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Kerry GAA

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Kerry GAA
Irish:Ciarraí
Nickname(s):The Kingdom,
The Green and Gold
Province:Munster
Dominant sport:Gaelic football
Ground(s):Fitzgerald Stadium
Austin Stack Park
Currans
County colours:GreenGold
County teams
NFL:Division 1
NHL:Division 2A
Football Championship:Sam Maguire Cup
Hurling Championship:Joe McDonagh Cup
Ladies' Gaelic football:Brendan Martin Cup

TheKerry County Boardof theGaelic Athletic Association(GAA), orKerry GAA,is one of the 32county boardsof the GAA inIreland.It is responsible forGaelic gamesinCounty Kerry,and for the Kerry county teams.

The Kerry branch of the Gaelic Athletic Association was founded in the year 1888.Footballis the dominant sport in the county, with both the men's and women's teams among the strongest in the country at senior level. Thecounty football teamwas the fourth from theprovinceofMunsterto win anAll-Ireland Senior Football Championship(SFC), as well as to appear in the final, followingLimerick,TipperaryandCork.Kerry is the most successful in the history of the All-Ireland SFC, topping thelist of counties for All-Irelands won.It has won the competition on 38 occasions, including two four-in-a-rows (19291932,19781981) and two three-in-a-rows (19391941,19841986). It has also lost more finals than any other county (23).

Thecounty hurling teamwon anAll-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship(SHC) title in1891,but is no longer capable of competing at this level. The team instead competes in the sport's secondary inter-county competition, theJoe McDonagh Cup.Thecamogieteam does not compete at senior level.

Club competitions

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County

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– Molyneaux Cup – McElligott Cup – Barrett Cup – Cahill Cup - Kerry Cup

Divisional championships

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Football

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Hurling

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Kerry GAA divisions

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East Kerry

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Mid Kerry

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North Kerry

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South Kerry

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West Kerry

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Men's football

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County team

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Kerry are the most successful team infootballhistory, having won theAll-Ireland Senior Football Championshipon 38 occasions and theNational Football League21 times. The team is also the holders of a number of distinctive records in football championship history. They have contested59 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Finals,the next highest participator beingDublinwith 36 appearances. Kerry's record in the All-Ireland Senior Football Championship involves having played 30 of the 31 other counties, with onlyKilkennybeing the exception.[1]

The traditional Irish game ofcaid,from which modern football developed, was especially popular in Kerry. The GAA was formed in 1884 and codified the modern rules of the game, which were soon adopted in Kerry clubs such asLaune Rangers.Despite this, the county team did not win an All-Ireland Football Championship in the nineteenth century. The1903 titlewas the first won by Kerry, with them beatingLondonin the final at a time when London were given a bye to that stage of the championship; Kerry's overall exceptional success in the game began in this period.[citation needed]

The Kerry team of the 1970s and 1980s were considered to be the greatest in the history of football[2][3][4]and its manager (Mick O'Dwyer) one of the greatest of all time.[2][5][6]Of the 20 All-Ireland finals held during those two decades, Kerry participated in 12, with victory coming on 9 occasions. During this time most other finals were won byDublin,and there was a major rivalry between the two counties especially during the 1970s and 1980s. In 1982, Kerry came within one minute of winning an unprecedented fifth All-Ireland title in a row, only for a late goal byOffaly'sSéamus Darby(controversial as many[who?]claimed Darby pushed the Kerry defender, Tommy Doyle, in the back) gave the title to Offaly. This goal was voted third in a poll to find theTop 20 GAA Moments.

Kerry team celebrating withSam Maguire CupinTraleein 2007

Towards the end of the 1980s, Kerry went into decline and did not appear in an All-Ireland final for 11 years, between 1986 and 1997. The 1997 victory, however, would mark the beginning of a revival for Kerry which spanned roughly the first decade of the 21st century. Of the 15 All-Ireland finals between 1997 and 2011, Kerry contested ten and won six, including five titles in the 2000s. In 2006 and 2007, Kerry won consecutive All-Ireland titles (the first to do so sinceCorkin 1989 and 1990), while in 2009, they became only the third team to reach six consecutive All-Ireland finals, winning their 36th title by beatingCorkin that final. Kerry quietly exited the 2010 and 2012 All-Ireland Senior Football Championships at the quarter-final stage, losing toDownandDonegalrespectively, whileDublindefeated them in dramatic fashion on the last kick in the 2011 final.[7][8][9]Dublin were also responsible for their exit at the semi-final stage in 2013 in a closely contested classic match.[10]Kerry won their 37th All-Ireland title in2014against Donegal, winning by a margin of 2–09 to 0–12.[11]This win was notable due to Kerry's fairly young squad and a belief that Kerry were becoming unable to produce the talent they once had, after punditJoe Brollyhad suggested as such.[12]In the aftermath of the game, Kerry playerKieran Donaghygave a famous interview in which he directly referenced Brolly's claim that the 'production line' in Kerry had stopped, with Donaghy speaking directly to the camera and asking 'Well, Joe Brolly, what do you think of that?'.[12]The next year, Kerry again reached the All-Ireland final, only this time to be comfortably beaten by Dublin, 0–12 to 0–9. The next two years saw Kerry bow out at the Semi-Final stage. In 2016, they were narrowly defeated by Dublin in a thrilling encounter, while in 2017 they were beaten by Mayo in a replay – their first championship defeat to Mayo in 21 years.[13][14][15]Kerry crashed out of the 2018 championships at the group stages of the new Super Eights format. However, in 2019 Kerry reached their first All-Ireland final for four years. The first match was drawn 1–16 to 1–16, with the final to be played on 14 September.[16]

Kerry's 2009 title was also notable since it followed the return ofTadhg Kennelly.The son ofTim Kennelly,a five-time All-Ireland winner with Kerry, and a former talented underage player with the county, he had joined theAFL'sSydney Swansand become the first Irish player to win an AFL Premiership in 2005 (the Swans' first in 72 years). Following Tim's death later that year, he elected to return to Ireland and rejoin Kerry in 2009 in pursuit of winning an All-Ireland of his own playing for the county. After he succeeded and became the first player to have won an All-Ireland and an AFL Premiership, he returned to Australia and the Swans to finish his career.

Hurling

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Clubs

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Kerry has a shortage of hurling referees at club level. A 2020 report cited the example that, when the Kilmoyley, Lixnaw or Causeway clubs are playing Ballyduff in any game, only two referees can officiate (due to the need for an appearance of neutrality) and one of these has work commitments outside Kerry, which affects his availability.[17]

County team

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For many years the senior team played in the Junior and Intermediate Championships and had some success. They won All-Ireland titles at Junior level in 1961 and 1972, and won a Munster Championship at junior level in 1956. At Intermediate level they won Munster titles in 1970 and 1973.[citation needed]In 2003, team made it to the fourth round of the qualifiers only to go down toLimerick1–14 to 0–24 in Austin Stack Park in Tralee. Along the way they beatWestmeath,Carlowand beatenUlsterfinalistsDerry.The wins over Westmeath and Carlow represented the first time a Kerry team strung two consecutive Championship victories together. It also marked the first occasion that the Kerry hurling team played more championship games then the Kerry football team. The advent of theChristy Ring Cuphas seen Kerry become very competitive. They first made the semi-finals in 2009 where they lost out toCarlowafter a replay. They went a step more in 2010 making the final but losing out toWestmeath.In 2011 they again made the final, but this time won the title with voctory overWicklow.From 2013 to 2015 they made the final each year, losing toDownin 2013 andKildarein 2014 before finally getting over the line thanks to victory overDerry.Kerry won the Division 2A final of the2015 National Hurling Leagueand advanced to the relegation/promotion match with favoritesAntrim,a late point by substitute John Egan saw Kerry advance to Division 1B.[18]In 2016, Kerry played in theLeinster Senior Hurling Championshipround robin along withCarlow,WestmeathandOffaly.During the2018 Munster Senior Hurling LeagueKerry recorded their first ever senior victory over Cork beating them 1-23 to 1-13 atAustin Stack Park.[19]On 8 January 2022 Kerry recorded their first victory over Tipperary 0-17 to 0-14 in the Munster Hurling Cup quarter-final.[20]At the time it was deemed Kerry's greatest hurling success in Austin Stack Park since they beat All-Ireland champions Clare by 3-7 to 1-8 in opening round of 1995-96 NHL.[20]

Ladies' football

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Kerry have the following achievements in ladies' football.

Camogie

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Cillardand a selected Kerry team won divisional honours atFéile na nGaelin 2008, 2009 and 2010.

Under Camogie's National Development Plan 2010–2015, "Our Game, Our Passion",[21]Donegal,Kerry,MayoandMonaghanwere to get a total of 14 new clubs by 2015.[22]

Kerry won Division 3 of the National Camogie League in 2018

Kerry won Division 2A of the National Camogie League in 2023 [They defeated Meath in the Final at Croke Park in April]

Clanmaurice Camogie Club from North Kerry won the 2023 All-Ireland Intermediate Club Camogie Championship [They beat Na Fianna (Meath) in the Final at Croke Park on 17 December by 1-7 to 0-7]

Eponyms

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Several clubs in cities worldwide use the "Kerry" or "The Kingdom" name. These include:

Proposed museum

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A "Kerry GAA Museum" at Fitzgerald Stadium in Killarney has been proposed. An application for planning permission was made in 2017 by Kerry Gaelic Culture Museum Ltd. This application expired in 2022.[23]

References

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  1. ^Nolan, Sean (2 August 2012)."Hospital Pass: Kerry eye up Kilkenny and where Andy Moran wants to play the All-Ireland final".JOE.Retrieved2 August2012.
  2. ^abKeane, Paul (20 April 2003)."GAA: Micko's still the best in my book says Armagh's Kernan".Sunday Mirror.Archived fromthe originalon 28 October 2008.
  3. ^"Tears flow freely in Listowel on the day they buried a real giant".The Kingdom.15 December 2005. Archived fromthe originalon 23 June 2007.Retrieved15 December2005.
  4. ^"Better late than never".Irish Examiner.24 September 2005. Archived fromthe originalon 26 June 2007.Retrieved24 September2005.
  5. ^Ó Sé, Páidí(18 May 2008)."Last hurrah looms for football's most remarkable man".Sunday Independent.Retrieved18 May2008.
  6. ^"Where next for Mick O'Dwyer?".Irish News UK – News from the Irish Community in Britain.Archived fromthe originalon 18 June 2015.Retrieved8 February2009.
  7. ^"Down shock Kerry at Croke Park".RTÉ Sport.31 July 2010.Retrieved31 July2010.
  8. ^Keys, Colm (7 August 2012)."House that Jack built in danger of collapse".Irish Independent.Independent News & Media.Retrieved7 August2012.
  9. ^Moynihan, Michael (1 July 2009)."Brolly: Kerry in 'terminal decline'".Irish Examiner.Retrieved1 July2009.
  10. ^"Colm Keys: Was Dublin v Kerry the greatest game Gaelic football has seen?".Irish Independent.13 January 2015.Retrieved13 January2015.
  11. ^"As it happened: Kerry 2–9 Donegal 0–12".Independent.ie.Retrieved13 September2019.
  12. ^ab"Tomás O'Sé pokes fun at Joe Brolly's prediction of a Kerry demise".Independent.ie.Retrieved13 September2019.
  13. ^O'Toole, Fintan."Late points carry Dublin to victory over Kerry in All-Ireland semi-final cracker".The42.Retrieved13 September2019.
  14. ^O'Toole, Fintan."Durcan rescues a draw for Mayo against Kerry in All-Ireland semi-final thriller".The42.Retrieved13 September2019.
  15. ^O'Brien, Kevin."Rochford gets it right as Mayo claim first win over Kerry in 21 years to seal return to All-Ireland final".The42.Retrieved13 September2019.
  16. ^Sweeney, Peter (1 September 2019)."History suspended as Dublin and Kerry share the spoils".{{cite journal}}:Cite journal requires|journal=(help)
  17. ^"Kerry hurling referee shortage causing 'unhealthy' reliance on one official".Irish Examiner.1 December 2020.
  18. ^Keane, Paul (11 April 2015)."Latest Hurling News, Results & Fixtures – RTÉ Sport – GAA".www.rte.ie.
  19. ^"Chips fall for Kerry hurling in historic win over Cork".RTE.15 January 2018.Retrieved24 January2022.
  20. ^ab"Kerry Record First Ever Senior Hurling Victory Over Tipperary".Balls.Retrieved8 January2022.
  21. ^"Final goal for camogie".Irish Independent.29 March 2010.Retrieved29 March2010.
  22. ^National Development Plan 2010–2015, Our Game, Our Passion information page oncamogie.ieArchived1 September 2010 at theWayback Machine,pdf download (778k) fromCamogie.ie download siteArchived16 September 2011 at theWayback Machine
  23. ^Fernane, Stephen (20 July 2022)."Kerry GAA Museum planning permission date expires without renewed application".The Kerryman.
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