Tipperary GAA President Matt Hassett and Peter Ward at Team Tipperary GAA Race Day at the Galway Races on Monday. Photo: Bridget Delaney

Tipperary GAA Scene

By Jonathan Cullen PRO

FBD Insurance County Championships

Last weekend saw the commencement of the FBD Insurance County Hurling Championships for 2024. Games took place in lots of venues across the county and saw large numbers of supporters attending at all grades.

This coming weekend it’s the turn of the football championships to take centre stage across the county, with games scheduled to take place in the Senior, Intermediate and Premier Junior grades. There is also one remaining game in the FBD Insurance County Premier Intermediate Hurling Championship scheduled to take place on Saturday. See GAA Scoreboard for fixtures.

Tipperary GAA and Pinergy announce new partnership

Ahead of the commencement of the FBD Insurance County Championships last weekend, Tipperary GAA and Pinergy announced an exciting new partnership that will see Pinergy becoming the official streaming sponsor for the FBD Insurance County Senior and Premier Intermediate Hurling Championships.

Pinergy have very deep rooted Tipperary connections as their CEO Enda Gunnell is a proud Roscrea man and has been a very strong supporter of GAA in his native town for many year’s.

Pinergy was founded with a simple goal, to make a difference in the energy sector. Over time, they have grown to become Ireland’s leading authority on smart energy technology. Today Pinergy supply renewable energy and sector-specific insights to thousands of businesses and homes across Ireland. Their goal is to translate our deep understanding of the global energy sector into practical, tailored advice for our customers, helping them to optimise their energy use, reduce waste and treat energy as a resource, not a commodity.

All Ireland Senior Football Final

We extend our congratulations to Armagh on winning last Sundays All Ireland Senior Football Final in Croke Park. We also commiserate with Galway who will be disappointed not to have got over the line, but they can be very proud of their performance in the final and indeed throughout the year. Tipperary was represented on the day as Derek O’Mahony from the Ardfinnan club acted as fourth official for the game.

Camogie

Hard luck to the Tipperary Senior Camogie team who just fell short against Galway in last Saturdays All Ireland semi-final at UMPC Nowlan Park, Kilkenny. This group of players have been very unlucky over the last few years, but there is no doubt that their day is just around the corner, and it won’t be long before they will taste success at the highest level.

New GAA podcast celebrates its athletics past and Olympic links

Lords of the Rings: the GAA’s Olympic Story is a new five-part podcast series that looks at the fascinating links between Gaelic games and the Olympics, featuring some of the many players who have won gold, silver and bronze while competing on the biggest stage in world sport.

Hosted by award-winning Sunday Times journalist and author Michael Foley and GAA journalist and historian Cian Murphy, they are joined by a panel of experts to look at some of the truly weird and wonderful aspects of the GAA link to the Olympics and recall some of the forgotten heroes who played hurling and football and became some of the greatest athletes in the world.

This year marks a centenary of Team Ireland at the Olympics. That involvement was secured by Limerick’s JJ Keane, arguably Ireland’s greatest ever sports administrator who successfully oversaw the GAA passing the baton of athletics administration to a new National Athletic and Cycling Association of Ireland in 1922.

A member of the GAA’s Central Council and an All-Ireland football winner with Dublin, Keane’s ally in the new Free State government in the promotion of sport was JJ Walsh a former Cork GAA Chairman.

In Paris in 1924 were footballers Larry Stanley and Seán Lavin. High jumper Stanley was an All-Ireland champion with Kildare and later Dublin, while Mayo footballer Lavin was the man credited with inventing the solo run.

Long before 1924 however, the GAA link to athletic excellence was well established. Its first President Maurice Davin was chosen, in part, because of his status as a renowned weight thrower.

Edmund Barrett of Ballyduff in Kerry won an All-Ireland senior hurling medal in 1901 representing London and was later part of the City of London police team that won gold in 1908 in the tug of war. He also won a bronze in wrestling – making him the sole holder of All-Ireland and Olympic gold medals.

Forced emigration brought many GAA athletes to Britain, the US and Canada where they were able to successfully revive their careers. Others, like James Mitchell, were prominent players who were part of the GAA-sponsored US Invasion Tour of 1888 who opted not to return to Ireland and would go on to land Olympic success.

John McGough was born in Ireland, raised in Scotland, and worked as physical fitness coach for Celtic and Manchester United. He ran the Olympic 1500m in 1906 and later trained the Cavan team that won the Sam Maguire at the Polo Grounds in New York in 1947.

Then there was the great Tom Kiely of Ballyneale in Tipperary who was a Tipperary and Grangemockler footballer, sometime hurler and GAA Central Council representative who was also regarded as the greatest athlete in the world in his heyday. He was a gold medal winner as an all-rounder in 1904 in St Louis. Resisting offers to officially represent Great Britain and the US, Kiely declared himself to be representing Tipperary, and Ireland.

On the first eight occasions that the hammer event was staged in the Olympics, there were seven first-place finishes for Irish-born athletes with GAA links and the Gaelic games connection continued in Olympic history, right up to the 2024 team with 1500m medal hopeful, European champion and Portaferry camogie player, Ciara Mageean.

Michael Foley previously produced popular podcasts for the GAA on the Croke Park Bloody Sunday centenary in The Bloodied Field in 2020 and last year with the Summer of 98. Olympic historians and authors Kevin McCarthy and Tom Hunt and Cultural Historian and author Siobhán Doyle and Irish Times athletics correspondent Ian O’Riordan shine a light on the great stories that illuminate the GAA and its Olympics link in this year of milestones.

Lords of the Rings: The GAA’s Olympics Story is a podcast available today from gaa.ie, Spotify and usual platforms, produced by Andrew Foley and GAA Digital Manager Niamh Boyle.1

Tipperary GAA Scene

If there is anything you feel should feature in this column going forward, please feel free to forward it to pro.tipperary@gaa.ie