William O'Donoghue explained

William O'Donoghue
Irish:Liam Ó Donnchú
Birth Date:1994
Birth Place:Caherdavin, Limerick, Ireland
Feet:6
Inches:5
Sport:Hurling
Code:Hurling
County:Limerick
Province:Munster
Club:Na Piarsaigh
Clyears:2013-present
Clcounty:6
Clprovince:3
Clallireland:1
Colleges:University of Limerick
Fitz:0
Colyears:2013-2017
Counties:Limerick
Icyears:2017-present
Icposition:Midfield
Icapps(Points):41 (0-11)
Icprovince:6
Icallireland:5
Nhl:3
Allstars:2
Icupdate:19:44, 07 July 2024

William O'Donoghue (born 1994) is an Irish hurler who plays as a midfielder for club side Na Piarsaigh which he captains and at inter-county level with the Limerick senior hurling team.[1]

Playing career

Club

O'Donoghue joined the Na Piarsaigh club at a young age and played in all grades at juvenile and underage levels, enjoying championship success in the under-16, minor and under-21 grades.

On 6 October 2013, O'Donoghue was at right wing-forward when Na Piarsaigh defeated Adare by 0-14 to 0-12 to win the Limerick Senior Championship.[2] He was switched to midfield for the subsequent Munster Championship, which culminated with him winning a provincial medal after a 4-14 to 0-08 defeat of Sixmilebridge in the final.[3]

O'Donoghue won a second Limerick Championship medal on 11 October 2015 after a 1-22 to 4-12 defeat of Patrickswell in the final.[4] Later that season he won a second Munster medal after a 2-18 to 2-11 defeat of Ballygunner.[5] On 17 March 2016, O'Donoghue won an All-Ireland medal when Na Piarsaigh defeated Ruairí Óg by 2-25 to 2-14 in the final.[6]

On 15 October 2017, O'Donoghue won a third Limerick Championship medal when Na Piarsaigh defeated Kilmallock by 1-22 to 2-14 in the final.[7] He later won a third Munster Championship medal when Na Piarsaigh defeated Ballygunner by 3-15 to 2-10 in the final.[8] On 17 March 2018, O'Donoghue was at midfield when Na Piarsaigh were defeated by Cuala in the All-Ireland final.[9]

On 27 October 2018, O'Donoghue won a fourth Limerick Championship medal as captain following Na Piarsaigh's 2-22 to 3-10 defeat of Doon.[10]

O'Donoghue retained the captaincy for the 2019 championship, however, Na Piarsaigh surrendered their title following a 1-17 to 0-15 defeat by Patrickswell in the 2019 final.[11]

On 19 September 2020, O'Donoghue captained Na Piarsaigh in a third consecutive final and their eighth overall in ten seasons. He ended the game with a fifth winners' medal after the 5-27 to 1-12 victory over Doon.[12]

Inter-county

Under-21

O'Donoghue joined the Limerick under-21 hurling team in 2014.[13] He later joined the Limerick under-21 Gaelic football team.[14]

Senior

On 19 February 2017, O'Donoghue made his first appearance for the Limerick senior hurling team in a 6-21 to 3-08 defeat of Kerry in the National Hurling League.[15] In the subsequent league semi-final against Tipperary he scored his first goal in a 1-21 to 1-11 defeat by Tipperary.[16]

On 19 August 2018, O'Donoghue was introduced as a 66th-minute substitute for Darragh O'Donovan when Limerick won their first All-Ireland title in 45 years after a 3-16 to 2-18 defeat of Galway in the final.[17]

In December 2018, O'Donoghue was included on the Limerick panel for the upcoming season.[18] Injury ruled him out of the National League, however, he returned to training in March 2019.[19] On 30 June 2019, O'Donoghue won a Munster Championship medal at midfield following Limerick's 2-26 to 2-14 defeat of Tipperary in the final.[20] He ended the year by receiving his first All-Star nomination.[21]

Career statistics

TeamYearNational LeagueMunsterAll-IrelandTotal
DivisionAppsScoreAppsScoreAppsScoreAppsScore
Limerick2017Division 1B51-0300-0000-0051-03
201800-0020-0040-0060-00
2019Division 1A00-0050-0110-0060-01
202040-0230-0220-0190-05
202150-0220-0120-0190-04
202240-0050-0120-01110-02
202330-0250-0120-00100-03
202440-0050-0210-00100-02
Career total251-09270-08140-03661-21

Honours

Na Piarsaigh

2016

2013, 2015, 2017

2013, 2015, 2017, 2018 (c), 2020 (c), 2022 (c)

Limerick

2018, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023

2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023

2019, 2020, 2023

Awards

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Limerick cut 7 players from panel ahead of hurling championship campaign. 25 April 2017. The 42. 1 August 2018.
  2. Web site: Downes sets the tone for Na Piarsaigh to grind it out. 7 October 2013. Irish Independent. 31 July 2018. Donnchadh. Boyle.
  3. Web site: Powerful Piarsaigh's blistering pace too much for tired Bridge. 25 November 2013. Irish Examiner. 31 July 2018. Diarmuid. O'Flynn.
  4. Web site: Downes restores Na Piarsaigh as Limerick leaders. 12 October 2015. Irish Independent. 31 July 2018. Donnchadh. Boyle.
  5. Web site: Dowling goal puts seal on Na Piarsaigh glory trail. 23 November 2015. Irish Independent. 31 July 2018. Jackie. Cahill.
  6. Web site: Immortality for Na Piarsaigh as Cushendall rue big-day flop. 18 March 2015. Irish Examiner. 31 July 2018. Michael. Moynihan.
  7. Web site: Na Piarsaigh see off Kilmallock to secure Limerick hurling crown. 15 October 2017. Irish Independent. 31 July 2018.
  8. Web site: Late Na Piarsaigh surge sweeps aside Ballygunner in scrappy Munster final. 19 November 2017. Irish Independent. 31 July 2018. Colm. Keys.
  9. Web site: Cuala finish with four late points to finally see off Na Piarsaigh challenge and retain All-Ireland title. 18 March 2018. Irish Independent. 31 July 2018. Colm. Keys.
  10. Web site: Boss Beary points to experience of troops as Na Piarsaigh impress again. 29 October 2018. Irish Independent. 1 November 2018. Darragh. Small.
  11. Web site: Cian Lynch comes to the fore as Patrickswell hold off Na Piarsaigh in Limerick county final. Irish Independent. 6 October 2019. 6 October 2019. Colm. Keys.
  12. Web site: Na Piarsaigh crush Doon in one-sided Limerick final. Irish Examiner. 19 September 2020. 19 September 2020. Michael. Moynihan.
  13. Web site: Clare power and class too much for Limerick. 5 June 2014. Irish Examiner. 30 July 2018.
  14. Web site: Limerick U-21 footballers denied shock win by barrage of Cork goals. 11 March 2015. Limerick Leader. 30 July 2018. Jerome. O'Connell.
  15. Web site: Hurlers back down to earth with a bang. 25 February 2017. The Kerryman. 30 July 2018. Damian. Stack.
  16. Web site: Galway see off Limerick to advance to Division 1 final. 16 April 2017. Irish Examiner. 30 July 2018.
  17. Web site: Limerick are All Ireland hurling champions for the first time in 45 years following epic victory over Galway. Irish Independent. 19 August 2018. 20 August 2018. Seán. McGoldrick.
  18. Web site: 42-man Limerick hurling panel for 2019 includes seven newcomers. Limerick Leader. 21 December 2018. 31 March 2019. Jerome. O'Connell.
  19. Web site: Limerick with 'pretty full to select from' as Casey and O'Donoghue return. Limerick Leader. 21 March 2019. 31 March 2019. Jerome. O'Connell.
  20. Web site: More glory for Limerick as they lift Munster crown with 12-point win over Tipperary. 30 June 2019. The 42. 1 July 2019. Fintan. O'Toole.
  21. Web site: 11 players from Tipperary as 8 counties feature in 2019 All-Star hurling nominations. 26 September 2019. The 42. 26 September 2019. Fintan. O'Toole.