All-Ireland Poc Fada Championship

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Paul Dunne holds An Corn Cuailgne after his 2003 victory.
Paul Dunne holds An Corn Cuailgne after his 2003 victory.

The All-Ireland Poc Fada Championship is an annual tournament testing the skills of Ireland's best hurlers. Poc Fada is Irish for "long puck".Known for sponorship reasons as the M DONNELLY POC FADA[1]

Twelve competitors are invited to play each year. The competition is held every year on the Cooley mountains, Co. Louth, beginning in Annaverna. Competitors must puck a sliotar with a hurley (they may lift and strike or hit the ball from the hand). They play to the top of Carn an Mhadaidh and after a short break continue back down to finish in Aghameen. The whole course measures three miles 320 yards (5,121 metres).

An Corn Cuailgne ("The Cooley Cup") is awarded to the player who takes the lowest number of pucks. Ties are broken by the distance by which the player's last puck crosses the finish line.

There is also the comórtas beirte (pairs competition) in which the competitors are randomly assigned partners, the pair with the lowest combined score winning An Corn Setanta ("The Setanta Cup") and the Corn na Craoibhe Rua ("The Trophy of the Red Mountain").

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[edit] History

The tournament was founded in 1961 by Fr. Pól Mac Seáin and the Naomh Moninne club based in Fatima, Dundalk, Louth, with Limerick man Vincent Godfrey the first winner, out of 16 hurlers invited. The competition went off the calendar after 1969 before returning in 1981 with 12 competitors. The concept of the competition originates in the Irish legend of Cúchulainn, where the young Setanta, as Cúchulainn is called in his youth, sets out from his home to the king's court at Emain Macha hitting his sliotair before him as he walks.

Since 1996 the tournament has been sponsored by M Donnelly Builders Providers. In 2001 the Poc Fada was held at Dowdalshill racecourse due to foot-and-mouth disease, doing two laps of the circuit (2 miles 880 yards / 4,023 metres). The 2005 tournmant was won by Albert Shanahan of Limerick, with international soccer player Niall Quinn (who played for Dublin in the All-Ireland minor final of 1983) also competing.

Almost all of the winners have been from the traditional hurling counties, but Dinny Donnelly (Meath), Gerry Goodwin (Tyrone), Colin Byrne (Wicklow) and Paul Dunne (Louth), and Mary Henry (Westmeath) have been the exceptions. The record currently stands at 48 pucks (an average of 107 metres per puck), achieved by Brendan Cummins (Tipperary) in 2004, while for the camogie course Mary Henry has the record with 28.The current Champion is Brendan Cummins [2]

[edit] Roll of Honour 1961-69 (sixteen competitors)

Year Winner County Number of pucks
1961 Vincent Godfrey Limerick 52
1962 Ollie Walsh Kilkenny
1963 Ollie Walsh Kilkenny
1964
tie
Ollie Walsh
Tom Geary
Dinny Donnelly
Kilkenny
Waterford
Meath
1965 Denis Murphy Cork
1966 Finbar O'Neill Cork
1967 Finbar O'Neill Cork
1968 Finbar O'Neill Cork
1969 Liam Tobin Waterford

[3]

[edit] Roll of Honour 1981-present (twelve competitors)

Year Winner County Number of pucks
1981 Pat Hartigan Limerick
1982 Gerry Goodwin Tyrone
1983 Pat Hartigan Limerick
1984 Ger Cunningham Cork
1985 Ger Cunningham Cork
1986 Ger Cunningham Cork
1987 Ger Cunningham Cork
1988 Ger Cunningham Cork
1989 Ger Cunningham Cork
1990 Ger Cunningham Cork
1991 Tommy Quaid Limerick
1992 Albert Kelly Offaly
1993 Albert Kelly Offaly
1994 Michael Shaughnessy Galway
1995 Michael Shaughnessy Galway
1996 Michael Shaughnessy Galway
1997 Colin Byrne Wicklow
1998 Albert Kelly Offaly
1999 Davy FitzGerald Clare
2000 Colin Byrne Wicklow 50
2001 Albert Shanahan Limerick 49 §
2002 Davy Fitzgerald Clare 52
2003 Paul Dunne Louth 54
2004 Brendan Cummins Tipperary 48
2005 Albert Shanahan Limerick 58
2006 Brendan Cummins Tipperary 52
2007 Brendan Cummins Tipperary 49

§ short course - took place at the Dundalk Racecourse (two and a half-mile) due to foot-and-mouth disease.

[edit] Camogie Poc Fada 2004-present (seven competitors)

Uses a shorter course.

Year Winner County Number of pucks
2004 Stephanie Gannon Galway 32
2005 Denise Lynch Clare 30
2006 Mary Henry Westmeath 28
2007 Lyndsey Condell Carlow


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[edit] External links