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Kildare GAA

The Kildare County Board of the Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA), or Kildare GAA, is one of 12 county boards governed by the Leinster provincial council of the GAA in Ireland, and is responsible for the administration of Gaelic games in County Kildare

Kildare GAA
Irish:Cill Dara
Nickname(s):The Lilywhites
Province:Leinster
Dominant sport:Gaelic football
Ground(s):St Conleth's Park, Newbridge
Conneff Park, Clane
County colours:  White
County teams
NFL:Division 1
NHL:Division 2B
Football Championship:Sam Maguire Cup
Hurling Championship:Christy Ring Cup
Ladies' Gaelic football:Brendan Martin Cup
Camogie:Kay Mills Cup

The County Board is responsible for preparing the Kildare county teams in the various Gaelic sporting codes; football, hurling and camogie.

The county football team won the All-Ireland Senior Football Championship (SFC) on four occasions in less than 25 years at the beginning of the 20th century and had accumulated ten Leinster Senior Football Championships by 1935; however, it then went into decline. It last reached an All-Ireland SFC final in 1998 after a gap of 63 years without an appearance in the decider.

Colours and crest

 
The old Kildare GAA crest, showing oak trees, acorns and lily flower was replaced by the current crest in 2005.

The Kildare crest had a serpent on it until 1993, reflecting that of Kildare County Council, itself based on the crest for the town of Naas. When Kildare County Council had the Heraldic Office of Ireland create a proper crest in 1991, and with Kildare fans regarding the serpent as a bad omen, the Kildare Supporters' Club requested a new one for their county teams; this featured acorns above a bunch of lilies (the county council one differed in that it had a Brigid's cross, a harp, a horse's head and acorns). Kildare still lost in the first round of the Leinster Senior Football Championship (SFC) for three years afterwards, from 1994 until 1996.[1]

History

Gaelic games predate recorded sporting history in Kildare. Hurling on Lyons Hill was featured in the Book of Leinster. The Curragh of Kildare was the venue for the fairs and festivals of ancient Ireland called the Aonach Colmáin. Local references to football go back to medieval times.[citation needed] An English traveller, John Dundon, described a hurling match in Naas in 1699. A handball alley near Rathangan bears the date 1790, though the oldest known alley is located near Moone. A match at Timolin in February 1792, resulted in a riot that was reported in local newspapers. There is also a reference to an inter-county match between Kildare and Meath GAA in 1797 which was attended by Lord Edward Fitzgerald. Valentine Lawless, Lord of Cloncurry, describes how Wogan Browne, an 18th-century grandee, lost his Justice of the Peace status for kicking off a football match in the Clane area, also in 1797.

Summer athletics meetings in Kildare predate the GAA. John Wyse Power, then editor of local newspaper The Leinster Leader, attended the foundation meeting of the Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) in Thurles in 1884. In February 1885, Sallins GAA, Straffan GAA, Naas GAA and the Suncroft GAA played in the first four football matches governed under new GAA rules.

A county committee was established in 1887. Kildare entered the second championships in 1888 and was represented by Clane GAA. Tommy Conneff from Clane, who went on to hold the world record for the mile, was among the first GAA athletic champions.

County board structure

The Kildare County Board, which meets once a month in St Conleth's Park, is the highest authority within the county. It is responsible for running all adult football competitions, the Under 21 championships, and minor leagues and championships. Every club sends one delegate. There is a separate board responsible for hurling, which is a subsidiary board to the county board.

Juvenile hurling and football is administered by Bord na nÓg which runs Under 14, 15 and 16 competitions. Under 13 and younger grades are separated into a North Board and South Board.

The current Kildare county board is structured as follows:
Chairman: Vice-Chair: John McMahon (Naas)
Full-time secretary: Kathleen O'Neill (Rathcoffey)
PRO: Mary Donnelly (Round Towers)
Treasurer: Martin Whyte (Kilcullen)
Oifigeach Gaeilge: Peadar O Murchu (St. Laurence's)
Hurling Chairman: Eddie Lawlor (Athy)

Football

Clubs

Kildare is very much a footballing county, with 105 teams from 45 clubs competing in the Senior and Junior Football Leagues. The highest-achieving club is Sarsfields (Newbridge) with 25 (9 as their former name Roseberry). Clane won 17 titles. Raheens won 10; Carbury, 11; Round Towers from Kildare Town, 10 (counting three won as Kildare Town and one as St Patrick's); Naas, 9; Moorefield (Newbridge), 8; Athy, 5; Kilcock, 5; Ellistown, 4 (counting 2 won as Mountrice); Johnstownbridge, 3; Caragh, 3; Monasterevin, 3; Maynooth, 2; and Allenwood, Ardclough, Ballymore, Celbridge, Curragh, Eadestown, Military College, Rathangan, Newbridge CYMS club St Conleth's (on objection) and St Laurence's won one each. Raheens and Moorefield are the only Kildare sides to win a Leinster club title (in 1981 and 2006 and Moorefield again in 2017


Kildare Senior Football Championship Finals

(year, winner, score, defeated finalists, score, venue)

(Match played during Irish Civil War, St Conleth's awarded title on objection because one of the Caragh players C. McCarthy gave a false name as he was 'on the run' from Free State troops at the time)

County team

 
Donegal defeated Kildare in the 2011 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship in Jim McGuinness's first season in charge.

Kildare first entered the All-Ireland Senior Football Championship in 1888, and lost to Dublin by a score of 2–7 to 0–1.

Kildare made a major contribution towards the evolution of rules and tactics in Gaelic football. The county was the first to abandon the tradition of playing 21 people on each team, using 16 on each team for a period. Kildare players invented the hand pass: a polished team tactic since 1903;[citation needed] The toe-to-hand was pioneered by the Roseberry (now Newbridge Sarsfields) club. A team made up of players from the two strongest clubs in the county, Roseberry and Clane, played Kerry three times for the All-Ireland Championship of 1903; the matches drew the first mass interest in a field sport in the country, had an aggregate attendance of 50,000, and were regarded as the games which "made the GAA."

Kildare's four All-Ireland titles were won between 1905 and 1928: over Kerry in 1905, Galway in 1919, and Kerry again in the 1927 final and Cavan in the 1928 final. Kildare became the first team to win the Sam Maguire Cup in 1928. They haven't won it since.

Tactics such as the hand pass were perfected by those early Kildare teams, but they also developed what became traditional catch-and-kick football. Olympic high jumper Larry Stanley was regarded as one of the greatest fielders in the history of the game, and first winner of the all-time All Star award.

Despite winning a Leinster Senior Football Championship in 1956, reaching the National League final in 1958 and 1968, and winning the All-Ireland Under-21 Football Championship in 1965, Kildare footballers seemed to have difficulty maintaining their proud tradition. The county lost six Leinster finals in the twelve years between 1966 and 1978. Although the Raheens club won a Leinster Senior Club Football Championship title in 1983.

In 1991, former Kerry manager Mick O'Dwyer took charge of the county football team. Kildare lost two more Leinster finals to Dublin in 1992 and 1993, as well as the National League final of 1991. When Dublin came back for a draw in 1994 and won the replay, O'Dwyer was succeeded by Dermot Earley Snr for two years. He returned in 1997, and guided the county to victory over Laois with 13 players and a dramatic, twice replayed series of matches with Meath (which they lost) that captured the imagination of the public and steeled the side for further honors.

In 1998, the Kildare team became the only team in 110 years of championship football to beat the previous three champions, Dublin, Meath and Kerry in turn only to lose to Galway in the All-Ireland final; despite leading by three points at half time. Another Leinster followed in 2000, but Galway defeated them in the semi-final. Leinster Final defeats followed in 2002 and 2003, against Dublin and a Laois side back-boned by their All-Ireland MFC winning sides of the late 1990s. In (2005), Kildare enjoyed mixed success and finished in the top six in the National Football League, but was knocked out of the championship by Sligo.[2]

In 2008 under the new management of Kieran McGeeney Kildare made a bit of unfortunate history by becoming the first team ever to lose a championship game to Wicklow in Croke Park, losing in the first round by 0–13 to 0–9. However Kildares season took a turn for the better after that by beating Cavan, Limerick and Fermanagh in the all- Ireland qualifiers to reach their first ever all-Ireland quarter-final. To date in 2009, an improved Kildare side reached the Leinster Final only to suffer a defeat to Dublin. Kildare advanced to the All-Ireland quarter-final to play then All-Ireland champions Tyrone after beating Wicklow only to be knocked out by Tyrone. 2010 saw Kildare lose to Louth in the 2nd round. However Kildare had a great run through the qualifiers beating teams like Antrim, Leitrim, Derry and Monaghan to once again reach the All-Ireland Quarter-final to face Leinster champions Meath which they got a slow start but enjoyed the 2nd half as they ran out winning 2–17 to 1–12. to reach the All-Semi-final for the first time since 2000. On 29 August 2010 Kildare faced Down for the first time ever in the championship which turned out to be a very tense game but Down ran out winners 1–16 to 1–14 after a very frantic finish. 2011 saw Kildare advance to the Leinster semi-final after defeating Meath in the Leinster quarter-final only to be defeated by Dublin. Kildare had a good run in the qualifiers beating teams like Laois, Meath & Derry to advance to the All-Ireland quarter-final to face Ulster champions Donegal which turned to be a very poor performance but the 2nd half was a real contest from both sides with the sides finishing level to drag the game into extra-time only to be defeated by a single point by Donegal. Then in 2015 Cian O'Neill became manager after being with kerry gaa backroom . In 2017 kildare reached their first leinster final in 10 years . Only losing to dublin gaa by 9 points (Dublin 2-23 Kildare 1-17) . [3]

Hurling

Clubs

In recent years,[when?] the leading clubs have been Coill Dubh, Éire Óg/Corra Coill, Ardclough and Celbridge. Kildare's youngest club, Confey, became the reigning Senior Hurling Championship in 2007, winning over Coill Dubh in the final.

Ardclough beat Buffer's Alley in the 1976 Leinster club championship, following Ardclough player Johnny Walsh's replacement All Star award for his county heroics earlier that year (see below).

County team

Kildare hurlers came within minutes of reaching a Leinster Senior Hurling Championship (SHC) final in 1976, holding a four-point lead over eventual All-Ireland SHC finalists Wexford until the closing stages of the semi-final. That performance earned Johnny Walsh a replacement All Star award.

The county's major hurling successes were four All-Ireland Senior B titles (last in 2004), an intermediate All-Ireland (1969), and two junior All-Irelands (1962 and 1966). The closest it came to playing in the top division of the National Hurling League was when it lost a four-point lead in the last ten minutes of a Division 1B promotion play-off against Clare in 1971. Kildare defeated Waterford in the league in two successive years, was tied at half-time against Tipperary in the 1971 National League quarter-final, and lost to the same team by six points in the quarter-final of 1976. Kildare also lost a promotion play-off against Waterford in 1974.

In the 21st-century, Kildare won four Christy Ring Cups: in 2014, 2018, 2020 and 2022.[4][5][6]

Camogie

Camogie was played in Kildare since the sport was first organised in 1904, although records are sparse. Athy Ladies Hurling Club advertised a members reunion in July 1909. Newbridge, Naas, Blacktrench, Prosperous and Ballymore applied unsuccessfully for affiliation to Kildare GAA board in 1921. Kildare sent delegates to the camogie congress of 1932, and a county board was formed in 1934 with Fr Byrne CC of Caragh as president, Mrs B McCarthy as vice-president, William Fisher of Newbridge as secretary, and Polly Smyth of Newbridge as treasurer. Camogie was reorganized at a county convention in 1954, and has been played in Kildare continuously since.

Kildare's contested the All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship semi-final in 1933 and contested the Leinster Senior final in 1939 (which was hosted in Kill), and 1947 at Inchicore. They last competed in the senior championship in 1992 and 1993.

After a series of successes at the junior level, Kildare was defeated by Cork in the National League semi-final of 1992, despite their best performance at senior level. Kildare teams played in navy and white (1930s), brown and white (1955–60) and blue and white (sporadically since the 1960s). White was adopted as the county color in April 1963.

Kildare won the Nancy Murray Cup in 2010,[7] having previously won the Kay Mills Cup in 1987, 1989 and 1990, their best period in the game. They also won the second division of the National Camogie League in 2004.[8] They had previously won the second division title in 1986, 1989 and 1990. Kildare contested senior finals in the Leinster championship, notably in 1939, and Ardclough contested the Leinster senior club final in 1968.

Notable players include Broadford players Miriam Malone, who played from the 1960s to the 1980s and won a Junior Player of the Year award in 1989, Gradam Tailte winner Bernie Farrelly, and scoring forwards Marianne Johnson, and Susie O'Carroll from Celbridge who captained UCD to Ashbourne Cup honours and won a Soaring Star award in 2009. Carbury Johnstownbridge and Celbridge all won divisional camogie honours at Féile na nGael. Joan O'Flynn from Celbridge served as president of the Camogie Association. Gloria Lee refereed the All Ireland senior final of 1963 and John Pender that of 2005.

Under Camogie's National Development Plan 2010–2015, "Our Game, Our Passion",[9] five new camogie clubs were to be established in the county by 2015.[10]

Honours

Kildare Senior Camogie Championship Roll of Honour

For more details on this topic, see here

Ladies' football

The Kildare Ladies' County Board was set up in March 1992 under the Chairmanship of Catherine Donohoe. At that time there were two clubs playing in the county, Kilcock and Leixlip, and these were joined by the newly formed Eadestown club. Michael Delaney of Leixlip was elected chairman on 10 February 1993.

Kildare's ladies' football is administered by a separate county board structured as follows (2013 Executive);
Chairman: Arthur Corrigan (Naas)
Vice-Chair: MJ Smith (Carbury)
Secretary: Gillian Dunne (St Laurences),
PRO: Jackie Whelan (Castledermot)
Treasurer: Sharon Dooley(Suncroft)

Honours

Kildare Ladies' won the Leinster Junior championship in 2000, beating Laois by 2–13 to 2–5. Kildare contested three All Ireland junior finals before eventually beating Sligo to qualify for senior status in 2004. Grangenolvin dominated club competition in the sport, in which they won five in a row at the time the championship was elevated to senior status. Brianne Leahy became the first female All Star from Kildare in 1999. In 2015 Kildare took the decision to re-grade to Intermediate level after spending 10 years without success at Senior Level. This brought a new impetus to Kildare Ladies Football where the captured 2 Leinster Intermediate Championships which moving on to win the all Ireland against Clare by a point in 2017. Mary Hulgraine the Kildare goalkeeper was rewarded for her performance by picking up an all-star.

Teams of the Millennium

Football Team of the Millennium

Ollie Crinnigan (Carbury), Matt Goff (Leixlip), Pa Connolly (Clane), Glenn Ryan ([Round Towers GAA|Round Towers]), Jack Higgins Naas, Mick Carolan ([Athy GAA|Athy]), Larry Stanley ([Caragh GAA|Caragh]), Pat Mangan (Carbury), Jack Donnelly (Ellistown), Paddy "Boiler" White ([Sarsfield's GAA (Kildare)|Sarsfields]), Larry Tompkins (Eadestown and Castlehaven Cork), Pat Dunny (Raheens), Tommy Carew ([Clane GAA|Clane]), Paul Doyle Suncroft).

Hurling Team of the Millennium

Jimmy Curran (Castledermot), Tommy Burke (Naomh Bríd), Richard Cullen (Ardclough), Seamus Malone (Coill Dubh), Tommy Christian (Ardclough), Pat Dunny (Éire Og), Tony Carew (Coill Dubh), Bobby Burke (Ardclough), Jack O'Connell (Naomh Bríd), Johnny Walsh (Ardclough), Tommy Carew (Coill Dubh), Pat White (Naomh Bríd), Mick Dwane (Ardclough), Mick Moore (Broadford), Mick Mullins (Éire Og).

Camogie Team of the Century

Anna Dargan (Broadford), Geraldine Dwyer (Athy, Prosperous & Clane), Teresa Lynch (Rathcoffey & Prosperous), Bridget Cushen (Celbridge & Ardclough), Nuala Malone (Rathcoffey & Prosperous), Melanie Treacy (Ballyboden St. Endas, Dublin & Bishopstown, Cork), Phyllis Hurst (Broadford), Miriam Malone (Broadford), Eileen Reilly (Rathcoffey & Prosperous), Michelle Aspell (Kilcullen & St Laurence's), Bernie Farrelly (Crumlin & Broadford), Patricia Keatley (St Laurence's & Broadford), Marianne Johnson (Prosperous & Clane), Clare Monahan (Naas & Two Mile House), Gloria Lee (Naas).

Bibliography

  • Kildare GAA: A Centenary History, by Eoghan Corry, CLG Chill Dara, 1984, ISBN 0-9509370-0-2 hb ISBN 0-9509370-1-0 pb
  • Kildare GAA yearbook, 1972, 1974, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1994 and 2000– in sequence especially the Millennium yearbook of 2000
  • Soaring Sliothars, Centenary of Kildare Camogie 1904–2004 by Joan O'Flynn Kildare County Camogie Board.

References

  1. ^ "Lily snake was banished". Irish Independent. 23 September 1998.
  2. ^ "Irish & International Sports News, Fixtures & Results | RTÉ". RTÉ.ie. 14 October 2021.
  3. ^ . RTÉ.ie. Archived from the original on 29 March 2015. Retrieved 30 July 2011.. RTE. 30 July 2011.
  4. ^ "Underdogs Kildare stun Kerry for first ever Christy Ring Cup success". Irish Independent. 7 June 2014.
  5. ^ "Kildare overpower London to win Christy Ring Cup". RTÉ Sport. 23 June 2018.
  6. ^ "Kildare edge Down to win Christy Ring Cup". RTÉ Sport. 22 November 2020.
  7. ^ 2010 Nancy Murray Cup, Kildare 3–10 Armagh 2–8 in Ashbourne report in Sunday Independent, on camogie.ie and scorers
  8. ^ 2004 Div 2 Kildare 2–11 Laois 2–6 report in Irish Independent
  9. ^ Irish Independent March 29 2010: Final goal for camogie
  10. ^ National Development Plan 2010–2015, Our Game, Our Passion information page on camogie.ie, pdf download (778k) from Camogie.ie download site
  11. ^ 2012 Div 3 Final Kildare 1-8 Armagh 0-10 Camogie.ie

External links

  • Kildare GAA Site
  • Kildare on Hoganstand.com

kildare, kildare, county, board, gaelic, athletic, association, county, boards, governed, leinster, provincial, council, ireland, responsible, administration, gaelic, games, county, kildareirish, cill, daranickname, lilywhitesprovince, leinsterdominant, sport,. The Kildare County Board of the Gaelic Athletic Association GAA or Kildare GAA is one of 12 county boards governed by the Leinster provincial council of the GAA in Ireland and is responsible for the administration of Gaelic games in County KildareKildare GAAIrish Cill DaraNickname s The LilywhitesProvince LeinsterDominant sport Gaelic footballGround s St Conleth s Park NewbridgeConneff Park ClaneCounty colours WhiteCounty teamsNFL Division 1NHL Division 2BFootball Championship Sam Maguire CupHurling Championship Christy Ring CupLadies Gaelic football Brendan Martin CupCamogie Kay Mills CupThe County Board is responsible for preparing the Kildare county teams in the various Gaelic sporting codes football hurling and camogie The county football team won the All Ireland Senior Football Championship SFC on four occasions in less than 25 years at the beginning of the 20th century and had accumulated ten Leinster Senior Football Championships by 1935 however it then went into decline It last reached an All Ireland SFC final in 1998 after a gap of 63 years without an appearance in the decider Contents 1 Colours and crest 2 History 3 County board structure 4 Football 4 1 Clubs 4 1 1 Kildare Senior Football Championship Finals 4 2 County team 5 Hurling 5 1 Clubs 5 2 County team 6 Camogie 6 1 Honours 6 2 Kildare Senior Camogie Championship Roll of Honour 7 Ladies football 7 1 Honours 8 Teams of the Millennium 8 1 Football Team of the Millennium 8 2 Hurling Team of the Millennium 8 3 Camogie Team of the Century 9 Bibliography 10 References 11 External linksColours and crest Edit The old Kildare GAA crest showing oak trees acorns and lily flower was replaced by the current crest in 2005 The Kildare crest had a serpent on it until 1993 reflecting that of Kildare County Council itself based on the crest for the town of Naas When Kildare County Council had the Heraldic Office of Ireland create a proper crest in 1991 and with Kildare fans regarding the serpent as a bad omen the Kildare Supporters Club requested a new one for their county teams this featured acorns above a bunch of lilies the county council one differed in that it had a Brigid s cross a harp a horse s head and acorns Kildare still lost in the first round of the Leinster Senior Football Championship SFC for three years afterwards from 1994 until 1996 1 History EditGaelic games predate recorded sporting history in Kildare Hurling on Lyons Hill was featured in the Book of Leinster The Curragh of Kildare was the venue for the fairs and festivals of ancient Ireland called the Aonach Colmain Local references to football go back to medieval times citation needed An English traveller John Dundon described a hurling match in Naas in 1699 A handball alley near Rathangan bears the date 1790 though the oldest known alley is located near Moone A match at Timolin in February 1792 resulted in a riot that was reported in local newspapers There is also a reference to an inter county match between Kildare and Meath GAA in 1797 which was attended by Lord Edward Fitzgerald Valentine Lawless Lord of Cloncurry describes how Wogan Browne an 18th century grandee lost his Justice of the Peace status for kicking off a football match in the Clane area also in 1797 Summer athletics meetings in Kildare predate the GAA John Wyse Power then editor of local newspaper The Leinster Leader attended the foundation meeting of the Gaelic Athletic Association GAA in Thurles in 1884 In February 1885 Sallins GAA Straffan GAA Naas GAA and the Suncroft GAA played in the first four football matches governed under new GAA rules A county committee was established in 1887 Kildare entered the second championships in 1888 and was represented by Clane GAA Tommy Conneff from Clane who went on to hold the world record for the mile was among the first GAA athletic champions County board structure EditThe Kildare County Board which meets once a month in St Conleth s Park is the highest authority within the county It is responsible for running all adult football competitions the Under 21 championships and minor leagues and championships Every club sends one delegate There is a separate board responsible for hurling which is a subsidiary board to the county board Juvenile hurling and football is administered by Bord na nog which runs Under 14 15 and 16 competitions Under 13 and younger grades are separated into a North Board and South Board The current Kildare county board is structured as follows Chairman Vice Chair John McMahon Naas Full time secretary Kathleen O Neill Rathcoffey PRO Mary Donnelly Round Towers Treasurer Martin Whyte Kilcullen Oifigeach Gaeilge Peadar O Murchu St Laurence s Hurling Chairman Eddie Lawlor Athy Football EditClubs Edit Further information List of Gaelic games clubs in Ireland Kildare Kildare is very much a footballing county with 105 teams from 45 clubs competing in the Senior and Junior Football Leagues The highest achieving club is Sarsfields Newbridge with 25 9 as their former name Roseberry Clane won 17 titles Raheens won 10 Carbury 11 Round Towers from Kildare Town 10 counting three won as Kildare Town and one as St Patrick s Naas 9 Moorefield Newbridge 8 Athy 5 Kilcock 5 Ellistown 4 counting 2 won as Mountrice Johnstownbridge 3 Caragh 3 Monasterevin 3 Maynooth 2 and Allenwood Ardclough Ballymore Celbridge Curragh Eadestown Military College Rathangan Newbridge CYMS club St Conleth s on objection and St Laurence s won one each Raheens and Moorefield are the only Kildare sides to win a Leinster club title in 1981 and 2006 and Moorefield again in 2017 Kildare Senior Football Championship Finals Edit year winner score defeated finalists score venue 1888 Clane 0 4 Naas 0 0 Naas 1889 Mountrice Blunts 0 2 Kildare 0 1 Kildare 1890 Monasterevin 1 3 Clane 1 2 Milltown 1891 Mountrice Blunts 1 4 Kildare 0 1 Monasterevin 1892 Clane 0 3 Kilcullen 0 2 1894 Void 1895 Clane 0 7 Maynooth 0 1 Sallins 1896 Maynooth 7 9 Sallins 0 3 Clane 1897 Clane beat Maynooth 1898 Void 1899 Void 1900 Void 1901 Clane 4 15 Prosperous 0 3 Maynooth 1902 Clane 4 7 Moorefield 2 3 Roseberry Newbridge 1903 Clane 1 10 Prosperous 0 7 Clane 1904 Roseberry Newbridge 0 14 Naas 0 3 Clane 1905 Roseberry Newbridge 0 10 Clane 0 6 Clane 1906 Roseberry Newbridge 1 11 Clane 1 2 Celbridge 1907 Roseberry Newbridge 0 7 Monasterevin 0 3 Athy 1908 Roseberry Newbridge beat Allen 1909 Roseberry Newbridge 0 4 Clane 0 1 Athy 1910 Roseberry Newbridge 1 3 Monasterevin 1 1 Athy 1911 Monasterevin 2 1 Roseberry Newbridge 0 2 Kildare 1912 Roseberry Newbridge 2 6 Monasterevin 1 2 Athy 1913 Maynooth 2 1 Kilcock 1 1 Clane 1914 Kilcock 1 4 Clane 0 4 Celbridge 1915 Roseberry Newbridge 0 6 Maynooth 1 0 Naas 1916 Clane 2 2 Maynooth 0 2 Naas 1917 Kilcock 5 0 Kilcullen 0 5 Naas 1918 Caragh 2 2 Roseberry Newbridge 0 5 Naas 1919 Caragh 2 4 Kilcock 2 1 Naas 1920 Naas 1 6 Caragh 0 8 St Conleth s Park 1921 St Conleth s 1 2 Caragh 1 12 St Conleth s Park Match played during Irish Civil War St Conleth s awarded title on objection because one of the Caragh players C McCarthy gave a false name as he was on the run from Free State troops at the time 1922 Naas 1 8 Caragh 1 3 Newbridge 1923 Naas 2 5 Athy 0 0 St Conleth s Park 1924 Naas 1 1 Kildare 0 4 St Conleth s Park Replay Naas 1 2 Kildare 0 3 St Conleth s Park 1925 Rathangan 2 4 Caragh 1 3 Naas 1926 Caragh 3 4 Athy 3 3 Kildare 1927 Kildare 2 6 Athy 1 5 St Conleth s Park 1928 Naas 3 3 Rathangan 2 4 St Conleth s Park 1929 Kildare 3 2 Naas 1 2 St Conleth s Park 1930 Kildare 2 4 Naas 0 5 St Conleth s Park 1931 Naas 6 7 Round Towers Kildare 0 3 St Conleth s Park 1932 Naas 0 10 Curragh 0 9 St Conleth s Park 1933 Athy 2 6 Rathangan 1 4 St Conleth s Park 1934 Athy 1 3 Raheens 0 6 St Conleth s Park Replay Athy 2 6 Raheens 1 4 St Conleth s Park 1935 Raheens 6 3 St Brigid s Kildare 1 0 St Conleth s Park 1936 Raheens 1 7 McDonaghs 1 6 St Conleth s Park 1937 Athy 3 6 Sarsfields Newbridge 1 6 Naas 1938 St Patrick s Kildare w o Ellistown St Conleth s Park 1939 Ellistown 3 2 St Patrick s Kildare 1 3 St Conleth s Park 1940 Carbury 1 5 Kilcock 0 4 Naas 1941 Carbury 1 9 Athy 0 6 St Conleth s Park 1942 Athy 0 6 Carbury 0 6 St Conleth s Park Replay Athy 1 6 Carbury 0 6 St Conleth s Park 1943 Raheens 1 3 Ellistown 1 3 St Conleth s Park Replay Raheens 1 1 Ellistown 1 1 St Conleth s Park Replay Raheens 1 4 Ellistown 1 2 St Conleth s Park 1944 Ellistown 1 4 Carbury 0 4 St Conleth s Park 1945 Sarsfields Newbridge 2 9 Raheens 1 5 St Conleth s Park 1946 Carbury 0 11 Athy 0 7 St Conleth s Park 1947 Sarsfields Newbridge 1 7 Curragh 1 5 St Conleth s Park 1948 Curragh 2 7 Sarsfields Newbridge 2 4 St Conleth s Park 1949 Ardclough 1 8 Curragh 1 8 St Conleth s Park Replay Ardclough 1 11 Curragh 2 6 St Conleth s Park 1950 Sarsfields Newbridge 1 9 Carbury 2 3 St Conleth s Park 1951 Sarsfields Newbridge 2 11 North Division 1 7 St Conleth s Park 1952 Sarsfields Newbridge 2 6 Carbury 0 4 Naas 1953 Ballymore 1 6 Carbury 1 5 St Conleth s Park 1954 Round Towers Kildare 0 3 Carbury 0 2 St Conleth s Park 1955 Kilcock 3 13 Sarsfields Newbridge 4 10 Naas Replay Kilcock 0 9 Sarsfields Newbridge 1 4 St Conleth s Park 1956 Military College l 6 Ballymore 0 4 St Conleth s Park 1957 Kilcock 1 6 Round Towers Kildare 1 5 Naas 1958 Kilcock 3 12 Round Towers Kildare 3 8 St Conleth s Park 1959 Round Towers Kildare 5 5 Clane 0 7 St Conleth s Park 1960 Carbury 2 9 Round Towers Kildare 0 5 St Conleth s Park 1961 Round Towers Kildare 3 8 Carbury 1 11 St Conleth s Park 1962 Moorefield Newbridge 2 11 Kilcullen 0 2 St Conleth s Park 1963 Clane 1 8 Round Towers Kildare 2 1 St Conleth s Park 1964 Raheens 3 10 Clane 1 9 St Conleth s Park 1965 Carbury 3 13 Moorefield 1 9 St Conleth s Park 1966 Carbury 2 14 Raheens 0 7 St Conleth s Park 1967 Clane 4 6 Carbury 1 9 St Conleth s Park 1968 Raheens 2 7 Carbury 1 8 St Conleth s Park 1969 Carbury 0 10 Clane 0 7 St Conleth s Park 1970 Eadestown1 9 Carbury 0 10 St Conleth s Park 1971 Carbury 1 13 Allenwood 1 8 St Conleth s Park 1972 Carbury 3 14 Ellistown 1 7 St Conleth s Park 1973 Raheens 1 7 Monasterevin 0 4 St Conleth s Park 1974 Carbury 2 9 Ballyteague 0 5 St Conleth s Park 1975 Clane 1 6 Carbury 0 9 St Conleth s Park Replay Clane 2 7 Carbury 1 6 St Conleth s Park 1976 Raheens 2 5 Monasterevin 0 6 St Conleth s Park 1977 Monasterevin 2 8 Carbury 2 6 St Conleth s Park 1978 Raheens 3 14 Athy 2 6 St Conleth s Park 1979 Raheens 0 15 Carbury 0 10 St Conleth s Park 1980 Clane 1 7 Raheens 1 6 St Conleth s Park 1981 Raheens 2 9 Sarsfields Newbridge 1 7 St Conleth s Park 1982 Sarsfields Newbridge 2 11 St Laurence s 0 4 St Conleth s Park 1983 Johnstownbridge 2 7 Sarsfields Newbridge 1 8 St Conleth s Park 1984 Clane 1 9 Carbury 0 8 St Conleth s Park 1985 Carbury 1 9 Raheens 0 5 St Conleth s Park 1986 Sarsfields Newbridge 0 11 Leixlip 0 8 St Conleth s Park 1987 Athy 2 9 Johnstownbridge 0 9 St Conleth s Park 1988 Johnstownbridge 0 10 Carbury 0 10 St Conleth s Park Replay Johnstownbridge 1 10 Carbury 1 8 St Conleth s Park 1989 Johnstownbridge 1 7 Clane 1 5 St Conleth s Park 1990 Naas 1 14 Clane 2 9 St Conleth s Park 1991 Clane 2 10 Naas 1 6 St Conleth s Park 1992 Clane 0 9 St Laurence s 0 7 St Conleth s Park 1993 Sarsfields Newbridge 0 11 Clane 0 11 St Conleth s Park Replay Sarsfields Newbridge 1 16 Clane 0 15 St Conleth s Park 1994 Sarsfields Newbridge 2 15 Johnstownbridge 0 9 St Conleth s Park 1995 Clane 3 17 Athy 1 8 St Conleth s Park 1996 Round Towers Kildare 1 13 Johnstownbridge 0 10 St Conleth s Park 1997 Clane 0 13 Sarsfields Newbridge 0 8 St Conleth s Park 1998 Round Towers Kildare 2 8 Clane 0 4 St Conleth s Park 1999 Sarsfields Newbridge 0 15 Allenwood 1 5 St Conleth s Park 2000 Moorefield Newbridge 2 13 Kilcock 2 7 St Conleth s Park 2001 Sarsfields Newbridge 0 10 Moorefield 0 8 St Conleth s Park 2002 Moorefield Newbridge 1 8 Sarsfields Newbridge 0 7 St Conleth s Park 2003 Round Towers Kildare 2 14 Kilcock 1 9 St Conleth s Park 2004 Allenwood 0 11 St Laurence s 0 7 St Conleth s Park 2005 Sarsfields Newbridge 0 11 St Laurence s 1 8 St Conleth s Park Replay Sarsfields Newbridge 1 11 St Laurence s 0 9 St Conleth s Park 2006 Moorefield Newbridge 0 10 Allenwood 0 9 St Conleth s Park 2007 Moorefield Newbridge 2 9 Sarsfields Newbridge 0 11 St Conleth s Park 2008 Celbridge 0 7 Sarsfields Newbridge 0 7 St Conleth s Park Replay Celbridge 1 9 Sarsfields Newbridge 0 10 St Conleth s Park 2009 St Laurence s 1 13 Moorefield Newbridge 0 6 St Conleth s Park 2010 Moorefield Newbridge 0 13 Sarsfields Newbridge 1 8 St Conleth s Park 2011 Athy 2 11 Carbury 2 7 2012 Sarsfields Newbridge 2 11 Carbury 0 11 2013 Moorefield Newbridge 2 14 Sarsfields Newbridge 0 13 St Conleth s Park 2014 Moorefield Newbridge 0 16 Sarsfields Newbridge 1 13 St Conleth s Park Replay Moorefield Newbridge 1 15 Sarsfields Newbridge 1 6 St Conleth s Park 2015 Sarsfields Newbridge 0 17 Athy 1 12 St Conleth s Park 2016 Sarsfields Newbridge 2 13 Moorefield Newbridge 0 15 St Conleth s Park 2017 Moorefield Newbridge 0 11 Celbridge 0 9 St Conleth s Park 2018 Moorefield Newbridge 2 12 Athy 2 09 St Conleth s Park 2019 Sarsfields Newbridge 0 15 Moorefield Newbridge 2 09 St Conleth s Park Replay Sarsfields Newbridge 2 15 Moorefield Newbridge 2 09 St Conleth s ParkCounty team Edit Donegal defeated Kildare in the 2011 All Ireland Senior Football Championship in Jim McGuinness s first season in charge Main article Kildare county football team Kildare first entered the All Ireland Senior Football Championship in 1888 and lost to Dublin by a score of 2 7 to 0 1 Kildare made a major contribution towards the evolution of rules and tactics in Gaelic football The county was the first to abandon the tradition of playing 21 people on each team using 16 on each team for a period Kildare players invented the hand pass a polished team tactic since 1903 citation needed The toe to hand was pioneered by the Roseberry now Newbridge Sarsfields club A team made up of players from the two strongest clubs in the county Roseberry and Clane played Kerry three times for the All Ireland Championship of 1903 the matches drew the first mass interest in a field sport in the country had an aggregate attendance of 50 000 and were regarded as the games which made the GAA Kildare s four All Ireland titles were won between 1905 and 1928 over Kerry in 1905 Galway in 1919 and Kerry again in the 1927 final and Cavan in the 1928 final Kildare became the first team to win the Sam Maguire Cup in 1928 They haven t won it since Tactics such as the hand pass were perfected by those early Kildare teams but they also developed what became traditional catch and kick football Olympic high jumper Larry Stanley was regarded as one of the greatest fielders in the history of the game and first winner of the all time All Star award Despite winning a Leinster Senior Football Championship in 1956 reaching the National League final in 1958 and 1968 and winning the All Ireland Under 21 Football Championship in 1965 Kildare footballers seemed to have difficulty maintaining their proud tradition The county lost six Leinster finals in the twelve years between 1966 and 1978 Although the Raheens club won a Leinster Senior Club Football Championship title in 1983 In 1991 former Kerry manager Mick O Dwyer took charge of the county football team Kildare lost two more Leinster finals to Dublin in 1992 and 1993 as well as the National League final of 1991 When Dublin came back for a draw in 1994 and won the replay O Dwyer was succeeded by Dermot Earley Snr for two years He returned in 1997 and guided the county to victory over Laois with 13 players and a dramatic twice replayed series of matches with Meath which they lost that captured the imagination of the public and steeled the side for further honors In 1998 the Kildare team became the only team in 110 years of championship football to beat the previous three champions Dublin Meath and Kerry in turn only to lose to Galway in the All Ireland final despite leading by three points at half time Another Leinster followed in 2000 but Galway defeated them in the semi final Leinster Final defeats followed in 2002 and 2003 against Dublin and a Laois side back boned by their All Ireland MFC winning sides of the late 1990s In 2005 Kildare enjoyed mixed success and finished in the top six in the National Football League but was knocked out of the championship by Sligo 2 In 2008 under the new management of Kieran McGeeney Kildare made a bit of unfortunate history by becoming the first team ever to lose a championship game to Wicklow in Croke Park losing in the first round by 0 13 to 0 9 However Kildares season took a turn for the better after that by beating Cavan Limerick and Fermanagh in the all Ireland qualifiers to reach their first ever all Ireland quarter final To date in 2009 an improved Kildare side reached the Leinster Final only to suffer a defeat to Dublin Kildare advanced to the All Ireland quarter final to play then All Ireland champions Tyrone after beating Wicklow only to be knocked out by Tyrone 2010 saw Kildare lose to Louth in the 2nd round However Kildare had a great run through the qualifiers beating teams like Antrim Leitrim Derry and Monaghan to once again reach the All Ireland Quarter final to face Leinster champions Meath which they got a slow start but enjoyed the 2nd half as they ran out winning 2 17 to 1 12 to reach the All Semi final for the first time since 2000 On 29 August 2010 Kildare faced Down for the first time ever in the championship which turned out to be a very tense game but Down ran out winners 1 16 to 1 14 after a very frantic finish 2011 saw Kildare advance to the Leinster semi final after defeating Meath in the Leinster quarter final only to be defeated by Dublin Kildare had a good run in the qualifiers beating teams like Laois Meath amp Derry to advance to the All Ireland quarter final to face Ulster champions Donegal which turned to be a very poor performance but the 2nd half was a real contest from both sides with the sides finishing level to drag the game into extra time only to be defeated by a single point by Donegal Then in 2015 Cian O Neill became manager after being with kerry gaa backroom In 2017 kildare reached their first leinster final in 10 years Only losing to dublin gaa by 9 points Dublin 2 23 Kildare 1 17 3 Hurling EditClubs Edit Further information List of Gaelic games clubs in Ireland Kildare In recent years when the leading clubs have been Coill Dubh Eire og Corra Coill Ardclough and Celbridge Kildare s youngest club Confey became the reigning Senior Hurling Championship in 2007 winning over Coill Dubh in the final Ardclough beat Buffer s Alley in the 1976 Leinster club championship following Ardclough player Johnny Walsh s replacement All Star award for his county heroics earlier that year see below County team Edit Main article Kildare county hurling team Kildare hurlers came within minutes of reaching a Leinster Senior Hurling Championship SHC final in 1976 holding a four point lead over eventual All Ireland SHC finalists Wexford until the closing stages of the semi final That performance earned Johnny Walsh a replacement All Star award The county s major hurling successes were four All Ireland Senior B titles last in 2004 an intermediate All Ireland 1969 and two junior All Irelands 1962 and 1966 The closest it came to playing in the top division of the National Hurling League was when it lost a four point lead in the last ten minutes of a Division 1B promotion play off against Clare in 1971 Kildare defeated Waterford in the league in two successive years was tied at half time against Tipperary in the 1971 National League quarter final and lost to the same team by six points in the quarter final of 1976 Kildare also lost a promotion play off against Waterford in 1974 In the 21st century Kildare won four Christy Ring Cups in 2014 2018 2020 and 2022 4 5 6 Camogie EditCamogie was played in Kildare since the sport was first organised in 1904 although records are sparse Athy Ladies Hurling Club advertised a members reunion in July 1909 Newbridge Naas Blacktrench Prosperous and Ballymore applied unsuccessfully for affiliation to Kildare GAA board in 1921 Kildare sent delegates to the camogie congress of 1932 and a county board was formed in 1934 with Fr Byrne CC of Caragh as president Mrs B McCarthy as vice president William Fisher of Newbridge as secretary and Polly Smyth of Newbridge as treasurer Camogie was reorganized at a county convention in 1954 and has been played in Kildare continuously since Kildare s contested the All Ireland Senior Camogie Championship semi final in 1933 and contested the Leinster Senior final in 1939 which was hosted in Kill and 1947 at Inchicore They last competed in the senior championship in 1992 and 1993 After a series of successes at the junior level Kildare was defeated by Cork in the National League semi final of 1992 despite their best performance at senior level Kildare teams played in navy and white 1930s brown and white 1955 60 and blue and white sporadically since the 1960s White was adopted as the county color in April 1963 Kildare won the Nancy Murray Cup in 2010 7 having previously won the Kay Mills Cup in 1987 1989 and 1990 their best period in the game They also won the second division of the National Camogie League in 2004 8 They had previously won the second division title in 1986 1989 and 1990 Kildare contested senior finals in the Leinster championship notably in 1939 and Ardclough contested the Leinster senior club final in 1968 Notable players include Broadford players Miriam Malone who played from the 1960s to the 1980s and won a Junior Player of the Year award in 1989 Gradam Tailte winner Bernie Farrelly and scoring forwards Marianne Johnson and Susie O Carroll from Celbridge who captained UCD to Ashbourne Cup honours and won a Soaring Star award in 2009 Carbury Johnstownbridge and Celbridge all won divisional camogie honours at Feile na nGael Joan O Flynn from Celbridge served as president of the Camogie Association Gloria Lee refereed the All Ireland senior final of 1963 and John Pender that of 2005 Under Camogie s National Development Plan 2010 2015 Our Game Our Passion 9 five new camogie clubs were to be established in the county by 2015 10 Honours Edit 4 All Ireland Junior Camogie Championships 1987 1989 1990 2013 1 Nancy Murray Cup 2010 4 National Camogie League Division Two junior winners 1986 1989 1990 2004 2 National Camogie League Division Three winner 2012 11 2019 1 National Camogie League Division Four winners 2009 Once semi finalists in the National Camogie League National League Division 1 1992 Once finalists in the All Ireland Intermediate Camogie Championship 1994 11 Leinster Junior Camogie Championships 1961 1966 1967 all Smyco cup 1969 1981 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1996 2 Leinster Under 14 B Championships 1997 2003 1 Minor Special Blitz 2008 Kildare Senior Camogie Championship Roll of Honour Edit For more details on this topic see hereLadies football EditThe Kildare Ladies County Board was set up in March 1992 under the Chairmanship of Catherine Donohoe At that time there were two clubs playing in the county Kilcock and Leixlip and these were joined by the newly formed Eadestown club Michael Delaney of Leixlip was elected chairman on 10 February 1993 Kildare s ladies football is administered by a separate county board structured as follows 2013 Executive Chairman Arthur Corrigan Naas Vice Chair MJ Smith Carbury Secretary Gillian Dunne St Laurences PRO Jackie Whelan Castledermot Treasurer Sharon Dooley Suncroft Honours Edit Kildare Ladies won the Leinster Junior championship in 2000 beating Laois by 2 13 to 2 5 Kildare contested three All Ireland junior finals before eventually beating Sligo to qualify for senior status in 2004 Grangenolvin dominated club competition in the sport in which they won five in a row at the time the championship was elevated to senior status Brianne Leahy became the first female All Star from Kildare in 1999 In 2015 Kildare took the decision to re grade to Intermediate level after spending 10 years without success at Senior Level This brought a new impetus to Kildare Ladies Football where the captured 2 Leinster Intermediate Championships which moving on to win the all Ireland against Clare by a point in 2017 Mary Hulgraine the Kildare goalkeeper was rewarded for her performance by picking up an all star 1 All Ireland Intermediate Ladies Football Championship 2016 1 All Ireland Junior Ladies Football Championship 2004 2 All Ireland Leinster Intermediate Ladies Football Championship 2016 2017Teams of the Millennium EditFootball Team of the Millennium Edit Ollie Crinnigan Carbury Matt Goff Leixlip Pa Connolly Clane Glenn Ryan Round Towers GAA Round Towers Jack Higgins Naas Mick Carolan Athy GAA Athy Larry Stanley Caragh GAA Caragh Pat Mangan Carbury Jack Donnelly Ellistown Paddy Boiler White Sarsfield s GAA Kildare Sarsfields Larry Tompkins Eadestown and Castlehaven Cork Pat Dunny Raheens Tommy Carew Clane GAA Clane Paul Doyle Suncroft Hurling Team of the Millennium Edit Jimmy Curran Castledermot Tommy Burke Naomh Brid Richard Cullen Ardclough Seamus Malone Coill Dubh Tommy Christian Ardclough Pat Dunny Eire Og Tony Carew Coill Dubh Bobby Burke Ardclough Jack O Connell Naomh Brid Johnny Walsh Ardclough Tommy Carew Coill Dubh Pat White Naomh Brid Mick Dwane Ardclough Mick Moore Broadford Mick Mullins Eire Og Camogie Team of the Century Edit Anna Dargan Broadford Geraldine Dwyer Athy Prosperous amp Clane Teresa Lynch Rathcoffey amp Prosperous Bridget Cushen Celbridge amp Ardclough Nuala Malone Rathcoffey amp Prosperous Melanie Treacy Ballyboden St Endas Dublin amp Bishopstown Cork Phyllis Hurst Broadford Miriam Malone Broadford Eileen Reilly Rathcoffey amp Prosperous Michelle Aspell Kilcullen amp St Laurence s Bernie Farrelly Crumlin amp Broadford Patricia Keatley St Laurence s amp Broadford Marianne Johnson Prosperous amp Clane Clare Monahan Naas amp Two Mile House Gloria Lee Naas Bibliography EditKildare GAA A Centenary History by Eoghan Corry CLG Chill Dara 1984 ISBN 0 9509370 0 2 hb ISBN 0 9509370 1 0 pb Kildare GAA yearbook 1972 1974 1978 1979 1980 1994 and 2000 in sequence especially the Millennium yearbook of 2000 Soaring Sliothars Centenary of Kildare Camogie 1904 2004 by Joan O Flynn Kildare County Camogie Board References Edit Lily snake was banished Irish Independent 23 September 1998 Irish amp International Sports News Fixtures amp Results RTE RTE ie 14 October 2021 Donegal 1 12 Kildare 0 14 Aet RTE Sport RTE ie Archived from the original on 29 March 2015 Retrieved 30 July 2011 RTE 30 July 2011 Underdogs Kildare stun Kerry for first ever Christy Ring Cup success Irish Independent 7 June 2014 Kildare overpower London to win Christy Ring Cup RTE Sport 23 June 2018 Kildare edge Down to win Christy Ring Cup RTE Sport 22 November 2020 2010 Nancy Murray Cup Kildare 3 10 Armagh 2 8 in Ashbourne report in Sunday Independent on camogie ie and scorers 2004 Div 2 Kildare 2 11 Laois 2 6 report in Irish Independent Irish Independent March 29 2010 Final goal for camogie National Development Plan 2010 2015 Our Game Our Passion information page on camogie ie pdf download 778k from Camogie ie download site 2012 Div 3 Final Kildare 1 8 Armagh 0 10 Camogie ieExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kildare GAA Kildare GAA Site Kildare on Hoganstand com Kildare GAA club sites Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kildare GAA amp oldid 1112560311, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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