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Philadelphia Gaelic Athletic Association

Sports

A Championship Weekend for the Delco Gaels

http://www.cycgaa.org

http://www.cycgaa.org

The Delco Gaels had plenty of cause for jubilation as three of their teams notched thrilling championship wins in the Continental Youth Championships this past weekend in Malvern.

In Under-16 Boys A and Under-12 Boys A, Gaels football teams emerged victorious, as did the Under-8 Boys A hurling team. At the end of the day, there were lots of medals dangling around lots of necks.

All of those championships probably took some of the sting out of a hard-fought, emotional finals loss by the Under-18 Boys B team. The Gaels were slightly younger than the winner, St. Raymond’s. Still, coach Louie Bradley expressed nothing but pride in his team.

“We had six under-18s (on the Gaels’ team), but the rest were all under-16s. We were making up the numbers,” Bradley explained. “We were never favored for that game, but they (the Gaels’ team) put up a good effort, they really did. The other team was just stronger. They were a legitimate under-18 team, and they were just stronger than us.”

Matters weren’t helped any by the fact that the team had just come back onto the field from their semi-final match after a rest of 20 minutes or so in a tent that probably did little to relieve the unrelenting heat of the day.

“We were just exhausted,” Bradley said. “We had just come off the field, having played a game, and that doesn’t help. I was glad to get to the final. Obviously, when we had gotten that far, I would love to have won it. But I’m still proud. They gave me a great effort out there.”

St. Raymond’s won it 2-11 to 1-6.

Another Gaels runner-up: The Under-14 A Ladies Camogie team.

All told, a memorable performance for a proud local club.

Another local coach had reason to be proud. Brendan Gallagher, of the brand-new Glenside Gaelic Club, clearly relished the club’s Under-8 Boys Football D fifth-place finish.

“We reached the finals in our very first year,” he said with a smile after posing for pictures with his medal-wearing youngsters. “We lost by just one point to San Diego. Not too bad, huh? It’s our first year as a club, so it’s very special, to say the least.”

We have what my partner Denise has described has “a gabillion photos” from the many weekend games. Yeah, really, that many. You can see them, above.

You can see the finals listings on the Continental Youth Championships website.

Sports

Philly’s Ready for the Continental Youth Championships

Kids getting their kicks.

Kids getting their kicks.

Philadelphia will be hosting the Gaelic Athletic Association’s Continental Youth Championships in Malvern from July 25 through 28. For such a massive undertaking—Gaelic football and hurling players from throughout the United States are taking partthere’s a national committee, of course. But when all those kids, their families and supporters start arriving this weekand certainly when play begins at the Greater Chester Valley Soccer Association fieldsthey’ll all be the guests of the Philadelphia GAA. And the Philly folks have had plenty to do to get ready.

To learn more, we checked in with local chairperson Louie Bradley.

How are things coming along?

Everything’s going pretty good. They’re delivering the goals tomorrow. We can’t put them up until Monday because the grass is getting cut again and they’re relining the fields. Tents are getting delivered Tuesday and Wednesday, the parade (down Gay Street in West Chester) is set for Wednesday night. People from the GAA in Ireland are arriving on Monday and Tuesday. All the teams start arriving on Wednesday.

It’ll be all hands on deck locally. We have a great group. The people who are involved are really dedicated.

It sounds like this is a big  job for the local GAA. How big?

It’s a lot of work when you’re trying to do your daytime job. It’s definitely a massive undertaking to get sponsors lined up, get the equipment, getting goals made up, having T-shirts made … all that. Scheduling games has been the hardest. We’re still finalizing the numbers.

What does this mean for the Philadelphia GAA? Seems like it would be a nice feather in your cap.

The first one was done really well. (The championships were last played in Philly in 2008.) That one was big. This one will be bigger. Everyone here is on the same page. There’s 2,000 kids and parents coming. Put it is way: If it goes wrong it’ll reflect on us. Were working hard to make sure that doesn’t happen.

Do you still need help?

Every day we need 84 volunteers on the fields. (There are 12 fields.) At 8 o’clock every morning of the tournament, we need officials, like field marshals, linesmen and umpires. People who want to volunteer should go to our website.

Do you think an event like this raises public awareness of the role of young people in the GAA? It seems like, if you want Gaelic games to survive and thrive in the United States, you have to invest in young people.

It’s tough. In this country you have a lot of competition, with football, baseball, lacrosse, track, soccer and numerous other sports. Gaelic football is more of a cultural sport. It’s a coordination sport that helps you with other sports. I think it help my kids with their soccer, and it helps them with their aggressiveness as well. Obviously I’m biased, but it’s a great sport.

More details here.

Sports

GAA Kids From Around the Nation are Headed Here

2008 in West Chester

2008 in West Chester

The biggest Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) competition outside of Ireland is coming to our own back yard.

From July 25 through 28, roughly 2,000 young Gaelic football and hurling players from as far way as the West Coast will converge on the Greater Chester Valley Soccer Association fields in Malvern for the Continental Youth Championships (CYC).

Now celebrating its 10th anniversary, the tournament has exceeded its organizers’ wildest expectations, according to Simon Gillespie, CYC recording secretary.

“We started in 2004,” Gillespie says. “They (organizers) didn’t think it was going to survive. It started out just as a trial, with 50 teams. Now we’re at nearly 200 teams. We’re the only competition for kids 3 to 18. It really is a highlight of the year for underage GAA sports. We estimate more than 10,000 spectators will come in over the four days.”

The only GAA youth competition that compares, Gillespie notes, is the Féile Peile na nÓg, Ireland’s national festival of football for boys and girls under 14. The CYC is is unique in that it features both football and hurling.

The CYC rotates through a different host city every year. The Philadelphia Gaelic Athletic Association is hosting this year’s competition. It’s a really big deal.

“Last year, it (the championships) was at Gaelic Park in Chicago,” says Gillespie. “Next year, it’ll be in New York. Each area gets it every so often. It’s as big a commitment for the host committee as it is for the national committee.”

Learn more about the championship. And take a gander at our photo essay from 2008, the last time the locals hosted the CYC.

People

Catching Up on GAA Action

Happy time

Happy time

Two big Philly GAA football matches last Sunday down at Cardinal Dougherty.

First up, St. Pats Donegal came out and played strongly to top Tyrone 0-11 to 0-2.

The second game was closer, with the Young Irelands over the Kevin Barrys, 3-11 to 1-14. Our pal Gwyneth MacArthur, who has a real knack for capturing GAA action, was on the sidelines, and she caught all of the action, on and off the field.

If you’ve not seen Gaelic Athletic Association sports, we recommend it highly. You could watch the Phillies’ relievers squander yet another lead, or you could watch a bunch of crazy guys playing all out in a sport that makes major league baseball look like tai chi.

From the Philly GAA, here’s what’s on at Dougherty this Sunday:

  • 6/30/2013 12:00pm Division 1 St. Patrick’s v. Kevin Barry’s Tyrone (Out Of Town Ref) Pat Na Toraidhe
  • 6/30/2013 1.30pm Hurling Na Toraidhe v. Allentown Young Irelands TBD
  • 6/30/2013 3.00pm Junior B Young Ireland v. Kevin Barry’s Allentown TBD
  • 6/30/2013 4.00pm Division 1 Tyrone V. Young Irelands Kevin Barry’s (Out Of Town Ref)

We recommend that you keep up to date on the Philly GAA Facebook page.

News

Is Immigration Reform on the Brink?

Ciaran Staunton addresses a group at the Irish Center.

Ciaran Staunton addresses a group at the Irish Center.

She came here from Northern Ireland nearly 20 years ago just to visit her sister, and fell in love with America. And when she fell in love with the man who became her husband, a man from Belfast and, like her, here illegally, she found herself committed to a life in the shadows.

They now have children, American born, who can only see their Irish grandparents when they can come to the States. Because they’re “undocumented,” she and her husband can go back to Ireland, but they’d never be able to return to the US, the place they now call home.

“I haven’t been home to Ireland in 16 years,” she said. “When my husband’s mother died, he couldn’t even go to her funeral.”

For the 50,000 Irish in the US illegally, the story is much the same. But the new bipartisan immigration reform bill now before the US Senate could rewrite the ending, said Ciaran Staunton, president of the Irish Lobby for Immigration Reform, which has been on the stump since 2005 to bring undocumented Irish out of the shadows and open their path to citizenship of the country where they live, raise their children, and pay taxes.

Staunton was in Philadelphia on Wednesday night at a meeting called by the Philadelphia Gaelic Athletic Association, many of whose members are Irish born and depend on Irish players to fill out their rosters during summer’s 8 weeks of play on the fields of Cardinal Dougherty High School. In an impassioned speech sprinkled with Irish, he urged those who attended—about 50 people, including the woman from Northern Ireland—to call Pennsylvania’s GOP Senator Pat Toomey to urge him to vote yes on Senate Bill 744. (“Clearly his people dropped the ‘W’ when they came to America,” joked Staunton about the Rhode Island-born Toomey’s Irish forbears, referring to an alternate spelling of the name that may either be traced to a town in Galway or to the word in Irish meaning hill or burial mound.)

S 744 would legalize undocumented immigrants and establish 10,000 E visas, renewable work visas, for people from Ireland, both the republic and Northern Ireland. It needs 60 votes to pass the Senate, and though it has bipartisan support, including that of some prominent conservative Republicans including Marco Rubio, John McCain, and Lindsey Graham, passage is far from guaranteed, said Staunton. And its passage by the dog’s breakfast of personalities in the House is doubtful, though a major victory in the Senate could sway House members, some political observers are saying. Staunton said to send a strong message to the House, the bill’s chief supporter, NY Senator Charles Shumer, wants it to pass with more than 70 votes, not just the bare minimum.

Still, this week House Speaker John Boehner called the bill “laughable.”

On Wednesday night, no one was laughing. Even Staunton admitted it’s not a great bill. “It’s grand bargain and no one loves it,” he said. But it’s the only thing on the table right now.

Staunton recalled with some bitterness the quid pro quo act of the Bush Administration to give the Australians 10,000 E visas a year, limited to those with a college degree, for their military support in Afghanistan and Iraq and as a result of the Australia-United States Free Trade Agreement. “Yet they didn’t build roads, they didn’t build churches, and they didn’t build the democracy of America,” said Staunton.

The degree limitation is “a bit elitist as far as I’m concerned,” he said, noting that many of the Irish who come to the US are skilled “trades people.” At a New York fundraiser recently, he said, he was in a room of Irish-born millionaires “and none of them would be fit to come here under the Australian visas.”

One major stumbling block to passage of the bill is the insistence by some legislators that legalizing undocumented workers be linked to the protection of the border. Staunton said this brought him into rare agreement with NY Congressman Peter King who pointed out that there are already 11 million undocumented immigrants “inside our borders, and we need to know who they are.”

Immigration reform has some other strange bedfellows as well, including the US Chamber of Commerce, the labor unions, and the Catholic Bishops, though the church hierarchy has stopped short of Staunton’s wish that “they issue a statement from every pulpit.” And most political observers point out that the only reason there is an immigration reform bill on the table—albeit a shaky table—is the resounding support President Barack Obama received in his second term election from Latinos and other ethnic groups who have become alienated from the GOP in part because of its hard line stance on immigration.

The struggle will be difficult, but don’t count the bill down yet if supporters are willing to flood Toomey’s office with calls, said Jeff Dempsey, an aide to State Rep. Brendan Boyle, the son of Irish immigrants who is running for Congress in the 13th district, which includes Northeast Philadelphia and Montgomery County. (Boyle remains in Harrisburg to finish work on the state budget.)

You may think you’re “not effective,” Dempsey said. “But I’ve been on the other end of the phone” after a grassroots calling campaign and legislators take it very seriously. They understand “this is a groundswell, this is a constituency that we have to answer to,” he said.

The woman from Northern Ireland is hopeful, but still, when her parents called her, excited about the latest immigration reform push, “I told them not to get their hopes up,” she said. “They got excited when this came up a few years ago and all our great hopes fell. If this doesn’t work, it could be years before it comes up again.”

You can reach Senator Pat Toomey’s office at 215-241-1090 in Philadelphia or 610-434-1444 in Allentown.

View photos from the meeting 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

Up Donegal!

Kids might have been the most excited fans ... but it would have been a close contest.

Kids might have been the most excited fans … but it would have been a close contest.

Up Donegal! If we heard it once, we heard it a thousand times, and it never got tired. On a Tuesday night when a lot of kids otherwise would have been home getting ready for bed, they were instead decked out in their bright yellow Donegal jerseys and running around the Philadelphia Irish Center like children possessed.

And possessed they were, perhaps, by the presence of the shiny Sam Maguire Cup, brought to Philadelphia by three incredibly proud representatives of the 2012 All-Ireland Football champion team from Donegal: coach Jim McGuinness, along with all-stars Mark McHugh and Michael Murphy.

When the kids weren’t setting land-speed records running from one end of the Irish Center ballroom to the other, they were standing in line with their parents, relatively patiently, waiting for the chance to get their pictures taken with cup and players.

And yes, the place was jammed with ecstatic adult fans, too, including dozens of Donegal natives, and sons and daughters of natives, celebrating the county’s first All-Ireland championship in 20 years. (And they were just as eager to get their picture taken, too.)

After a couple of hours smiling and posing, McGuinness and his players adjourned to the ballroom, where they accepted presentations from the Philadelphia Donegal Association, along with local Gaelic Athletic Association representatives, the Philadelphia Irish Center, state lawmakers Kevin and Brendan Boyle, and many others.

For the Donegal footballers, it had been a long day, but they showed no evidence of tiring. Player Mark McHugh, son of legend Martin McHugh, was still a little wound up—or maybe just jet-lagged—as he spoke about his Philadelphia welcome, and the rigors of the tightly coordinated U.S. victory lap.

“We just got in this morning,” he said. “We flew into New York, and we just drove down. We’re flying off to Chicago at 9 o’clock in the morning, and back to New York on Thursday. It’s just a full-time job, but it’s a good complaint to have. If we hadn’t won the All-Irelands, we wouldn’t be here.

“It’s so good to see all the American kids wearing the Donegal jersey. That’s one of our main reasons for coming over, to promote the GAA, to get young kids involved. And as they get older, maybe their kids will get involved. You never know what could happen.”

Addressing the many fans who have waited a long time to see the cup return to Donegal, McGuinness thanked his hosts for the wildly enthusiastic turnout.

“It’s a great honor for us to be here tonight,” he said. “And along with the honor goes a lot of pride. We’re very happy to bring the Sam Maguire Cup to Philadelphia and the United States. There’s obviously a lot of people in the room tonight who have very, very strong connections to Donegal who were not able to make the journey home for the final, and that’s why I feel it’s very special to take the cup across the water and let the people who were not fortunate enough to be there on the day get their hands on the cup and pretend you’re Michael Murphy.”

McGuinness also recalled his brief time playing football in Philadelphia in the summer of 1999. “I made a lot of very good friends here that I still have to this day. It’s fantastic to be back amongst everybody tonight. I just hope it won’t be 20 years before we’re back with the cup.”

We have many photos from the night’s celebration. Check out our photo essay, above.