than a year after finishing out of the money in the wind and rain of Ernesto last September – the Brian Boru hurlers are pointing once again toward the North American league’s Labor Day playoff marathon.

    “They’ve come on since the start of the season,” said head coach and sponsor Colm McNally, whose “C. McNally Construction” plug is emblazoned across the front of the team’s jerseys.  “We started the season with a strong base of players; the guys who’ve come over from Ireland have strengthened the squad.  As the season has gone on, they’ve been getting used to playing with each other.”

    Bolstered by the addition of recent arrivals Arron Hater, Eamonn Keley and Cahill O’Keane, and with strong performances by Barry Hasson (three goals), Derek Glennon and Luke Coyle (one goal each), the Upper Darby-based squad boosted its season record to 3-1 last Sunday with a 5-18 to 2-5 romp over the Washington, DC Gaels.  The Brian Boru side also got strong performances by brother Brendan and Paul McCarthy, Noel Doherty and Patrick McAnn in net.

    Next up:  The hurling final on Sunday, August 19, at Cardinal Dougherty High School.  “Our guys want to get back into the championships,” said McNally.  “That’s our ultimate goal:  To win Philadelphia and then to get out to Chicago and win the American League finals.”

    Sports

    More Philly GAA Photos Than You Can Shake a Hurley At

    “Hot” doesn’t begin to describe it. It was flat-out steamy Sunday afternoon down at Cardinal Dougherty High School.

    The football and hurling action was a bit on the steamy side, too. If you love Gaelic Athletic Association action, these pictures will make you feel like you were there. 

    And if you haven’t seen these hard-playing athletes in action … all the action shots will show you what you’re missing. (And maybe you’ll head out some Sunday afternoon to see it all, up close and personal.)

    Here are the scores, by the way:

    Intermediate Football    

    TYRONE 1-8  KEVIN BARRY’S       0-11 (Draw)

    Junior C Football     

    EIRE Og 2-9  SAINT PATRICK’S    0-8

    Junior A Football     

    YOUNG IRELAND  1-11   KEVIN BARRY’S  1-6

    Junior A Hurling        

    SHAMROCKS  3-7        BRIAN BORU   2-7

    Sports

    Recruiting the Next Generation of Gaelic Athletes

    By Paul Schneider

    In a world of forward passes and slam dunks, how in the heck do you sell Gaelic football? For guys like Brendan Bradley and Paul Loftus, coaches in the Delaware County Gaels youth organization, it’s often akin to the mantra of the old Alka-Seltzer commercials: “Try it; you’ll like it.”

    Bradley, Loftus and coaches like them throughout the Philadelphia area have the challenge of creating interest in a sport that lacks the television reach of major leagues, and the lineage of parents who played and enjoyed the sport as kids. But what Gaelic football lacks in exposure and background, they say, is made up for in excitement once they get youth players on the field.

    “Kids are enthusiastic about the game once they see how it’s played,” said Bradley after a recent Sunday afternoon match at Cardinal Dougherty High School. “They get to drop their shoulders, to be physical, to do things that they’re not able to do at home.

    “Most of the kids we get, the chances are good that their parents have had nothing to do with Gaelic football or perhaps are not even of Irish heritage,” the Donegal native and Newtown Square resident continued. “We have African-American kids, Polish-American kids, you name it. We get them from everywhere.”

    Dedicated to growing grassroots interest and participation in Gaelic sports, the youth divisions of the Philly GAA have teams for age categories ranging from Under-6 to Under 16. Four clubs – The Gaels, the Delco Harps, the Northeast Philly’s Shamrocks and Northwest Philly’s Eire Og – use their own methods to uncover youngsters who are interested in more than the run-of-the-mill athletic experience.

    Bradley’s own secret weapon is his wife Ann Marie. “She’ll see a kid at the park or on a playground and say ‘That kid would be perfect for Gaelic football,’” said Bradley. “She’ll go up and tell the kid about the game and try to get him or her to come out. I’d say one out of five kids she talks to winds up joining the team.”

    “The biggest challenge we have is the coordination aspect,” said Loftus. “When they’re just getting used to the game, most of the kids just want to get rid of the ball. We have to teach them that there are options to think about. There’s a lot for them to grasp at a young age.”

    While the ultimate goal for youth players might be to compete on the main field as part of a Philly GAA adult club, there are more immediate rewards. Later this month, on the weekend of July 20-22, local teams will travel to Chicago for the Continental Cup for youth organizations.

    As the Gaels train for that event, Bradley and Loftus will use the very American sports that compete for players’ attention to help bring the technicalities of Gaelic football home for their youngsters.

    “I try to bring sports they see every day into play,” said Bradley. “I’ve found that if you use analogies from other sports, then Gaelic football is no longer a ‘foreign’ sport. I can turn it into something our players can relate to.”