Archive News
Comer is geared up for St. Gall’s challenge

Date Published: {J}
Dara Bradley
IT’S amazing how a good clipping can focus the mind. It was early June. Reigning County and Connacht champions Corofin were embarking on their first outing of the 2009 championship campaign and underdogs Micheál Breathnachs beat them out the gap.
It’s not often Gaeltacht sides, or any other team for that matter, runs rings around Galway’s most successful senior club team in the county for the past two decades.
“Breathnachs wiped us off the field that day,” admits Corofin captain Kieran Comer this week, as he prepares for this Sunday’s All-Ireland AIB Club Championship semi-final clash with St Gall’s.
“We just never got going and they deserved to win it. We knew we weren’t as bad as we played. We had a meeting with all the players and management a few days after the Breathnachs match and we asked ‘do we want to go further or just throw it all in and give up’. It probably was the kick in the ass we needed.”
On that summer’s day in Pearse Stadium, you’d have got long odds on Corofin surviving until St Patrick’s Day – now they are just an hour away from making it back to Croke Park for the first time in 12 years.
The North Galway kingpins luckily had a safety net – the backdoor. A ‘bye’ in the next round gave the champs time to regroup and lick wounds. They subsequently needed extra-time to see off An Cheathru Rua and two bites of the cherry against Mountbellew/Moylough in the county final.
Corofin basically stuttered out of Galway but have built momentum since with solid wins over the Leitrim and Mayo champions in the Connacht series and now – with a bit of luck – the Belclare man hopes they are peaking just at the right time.
“It took us a while to get motoring this year and w
e were lucky enough to get out of Galway. There was nothing between the teams in Galway this year; every game was close. We just took every game as it came.
“I suppose it was difficult to motivate ourselves, especially after last year when we were going training from January (2008) to the following February.
“I know last year was a long year (because of an All-Ireland quarter-final match against Tir Chonaill Gaels in London last January) – we didn’t really stop training at all. This year we’ve had more time off, we had a few days rest. It’s nice to get the break. Training has been going well and it’s just a case of getting match fit – there’s a big difference between being fit and being match fit,” he says.
Of course the defeat at the hands of Breathnachs wasn’t so unexpected in hindsight. Remember, this was a Corofin outfit still hurting – and probably still tired – from the 2008 campaign which ended with in defeat to Dublin’s Kilmacud Crokes in last year’s All-Ireland semi-final.
How much will that defeat, which brought Corofin’s number of losses at the All-Ireland semi-final stage to three out of four attempts – play on their minds going into Sunday’s clash?
For more, read page 56 of this week’s Galway City Tribune.
Galway in Days Gone By
The way we were – Protecting archives of our past

People’s living conditions less than 100 years ago were frightening. We have come a long way. We talk about water charges today, but back then the local District Councils were erecting pumps for local communities and the lovely town of Mountbellew, according to Council minutes, had open sewers,” says Galway County Council archivist Patria McWalter.
Patria believes we “need to take pride in our history, and we should take the same pride in our historical records as we do in our built heritage”. When you see the wealth of material in her care, this belief makes sense.
She is in charge of caring for the rich collection of administrative records owned by Galway County Council and says “these records are as much part of our history as the Rock of Cashel is. They document our lives and our ancestors’ lives. And nobody can plan for the future unless you learn from the past, what worked and what didn’t”.
Archivists and librarians are often unfairly regarded as being dry, academic types, but that’s certainly not true of Patria. Her enthusiasm is infectious as she turns the pages of several minute books from Galway’s Rural District Councils, all of them at least 100 years old.
Part of her role involved cataloguing all the records of the Councils – Ballinasloe, Clifden, Galway, Gort, Loughrea, Mountbellew, Portumna and Tuam. These records mostly consisted of minutes of various meetings.
When she was cataloguing them she realised their worth to local historians and researchers, so she decided to compile a guide to their content. The result is For the Record: The Archives of Galway’s Rural District Councils, which will be a valuable asset to anybody with an interest in history.
Many representatives on these Councils were local personalities and several were arrested during the political upheaval of the era, she explains.
And, ushering in a new era in history, women were allowed to sit on these Rural District Councils – at the time they were not allowed to sit on County Councils.
All of this information is included in Patria’s introductory essay to the attractively produced A4 size guide, which gives a glimpse into how these Rural Councils operated and the way political thinking changed in Ireland during a short 26-year period. In the early 1900s, these Councils supported Home Rule, but by 1920, they were calling for full independence and refusing to recognise the British administration.
“I love the tone,” says Patria of the minutes from meetings. “The language was very emotive.”
That was certainly true of the Gort Rural District Council. At a meeting in 1907, following riots in Dublin at the premiere of JM Synge’s play, The Playboy of the Western World the councillors’ response was vehement. They recorded their decision to “protest most emphatically against the libellous comedy, The Playboy of the Western World, that was belched forth during the past week in the Abbey Theatre, Dublin, under the fostering care of Lady Gregory and Mr Yeats. We congratulate the good people of Dublin in howling down the gross buffoonery and immoral suggestions that are scattered throughout this scandalous performance.
For more from the archives see this week’s Tribunes here
Archive News
Galway have lot to ponder in poor show

Date Published: 23-Jan-2013
SLIGO 0-9
GALWAY 1-4
FRANK FARRAGHER IN ENNISCRONE
GALWAY’S first serious examination of the 2013 season rather disturbingly ended with a rating well below the 40% pass mark at the idyllic, if rather Siberian, seaside setting of Enniscrone on Sunday last.
The defeat cost Galway a place in the FBD League Final against Leitrim and also put a fair dent on their confidence shield for the bigger tests that lie ahead in February.
There was no fluke element in this success by an understrength Sligo side and by the time Leitrim referee, Frank Flynn, sounded the final whistle, there wasn’t a perished soul in the crowd of about 500 who could question the justice of the outcome.
It is only pre-season and last Sunday’s blast of dry polar winds did remind everyone that this is far from summer football, but make no mistake about it, the match did lay down some very worrying markers for Galway following a couple of victories over below par third level college teams.
Galway did start the game quite positively, leading by four points at the end of a first quarter when they missed as much more, but when Sligo stepped up the tempo of the game in the 10 minutes before half-time, the maroon resistance crumbled with frightening rapidity.
Some of the statistics of the match make for grim perusal. Over the course of the hour, Galway only scored two points from play and they went through a 52 minute period of the match, without raising a white flag – admittedly a late rally did bring them close to a draw but that would have been very rough justice on Sligo.
Sligo were backable at 9/4 coming into this match, the odds being stretched with the ‘missing list’ on Kevin Walsh’s team sheet – Adrian Marren, Stephen Coen, Tony Taylor, Ross Donovan, David Kelly, David Maye, Johnny Davey and Eamon O’Hara, were all marked absent for a variety of reasons.
Walsh has his Sligo side well schooled in the high intensity, close quarters type of football, and the harder Galway tried to go through the short game channels, the more the home side bottled them up.
Galway badly needed to find some variety in their attacking strategy and maybe there is a lot to be said for the traditional Meath style of giving long, quick ball to a full forward line with a big target man on the edge of the square – given Paul Conroy’s prowess close to goal last season, maybe it is time to ‘settle’ on a few basics.
Defensively, Galway were reasonably solid with Gary Sice at centre back probably their best player – he was one of the few men in maroon to deliver decent long ball deep into the attacking zone – while Finian Hanley, Conor Costello and Gary O’Donnell also kept things tight.
For more, read this week’s Connacht Tribune.
Archive News
Real Galway flavour to intermediate club hurling battle in Birr

Date Published: 23-Jan-2013
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