Buaileadh
na Fuinseoige
The Clash of the Ash
Join
Today! - Ceangail Inniú!
If you want to join up and would like more information about
the club, contact us today: brussels.hurling@gmail.com
Still not convinced that hurling is for you?
There are many reasons why you should join our club. Some
of the more important reasons are:
The Best - We're the best hurlers in Belgium
(Probably because we're the only club?)
Good Looking - enough said!
Friendly - Not only do we play hard on the
field but we have fun off the field! |
|

History
of the Game - Stair an Chluiche
The oldest field game in Europe, the fastest field
game in the world - just two of the things we are able to boast
about this ancient celtic game.A traditional Irish field sport
in which a ball, called a sliotar, is caught on a hurley, or stick,
and carried, or hurled into the opponent's goal. Irish mythology
has tales of the warrior Cu Chulainn and other legendary heroes
who were expert hurlers. The rules of play were standardized in
1884 when the Gaelic Athletic Association was founded. Today the
game is almost entirely restricted to Ireland, where the All-Ireland
championship competition has been held since 1887.
"Pat
Fox has it on his hurley and is motoring well now ... But here
comes Joe Rabbitte hot on his tail ... I've seen it all now -
a Rabbitte chasing a Fox around Croke Park!"
From the great Mícheál Ó Muircheartaigh
Records
show evidence that hurling was a regular pasttime in Ireland for
well over 2,000 years. In fact the first recorded reference to
hurling dates to the Battle of Moytura, near Cong in County Mayo
(in the West of Ireland) in 1272 BC between the native Fir Bolg
and the invading Tuatha De Danann. When both sides were preparing
for battle they decided to have a hurling contest instead, between
twenty-seven of the best players from each side. Both sides fought
a bloody match and in the end when they were bruised and broken
the match finished with the he Fir Bolg victorious who then slew
the Tuatha De Danann.

Waterford:
All-Ireland Hurling Final 1938
It is known that the Tailtean Games, said to be the oldest recorded
organised sports in the world, were held in Ireland as far back
as approximately 1800BC, and that they went on until 1180AD. Hurling
was likely to have been a central part of those games.
"Anthony
Lynch the Cork corner back will be the last person to let you
down - his people are undertakers"
From the great Mícheál Ó Muircheartaigh
One of the earliest references to hurling but by far the most
famous and widely known is from the 12th centuary document which
tells the story of Cu Chulainn and clearly mentions the word camán
which is the Irish word for hurley. Cu Chulainn was one of the
greatest Irish mythological heroes and legend tells us of his
famous feat when, as a young boy and known then as Setanta, he
defeated a viscous hound by hitting his ball through the mouth
of the hound with his hurley. For this feat he won the name Cu
Chulainn, the Hound of Chulainn. This story is told in Táin
Bo Cuailgne (The Cattle Raid of Cooley).

1957
All-Ireland Final
Not
just a sport, hurling was also a common way to train warriors
for battle. Even the Vikings tried their hand at the sport before
we sent them home!

The
Game - An
Cluiche
Hurling is played by two 15-member teams
on a field measuring 84 to 100 yd (76.81 to 91.44 m) in width
and 140 to 160 yd (128 to 146.30 m) in length. The hurley is a
narrow-shafted stick about 3.5 ft (1 m) long, ending in a curved
blade about 3 in (8 cm) wide. The sliotar has a cork center and
a leather cover; it is between 9 and 10 in (23 and 25 cm) in circumference,
and weighs between 3.5 and 4.5 oz (100 and 130 g). The goals at
each end of the field are formed by two posts, which are usually
6.6 yd (6 m) high, set 7 yd (6.4 m) apart, and connected 8 ft
(2 m) above the ground by a crossbar. A net extending in back
of the goal is attached to the crossbar and lower goal posts.

The object of hurling is to catch the sliotar on the blade of
the hurley, carry it, and then hurl it into the goal. The sliotar
may be picked off the ground only with the hurley. The player
may pick the sliotar off the hurley with his or her hand, but
may not throw it or run with it. Three points are scored when
the sliotar is hurled into the net and one point when the sliotar
is hurled over the crossbar between the goal posts. Although hurling,
among the fastest of team sports, is a rough game, serious injuries
are rare.

Grandfather
of Ice Hockey?
The exact origins of ice-hockey are not fully clear. But one Canadian
source seems to be in no doubt. The website Birth Place Of Hockey
claims the following:
"[Ice
Hockey] originated around 1800, in Windsor, where the boys of
Canada's first college, King's College School, established in
1788, adapted the exciting field game of Hurley to the ice of
their favorite skating ponds and originated a new winter game,
Ice Hurley. Over a period of decades, Ice Hurley gradually developed
into Ice Hockey."
Some claim ice-hockey developed from the
Scottish game of Shinty, but as we know shinty came from hurling
as it was introduced to Scotland along with the Gaelic language
approximatly 2000 years ago by Irish missionaries.
"Teddy
looks at the ball, the ball looks at Teddy"
From the great Mícheál Ó Muircheartaigh