Re: What are they smoking in Birr?
Posted: Sat Sep 19, 2015 11:44 am
Also 1 more thing I've never said ocp pitch is a bad pitch,it's well maintained even with all the traffic on it but 100% it is a slower field to hurl on
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Is that you Daithi???Keiap wrote:It's very easy play on both and you would know simple as that..don't spout on about something you have no knowledge on I've played many times on both different times of the year and they are different to play on..you can't tell me that every sod in the country is the same..outsider
Great post! Fully agree.KeshaWantsTimber wrote:Tradition is something that is built. It's not in the air, it's not in the water and it's not in the soil. These are all things we imagine. Birr doesn't have any more of a hurling lustre than Tullamore. Some people just imagine that it does. The same tradition can be built in Tullamore if people from North and South Offaly unite and stop bickering over venues. A number of clubs are building a tradition in North Offaly. Shamrocks, Tullamore, Ballinamere, Brosna Gaels were all senior in 2015. Clodiagh Gaels, after much underage success, will probably be a senior club in the next few years. So there could possibly be 5/6 senior clubs in North Offaly. With the diminished populations in some of the villages in South Offaly, these new powers are needed by the county more than ever.
In 1995, Clare won the All-Ireland. At the time Cratloe had no player on the Clare panel but hurling fever gripped the parish. They won intermediate and by the time Clare won the All Ireland in 2013 Cratloe contributed Podge Collins, Conor Ryan and Conor McGrath to the starting 15 and 2 more to the panel. In 95 Sixmilebridge, Josephs Doora-barefield, Clarecastle and Wolfe Tones dominated the team by providing 10 of the starting 15. In 2013 they contributed 0 starters to the All-Ireland team. Inagh, Crusheen, Tulla, Clonlara, Whitegate, Tubber, Cratloe, Ballyea and Newmarket provided starters in 2013 after having none in 95. This shows that any club with the correct application and raw material can produce top class hurlers.
Offaly hurling followers need to stop using divisive language with regards to Offaly hurling's traditional heartlands and realise what can be achieved if more of the county was accepted as 'hurling people'. Making half of the county think they are 2nd class hurling citizens is not a recipe for success in a county with a population of about 70,000 people.
Bord na Mona man wrote:Great post! Fully agree.
The smell of urine from the overflowing toilets as you pass through the turnstile may well explain the feeling in your stomach. However you may want to see a doctor about your neck.Keiap wrote:when you walk in birr that shiver down your neck the feeling in your stomach is unexplainable
North Offaly people having hurling explained to them be like..Plain of the Herbs wrote:Hoi!
Coming from where you're from, you don't get a say in this. You wouldn't understand hurling. Only hurling peepel understand.
PS, ye're great to keep hurling alive up there in north Offaly.Bord na Mona man wrote:Great post! Fully agree.
Also agree with this, see that's the thing, some clubs and counties get so hung up on tradition that when when they fall on lean times and the old reliable's that used to bring them success don't work anymore they will look to any excuse to provide an explanation as to why they have been so poor over that extended period of time. the one thing you can be sure they wont do is own up to their own failings such as a poor standard of coaching at underage or the fact that their philosophy simply is not effective in today's era of hurling, its like taking a winning formula one car from 1995 and entering it into this years Formula one season and expecting it to be competitive, that cake just ain't gonna bakeBord na Mona man wrote:Great post! Fully agree.KeshaWantsTimber wrote:Tradition is something that is built. It's not in the air, it's not in the water and it's not in the soil. These are all things we imagine. Birr doesn't have any more of a hurling lustre than Tullamore. Some people just imagine that it does. The same tradition can be built in Tullamore if people from North and South Offaly unite and stop bickering over venues. A number of clubs are building a tradition in North Offaly. Shamrocks, Tullamore, Ballinamere, Brosna Gaels were all senior in 2015. Clodiagh Gaels, after much underage success, will probably be a senior club in the next few years. So there could possibly be 5/6 senior clubs in North Offaly. With the diminished populations in some of the villages in South Offaly, these new powers are needed by the county more than ever.
In 1995, Clare won the All-Ireland. At the time Cratloe had no player on the Clare panel but hurling fever gripped the parish. They won intermediate and by the time Clare won the All Ireland in 2013 Cratloe contributed Podge Collins, Conor Ryan and Conor McGrath to the starting 15 and 2 more to the panel. In 95 Sixmilebridge, Josephs Doora-barefield, Clarecastle and Wolfe Tones dominated the team by providing 10 of the starting 15. In 2013 they contributed 0 starters to the All-Ireland team. Inagh, Crusheen, Tulla, Clonlara, Whitegate, Tubber, Cratloe, Ballyea and Newmarket provided starters in 2013 after having none in 95. This shows that any club with the correct application and raw material can produce top class hurlers.
Offaly hurling followers need to stop using divisive language with regards to Offaly hurling's traditional heartlands and realise what can be achieved if more of the county was accepted as 'hurling people'. Making half of the county think they are 2nd class hurling citizens is not a recipe for success in a county with a population of about 70,000 people.
First of all yep totally agree, only thing that will fix Offaly Gaa is good ol fashioned elbow grease not wallowing in self pity and wishing for the old days to come back and secondly Dublin, Waterford and Galway may not have won an All Ireland recently but they have won way more than we have recently and that was down??? yep you guessed it, hard work, all three have had relatively recent underage success and are in a better position than we are to challenge in Leinster, tradition and a name will not win you silverware unless you put the work in and keep your finger on the pulse of where the modern game is headingKeshaWantsTimber wrote:The only thing consistent with modern hurling success is hard work, talent and perseverance. Before 2006 Danesfort in Kilkenny hadn't won anything since 1931. They now have the current Hurler of the Year among their ranks. Kilkenny don't rule out players because their clubs don't produce players traditionally. Mullinahone was a football stronghold before John Leahy came along. Only one man from there had ever hurled c'ship for Tipperary previously. They have since won senior county titles and had players like Eoin and Paul Kelly emerge to play for the county. Clubs like these need to emerge in Offaly. Clodiagh Gaels or Ballinamere could be the clubs and Offaly hurling would be much healthier for their presence. A revolution is needed and the old order needs a good shake up.
Difference is, they are competing well at Minor and U21 on a regular basis.townman wrote:and how long is it since Waterford, Galway, or Dublin won senior all ireland ???