The Longford County Board of the Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) (Irish: Cumann Lúthchleas Gael Coiste Chontae an Longfort) or Longford GAA is one of the 32 county boards of the GAA in Ireland, and is responsible for Gaelic games in County Longford. The county board is also responsible for the Longford county teams.

Longford GAA
Irish:An Longfort
Nickname(s):Midlanders
Province:Leinster
Dominant sport:Gaelic football
Ground(s):Pearse Park, Longford
County colours:  Royal blue   Gold
County teams
NFL:Division 4 (2024)
NHL:Division 3B (2024)
Football Championship:Tailteann Cup
Hurling Championship:Lory Meagher Cup
Ladies' Gaelic football:Mary Quinn Memorial Cup

The county football team won its only National Football League title in 1966 with a one-point victory over Galway in the Home Final and an aggregate win over New York in the Final. The team won its only Leinster Senior Football Championship title in 1968, with a 3-9 to 1-4 win over Laois.[1]

Clubs

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The county board oversees 22[2] GAA clubs, the lowest number of any county in Ireland. The current total of 22 clubs is down from 24 in 2009 which at the time was the smallest in the country, below Sligo, which had 26 back then and now has 23 clubs.[3]

(F) Football | (H) Hurling | (HB) Handball | (C) Camogie

(* St. Munis Forgney & Ballymahon compete as a Group Team in adult competition since 2022)

Three hurling clubs exist within the above list of GAA clubs:

Football

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Clubs

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12 clubs contest the Longford Senior Football Championship.

Killoe Young Emmets are the current Longford Senior Football champions (as of 2023).[4]

Mullinalaghta St Columba's won the Leinster Senior Club Football Championship in 2018.[5][6]

County team

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Longford won the National Football League in 1966, then the 1968 Leinster Senior Football Championship. The county has never won the All-Ireland Senior Football Championship.

Hurling

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Clubs

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3 clubs contest the Longford Senior Hurling Championship.

Clonguish Gaels are the current Longford Senior Hurling champions (as of 2023).[7]

County team

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Like most of its neighbours, Longford have struggled to compete with the bigger counties as they only have three Hurling teams in the county, Slashers, Wolfe Tones and Clonguish. The county team won the National League Division 3 title in 2002, In 2005 & 2006 they won the Leinster Shield. They won the Lory Meagher Cup, for the first time, in Croke Park on 3 July 2010 and won on a scoreline 1 – 20 to Donegal 1 – 12.

Liam Griffin has said the GAA should be ashamed of itself over its failure in the promotion of hurling.

Australia is 24 hours away, yet we can create a new game with the Aussie Rules lads. Longford and Leitrim are right here, yet we largely ignore them and many others too when it comes to promoting hurling. The new D. J. Carey could be living in Longford, Leitrim or Donegal, but we'll never know. We have failed him. [...] If someone can market coloured gripe water, call it Coca-Cola and clean up worldwide, we should be able to sell hurling in Longford.[8]

Leinster SHC

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Longford competed in just two seasons, with a walkover to Wexford in the 1902 season (played in November 1903) and a loss to Westmeath in the 1903 season (played in July 1904). After 1904 Longford played in Junior Hurling Championship. Longford remains the only county in Leinster never to win a provincial hurling championship at any grade.

Matches

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Hurling Honours

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Championship Titles

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  • Lory Meagher Cup: (2)
  • All Ireland Minor C Championship (2)
    • 1997, 2000
  • All Ireland Juvenile C Championship (2)
    • 1982, 1984

League Titles

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Provincial Cups & Shields

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Other

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  • U16 All Ireland Winners (2013) ?

(This honours section is incomplete)

References

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  1. ^ "Leinster SFC". Longford Gaelic Stats.
  2. ^ "Club Details". Longford GAA.
  3. ^ "GAA clubs by numbers". Irish Independent. 9 May 2009.
  4. ^ "Mark Hughes the hero as last minute free seals the Longford championship for Killoe". Independent.ie. 15 October 2023.
  5. ^ "Wilderness to Leinster champions - Mullinalaghta story sums up magic of club game". The 42. 10 December 2018. Retrieved 11 December 2018.
  6. ^ "Mullinalaghta pull off seismic shock and stun Kilmacud in Leinster football final". The 42. 9 December 2018. Retrieved 11 December 2018.
  7. ^ "Collective effort puts Clonguish hurlers back on top". www.gaa.ie.
  8. ^ Breheny, Martin (27 October 2012). "All Stars bright lights hide darker side of hurling". Irish Independent. Independent News & Media. Retrieved 27 October 2012.
  9. ^ "Longford SHC matches".
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