Clan na Gael GAA (Armagh) explained

Club Gaa:Clan na Gael Gaelic Athletic Club
Crest:Clan na Gael Gaelic Athletic Club logo.png
Irish:CLG Clan na Gael
County:Armagh
Nickname:The Clans, The Blues
Founded:1922
Coordinates:54.4622°N -6.3486°W
Leftarm:0000FF
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Rightarm:0000FF
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Clan na Gael Gaelic Athletic Club (Irish: CLG Clan na Gael) is a Gaelic Athletic Association club situated in the town of Lurgan, County Armagh, Northern Ireland. The club's pitch, Davitt Park, is named in honour of Michael Davitt, also the original club name.

History

The club, as Clan na Gael, was formed in 1922 in the Francis Street area following the demise of its long standing predecessor, The Michael Davitts. The club has been quite successful over the decades, bettered only in Armagh by Crossmaglen Rangers. Clan na Gael's height of dominance came in the 1970s, when the club won the Ulster Club Championship three times, and reached the final of the All-Ireland Club Championship, only to be beaten in a replay by University College Dublin, who had a high number of inter-county players in their squad. However, recently championship success has been minimal at senior level, the last Armagh Senior Championship was won by the club was in 1994, but winning the Armagh Intermediate Championship in 2021, has allowed the club to return to Senior level.

The club came to its lowest point for a long time when it was relegated in 2004 from the Armagh All County League Division I to the All County League Division II, for only the second time in the history of the club (and the League). Things however improved with the club retaining ACL Division I status in 2005 and also having a run in the Armagh Championship, reaching the semi-final only to be beaten after a replay with Dromintee. In 2006 Clan na Gael was beaten by Crossmaglen in the final. They reached the 2008 quarter-finals but were beaten by Crossmaglen and again in 2009 by Armagh Harps after a replay.Since 2013 the club was competing in the county's Intermediate Championship, returning to Senior Championship in 2021.[1]

Achievements

Notable players

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Cross and Harps win in Armagh . BBC News . 2008-09-14 . 4 August 2010.
  2. Web site: Stefan Campbell: 'I had not time to sulk after Armagh All-Ireland disappointment. The Irish News. 26 September 2023.
  3. Web site: O'Hagan set to quit. BBC. 23 September 2002.
  4. Web site: Hugh Kelly. Northern Ireland Football Greats. 20 October 2010.
  5. News: Neighbours St Paul's and Clan na Gael do battle for bragging rights and silverware in all-Lurgan Armagh championship final. The Irish News. Andy. Watters. 16 September 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20220817224053/https://www.irishnews.com/sport/gaafootball/2020/09/16/news/neighbours-st-paul-s-and-clan-na-gael-do-battle-for-bragging-rights-and-silverware-in-all-lurgan-armagh-championship-final-2068049/. 17 August 2022. ...Smyth, winner of nine senior championship medals, the Armagh skipper in the 1977 All-Ireland final and then a popular GAA commentator on BBC..