Last Sunday the sporting people of Kilmead, Booleigh, Narraghmore,
Ballitore, Calverstown, Kilgowan, Brewel, Blackhall, Ballymount, Usk, Moone and
Mullaghmast celebrated their local team’s highly popular success in the Kildare
Senior Football Championship Final. St.
Laurences, founded in 1957 had become Senior County Champions for the first
time in the Club's 52 year old history.
On the same Sunday and in the same venue, St. Conleth’s Park,
Newbridge, Athy’s minor footballers became Kildare Minor Champions for the
second year in succession. Meanwhile back home in Athy that same Sunday
afternoon yet another club, Woodstock Celts, still in its infancy as a club,
won another match in its unstoppable march to securing a league and cup double
in Division 2 of the Kildare District Football League.
Athy Gaelic Football Club, founded in 1887, played its first County
Senior Final in 1923 when it got a drubbing at the hands (feet more
appropriately) of Naas who scored two goals and 5 points to no score for the
Athy men. Some of the names from that
game bring back memories. Tom Moore and
his brother John, Jim Clancy, Mickey Grant, Mick Mahon and Tom Forrestal of
Castledermot. Twenty years ago I was
privileged to interview Tom Forrestal who was then 92 years of age. He recalled for me many of the players who
played for Athy in the 1923 final. Men
such as Eddie ‘Sapper’ O’Neill, who
later emigrated to America and captained the New York team which defeated All
Ireland champions Kerry and Tom, otherwise known as ‘Golly’ Germaine. He told me
that the then Club chairman presented each of the players with a medal
inscribed with the name of the recipient.
I wonder how many of those medals have survived?
Athy’s defeat in the 1923 Senior County Final was to be repeated in
1926 and 1927 before the mantle of Senior Champions finally came to rest on
Athy shoulders in 1933. It was a success
repeated the following year and again in 1937.
St. Laurences first footballing success came with the winning of the
Minor Football Championship in 1974 when Athy were the defeated finalists. The Club’s first appearance in a County
Senior Final was on 12th September 1982 when Sarsfields, who had
been defeated the previous year, gained the upper hand by two goals and 11
points to 4 points. Three further County
Final defeats awaited the St. Laurences men before last Sunday’s victory. The 1992 final saw Clane run out winners,
while Allenwood defeated the South Kildare men 12 years later. The following year St. Laurences suffered
another disappointing Final defeat and the prospects for success in 2009 did
not augur well after the team played three games in 15 days leading up to the
County Final. Awaiting them were
Moorefield, generally regarded as the best team in the County and heavily
tipped to win.
The final score tells the tale.
St. Laurences won convincingly and by a margin of 10 points brought the
Dermot Bourke Cup to Narraghmore for the first time. It was a great victory for a great Club which
in its short life has made extraordinary strides in developing a club structure
which is the envy of the Lilywhite sporting world.
In contrast Woodstock Celts is a small club centered on the
Woodstock area of Athy which plays its matches on a local pitch in the shadow
of the nearby 14th century castle.
The enthusiasm of the local lads is matched by skill and a
competitiveness which has secured for them victory in Division 2 Club
Championship in their first year back in the Kildare District Football
League. Last Sunday as the Athy Minors
and the St. Laurences Seniors won their matches in St. Conleth’s Park, the
Woodstock Celts team playing at home beat Allenwood Celtic on a score line of 5
goals to nil. This victory put them 6
points clear in the Division 2 League and well on their way to becoming League
champions. Theirs is a remarkable feat
which in the light of last Sunday’s victories in Newbridge is likely to be
overlooked. Well done to Tommy Connell,
Gary Foley, Michael Lawless, Patrick O’Brien, Robbie Donoher, Kieran Walsh,
Ricky Moriarty, James Fennell, Dean Connell, Jonathan Fennell, Kirby Fennell,
Mark Brennan, James Lammon, Brian Lawless, Kiwi Mulhall and Mick Doogue, all of
whom make up the Woodstock Celts playing squad.
Athy Gaelic Football Club has struggled for success on the football
field in recent years. Long gone are the
halcyon days of the 1930s and 1940s when Athy figured in many County Senior
Finals. Even success in the lower grades
over the years eluded the sportsmen of Geraldine Park. Victory for the Athy Minors was achieved for
the first time in 1936, repeated in 1937 and not again achieved until
1956. Ten years were to pass before the
next Minor County Final victory and 1973 witnessed the last Minor championship
for Athy until last year. 2008 was Athy
Minor’s first championship final win for 35 years when the team, captained by
Brian Kinahan, defeated a more fancied Sarsfield team.
Last Sunday before St. Laurences took to the field Athy Minors lined
out against a fancied Naas side. At half
time the Athy lads led Naas by 5 points to 2.
At the end of full time the lead had been reduced to one point but the
victory went to Athy for the second year in succession. Only twice before has Athy Gaelic Football
Club won back to back victories in County Finals – the minors of 1936 and 1937
and the seniors of 1933 and 1934.
Unfortunately, Club records for those years no longer exist but I would
imagine that many of those who played for Athy Seniors in 1941 and 1942 were
Minor players five years earlier. The
Minors of 1933 and 1934 may have included Richard Donovan, Tom Wall, Michael
Birney, Tadgh Brennan, John Rochford, Thomas Ryan, Joe Gibbons, Pat Mulhall,
William Chanders and Dan O’Shaughnessy.
We might never know if they did play on those Minor winning teams but
what we do know is that in 2009 a team of young fellows brought the Minor title
back to Geraldine Park for the second year in succession. Their names are worth recording, James
Roycroft, Sean Ronan, Luke Thomas, Wesley Clare, David Hyland, Barry Purcell,
David O’Toole, Liam McGovern, Kevin Feeley, Niall Kelly, Darroch Mulhall, Corey
Moore, Tony Gibbons, Cian Reynolds and Keelan Bolger. The team manager is Joe Kinahan, assisted by
Minor selectors Denis Sullivan and Ger Clancy.
The men of St. Laurences, the youngsters of Athy and the players of
Woodstock Celts have achieved great sporting success within the past week. The Athy Minors victory is another addition
to a chequered club history which with all clubs tends to be measured in terms
of success on the playing field. For St.
Laurences the 2009 Senior Championship represents a milestone which will
forever be recalled, whatever the future holds for the Club. Well done to all concerned.
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