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Donal O'Connell (192826 January 2016),
Dublin Dublin (; , or ) is the capital and largest city of Republic of Ireland, Ireland. On a bay at the mouth of the River Liffey, it is in the Provinces of Ireland, province of Leinster, bordered on the south by the Dublin Mountains, a part of th ...
, Ireland, was an Irish
road racing cyclist Road bicycle racing is the cycle sport discipline of road cycling, held primarily on paved roads. Road racing is the most popular professional form of bicycle racing, in terms of numbers of competitors, events and spectators. The two most common ...
, and later cycling sport administrator. He set several national records and qualified for the Olympic Games, and served as a race official and administrator for more than 40 years, holding office at club level for more than 30 years, later holding several national roles and then co-founding the ''Irish Veteran Cycling Association''.


Life


Cycling career


Early cycling career

O'Connell began cycling with the
Dublin Wheelers Dublin Wheelers is a cycling club operating from the northside of Dublin, Ireland since 1933. As of 2022, it is based in Santry. History The club was established in 1933 by a group of six friends on a weekend away cycling in Rostrevor, County ...
cycling club in 1948, participating in road races and time trials, most notably from 1948 to 1956; he was later made a life member of the club. In 1952, he was selected to ride for Ireland in the World Championships in Luxembourg, and in international races on the Isle of Man alongside Shay Eliott. He also won an Olympic trial race that year, qualifying to attend, but Ireland was excluded from the Olympics in cycling at that time. In 1953, he won the national Road Race Championships, just ahead of Shay Eliott and then
Jim McQuaid James K. McQuaid (1920 – 16 September 1991) was an Irish road racing cyclist and later cycling administrator, coach and team manager from Dungannon, County Tyrone, Northern Ireland, for most of his life based in Dublin, Ireland. From a family ...
. He also secured several place-to-place Irish records, such as Dublin-Wexford in 3 hours and 58 minutes, and Dublin-Derry in 7:09.


Club and national office

Having held various club offices, he was nominated by the Dublin Wheelers and elected as Road Racing Secretary of the internationally recognised cycling federation, the Irish Cycling Federation (ICF), for 1972-1974. The Dublin Wheelers were very active in national cycling governance in the 1960s and 1970s, with, in 1972, for example, Liam King as general secretary and Joe Doyle as treasurer, in addition to O'Connell as road racing secretary, Paddy McInerney time trial secretary, and Steve Lawless organiser of the Tour of Ireland, while
Willie Marks William Marks, born 1919 or 1920 in Dublin, Ireland, was an Irish road racing cyclist, and later cycling administrator, and one of the longest-participating club members in Irish cycling, joining the Dublin Wheelers Dublin Wheelers is a cy ...
also competed for a national committee general position. Along with
Ian Gallahar Ian Gallahar was an Irish road racing cyclist, and later race organiser, and national and international commissaire, involved in the organisation of the sport in Ireland and internationally for more than 30 years. Cycling career Gallahar cycl ...
as P.R.O. for several years, all of these served many years in national sport organisation. O'Connell was a representative of the ICF to the global cycling conference of 1974, and seated on the
Olympic Council of Ireland The Olympic Federation of Ireland or OFI ( ga, Cónaidhm Oilimpeach na hÉireann) (called the Irish Olympic Council until 1952 and the Olympic Council of Ireland until 2018) is the National Olympic Committee (NOC) of the island of Ireland. At ...
. He later participated in the Tripartite Committee, which worked between the various cycling bodies on the island of Ireland, and on the disciplinary and sporting committees of the fully unified Federation of Irish Cycling. O'Connell also worked on the organising committee of the Tour of Ireland from 1968 to 1980. O'Connell qualified as a masseur and accompanied Irish cycling teams abroad in that capacity. He also worked as a team mechanic, and team manager, and with the Falcon team in the Nissan International Classic in Ireland over two years.


Veterans

In 1966, O'Connell co-founded the Irish Veteran Cyclists Association (IVCA), and cycled competitively at veteran level until 1988, and casually until the 2010s. In 1989, he became general secretary of the IVCA, serving for more than a decade, and later being elected as Honorary President for life.


Personal life

O'Connell was a staff member and later a manager at Frawley's department store on Thomas Street in Dublin's Liberties. He married Elizabeth (Lily) O'Connell, whose sister Rita married the brother of his friend and fellow Dublin Wheelers committee member, Joe Doyle. The O'Connells had five children: Brendan, Anne, Moureen, Donal, and Shane. Three children, and his wife, as well as grandchildren and great-grandchildren, survived him. He lived most of his life in the Manor Estate between
Terenure Terenure (), originally called ''Roundtown'', is an affluent, middle class suburb of Dublin in Ireland. It is located in the city's D6W postcode area. Location and transport Terenure lies primarily in the administrative area of Dublin City ...
,
Kimmage Kimmage ( or ''Camaigh uisce'', meaning "crooked water-meadow", possibly referring to the meandering course of the River Poddle), is a suburb on the south side of the city of Dublin in Ireland. Location Kimmage is to the south of Dublin city c ...
and Greenhills. He became ill in 2013, died 26 January 2016; his funeral was at Greenhills and he was buried at Palmerstown Cemetery.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Oconnell, Donal 1928 births Irish male cyclists Dublin Wheelers cyclists Irish cycling administrators Olympic Federation of Ireland officials 2016 deaths