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词条 Sligo GAA
释义

  1. History

  2. Crest and colours

     Kit evolution 

  3. Gaelic football

     Club football  2019 club football status  Inter-county football  Current football squad  Football honours 

  4. Ladies' football

  5. Hurling

     Honours  Current Hurling Squad 2019 

  6. Camogie

  7. See also

  8. References

  9. External links

{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2012}}{{Infobox GAA county
| county gaa = Sligo GAA
| crest =
| website = [www.sligogaa.ie]
| irish = Sligeach
| province = Connacht
| nickname = The Yeats County
| county colours = Black, White{{Color box|#000000}} {{Color box|#FFFFFF}}
| grounds = Markievicz Park, Sligo
| dominant sport = Gaelic football
| supporters = The Black Parade
| nfl div = Division 4
| nhl div = Division 3B
| football champ = Sam Maguire Cup
| hurling champ = Nicky Rackard Cup
| ladies football = Brendan Martin Cup
| pattern_la= _white_hoop
| pattern_b=_whitehorizontal
| pattern_ra= _white_hoop
| pattern_sh = _galoscs13h
| pattern_so = _white hoops
| leftarm=000000
| body=000000
| rightarm=000000
| shorts=000000
| socks=000000
|}}

The Sligo County Board of the Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) ({{lang-ga|Cumann Luthchleas Gael Coiste Contae Sligeach}}) or Sligo GAA is one of the 32 county boards of the GAA in Ireland, and is responsible for Gaelic games in County Sligo. The county board is also responsible for the Sligo inter-county teams.

Sligo play in the Connacht Senior Football Championship but have only won three senior provincial titles, in 1928, 1975 and 2007. Sligo have never appeared in an All-Ireland final. The 1922 Championship is the closest they have come, defeating Roscommon, Mayo and Galway to win the Connacht title, and beating Tipperary in the subsequent All-Ireland semi-final that followed. However, "a flimsy technicality" led to a replay of the Connacht final against Galway, which Sligo lost.[1]

In club football, no Sligo team has ever appeared in an All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship final. St. Mary's is the only Sligo team to have ever won the Connacht Senior Club Football Championship, having won it three times in 1977, 1980 and 1983. Eastern Harps, Curry and Tourlestrane have all appeared in Connacht finals.

History

Due to its much smaller population than both County Galway and County Mayo, the two dominant forces in the province of Connacht, and competition from professional League of Ireland soccer team Sligo Rovers in the county's capital town, Sligo's Gaelic football team have never been able to break free of the shackles inherent in the provincial championship format. They have won only three Connacht championships, with about 50 years between each win. These championships came in 1928, 1975 and 2007.

Sligo have never appeared in an All-Ireland final. The 1922 Championship is the closest they have come, defeating Roscommon, Mayo and Galway to win the Connacht title, and beating Tipperary in the subsequent All-Ireland semi-final that followed. However an objection from Galway on what is described as "a flimsy technicality" led to the Connacht decider being brought to a replay, which Sligo went on to lose.[1] Sligo met the same fate in the inaugural National Football League campaign of 1926, beating Laois to reach the final, only for Laois to object on the grounds of a Sligo player's name being misspelled; Sligo lost the replay. This gives Sligo the unique position of having qualified for an All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final and a National Football League Final, without ever having contested either.

In 1954, Sligo reached the Connacht final against Galway, only for an equalising goal in the final minute to be disallowed. In 1962, Sligo reached the Connacht final against Roscommon, and led for much of the match only to be blighted by a sudden string of injuries, miss a 50 while two points ahead in the final minute, and then gift soon-to-be All-Ireland finalists Roscommon a goal in what is considered "one of the great football tragedies in Connacht".[1] In 1965, Sligo reached the Connacht final against Galway and gained a seven-point lead, only for one of their players to be "mysteriously sent to the full-forward spot", causing "the entire team [to lose] momentum" and the match.[1]

Since the 2001 introduction to the All-Ireland Senior Football Championship of a qualifier system for teams eliminated from their provincial championship, Sligo, despite historically having a poor record, has enjoyed some modest, though noteworthy, success. The new format together with a prolonged period of competing in Division 1 of the National Football League helped bring about an upward turn in the county's fortunes. In 2002, having narrowly lost the Connacht Senior Football Final to Galway, the defending All-Ireland champions, Sligo went on to defeat Tyrone in Croke Park, turning over a seven-point deficit in the process.{{citation needed|date=August 2012}} A similar comeback against the eventual All-Ireland champions Armagh two weeks later led to a replay, but Sligo's run was halted when they had claims for a penalty in injury time of the second game turned down.

On 8 July 2007, Sligo claimed their first Connacht title since 1975 with a one-point victory over Galway. The following year they were trashed by Mayo and ended up in the Tommy Murphy Cup, after a league campaign that had seen them relegated to Division 4. Star player Eamonn O'Hara said he was embarrassed by the team's rapid decline back into mediocrity.[2] On 27 June 2010, Sligo hosted Galway and led 1–8 to 0–2 at halftime but were shocked by an undeserved draw ending 1–10 each. The replay saw Sligo defeat the Tribesmen on the scoreline 1–14 to 0–16 to advance to the Connacht Senior Football Final. Once there, after all their hard work and continued misfortune, Roscommon defeated them by 0–14 to 0–13.

Sligo football descended to a new depth on 26 May 2013 when they were dumped out of the Connacht Championship by London in their first game. The scoreline was 1-12 to 0-14. This was London's first victory in the Connacht Championship since 1977. Lorcan Mulvey scored the vital London goal.[3][4][5]

The county Vocational Schools team reached two All-Ireland finals in 1962 and 1963, losing both to Dublin City.

Four Sligo players have won All-Stars: Mickey Kearns of St. Pat's (1971),[6] Barnes Murphy of St. Mary's (1974),[7] Eamonn O'Hara of Tourlestrane (2002), and Charlie Harrison of St. John's (2010). Sligo's club football scene is not dominated by any single team; there were no back-to-back winners since the St. Patrick's team of 1988 and 1989, the longest out of any county in history, until Tourlestrane did the two in a row in 2016 and 2017.

Crest and colours

Sligo's team colours are black and white. Sligo's jerseys have alternated between black and white over the years. In the 1990s, Sligo opted for predominantly white shirts with black shorts with exceptions in 1995 and 1996 when they wore an all-black strip. In 2001, Sligo was fined by the GAA for not wearing their registered county colours and after a win over Kildare decided to make the all-black kit their first choice.

Sligo's crest features Benbulbin in the background, one of the iconic landmarks of County Sligo.

Kit evolution

{{col-begin|width=70%; margin:auto}}{{col-break}}{{Football kit
| pattern_la =
| pattern_b =
| pattern_ra =
| leftarm = ffffff
| body = ffffff
| rightarm = ffffff
| shorts = 000000
| socks = ffffff
| title = Original kit
}}{{col-break}}{{Football kit
| pattern_la = _white hoops
| pattern_b =
| pattern_sh =_galoscs13h
| pattern_so = _white bands
| pattern_ra = _white hoops
| leftarm = 000000
| body = ffffff
| rightarm = 000000
| shorts = 000000
| socks = 000000
| title = Classic kit
}}{{col-break}}{{Football kit
| pattern_la =
| pattern_b =
| pattern_ra =
| pattern_sh =
| pattern_so = _white hoops
| leftarm = 000000
| body = 000000
| rightarm = 000000
| shorts = 000000
| socks = 000000
| title = 2004-12}}{{col-break}}{{Football kit
| pattern_la = _white_hoop
| pattern_b = _whitehorizontal
| pattern_ra = _white_hoop
| pattern_sh = _galoscs13h
| pattern_so = _white hoops
| leftarm = 000000
| body = 000000
| rightarm = 000000
| shorts = 000000
| socks = 000000
| title = 2015-}}{{col-end}}

Gaelic football

Club football

Tubbercurry are the most successful team in the history of the Club Championships in Sligo, with 20 Senior titles to their name. The last of these was won in 2014.

St. Mary's are Sligo's most successful club team in the Provincial and All-Ireland club series with three Connacht Senior Club Football Championship titles to their name (1977, 1980 and 1983). They also won the All-Ireland sevens title in 1980. They, along with Tubbercurry, dominated the club scene in Sligo over a fifteen-year period (1976–1991), with St. Mary's claiming eight championships to Tubber's three. The pairing contested the final on eight occasions, including five in succession (1983–1987), and these finals were tense and heated encounters. In recent years Tourlestrane have dominated Sligo Gaelic .

St Marys and Tubbercurry also jointly lead the roll of honour for the Under-21 Championships with Tubbercurry, having both won on 6 occasions as of 2015.

St Marys lead the roll of honour for the Minor Championship, with 11 titles as of 2015, having won the previous 5 championships in succession(2011-2015).

Despite being one of the most celebrated clubs in the county, St. Mary's remain one of the worst supported sides due to the dominance of soccer in Sligo town.{{Citation needed|date=February 2014}}

In the years since the dominance of St. Mary's and Tubbercurry, there have been various winners of the county championship with Bunninadden, Coolera/Strandhill, Curry, Eastern Harps, Shamrock Gaels and Tourlestrane all claiming the Owen B. Hunt Cup during the past two decades. Other Senior teams that have come close to winning the championship in the past few years include St. John's and Easkey.

In 2005, Coolera/Strandhill won its first Senior title in 98 years, having narrowly lost the 2000 final to Bunninadden, who at that time had not won a title in 109 years.

Much of the Minor and Underage successes within the county have seen Tubbercurry and St. Mary's teams dominate this grade in recent years with many of the titles being won by either of Sligo town's two main club's in the past decade.

2019 club football status

ClubChampionshipLeague
1st Team2nd Team1st Team2nd Team
BallymoteIntermediate n/aDivision 3n/a
Bunninadden Intermediate n/aDivision 2n/a
Calry/St. Joseph's Senior Junior BDivision 2Division 4
Castleconnor Intermediate Junior BDivision 1Division 4
Cloonacool Junior A n/aDivision 3n/a
Coolaney/Mullinabreena Senior Junior BDivision 1Division 4
Coolera/Strandhill Senior Junior BDivision 1Division 4
Curry Intermediate Junior ADivision 1Division 3
Drumcliffe/Rosses PointSenior Junior ADivision 2Division 4
EaskeyIntermediateJunior BDivision 2Division 4
Eastern Harps SeniorJunior ADivision 1Division 3
Enniscrone/Kilglass Intermediate Junior BDivision 2n/a
GeevaghIntermediaten/aDivision 2n/a
Owenmore Gaels Junior A Junior BDivision 2Division 4
Shamrock Gaels Senior Junior ADivision 1Division 3
St. Farnan's IntermediateJunior BDivision 2Division 4
St. John'sIntermediateJunior BDivision 2Division 4
St. Mary's Senior Junior BDivision 1Division 4
St. Michael'sJunior An/aDivision 3Division 4
St. Molaise Gaels Senior Junior ADivision 1Division 3
St. Patrick's Intermediate n/aDivision 2Division 4
Tourlestrane Senior Junior ADivision 1Division 3
Tubbercurry Seniorn/aDivision 1n/a

Inter-county football

Sligo's senior Gaelic football team play in the Connacht Senior Football Championship. They have only managed to ever win three senior provincial titles: each of these wins came after gaps of about fifty years, in 1928, 1975 and 2007. Sligo have never appeared in an All-Ireland final.

Current football squad

  • Manager: Paul Taylor
  • Selector: John McPartland
  • Coach: Joe Keane
  • Strength & Conditioning Coach: Adam Speer
{{GAA squad start}}{{GAA squad player|no=1|pos=Goalkeeper|name=Aidan Devaney|club=Calry/St. Joseph's}}{{GAA squad player|no=2|pos=Right Corner Back|name=Charlie Harrison|club=St. John's}}{{GAA squad player|no=3|pos=Full Back|name=Eoin McHugh|club=St. Molaise Gaels}}{{GAA squad player|no=4|pos=Left Corner Back|name=Ross Donovan|club=Eastern Harps}}{{GAA squad player|no=5|pos=Right Half Back|name=Neil Ewing|club=Drumcliffe/Rosses Point}}{{GAA squad player|no=6|pos=Centre Back|name=Adrian McIntyre|club=Tubbercurry}}{{GAA squad player|no=7|pos=Left Half Back|name=Ger O'Kelly Lynch|club=St. Mary's}}{{GAA squad player|no=8|pos=Midfield|name=Niall Murphy|club=Coolera/Strandhill}}{{GAA squad player|no=9|pos=Midfield|name=Kevin McDonnell (c)|club=Castleconnor}}{{GAA squad player|no=10|pos=Right Half Forward|name=Patrick O'Connor|club=St. Farnan's}}{{GAA squad player|no=11|pos=Centre Forward|name=Liam Gaughan|club=Tourlestrane}}{{GAA squad player|no=12|pos=Left Half Forward|name=Cathal Henry|club=Tourlestrane}}{{GAA squad player|no=13|pos=Right Corner Forward|name=Kyle Cawley|club=St. Mary's}}{{GAA squad player|no=14|pos=Full Forward|name=Pat Hughes|club=Geevagh}}{{GAA squad player|no=15|pos=Left Corner Forward|name=Adrian Marren|club=Curry}}{{GAA squad mid}}{{GAA squad player|no=16|pos=Substitute|name=Éamonn Kilgannon|club=St. Farnan's}}{{GAA squad player|no=17|pos=Substitute|name=Mikey Gordon|club=Easkey}}{{GAA squad player|no=18|pos=Substitute|name=Cian Breheny|club=St. Mary's}}{{GAA squad player|no=19|pos=Substitute|name=Seán Carribine|club=Castleconnor}}{{GAA squad player|no=20|pos=Substitute|name=Eddie McGuinness|club=Tubbercurry}}{{GAA squad player|no=21|pos=Substitute|name=Finnian Cawley|club=St. Farnan's}}{{GAA squad player|no=22|pos=Substitute|name=Luke Nicholson|club=St. Mary's}}{{GAA squad player|no=23|pos=Substitute|name=Keelan Cawley|club=Coolera/Strandhill}}{{GAA squad player|no=24|pos=Substitute|name=Darragh Cummins|club=Calry/St. Joseph's}}{{GAA squad player|no=25|pos=Substitute|name=Peter Laffey|club=Coolera/Strandhill}}{{GAA squad player|no=26|pos=Substitute|name=Nathan Rooney|club=St. Mary's}}{{GAA squad end}}

Squad as per Sligo v Galway, 2018 Connacht Senior Football Championship Semi Final, 3 June 2018

Football honours

Connacht Senior Football Championship: 3 – 1928, 1975, 2007

Connacht Junior Football Championship: 11 – 1926, 1928, 1935, 1956, 1973, 1998, 2005, 2010, 2011, 2013, 2014

Connacht Minor Football Championship: 2 – 1949, 1968.

All-Ireland Junior Football Championship: 2 – 1935, 2010

FBD Insurance League: 1 – 2004

All Stars: 4

  • Mickey Kearns: 1971
  • Barnes Murphy: 1974
  • Eamonn O'Hara: 2002
  • Charlie Harrison: 2010

Ladies' football

Sligo ladies' football team have won one All-Ireland Junior title in 2006. managed at the time by Paddy Henry.

They are currently{{When|date=March 2016}} competing in the Intermediate Championship.

They have had a number of club provincial Junior titles as both St. Nathy's and Drumcliffe have won and both have reached the All-Ireland Finals. St.Nathys are the strongest club side in the county at present,{{When|date=March 2016}} followed by Geevagh and St.Michaels.{{Citation needed|date=March 2016}}

Hurling

Sligo have not been considered a traditionally strong team in senior hurling, yet they have attained considerably more success than their football counterparts, with the county's most notable achievements being an appearance in the All-Ireland Junior final in 1968, and the National League Division 3 title in 2005,

In 2008, Sligo finally tasted All-Ireland success, albeit at the Third Tier level, when they claimed the Nicky Rackard Cup, the All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship for Tier Three (developing) hurling counties. Sligo have done extremely well but did not get promoted due to losing playoff with Roscommon. Paul Seevers was most likely the county's greatest hurling playing for more the 20 years, he won 3 Railway Cups with Connacht as well as a Nicky Rackard Cup in 2008, he also represented Ireland in the Shinty International against Scotland in 2003. Sligo won the All-Ireland Minor 'C' Hurling Championship in August 1986, defeating Tyrone by 4 points in Croke Park. They won the U16 All-Ireland 'C' hurling title after they beat Tyrone in the Monaghan Centre of Excellence in 2012. 2018 was a signature year for Sligo Hurling when both Senior and Minor Teams brought National Silverware back to the Land of the Shells. The Sligo Senior Hurlers achieved All- Ireland glory for the first time since 2008, then under the late Michael Galvin. Darragh Cox and Daithí Hand's men beat Lancashire in a thrilling Lory Meagher All Ireland Final with a late last minute goal to seal the winning points. Benny Kenny's Young u17 Squad achieved great success no less than a few weeks later as they beat Donegal in a convincing win to become All-Ireland Celtic Challenge Cup Champions in the Michael Feery Cup, beating Mayo, Roscommon and others along the way. 2018 was indeed a notable year for Sligo hurling.

Honours

  • Connacht Junior Hurling Championship: 2
    • 1968, 1973
  • The All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship : The Nicky Rackard Cup
    • 2008
  • Lory Meagher Cup:1
    • 2018

Current Hurling Squad 2019

  • Manager: Daithí Hand
  • Selector: Mark Burke
  • Coach: Colum O'Meara
  • Strength & Conditioning Coach: Seán Flannery
{{GAA squad start}}{{GAA squad player|no=1|pos=Goalkeeper|name=Kevan Brennan|club=Naomh Eoin}}{{GAA squad player|no=2|pos=Right Corner Back|name=Tommy Kelly|club=Calry/St. Joseph's}}{{GAA squad player|no=3|pos=Full Back|name=James Weir|club=St. Farnan's}}{{GAA squad player|no=4|pos=Left Corner Back|name= Cathal Jordan|club=Naomh Eoin (County Sligo)}}{{GAA squad player|no=5|pos=Right Half Back|name= Liam Reidy
|club=Calry/St. Joseph's}}{{GAA squad player|no=6|pos=Centre Back|name= Keith Raymond|club=Calry/St. Joseph's}}{{GAA squad player|no=7|pos=Left Half Back|name=Kevin Banks |club=Coolera/Strandhill GAA}}{{GAA squad player|no=8|pos=Midfield|name=Mark Comerford|club=Coolera/Strandhill}}{{GAA squad player|no=9|pos=Midfield|name=Ronan Cox (c)|club=[

Camogie

Sligo camogie official Nuala Kavanagh refereed the 1965 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship Final.

Under Camogie's National Development Plan 2010–2015, “Our Game, Our Passion,”[8] three new camogie clubs are to be established in Sligo and a county board formed by 2015.[9]

See also

  • Sligo Senior Club Football Championship
  • Sligo Senior Club Hurling Championship

References

1. ^{{cite news | first=Eamonn | last=Sweeney | url=http://www.independent.ie/sport/other-sports/about-time-lady-luck-gave-sligo-the-time-of-day-995360.html | title=About time Lady Luck gave Sligo the time of day | newspaper=Sunday Independent | publisher=Independent News & Media | date=8 July 2007 | accessdate=8 July 2007}}
2. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.hoganstand.com/ArticleForm.aspx?ID=97197|title=O'Hara ’embarrassed’ by Sligo's fall from grace|work=Hogan Stand|date=25 June 2008|accessdate=25 June 2008}}
3. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.thescore.ie/london-sligo-shock-victory-half-time-925641-May2013/ |title=London shock Sligo to secure first Connacht SFC victory since 1977 |work=The Score |date=26 May 2013 |accessdate=26 May 2013 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20131202233100/http://www.thescore.ie/london-sligo-shock-victory-half-time-925641-May2013/ |archivedate= 2 December 2013 |df= }}
4. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.rte.ie/sport/gaa/2013/0526/452776-london-dump-sligo-out-of-connacht/ |title=London dump Sligo out of Connacht |work=RTÉ Sport |date=26 May 2013 |accessdate=26 May 2013 }}{{dead link|date=June 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
5. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.irishtimes.com/sport/gaelic-games/gaelic-football/london-end-36-year-wait-for-connacht-championship-glory-1.1406892|title=London end 36-year wait for Connacht championship glory|newspaper=The Irish Times|date=26 May 2013|accessdate=26 May 2013}}
6. ^http://homepage.eircom.net/~bunsligeach/kearins.htm
7. ^http://www.hoganstand.com/Sligo/ArticleForm.aspx?ID=26256
8. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.independent.ie/sport/hurling/final-goal-for-camogie-2115510.html|title=Final goal for camogie|newspaper=Irish Independent|publisher=Independent News & Media|date=29 March 2010|accessdate=29 March 2010}}
9. ^National Development Plan 2010–2015, Our Game, Our Passion information page on camogie.ie, pdf download (778k) from Camogie.ie download site

External links

  • Official website
  • Sligo at Hogan Stand
  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20081007011109/http://www.hoganstand.com/sligo/Profile.aspx National and provincial titles won by Sligo teams]
{{Sligo GAA clubs}}{{Sligo GAA clubs competitions}}{{GAA National Leagues|Nicky Rackard Cup}}{{GAA bodies}}

3 : Sligo GAA|Gaelic games governing bodies in Connacht|Sport in County Sligo

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