Paudie Fitzgerald Explained

Paudie Fitzgerald
Fullname:Padraig Fitzgerald
Nickname:Paudi, Paudie
Birth Date:5 December 1933
Birth Place:Lispole, County Kerry, Ireland
Discipline:Road bicycle racing
Role:Rider
Amateurteam3:Kerry
Amateurteam4:Dingle Cycling Club
Majorwins:Rás Tailteann (1956)

Padraig "Paudie" Fitzgerald[1] (5 December 1933 – 3 December 2020)[2] was an Irish cyclist. He won the Rás Tailteann in 1956.[3] He was also known for a failed attempt to represent Ireland at the 1956 Summer Olympics.

Early life

Fitzgerald is a native of Lispole.[4]

Career

Fitzgerald started his career at grass track racing.

His first big win was a race from Dublin to Galway to Dublin, for which he won a battery for a bicycle light.

Fitzgerald competed in the first Rás, in 1953.[5]

In the 1956 Rás Tailteann, Fitzgerald won two stages and the overall prize.[6]

1956 Olympics

Fitzgerald, along with Tommy Flanagan and Tom Gerrard, attempted to compete for Ireland at the team road race event at the 1956 Summer Olympics in Melbourne. They were chosen by the 32-county National Cycling Association (NCA), which was not internationally recognised (instead, there was Cumann Rothaíochta na hÉireann and the Northern Ireland Cycling Federation). They aimed to "gate-crash" the race, remove Union Jack flags and extinguish the Olympic flame; they succeeded in none of these, but did attract international attention to the NCA's plight.[7]

Later life

Fitzgerald retired from cycling in 1957. He ran a hardware shop, Fitzgerald's Homevalue, in Dingle.[8] He was married twice and has seven children; Gaelic footballer Paul Geaney is one of his grandchildren.

He lived in Dingle and was President of Dingle Cycling Club and organised "Ride Dingle" a new Dingle-based cycling race.[9]

Fitzgerald died on 3 December 2020, aged 86.[10] [11]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The great road race robbery (almost). 3 December 2006. The Age.
  2. Web site: A cyclist, a businessman, and a man with a will to fight back. independent.
  3. Web site: Loved interviewing 1956 Rás Tailteann winner Paudie Fitzgerald for this week's Kerryman. . Twitter. Tadhg. Evans. 24 May 2018.
    - Web site: PHOTOS: A Glorious Morning For Na Gaeil's Annual Cycle. 22 April 2018.
    - Book: Daly, Tom. The Rás: The Story of Ireland's Unique Bike Race. 26 January 2019. Collins Press. 9781848891487 . Google Books.
    - Book: Muircheartaigh, Micheál. From Borroloola to Mangerton Mountain: Travels and Stories from Ireland's Most Beloved Broadcaster. 26 January 2019. Penguin Ireland. 9781844881215 . Google Books.
  4. Book: Fogarty, Weeshie. My Beautiful Obsession - Chasing the Kerry Dream. 1 October 2012. The Collins Press. 9781848899827 . Google Books.
  5. Web site: PAUDIE FITZGERALD INTERVIEW. www.irishcycling.com.
  6. Web site: Rás Tailteann - 1950's. www.rastailteann.com.
  7. Web site: Tomkins. Shea. Not all Memories from 1956 Melbourne Olympics are Golden. Ireland's Own.
    - Book: Holten, Anthony. 1 April 2014. Of Other Days. Anthony Holten. 9781291851458 . Google Books.
    - Web site: Terrace Talk :: Interviews :: Paudie Fitzgerald. Terrace Talk.
    - Web site: 23 November 2012. An Olympic tale that deserves re-telling. The Kerryman. Ireland.
  8. Web site: Fitzgerald's Homevalue. Web. Master. dingle-peninsula.ie.
  9. Web site: 'Ride Dingle' unveiled – Ride Dingle.
  10. Web site: Paudie Fitzgerald (Uncle Pat) has died aged 86. . Twitter. Monty . Mythen. 3 December 2020.
  11. News: Mac an tSíthigh . Seán . 3 December 2020 . Kerry cycling legend Paudie Fitzgerald dies aged 87 . Raidió Teilifís Éireann (RTÉ) . 5 December 2020.