THE TIPPERARY HURLERS are today savouring that winning feeling after they ended their recent losing steak in some style against Kilkenny yesterday.
Fresh from a first All-Ireland senior hurling final win since 2010, they brought the Liam MacCarthy Cup with them to Our Ladyโs Childrenโs Hospital in Crumlin this morning.
And the visiting Tipperary party certainly cheered up the young patients.
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big talent at 9 for Leinster..
Great to see Hugh doing so well. He was a key component in Belvo winning the cup for the last 2 years.
On the wider point of GAA / Rugby crossover and any perceived hostility, I donโt see any contradictions. Both sports have similar skills re ball handling and decision making and both are full contact sports. For as long back as I can recall there has always been a crossover of guys playing both codes. From Michael Hickey in the 1970s right up to present day with David Hawkshaw, Belvos current outhalf playing minor football for Dublin, to name but 2 and there have been more. Long may it continue
@Tom OโGorman: there is a huge battle at younger ages between GAA and rugby for athletes.. training being scheduled to clash forcing players to pick etc.
@Lf: very true LF and not likely to end any time soon. As a supporter of both codes I probably get less exercised about it than others who see talent migrating from their sport to โthe dark side โ as they might perceive it. Even within the GAA code thereโs a battle between hurling and football for the best available talent. As standards rise itโs becoming impossible for guys to meet the demands of playing rugby and GAA. Itโs a pity that lads are forced to make these choices at a younger and younger age nowadays.
@Tom OโGorman: I agree that having played both sports, their is a lot of crossover between them. As you say, it helps with spatial awareness and hand-eye coordination.
However, at an elite level, and particularly in the forwards, the physical demands of each sport are like chalk and cheese by the time a player is 18 years old.
Backs can enjoy the best of both worlds up until minor level but elite rugby players are conditioned in completely different ways to GAA players by the time their 18.
Iโm surprised the GAA charm offensive is still carrying on now that the RWC bid is dead.
@Alistair Fyffe: really? Thereโs hostility from a lot of people with GAA roots towards rugby, but thereโs very little in the other direction. The โcharm offensiveโ has been around for a lot longer than the RWC bid, and there are a lot of players in Irish rugby with roots in GAA. Itโs not an offensive.
@Conor Paddington: Conor, that is very simply not true. There is hostility within rugby circles towards all sports and pressure to only play it. That also applies to soccer and gaa within certain clubs( the most successful ones because they can). To say itโs only in one direction is naive.
@Conor Paddington: I have to disagree here Conor. I remember playing rugby in UCC and one fella put on a Cork GAA jersey after training and he got a pile of abuse โ you know the kind that pretends to be all in good fun but reveals some actual resentment. There are always people on here moaning that our rugby team would be much better if it wasnโt for the GAA taking away all these potential athletes. The hostility is definitely a two-way street.