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Louth GAA

The Louth County Board of the Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) (Irish: Cumann Lúthchleas Gael, Coiste Chontae an Lú) or Louth GAA is one of the 32 county boards of the GAA in Ireland, and is responsible for Gaelic games in County Louth. The county board is also responsible for the Louth county teams.

Louth GAA
Irish:Lughbhadh
An Lú
Nickname(s):The Wee County
Province:Leinster
Dominant sport:Gaelic football
Ground(s): Gaelic Grounds
County colours:  Red   White
Executive
Chairman:Peter Fitzpatrick
County teams
NFL:Division 2
NHL:Division 3A
Football Championship:Sam Maguire Cup
Hurling Championship:Lory Meagher Cup

County Board Chairpersons edit

The officials who have chaired the Louth GAA board since the establishment of the Gaelic Athletic Association are named below.

Elections for Chairperson as well as other positions take place at the board's annual convention and are held at headquarters in Darver. The maximum term under current county board rules is five years for any position.

The current incumbent, Clan na Gael's Peter Fitzpatrick T.D., is a former player and captain of the county football team. He also managed the team from 2010-12, the highlight of his tenure being Louth's first appearance in a Leinster Senior Football Championship Final for 50 years in 2010.

Name Year(s) Club
James Moore 1886 Dundalk Nationals
Thomas Smyth 1887 Dundalk Young Irelands
Fr. Arthur Smyth 1888 Togher
James Weldon 1889 Drogheda Gaelics
Tom Brannigan 1890 Drogheda Gaelics
No Convention 1891-94 -
Alfred Palmer 1895 Drogheda Commercials
John Corr 1896 Drogheda Emmets
Jim Carolan 1897 Dreadnots
John Landy 1898 Dunleer Emmets
No Convention 1899-1901 -
Larry Stanley 1902 Drogheda Independents
Pat McKeever 1903 Ardee
Tom O'Connell 1904-06 Mountpleasant
Fr. John Mullen 1907-09 Cooley Kickhams
Joe Ward 1910 Dundalk Young Irelands
Jack Clarke 1911-12 Tredaghs (Drogheda)
Tom McNello 1913-15 Ardee
Denis Trainor 1916 Hearts of Oriel
Joe Ward 1917-20 Dundalk Young Irelands
Nick Butterly 1921-22 Hitchestown
Patrick Duffy 1923-24 Newtown Blues
Séamus Flood 1925 Clan na Gael
Christy Bellew 1925-27 Larks (Killineer)
Tom Burke 1928-31 Wolfe Tones
Séamus Flood 1932-38 Clan na Gael
Name Year(s) Club
Peter Woods 1939-41 Cooley Kickhams
James Jordan 1942-43 Geraldines
Fr. Paddy Downey 1944-45 Dundalk Gaels
James Jordan 1946 Geraldines
J.J. Matthews 1947-56 Newtown Blues
Jimmy Mullen 1957-61 St Dominic's (Drogheda)
J.J. Matthews 1962 Newtown Blues
Brendan Breathnach 1963 St Bride's
Joseph Reilly 1964-66 Parnells (Drogheda)
Seán Murray 1967-69 Oliver Plunketts
Nicky Marry 1970-76 St Bride's
Frank Lynch 1977-79 Geraldines
Paddy Kenny 1980-84 Dundalk Gaels/Na Piarsaigh
Jim Lennon 1985-87 St Mochta's
Paddy McGlew 1988-91 St Fechin's
John Lynch 1992 Geraldines
Peter Brannigan 1993-98 Clan na Gael
Terry Maher 1999-2001 Oliver Plunketts
Paddy McMahon 2002-04 Seán O'Mahony's
Paddy Oliver 2005-09 St Patrick's
Pádraig O'Connor 2010-14 St Patrick's
Des Halpenny 2015-19 John Mitchels
Peter Fitzpatrick 2020- Clan na Gael

Crest edit

 
The former Louth GAA crest

In 2010, the Drogheda Gaelic football club, O'Raghallaigh's, tabled a motion for convention calling for the Boyne Valley Cable Bridge symbol to be removed from the Louth GAA crest because of the bridge's main location being in the neighbouring county of Meath; this led to the county crest being changed to a simpler version.[1]

Ógspórt Lú edit

Ógspórt Lú is the organisation in County Louth for the promotion of Gaelic Games and Activities among young children.

Its approach is new and innovative, concentrating on maximum participation, skill development and the inculcation of best practice.

It was founded in 2007 following a consultative process that identified the need for a new beginning and a system that would provide a solid foundation for the future development of Gaelic games in Louth.

Football edit

Clubs edit

Clubs contest the Louth Senior Football Championship. That competition's most successful club is Newtown Blues, with 23 titles.

Dundalk Young Irelands is the county's oldest GAA club.[2] The club represented Louth in the first All-Ireland Football final which was played at Beech Hill on 29 April 1888 against Limerick Commercials.[3]

County team edit

The earliest recorded inter-county football match took place in 1712 when Louth faced Meath at Slane.[4] A fragment of a poem from 1806 records a football match between Louth and Fermanagh at Inniskeen, Co Monaghan.

When Louth GAA sent the team into training in Dundalk for the 1913 Croke Memorial replay under a soccer trainer from Belfast, the move caused more than a ripple through the Association. For thirty years full-time training in bursts of a week or so before a big match were common. After that the two or three times a week gatherings became more popular.

Between 1945 and 1953 Louth and Meath met 13 times. The crowds got bigger and bigger each time as they played draw after draw in the Championship. The attendance of 42,858 at a thrilling 1951 replay remained a record for a provincial match other than a final for forty years the four match series between Meath and Dublin in 1991. The rivalry with Meath has never fizzled out, as witnessed by a stirring Leinster semi-final in 1998. Nor has controversy, as witnessed by Graham Geraghty's "wide" 45th minute point. In 1957 showband star Dermot O'Brien was late for the All-Ireland final and joined the team when the parade was completed. Prior to the game O'Brien had captained the side in the semi-final success, when the regular captain Patsy Coleman had been injured. Both Ardee men tossed a coin to see who would captain the team. O'Brien won the toss. Coleman today still has the match ball. O'Brien played a key role as Louth beat Cork with the help of a goal from Sean Cunningham with five minutes to go. Dermot O'Brien died on 21 May 2007. As both Cork and Louth wear Red and White, on that day Louth wore the green of Leinster, while Cork wore the blue of Munster.

Eamonn McEneaney was manager from 2006 to 2009 and guided them to their most recent success, the O'Byrne Cup when they defeated DCU in the 2009 final played in the Gaelic Grounds in Drogheda.

On 27 June 2010, Louth reached their first Leinster Senior Championship Final in 50 years. During the Leinster Final on 11 July that year, anger and controversy erupted when, during the 74th minute of the match against Meath, a goal was awarded by the referee after brief consultation with only one of the match umpires (although close circuit camera evidence shown on the RTÉ Two coverage of the game proved that the ball was carried over the line by a Meath player). However, Meath received the 2010 Leinster Title and the cup. Louth have been represented by two players in the International Rules Series versus Australia in recent years, Paddy Keenan and Ciarán Byrne.[5]

Hurling edit

Clubs contest the Louth Senior Hurling Championship. That competition's most successful club is Naomh Moninne, with 22 titles.

The Louth hurling team competes in the Nicky Rackard Cup, an extension of the All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship. The Louth hurlers finished as runner-up to London in the 2005 final at Croke Park, and to Sligo in 2008. In 2016, they competed in the Lory Meagher Cup, defeating Sligo in the final 4-15 to 4-11, and Fermanagh in the 2020 final by 2-19 to 2-08.[6]

Louth won the 2022 Lory Meagher Cup to become the first team to win that competition on three occasions.[7]

Louth has the following achievements in hurling.

Aidan Kerrigan from Ballyoughter, County Wexford has worked with the Louth senior hurling team.[8]

Camogie edit

Louth contested two All Ireland senior finals in 1934 and 1936, captained by Rose Quigley from Darver, where Fr Tom Soraghan was zealously promoting the game. Kathleen and Nan Hegarty two of her Darver team-mates were leading players of the decade.

Notable players include junior player of the year winner in 1982 Vivienne Kelly.

Under Camogie's National Development Plan 2010-2015, "Our Game, Our Passion",[9] Carlow, Cavan, Laois, Louth and Roscommon were to get a total of 17 new clubs by 2015.[10]

Louth have the following achievements in camogie.

Ladies' football edit

Louth has a ladies' football team.[11]

Further reading edit

  • Mulligan, Fr.John (1984). The GAA in Louth - An Historical Record.
  • Mulligan, Fr.John (2000). The GAA in Louth - An Historical Record (updated).

References edit

  1. ^ "Review of the Year (November): Cable bridge gets the boot from Louth county crest - Independent.ie". independent.ie. from the original on 8 March 2016. Retrieved 4 May 2018.
  2. ^ "What a year for Louths most famous club". Hogan Stand. 30 December 2010. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  3. ^ "Final Recalled". The Argus. 15 June 2001.
  4. ^ http://www.the-kingdom.ie/news/story/?trs=cwsnkfauoj[permanent dead link]
  5. ^ Sportsfile. "Sportsfile - Ireland v Australia - Irish Daily Mail International Rules Series 1st Test - 467438". sportsfile.com. from the original on 2 December 2016. Retrieved 4 May 2018.
  6. ^ Mooney, Francis (4 June 2016). "Late goal blitz secures Lory Meagher Cup for Louth". rte.ie. from the original on 27 May 2017. Retrieved 4 May 2018.
  7. ^ "Wicklow win Tailteann Cup opener, Croke Park hurling glory for Tyrone and Louth". The42.ie. 21 May 2022.
  8. ^ "Frank's with Mayo". Gorey Guardian. 22 December 2005.
  9. ^ "Final goal for camogie". Irish Independent. Independent News & Media. 29 March 2010. Retrieved 29 March 2010.
  10. ^ National Development Plan 2010-2015, Our Game, Our Passion information page on camogie.ie 2010-09-01 at the Wayback Machine, pdf download (778k) from Camogie.ie download site 2011-09-16 at the Wayback Machine
  11. ^ "Refreshing Louth begin the Kit Henry era with a clinical LGFA NFL victory at home to Longford". Drogheda Independent. 22 January 2023. Retrieved 21 February 2023.

External links edit

  • Louth on Hoganstand.com
  • Louth GAA site

louth, louth, county, board, gaelic, athletic, association, irish, cumann, lúthchleas, gael, coiste, chontae, county, boards, ireland, responsible, gaelic, games, county, louth, county, board, also, responsible, louth, county, teams, irish, lughbhadhan, lúnick. The Louth County Board of the Gaelic Athletic Association GAA Irish Cumann Luthchleas Gael Coiste Chontae an Lu or Louth GAA is one of the 32 county boards of the GAA in Ireland and is responsible for Gaelic games in County Louth The county board is also responsible for the Louth county teams Louth GAAIrish LughbhadhAn LuNickname s The Wee CountyProvince LeinsterDominant sport Gaelic footballGround s Gaelic GroundsCounty colours Red WhiteExecutiveChairman Peter FitzpatrickCounty teamsNFL Division 2NHL Division 3AFootball Championship Sam Maguire CupHurling Championship Lory Meagher Cup Contents 1 County Board Chairpersons 2 Crest 3 ogsport Lu 4 Football 4 1 Clubs 4 2 County team 5 Hurling 6 Camogie 7 Ladies football 8 Further reading 9 References 10 External linksCounty Board Chairpersons editThe officials who have chaired the Louth GAA board since the establishment of the Gaelic Athletic Association are named below Elections for Chairperson as well as other positions take place at the board s annual convention and are held at headquarters in Darver The maximum term under current county board rules is five years for any position The current incumbent Clan na Gael s Peter Fitzpatrick T D is a former player and captain of the county football team He also managed the team from 2010 12 the highlight of his tenure being Louth s first appearance in a Leinster Senior Football Championship Final for 50 years in 2010 Name Year s ClubJames Moore 1886 Dundalk NationalsThomas Smyth 1887 Dundalk Young IrelandsFr Arthur Smyth 1888 TogherJames Weldon 1889 Drogheda GaelicsTom Brannigan 1890 Drogheda GaelicsNo Convention 1891 94 Alfred Palmer 1895 Drogheda CommercialsJohn Corr 1896 Drogheda EmmetsJim Carolan 1897 DreadnotsJohn Landy 1898 Dunleer EmmetsNo Convention 1899 1901 Larry Stanley 1902 Drogheda IndependentsPat McKeever 1903 ArdeeTom O Connell 1904 06 MountpleasantFr John Mullen 1907 09 Cooley KickhamsJoe Ward 1910 Dundalk Young IrelandsJack Clarke 1911 12 Tredaghs Drogheda Tom McNello 1913 15 ArdeeDenis Trainor 1916 Hearts of OrielJoe Ward 1917 20 Dundalk Young IrelandsNick Butterly 1921 22 HitchestownPatrick Duffy 1923 24 Newtown BluesSeamus Flood 1925 Clan na GaelChristy Bellew 1925 27 Larks Killineer Tom Burke 1928 31 Wolfe TonesSeamus Flood 1932 38 Clan na Gael Name Year s ClubPeter Woods 1939 41 Cooley KickhamsJames Jordan 1942 43 GeraldinesFr Paddy Downey 1944 45 Dundalk GaelsJames Jordan 1946 GeraldinesJ J Matthews 1947 56 Newtown BluesJimmy Mullen 1957 61 St Dominic s Drogheda J J Matthews 1962 Newtown BluesBrendan Breathnach 1963 St Bride sJoseph Reilly 1964 66 Parnells Drogheda Sean Murray 1967 69 Oliver PlunkettsNicky Marry 1970 76 St Bride sFrank Lynch 1977 79 GeraldinesPaddy Kenny 1980 84 Dundalk Gaels Na PiarsaighJim Lennon 1985 87 St Mochta sPaddy McGlew 1988 91 St Fechin sJohn Lynch 1992 GeraldinesPeter Brannigan 1993 98 Clan na GaelTerry Maher 1999 2001 Oliver PlunkettsPaddy McMahon 2002 04 Sean O Mahony sPaddy Oliver 2005 09 St Patrick sPadraig O Connor 2010 14 St Patrick sDes Halpenny 2015 19 John MitchelsPeter Fitzpatrick 2020 Clan na GaelCrest edit nbsp The former Louth GAA crestIn 2010 the Drogheda Gaelic football club O Raghallaigh s tabled a motion for convention calling for the Boyne Valley Cable Bridge symbol to be removed from the Louth GAA crest because of the bridge s main location being in the neighbouring county of Meath this led to the county crest being changed to a simpler version 1 ogsport Lu editogsport Lu is the organisation in County Louth for the promotion of Gaelic Games and Activities among young children Its approach is new and innovative concentrating on maximum participation skill development and the inculcation of best practice It was founded in 2007 following a consultative process that identified the need for a new beginning and a system that would provide a solid foundation for the future development of Gaelic games in Louth Football editClubs edit Further information List of Gaelic games clubs in Ireland Louth Clubs contest the Louth Senior Football Championship That competition s most successful club is Newtown Blues with 23 titles Dundalk Young Irelands is the county s oldest GAA club 2 The club represented Louth in the first All Ireland Football final which was played at Beech Hill on 29 April 1888 against Limerick Commercials 3 County team edit Main article Louth county football team The earliest recorded inter county football match took place in 1712 when Louth faced Meath at Slane 4 A fragment of a poem from 1806 records a football match between Louth and Fermanagh at Inniskeen Co Monaghan When Louth GAA sent the team into training in Dundalk for the 1913 Croke Memorial replay under a soccer trainer from Belfast the move caused more than a ripple through the Association For thirty years full time training in bursts of a week or so before a big match were common After that the two or three times a week gatherings became more popular Between 1945 and 1953 Louth and Meath met 13 times The crowds got bigger and bigger each time as they played draw after draw in the Championship The attendance of 42 858 at a thrilling 1951 replay remained a record for a provincial match other than a final for forty years the four match series between Meath and Dublin in 1991 The rivalry with Meath has never fizzled out as witnessed by a stirring Leinster semi final in 1998 Nor has controversy as witnessed by Graham Geraghty s wide 45th minute point In 1957 showband star Dermot O Brien was late for the All Ireland final and joined the team when the parade was completed Prior to the game O Brien had captained the side in the semi final success when the regular captain Patsy Coleman had been injured Both Ardee men tossed a coin to see who would captain the team O Brien won the toss Coleman today still has the match ball O Brien played a key role as Louth beat Cork with the help of a goal from Sean Cunningham with five minutes to go Dermot O Brien died on 21 May 2007 As both Cork and Louth wear Red and White on that day Louth wore the green of Leinster while Cork wore the blue of Munster Eamonn McEneaney was manager from 2006 to 2009 and guided them to their most recent success the O Byrne Cup when they defeated DCU in the 2009 final played in the Gaelic Grounds in Drogheda On 27 June 2010 Louth reached their first Leinster Senior Championship Final in 50 years During the Leinster Final on 11 July that year anger and controversy erupted when during the 74th minute of the match against Meath a goal was awarded by the referee after brief consultation with only one of the match umpires although close circuit camera evidence shown on the RTE Two coverage of the game proved that the ball was carried over the line by a Meath player However Meath received the 2010 Leinster Title and the cup Louth have been represented by two players in the International Rules Series versus Australia in recent years Paddy Keenan and Ciaran Byrne 5 Hurling editClubs contest the Louth Senior Hurling Championship That competition s most successful club is Naomh Moninne with 22 titles The Louth hurling team competes in the Nicky Rackard Cup an extension of the All Ireland Senior Hurling Championship The Louth hurlers finished as runner up to London in the 2005 final at Croke Park and to Sligo in 2008 In 2016 they competed in the Lory Meagher Cup defeating Sligo in the final 4 15 to 4 11 and Fermanagh in the 2020 final by 2 19 to 2 08 6 Louth won the 2022 Lory Meagher Cup to become the first team to win that competition on three occasions 7 Louth has the following achievements in hurling All Ireland Junior Hurling Championship 1976 1977 Lory Meagher Cup 2016 2020 2022 Leinster Junior Hurling Championship 1968 1969 1973 National Hurling League Div 3 2000 2008 1967 first national hurling league title beating mayo in final Div 3 Aidan Kerrigan from Ballyoughter County Wexford has worked with the Louth senior hurling team 8 Camogie editLouth contested two All Ireland senior finals in 1934 and 1936 captained by Rose Quigley from Darver where Fr Tom Soraghan was zealously promoting the game Kathleen and Nan Hegarty two of her Darver team mates were leading players of the decade Notable players include junior player of the year winner in 1982 Vivienne Kelly Under Camogie s National Development Plan 2010 2015 Our Game Our Passion 9 Carlow Cavan Laois Louth and Roscommon were to get a total of 17 new clubs by 2015 10 Louth have the following achievements in camogie All Ireland Senior Camogie Championship runners up 1934 1936Ladies football editLouth has a ladies football team 11 Further reading editMulligan Fr John 1984 The GAA in Louth An Historical Record Mulligan Fr John 2000 The GAA in Louth An Historical Record updated References edit Review of the Year November Cable bridge gets the boot from Louth county crest Independent ie independent ie Archived from the original on 8 March 2016 Retrieved 4 May 2018 What a year for Louths most famous club Hogan Stand 30 December 2010 Retrieved 29 September 2022 Final Recalled The Argus 15 June 2001 http www the kingdom ie news story trs cwsnkfauoj permanent dead link Sportsfile Sportsfile Ireland v Australia Irish Daily Mail International Rules Series 1st Test 467438 sportsfile com Archived from the original on 2 December 2016 Retrieved 4 May 2018 Mooney Francis 4 June 2016 Late goal blitz secures Lory Meagher Cup for Louth rte ie Archived from the original on 27 May 2017 Retrieved 4 May 2018 Wicklow win Tailteann Cup opener Croke Park hurling glory for Tyrone and Louth The42 ie 21 May 2022 Frank s with Mayo Gorey Guardian 22 December 2005 Final goal for camogie Irish Independent Independent News amp Media 29 March 2010 Retrieved 29 March 2010 National Development Plan 2010 2015 Our Game Our Passion information page on camogie ie Archived 2010 09 01 at the Wayback Machine pdf download 778k from Camogie ie download site Archived 2011 09 16 at the Wayback Machine Refreshing Louth begin the Kit Henry era with a clinical LGFA NFL victory at home to Longford Drogheda Independent 22 January 2023 Retrieved 21 February 2023 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Louth GAA Louth on Hoganstand com National and provincial titles won by Louth teams Louth GAA site Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Louth GAA amp oldid 1167537062 Camogie, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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