The Hurlers: The First All-Ireland Championship and the Making of Modern Hurling

Paul Rouse

The Hurlers: The First All-Ireland Championship and the Making of Modern Hurling
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Penguin Books Ltd
Country
United Kingdom
Published
2 May 2019
Pages
336
ISBN
9780241983546

The Hurlers: The First All-Ireland Championship and the Making of Modern Hurling

Paul Rouse

The gripping story of the politics, the intrigue and the rows behind the rebirth of hurling

In 1882, a letter was published in the Irish Times, lamenting the decline of hurling. The game was now played only in a few isolated rural pockets, and according to no fixed set of rules. It would have been absurd to imagine that, within five years, an all-Ireland hurling championship would be underway, under the auspices of a powerful national organization.

The Hurlers is a superbly readable account of that dramatic turn of events, of the colourful men who made it happen, and of the political intrigues and violent rows that marked the early years of the GAA. From the very start, republican and ecclesiastical interests jockeyed for control, along with a small core of enthusiasts who were really in it for the sport. Paul Rouse shows how sport, culture and politics swirled together in a heady, often chaotic mix.

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