Buttevant GAA
Cill na Mullach | ||
Founded: | 1884 | |
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County: | Cork | |
Colours: | Black and yellow | |
Grounds: | Fr. Con Buckley Park | |
Playing kits | ||
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Buttevant GAA club is a Gaelic Athletic Association club located in the town of Buttevant, County Cork, Ireland. The club was founded in 1884 and fields teams in both Gaelic football and hurling. The club is a member of the Avondhu divisional board. The club plays under the name Awbeg Rangers for football competitions.
History
Founded in 1884 by Fr.Con Buckley who attended the inaugural meeting of the GAA in Hayes Hotel in Thurles in the same year Buttevant GAA has fielded teams in Hurling and Football since that time. The club has played in the former British army barracks since 1922 and officially took over the grounds from the state in the 1950s. Success on the field of play came in 1926 when the Intermediate Footballers won the Cork County Championship, the Club also contested and lost the Intermediate Hurling Final in the same year. After numerous attempts the club finally won the Cork Intermediate Hurling Final in 1940, the team was backboned by the Club most famous player and Cork's 'Four in a row' All Ireland winning full back Batt Thornhill. Other notable players from the club to wear the famous Red and White of Cork were one of Cork's first dual stars Billy Mackessey who won All Ireland Hurling and football in 1903 and 1911, Peter 'Hawker' O'Grady who won an All Ireland Hurling medal in the 1930s and Tommy O'Sullivan who scored the winning goal in the 1952 All Ireland Hurling final also collected another All Ireland medal in 1953. Other success at adult level came in 1996 when the Hurlers won the Cork County Junior B title. In the sixties the juvenile section of the Club was formed and much success followed with many North Cork titles won in both codes over the years and Football County Titles won in U14 and U16 in the '70 with U16 and Minor Titles coming the Club's way in the eighties.The work done at this level continued when a separate Juvenile Club Micheal MacCarthaigh's was formed in 1994 called after former player and soldier Michael McCarthy who lost his life on UN duty in the Lebanon in 1991. This good work has paid dividends with a strong Junior Team in both codes emerging in recent years with the Hurlers winning the Club's first North Cork Junior Hurling A title in 2010 and the Junior Footballers contesting, and losing to Mitchelstown, the Club's first North Cork Junior final in 2013. The Minor A footballers got to the County Final in 2013 losing narrowly to Castlehaven and then gaining this honor two years later when the side beat Macroom in October 2015.
Honours
- Cork Intermediate Hurling Championship (1): 1940 Runners-Up 1926, 1928, 1929, 1930, 1932, 1941
- Cork Intermediate Football Championship (1): 1926
- Cork Junior B Hurling Championship Winners (1): 1996 Runners-Up 1989 1994
- Cork Junior B Football Championship Runners-Up 1984, 1991
- Cork Minor Hurling Championship: Runners-Up 1955
North Cork Premier Minor Football winners 1978 North Cork Premier Minor Hurling Winners 1983 Cork County Premier Minor Hurling Runners Up 1983 North Cork Premier Minor hurling winners 1984.
- Cork Minor B Hurling Championship: Runners-Up 2004
- North Cork Minor A Football Champions: 2013, 2015
- North Cork Junior Hurling Championship: Winners 2010
- North Cork Junior Football Championship: Runners-Up 2013[1]
- Cork County Minor A Football Championship: Winners (1): 2015 Runners-Up 2013
- Anthony O'Neill
Notable Players
- Batt Thornhill
- Seamus Madigan
- Ronan Donovan
- Avondhu MVP 2015/16 Anthony 'shitfuck' O'Neill
References
- ↑ "Mitchelstown moving on up after big win". The Irish Examiner. 26 August 2013. Retrieved 26 August 2013.