Mayobridge GAA

Mayobridge
Cumann Naomh Phádraig, Droichead Mhaigh Eo
Founded:1888
County:Down
Nickname:The 'Bridge
Colours:Sky Blue and Navy
Grounds:St. Patrick's Gaelic Athletic Social Club,
Old Road, Mayobridge
Coordinates:54°10′59″N 6°13′30″W / 54.182979°N 6.224977°W / 54.182979; -6.224977
Playing kits
Standard colours
Senior Club Championships
All Ireland Ulster
champions
Down
champions
Football: - - 10

Mayobridge Gaelic Athletic Association, also called Mayobridge Gaelic Athletic Club or Saint Patrick's Gaelic Athletic Social Club, is a Gaelic football and ladies' Gaelic football club based in Mayobridge, County Down, Northern Ireland.[1][2][3]

Clubhouse

History

Mayobridge's playing fields

The club was founded in 1888 as Saint Patrick's Mayobridge and is the oldest in County Down. The minutes of the Central Council of the GAA record that on 30 April 1888, an application for affiliation was received from St Patrick's Mayobridge County Down.[citation needed] The acceptance of that application makes the club the oldest registered GAA club in the county.[citation needed] Mayobridge won the county title in 1918 and 1919. The youth club and later club grounds were opened in 1978.[4]

Mayobridge enjoyed a golden age around the turn of the millennium, winning eight senior county titles in ten years (1999 to 2008) and reaching the final of the Ulster Senior Club Football Championship twice, in 2001 and 2004.

Honours

Notable players

References

  1. ^ "GAA - Mayobridge Parish & Community Website". www.mayobridgeparish.com.
  2. ^ Mendlowitz, Andy (12 November 2007). Ireland's Professional Amateurs: A Sports Season at Its Purest. iUniverse. ISBN 9780595899869 – via Google Books.
  3. ^ "Mayobridge GAC (@MayobridgeGAC) - Twitter". twitter.com.
  4. ^ "History - C.L.G Droichead Mhaigh Eo".
  5. ^ "HoganStand GAA Football and Hurling". hoganstand.com.
  6. ^ "Garvey ruled out of Ulster final". Hogan Stand. 12 July 2012. The Mayobridge defender received a retrospective ban from the CCCC for an alleged stamp on Monaghan's Karl O'Connell during last month's dramatic Ulster semi-final, which saw Down come from nine points down to win by a point.
  7. ^ O'Dea, Arthur James. "Watch: 55-Year-Old Down Legend Hits Monstrous Point In County Final".