2005–06 All-Ireland Junior Club Hurling Championship
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2005–06 All-Ireland Junior Club Hurling Championship
The 2005–06 All-Ireland Junior Club Hurling Championship was the third staging of the All-Ireland Junior Club Hurling Championship since its establishment by the Gaelic Athletic Association in 2002. The All-Ireland final was played on 12 February 2006 at Croke Park in Dublin, between Fr. O'Neill's from Cork and Erin's Own from Carlow, in what was their first ever meeting in the final. Fr. O'Neill's won the match by 2-16 to 2-10 to claim their first ever All-Ireland title. Munster Junior Club Hurling Championship Munster quarter-finals Munster semi-finals Munster final All-Ireland Junior Club Hurling Championship All-Ireland quarter-final All-Ireland semi-finals All-Ireland final Championship statistics Miscellaneous * Erin's Own became the first Carlow club to win a Leinster Championship title in any grade. References {{DEFAULTSORT:2005-06 All-Ireland Junior Club Hurling Championship All-Ireland Junior Club Hurling Championship All-Ireland Junior ...
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2004–05 All-Ireland Junior Club Hurling Championship
The 2004–05 All-Ireland Junior Club Hurling Championship was the second staging of the All-Ireland Junior Club Hurling Championship since its establishment by the Gaelic Athletic Association in 2002. The All-Ireland final was played on 28 March 2005 at Semple Stadium in Thurles, Co Tipperary, between Galmoy from Kilkenny and Oran from Roscommon, in what was their first ever meeting in the final. Galmoy won the match by 2-18 to 0-09 to claim their first ever All-Ireland title. Connacht Junior Club Hurling Championship Connacht final Leinster Junior Club Hurling Championship Leinster first round Leinster quarter-final Leinster semi-finals Leinster final Munster Junior Club Hurling Championship Munster quarter-finals Munster semi-finals Munster final Ulster Junior Club Hurling Championship Ulster final All-Ireland Junior Club Hurling Championship All-Ireland semi-finals All-Ireland final References {{DEFAULTSORT:2004-05 All-Irelan ...
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Wolfe Tones Na Sionna GAA
Wolfe Tones is a Gaelic Athletic Association club in Shannon in County Clare, Ireland. The Wolfe Tones na Sionna club was founded in 1967. Honours 2010s * Clare Senior B Football Championship (2): 2010, 2012 * Munster Intermediate Club Hurling Championship (1): 2015 * Clare Intermediate Hurling Championship (1): 2015 * Clare Intermediate Football Championship (1): 2014 * Clare Junior A Ladies Football Championship (1): 2010 * Clare Junior B Football Championship (1): 2016 * Clare Junior B Hurling Championship (1): 2016 * Clare Junior C Hurling Championship (1): 2015 * Clare Under-21 B Hurling Championship (1): 2010 * Clare Minor C Hurling Championship (2): 2012, 2013 2000s * Clare Senior Hurling Championship (1): 2006 * Clare Senior B Hurling Championship (1): 2008 * Clare Junior A Hurling Championship (1): 2008 * Clare Junior A Ladies Football Championship (3): 2003, 2004, 2009 * Clare Junior B Football Championship (1): 2000 * Clare Junior C Hurling Championship (1): 200 ...
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2005 In Hurling
5 (five) is a number, numeral and digit. It is the natural number, and cardinal number, following 4 and preceding 6, and is a prime number. Humans, and many other animals, have 5 digits on their limbs. Mathematics 5 is a Fermat prime, a Mersenne prime exponent, as well as a Fibonacci number. 5 is the first congruent number, as well as the length of the hypotenuse of the smallest integer-sided right triangle, making part of the smallest Pythagorean triple ( 3, 4, 5). 5 is the first safe prime and the first good prime. 11 forms the first pair of sexy primes with 5. 5 is the second Fermat prime, of a total of five known Fermat primes. 5 is also the first of three known Wilson primes (5, 13, 563). Geometry A shape with five sides is called a pentagon. The pentagon is the first regular polygon that does not tile the plane with copies of itself. It is the largest face any of the five regular three-dimensional regular Platonic solid can have. A conic is ...
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Carlow GAA
The Carlow County Board of the Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) () or Carlow GAA is one of the 32 county boards of the GAA in Ireland, and is responsible for Gaelic games in County Carlow and the Carlow county teams. The Carlow county football team play in the Leinster Senior Football Championship and in Division 3 of the Allianz Football League for 2019. The Carlow county hurling team compete in the Joe McDonagh Cup, the second tier of the Leinster Senior Hurling Championship, and in Division 1B of the National Hurling League in 2019. Football Clubs Clubs contest the Carlow Senior Football Championship. That competition's most successful club is Éire Óg, with 29 titles. Carlow clubs have a decent record in the All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship. Éire Óg has five Leinster titles, while O'Hanrahans has one. Éire Óg was deprived of the All-Ireland club title in 1993 by Cork's O'Donovan Rossa of Skibbereen. The club was defeated by 1-7 to 0-8 after a r ...
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Skehana GAA
Skehana or Skehanagh () is a small village and townland in County Galway, Ireland. The name Skehana derives from the Irish ''Sceith eánach'' meaning "place of the whitethorn". Together with nearby Menlough, Skehana is a half-parish within the diocesan parish of Killascobe in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Tuam. The parish church in Skehana was built and is included on the Record of Protected Structures maintained by Galway County Council. The local Gaelic Athletic Association club, Skehana Hurling Club, fields hurling Hurling (, ') is an outdoor Team sport, team game of ancient Gaelic culture, Gaelic Irish origin, played by men and women. One of Ireland's native Gaelic games, it shares a number of features with Gaelic football, such as the field and goa ... teams at underage and adult Junior A grades. The ruins of an Anglo-Norman tower house, Garbally Castle, are located immediately to the west of the local national school. See also * List of towns and villag ...
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Castleblayney Faughs GFC
Castleblayney Faughs are a Gaelic football club based in the town of Castleblayney, County Monaghan, Ireland. They are the most successful club in the Monaghan Senior Football Championship, having won the competition 37 times, and have also won the Ulster Senior Club Football Championship twice. It is a separate club from Castleblayney Hurling Club, the town's hurling club. History The current Castleblayney Faughs club was founded in November 1905. Within two years the Faughs won the Monaghan Senior Football Championship for the first time. After winning their second title in 1916, Castleblayney went on to beat Derry Sarsfields in the final of the National Aid tournament in 1917, a precursor to the Ulster Club Championship. They moved to their current grounds at St Mary's Park in 1953. Castleblayney reached the final of the Ulster Senior Club Football Championship in 1975, losing to St Joseph's. Blayney won the Ulster championship in 1986 beating All-Ireland champions Burre ...
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Thomas McCurtains GAA
Thomas McCurtains is a Gaelic Athletic Association club based in Goodmayes, East London, with Adult teams also training in Hackney Marshes and Stratford (London Stadium). The club covers a wide area and current players live in many different areas, including, London and Essex. The club was founded in 1920, making it one of London's oldest GAA clubs. The club offers hurling, camogie, gaelic football, ladies' football and GAA handball from under-8s up to adults. History The club was founded in 1920 from members of the Forest Gate Branch of the Gaelic League. It soon adopted the name of Tomás Mac Curtain (1884–1920), in honour of the late Lord Mayor of Cork whom members of the Royal Irish Constabulary (RIC) shot dead during the Irish War of Independence, but the club was often referred to as Forest Gate in the early days. McCurtains' first fixtures came in 1921 when the club entered the first London GAA league and championship competitions to be played after the First World War in ...
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Castleblayney Hurling Club
Castleblayney Hurling Club is a hurling club based in the town of Castleblayney, County Monaghan, Ireland. They are the most successful hurling club in Monaghan, having won the senior championship 34 times. It is a separate club from Castleblayney Faughs, the town's Gaelic football club. History The club was founded in 1906, and won their first senior championship in 1943, beating Carrickmacross in the final. They have gone on to dominate the competition, their most recent success coming in 2022. Castleblayney reached the final of the Ulster Junior Club Hurling Championship for the first time in 2005. Castleblayney won the championship with a 2–15 to 1–8 win over Strabane. In 2011, Blayney reached the final of the Ulster Intermediate Club Hurling Championship, where they were well beaten by Middletown. They would reach the junior final again in 2014, and won the title for a second time with a comfortable win over Na Magha. The club played in their third Ulster Junior fi ...
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Gaelic Grounds
The Gaelic Grounds, known for sponsorship reasons as the TUS Gaelic Grounds, is the principal GAA stadium in the city of Limerick in Ireland. Home to the Limerick hurling and football teams, it has a capacity of 44,023. History 9 October 1926 saw first steps taken towards creating the Limerick Gaelic Grounds. A farm containing was purchased at Coolraine on the Ennis Road for development as a GAA sports ground. Two years later, the new grounds at ''Páirc na nGael'' were officially opened with two junior hurling games. The first big effort to raise funds for the development of the grounds was in 1932, with the establishment of a development committee, whose remit was to level the pitch, providing sideline seating and erect a boundary wall. The 1950s saw crowds of up to 50,000 attending games in the grounds. In 1958, a new stand was built at the grounds. This stand, the Old Hogan Stand from Croke Park, was dismantled in Dublin and reassembled at the Gaelic Grounds in Limerick. ...
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FitzGerald Park, Kilmallock
John FitzGerald Park is a GAA stadium in Kilmallock, County Limerick, Ireland. It is the home of Kilmallock GAA club and is one of the main grounds of Limerick GAA's Gaelic football and hurling teams. Part of the stand was damaged by Storm Éowyn Storm Éowyn ( ) was a powerful and record-breaking extratropical cyclone which hit Republic of Ireland, Ireland, the Isle of Man and the United Kingdom on 24 January 2025 and hit Norway on the night of 24 January into 25 January 2025. The twent ... in January 2025. References Gaelic games grounds in the Republic of Ireland Limerick GAA Sports venues in County Limerick {{Ireland-sports-venue-stub ...
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MacDonagh Park
MacDonagh Park is a GAA stadium in Nenagh, County Tipperary, Ireland. It is the home ground of the Nenagh Éire Óg club and has often been used for inter-county matches, including some of Tipperary's National Hurling League The National Hurling League is an annual Inter county, inter-county hurling competition featuring teams from Ireland and England. Founded in 1925 by the Gaelic Athletic Association, it operates on a system of promotion and relegation within the l ... fixtures. See also * List of Gaelic Athletic Association stadiums References Nenagh Sports venues in County Tipperary Tipperary GAA venues {{Ireland-sports-venue-stub ...
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Brickey Rangers GAA
Brickey Rangers () is a Gaelic Athletic Association, GAA club 5 km west of Dungarvan, County Waterford, Ireland. They cater for Gaelic football, camogie and hurling. Their home ground is Bushy Park, which was opened in 1984. The club won the Waterford Senior Football Championship, on one occasion, in 1963. They have finished runners-up on five occasions, the last being in 1960. History Formation and development Founded in 1896 as Brickey Rangers (named for the River Brickey),https://www.clubinfo.ie/club/brickey-rangers-gfc/ the club did not have their first game until 1917. To determine the cost of a football, it was decided to go door-to-door throughout the Valley. Members of the club collected money from locals in the area. The first jersey's worn by the club were all white. The first game played by the club was against Modeligo in Dempsey's field Dungarvan GAA. The club captured their only Waterford Senior Football Championship in 1963. They have been relegated from the ...
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