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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  





2 Today  





3 Notable players  





4 Roll of honour  



4.1  Hurling  





4.2  Camogie  





4.3  Gaelic football  







5 References  














Kevin's Hurling Club







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Coordinates: 53°1946.33N 6°1736.61W / 53.3295361°N 6.2935028°W / 53.3295361; -6.2935028
 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

(Redirected from Kevin's Hurling club)

Kevin's
Cumman Báire Caoimhín
Founded:1902
County:Dublin
Nickname:Caoimhin
Colours:Blue and white
Grounds:Dolphin Park
Coordinates:53°19′46.33″N 6°17′36.61″W / 53.3295361°N 6.2935028°W / 53.3295361; -6.2935028
Playing kits

Standard colours

Kevin's is a hurling club based in Dolphin's Barn in Dublin's south inner city, Ireland.

History

[edit]

Kevin's began promoting hurling and Gaelic football in Dublin's south inner city in 1902. It evolved from the Craobh Chaoimhín of Conradh na Gaeilge. The founder members included Joe O'Neill and Jim Maguire. Information on the formative years is sparse, but Harry O'Kelly, a staunch club member, was believed to be of central importance to the club at this time.[1]

The club attained senior status in 1910, in the mid-1920s and again in the late 1930s and enjoyed sporadic success at senior, intermediate, junior and juvenile levels. In the mid forties, Synge Street P.P. G.F.C. was formed and it assumed responsibility for football in the area. Kevin's became solely a hurling club.

In 1993 history was made. The foundation of Kevin's Camogie section was the result of a new policy being pushed by both the younger members and parent, who wanted to create both a family and community atmosphere within the area.

Kevin's could be regarded as the oldest club in Dublin (with an unbroken affiliation to the Dublin GAA). However, the factual accuracy of this claim was never verified.

Today

[edit]

Today, Kevin's Hurling and Camogie club continues to promote hurling in Dublin's south inner city and is proactive in attracting young people in the area to the games of hurling and camogie. The club's home ground is in Dolphin Park on the Crumlin Road.[2]

The club runs an Easter Hurling Festival which is an All-Ireland Event organised to pay tribute to and remember past members for their dedication and loyalty to the club. The event was first run in April 2007 and it is officially recognised by the Dublin County Board and the GAA. Emeralds of Urlngford won the inaugural Brian Scott Cup (Senior Competition), beating Camross of Laois in the final. The last tournament was won by Meelick Eyrecourt of Galway in 2010.

Notable players

[edit]

Joe O'Neill was the first club captain 1902. A successful builder, his portfolio included Synge Street CBS Primary School, a stronghold for Kevin's hurlers to this very day.

John Dunne was the first Kevin's man to represent the club at senior inter-county level in 1914.

Joe Connolly (Leader in City Hall) and Seamus Doyle (Battle of Mount Street Bridge) were two of many Kevin's men who took part in the 1916 uprising.

Sylvestor "Vesty" Muldowney, Charlie McMahon, Brendan Kinna and John Lawless played for successful Dublin teams in the late 1920s and early 1930s. Kevin's supplied a number of players to the first county team to win a National League title. Vesty played a prominent role in 1932 when Dublin reached the National League final and Charlie won an All-Ireland medal with the Dubs in 1939.

Finbar Fagan represented Dublin at Minor level in 1938, and played against Christy Ring in the All-Ireland final of that year. Other notable players from that era included Jimmy Bradley and Peader Carton (grandfather of Peader and Michael from the O'Tooles club).

Freddie Strahan was a key member of the club team that won the 1956 Dublin Minor Hurling Championship. The following year he signed for the Shelbourne Soccer Club and represented Ireland at senior international level. Renowned tenor John McNally was also on that 1956 panel, but was more noted for his singing ability.

Gerry Ryan hurled with the Dubs at various levels before representing the club at senior inter-county level for a number of years in the early 1970s.

Mick Bollard hurled at minor and under-21 level with the Dubs before establishing himself as a regular keeper on the senior hurling team in the early 1980s. Mick was on the last senior county hurling panel to reach the National League semi-finals. Other prominent club hurlers who played senior inter-county level included John Treacey, Donal Tutty, Joey Dalton, Andy Doyle, Greg Balfe and Tommy Daly.

Sean O'Shea is the only Kevin's man to hurl senior with the Dubs in its second century.

Roll of honour

[edit]

Hurling

[edit]

Camogie

[edit]

Gaelic football

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "History of Kevins Hurling Club". Kevins.ie.
  • ^ "Kevins Chairman's Greeting". Kevins.ie.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Kevin%27s_Hurling_Club&oldid=1114733291"

    Categories: 
    Gaelic Athletic Association clubs established in 1902
    1902 establishments in Ireland
    Gaelic games clubs in Dublin (city)
    Hurling clubs in Dublin (city)
    Hidden categories: 
    Pages using gadget WikiMiniAtlas
    EngvarB from September 2018
    Use dmy dates from September 2018
    Articles lacking reliable references from March 2008
    All articles lacking reliable references
    Articles containing Irish-language text
    Coordinates not on Wikidata
     



    This page was last edited on 8 October 2022, at 00:29 (UTC).

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