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Why this Irish American loves the GAA in Ireland

Love of Ireland's national sport


Kieran Donaghy fields the ball during the Munster football final against Cork during this years championship
Kieran Donaghy fields the ball during the Munster football final against Cork during this years championship


This time of year, when the summer is fast drawing to a close and the Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) finals are fast approaching, always transports me back to the Galway I landed into in early September of 2001. The city and county were in the throes of euphoria, excitement and, putting it honestly, pandemonium.

The two county teams in the premier sports of the GAA, football and hurling, had both advanced to the All-Ireland Final.  Reaching the final is the “holy grail” for all counties at the start of every year’s championship. 

I was somewhat bewildered at the incredible buzz generated by two games I had seen and knew vaguely growing up in Irish Boston, but soon threw myself into the spirit of things.  The Galway hurlers, who had been hot favourites, were defeated in the final, while the Galway footballers, who many anticipated would lose, took their second championship in three years.

It wasn’t until some months later, however, that I can say I really discovered the GAA.  And I haven’t looked back since.  On a weekend visit to my cousins who still live on the site of my ancestral home in north Co. Galway – about halfway between the towns of Tuam and Dunmore for those who know the territory – my cousin Paddy Murphy announced that I was going with him to see the local GAA club, Cortoon Shamrocks, take on a rival Co. Galway club in a senior football match. 

Paddy was then involved in management with Cortoon and thought it was high time to “make a west of Ireland man out of me.”

On a typical rainy and windy night in the west, we made our way through what Leo Moran of the Saw Doctors famously dubbed “the twisting, turning, winding roads of Galway and Mayo” to an isolated football pitch. 

We were early; it was raining; it was the middle of nowhere; no one was there; and I wondered almost out loud to myself: “What the hell am I doing here?”  Yet one car pulled up, and then another and soon the narrow country road became all but impassable with parked cars.
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The two teams started to warm up and soon the match began.  Unsurprisingly for the night that was in it, the game was at times slow and tedious, but there were flashes of brilliance as well.  Points were kicked through the wind and rain and “over the bar” by forwards from distances and at angles I didn’t think possible. There was great defending by the backs and a number of goal attempts were thwarted by extremely athletic keepers.




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the gaelic games of 15 aside has a blend of everything; basketball, handball, punch ball, soccer, rugby, hand to foot kicking, hand to toe catching, hands a-flailing around ball carrier trying to dislodge ball or prevent passing kicking and scores of which there are plenty from distances and from impossible goalpost angles. Three points over the bar equal one goal. Smidgin of what is possible in baseball - home run hit bringing in two on base buddies.
 




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