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Gaelic Athletic Association

GAA redirects here. For the ice hockey statistic, see Goals against average.

The Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) (Irish: Cumann Lúthchleas Gael) is an organisation which is mostly focussed on promoting Irish sports, such as hurling and camogie, Gaelic football and handball, and rounders. The organisation also promotes Irish music and dance, and the Irish language as an integral part of its objectives. The organisation is largely based, both functionally and in terms of competition, on the traditional counties of Ireland.

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Foundation of the GAA

The man directly involved in the founding of the GAA was a Clareman, Michael Cusack . Born in 1847 Cusack went on to pursue a career as a teacher at Blackrock College, in Dublin. In 1877 he set up his own cramming school, the Civil Service Academy, to prepare students for examinations into the British Civil Service. "Cusack's Academy" as it was known and its pupils did extremely well with the result that the numbers attending it soared. Pupils at the Academy were encouraged to get involved in all forms of physical exercise and, as a language enthusiast, Cusack was troubled by falling standards in specifically Irish games. To remedy this situation and to re-establish hurling as the national pastime, Cusack set up the GAA on the first of November 1884 in Hayes's Hotel, Thurles, Tipperary.

Within a few weeks of the foundation of the association, Archbishop Thomas Croke of Cashel gave it his approval and became its first patron. Its other patrons included both Michael Davitt and Charles Parnell. Cusack was a difficult man to get along with but in the first few months of the organisation he proved to be an excellent organiser. Cusack did not, however continue to run the association for long after its foundation. Within eighteen months he was obliged to resign as a result of his failure to submit accounts for auditing. Croke introduced a new rule which forbade members of the GAA from playing "foreign and fantastic games" such as tennis, polo, and croquet.

Aims of the GAA

  • 1. To prevent the decline of native pastimes.
  • 2. To open athletics to all social classes.
  • 3. To aid in the establishment of hurling and football club which would organise matches between counties.

The GAA in the Twentieth Century

Up to the turn of the century most of the members were farm labourers, small farmers, barmen or shop assistants. But from 1900 onwards a new type of person — those who were now being influenced by the Gaelic League (1893) — joined the movement. They tended to be clerks, school teachers or civil servants. In 1922 it passed over the job of promoting athletics to the National Athletic and Cycling Association.

The Achievements of the GAA

  • 1. The ancient game of hurling was saved from extinction and both it and Gaelic football were standardised.
  • 2. As a result of the GAA native games were taken out of the hands of the landlords and police and passed to the nationalists.
  • 3. A spirit of local patriotism was awakened in Ireland.
  • 4. In its democratic constitution it helped prepare the country for self-government.
  • 5. The GAA played an important part in the forging of a national identity in the early years of the twentieth century.

Sectarianism and the GAA

The GAA was often accused of being a sectarian organisation in Northern Irish society. It is said that its establishment was based on political nationalism and republicanism and the Catholic Church. Initially, members were prohibited from playing "foreign" sports, and to this day, such sports are officially barred from using GAA grounds. In practice, however, the ban is applied only to soccer and rugby. Since the 1960s, GAA has allowed its flagship stadium, Croke Park, to be used for International rules football — a compromise between Gaelic football and Australian rules — in matches between Ireland and Australia. And in the 1980s, Croke Park was the venue for an American football game between Notre Dame and Navy.

However on 16 April 2005 the GAA's congress voted to suspend its Rule 42 ban on foreign games to enable the Football Association of Ireland and the Irish Rugby Football Union to play their international fixures at Croke Park while their own stadium, Lansdowne Road is being rebuilt. Delegates from Northern Ireland strongly opposed the change, but they were outvoted by delegates from the Republic of Ireland. It is now up to the the Central Council to decide when matches can take place. First soccer and rugby games in Croke Park are expected to take place in early 2007.

A ban (written in Rule 42) on members of the British security forces from playing Gaelic games was lifted on 17 November 2001 after the creation of the new Police Service of Northern Ireland and after much lobbying from the more progressive majority in the association. Its perceived nationalism made it and its members particular targets for Loyalist paramilitaries during the Troubles.

The GAA Today

The GAA is the largest amateur sports association in Ireland. The GAA controls more than 3,000 member clubs and controls about 500 grounds throughout Ireland.

GAA Internationals

Strictly speaking, the GAA doesn't hold true internationals, however, hurlers play an annual fixture against a national Shinty team from Scotland, and — as mentioned above — Gaelic footballers have also played Australian national teams drawn from the Australian Football League on a number of occasions, under hybrid rules.

Important Dates of the GAA

Presidents of the GAA

# Name Took Office Left Office County
1.Maurice Davin 1884 1887 Tipperary
2.Edward Bennet 1887 1888 Clare
Maurice Davin (2nd time) 1888 1889 Tipperary
3.Peter Kelly 1889 1889 Galway
4.Frank Dineen 1895 1898 Limerick
5.Micheal Deering 1898 1901 Cork
6.James Nowlan 1901 1921 Kilkenny
7.Daniel McCarthy 1921 1924 Dublin
8.Patrick Breen 1924 1926 Wexford
9.Liam Clifford 1926 1928 Limerick
10.Seán Ryan 1928 1932 Dublin
11.Seán McCarthy 1932 1935 Cork
12.Robert O'Keefe 1935 1938 Laois
13.Pádraig MacNamee 1938 1943 Antrim
14.Séamus Gardiner 1943 1946 Tipperary
15.Dan O'Rourke 1946 1949 Roscommon
16.Michael Kehoe 1949 1952 Wexford
17.Vincent O'Donoghue 1952 1955 Waterford
18.Séamus MacFerran 1955 1958 Antrim
19.Joseph Stuart 1958 1961 Dublin
20.Aodh Ó Broin 1961 1964 Wicklow
21.Alf Ó Muirí 1964 1967 Armagh
22.Séamus Ó Riain 1967 1970 Tipperary
23.Pádraig Ó Fainín 1970 1973 Waterford
24.Donal Ó Cianáin 1973 1977 Roscommon
25.Con Murphy 1976 1979 Cork
26.Pádraig Mac Floinn 1979 1982 Down
27.Pádraig Ó Bogaigh 1982 1985 Kilkenny
28.Mick Loftus 1985 1988 Mayo
29.John Dowling 1988 1991 Offaly
30.Peter Quinn 1991 1994 Fermanagh
31.Jack Boothman 1994 1997 Wicklow
32.Joe McDonagh 1997 2000 Galway
33.Seán McCague 2000 2003 Monaghan
34.Seán Kelly 2003 Current Incumbent Kerry
35.Nicky Brennan 2006 2009 Kilkenny

Major GAA Grounds

See also

External links

Last updated: 10-10-2005 02:16:31
Last updated: 01-04-2007 01:18:57
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