
Women Gaelic games players suffer injuries in silence due to fear and lack of support, research finds
Fears of being dropped, letting their team down or being seen as weak are among the reasons women
Gaelic games
players
opt to conceal injuries, according to new research.
The study of intercounty camogie and women's Gaelic football players found that concern over being sidelined or dropped from the panel were factors in whether players chose to disclose injuries to management, as were worries about how they might be perceived by others in the team setting.
The research's lead author, chartered physiotherapist and PhD student at University of Limerick Marese Gilhooly, explains that while various factors can contribute to whether players feel empowered to report injuries, it can often come down to their standing in the set-up.
'A big part of it is the player experience,' she says. 'That might be linked to their years of playing intercounty level – they might be more sure of their place on the team and they mightn't have such fear of being deselected, or risking losing favour with management, whereas younger players mightn't have the confidence or have built up that experience that they feel that they can report [injuries].'
READ MORE
The research focuses on the players' perceptions of injuries and how those perceptions might lead them to suffer in silence rather than flag what's ailing them.
'One player said she didn't want to be perceived as a 'drama queen',' Gilhooly says, while others said they may not report injuries they felt weren't serious enough so as not to 'waste people's time', as one player quoted in the study said.
However, related research conducted by Gilhooly and her colleagues surveying athlete support personnel (ASP – 'individuals in coaching, management and allied health and performance related practice') found they did not share many of the sentiments expressed by players.
Of the 42 ASP surveyed, 66 per cent disagreed with the statement 'managers view players as weak for reporting injuries'. Forty-three per cent disagreed that players report all injuries.
Gilhooly, who is an assistant lecturer at TUS Athlone, says the findings from the two studies highlight a disconnect between players and ASP.
The responses from the ASP also noted the pitfalls of players concealing injuries, with one participant commenting: 'Players need to realise they aren't doing themselves or the team any favours'.
Gilhooly explains: 'It's a double-edged sword. They don't want to let the team down, however they're letting both themselves and the team down perhaps by performing through injury or symptoms in the long-term.'
External barriers to reporting were also cited both by players and ASP, chief among them access to medical personnel.
In the ASP responses, 93 per cent said they believe players are more likely to report injuries when immediate access to medical personnel [team doctors or physiotherapists] is available,
which was backed up by the player responses.
However, even in elite intercounty set-ups, those resources are often not available, or not consistently so, Gilhooly says.
'I often feel that women are nearly tougher, in a good way and in a bad way. They will put up with an awful lot more, they're not used to being supported,' one of the ASP respondents told the researchers. Another added: 'At club level it's really poor. You have one person on the sideline at club level with a physio bag and he or she is the manager, the coach, the S&C [strength and conditioning specialist] and physio. It's just not good enough. The clubs and county boards need to do better to support females.'
The latter comment is important, Gilhooly says, as a lack of support is probably a contributing factor to intercounty players' reluctance to report injuries.
'If players haven't the support at club level, they aren't used to how to access it, how to relay [concerns] to people. Often if they did have it, they didn't know how to make use of it, but often they didn't have it, or it wasn't consistent,' she adds.
Gilhooly notes many players detailed how regular access to medical professionals was not a given at intercounty level, adding that even with the adoption of player charters, 'there's still inconsistencies about what is local, feasible and economically able to be put in place'.
'Gaelic games are amateur sports, but [intercounty] players dedicate such time and commitment that it does equal professional standard,' Gilhooly says. 'They're expected to perform like elite athletes but they're not necessarily getting the resources or personnel to support them as elite athletes.'
Within the team setting, Gilhooly says 'it really comes down to culture', and, in addition to having the necessary resources in place, encouraging open communication between players and ASP can achieve 'a more honest middle ground' in which players feel empowered to speak up.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Times
11 minutes ago
- Irish Times
Ken Early: Heimir Hallgrímsson's plan very nearly pays off in Ireland's solid performance against Senegal
Last month, Heimir Hallgrímsson decided he would give most of Ireland's Championship-based players this international window off to make the most of their holidays. It may prove a far-sighted decision, but it didn't do much for excitement levels in advance of Friday night's Senegal match, where the vibe was less 'do or die' than 'let's get this over with'. So the Irish starting XI contained eight 2024-25 Premier League players, five of whom have just been relegated. The Irish set-up was 4-4-1-1 without the ball and 3-4-2-1 with the ball, with Robbie Brady and Kasey McAteer as the wide players and Ryan Manning and Ipswich's Jack Taylor supporting the centre-forward Adam Idah. It was more disappointing than surprising to see Evan Ferguson left out of the starting line-up. Despite a terrible season at club level, he scored one of the best goals by an Ireland player in years in his last game here, against Bulgaria. Hallgrímsson went with Taylor as the player closest to Idah up front. Taylor is generally used by Ipswich in a defensive midfield position. His selection here in a more attacking role showed the importance the Ireland manager attaches to physical strength through the team. That is consistent with an approach that puts a lot of importance on set pieces. In the second minute Ireland won a throw high on the left and Nathan Collins and Dara O'Shea both advanced into the Senegal penalty area for the long throw. Ireland's opening goal midway through the first half came from a set-piece, though not one that seemed to have gone exactly according to plan. READ MORE Matt Doherty was running in to attack Robbie Brady's corner at the far post but O'Shea reached the ball first and headed it back towards the edge of the box. As Doherty and O'Shea appeared to argue over what had gone wrong, Manning clipped it back towards the penalty spot and Nathan Collins flicked a looping head over the advancing Senegal defenders. Kasey McAteer had reacted quickest and although Yahvann Diouf saved his first header, he latched on to the rebound and buried it low for his first Ireland goal. The joy on McAteer's face reminded you that not everybody considered this match a meaningless chore. Ireland's Adam Idah with Abdoulaye Seck and Abdou Diallo of Senegal. Photograph: Bryan Keane/Inpho McAteer was seeing a fair bit of the ball, Dara O'Shea often picking him out with raking passes from left centre back. The right-sided wide role has been variously filled by Mikey Johnston, Festy Ebosele and Chiedozie Ogbene in Hallgrímsson's eight previous matches, but on this showing McAteer is as strong an option as any of these. Certainly he has the physicality the manager likes. Ireland's performance in the first half was the kind that managers love while the fans rose en masse at the 40-minute mark to beat the queues at the bar. Solid, organised, going close on a few occasions, denying the opponents any sight of goal, getting a goal and keeping a clean sheet? There may not have been much to cheer about, but there was very little to complain about either. The start of the second half was enlivened by the invasion of a flock of seagulls, maybe attracted by the smell of half-time chips. They glided low over the seats in the west stand hunting for food before perching on the huge steel girders of the roof. The birds all sat facing the stands rather than the pitch. [ Hallgrímsson stresses Ireland's World Cup ambitions before valuable Senegal test Opens in new window ] They were missing Senegal gradually working their way back into the game. Caoimhín Kelleher had had nothing to do in the first half, but early in the second he needed to stretch to tip a header on to the underside of the bar. A few minutes later he was scrambling another ball clear after O'Shea had inadvertently deflected a cross on to the Irish post. The Irish goalkeeper's luck couldn't hold forever. Everton's Iliman Ndiaye is a useful dribbler but Andrew Moran – who had just come on as substitute – will be disappointed with how easy Ndiaye made beating him look. Ireland goalkeeper Caoimhin Kelleher watches the ball go just wide at the Aviva Stadium on Friday. Photograph: Laszlo Geczo/Inpho The Senegalese attacker dribbled in from the right before hitting a low cross that took a deflection away from goal along the way, wrong-footing the Irish defence and allowing Cherif Ndiaye to get off a low shot from eight yards. Kelleher stuck out his left foot to save the first effort but was powerless to stop Ismaila Sarr finishing off the rebound. After four wins and four defeats, this was the first draw of Hallgrímsson's tenure. The day before the match he had talked about how the identity and the principles of the team were becoming clearer all the time. The performance here bore that out to a certain extent, though this occasion lacked the intensity of a serious qualifying match. It goes without saying that neither Senegal nor Ireland looked anywhere near the level of Ireland's qualifying opponents, Portugal, as they came back to beat Germany in Munich in the Nations League semi-final during the week. Come the World Cup qualifiers in the autumn, less will depend on what has happened in these two summer friendlies, and more on whether between now and then Evan Ferguson can find himself a club, get some minutes on the field, and play himself back into the kind of form he was showing two years ago.


Irish Times
11 minutes ago
- Irish Times
Sarah Healy wins 1,500m at Diamond League in Rome
Sarah Healy produced a magnificent finishing kick to win the 1,500 metres at the Rome Diamond League meeting on Friday night. Just like she did in winning the European Indoor title over 3,000m last March, Healy bided her time over the last 150 metres, holding third coming into the homestretch behind leader Susan Ejore from Kenya, and Australia's Sarah Billings. Just when Billings moved in front and looked poised for victory, Healy came again and took the win in 3:59.17, a rare Irish victory on the Diamond League stage inside the Stadio Olimpico. Billings held on for second in 3:59.24, with fellow Australian Abbey Caldwell coming through for third in 3:59.32. It was Healy's first outdoor 1,500m race this season, the 24-year-old already improving her 3,000m best to 8:27.02 in finishing third in the Rabat Diamond League 10 days ago. READ MORE In a stacked field of 15 women, 13 of which had run sub-4:00, Healy again showed her growing confidence since her indoor success in March, which she followed with a sixth-place finish in the World Indoors. She will race the 1,500m again in Paris on June 20th. Her best stands at 3:57.46, run at the Paris Diamond League last July, which looks under threat, as does Ciara Mageean's Irish record of 3:55.87, clocked in Brussels in 2023. Cathal Doyle ran a lifetime best of 3:32.15 in the men's 1,500m earlier in the night, although that left him back in 14th place, where the 16 finishers all ran sub-3:33. Victory went to Azeddine Habz from France, in a season best of 3:29.72, ahead of Kenya's 2019 World champion Cheruiyot Timothy, who clocked 3:39.75. It took a full second off Doyle's previous best of 3:33.15 set last year, the Dublin athlete moving closer to qualification for the World Championships in Tokyo in September. Kenya's Beatrice Chebet, the double Olympic champion from Paris last summer, produced another stellar run to clock the second fastest 5,000m time in history with her 14:03.69, just two and half seconds outside the world record.


Irish Daily Mirror
33 minutes ago
- Irish Daily Mirror
Ireland player ratings as Caoimhin Kelleher shows his quality in Senegal draw
CAOIMHIN KELLEHER: He could have had a nap during the first-half as Senegal failed to register a shot on target, but he showed his class with a wonderful stop in a busier second 45. 8 MATT DOHERTY: An inadvertent contribution to Ireland's opener and plenty of attacking play from the Wolves man, who made way in the 66th minute. 6 NATHAN COLLINS: His header teed up McAteer for Ireland's opener, but not a lot to do at the other end in the first-half. He defended well in the second as Senegal pushed forward. 8 DARA O'SHEA: O'Shea was solid, aside from two lucky escapes when he almost put the ball past his own goalkeeper. 7 ROBBIE BRADY: Came forward at every opportunity and was strong in defence against a team that had hoped to exploit spaces in the wide attacking areas. 6 KASEY McATEER: Was bright from the very first minute, eager to get on the ball and run at defenders, who were clearly terrified of the Leicester man, who marked his first Ireland start with his first goal. 7 JASON KNIGHT: Another solid display by the Bristol City man, who nipped at the ankles of his opponents and was effective once again in his distribution. 7 WILL SMALLBONE: A surprisingly deep role for the Southampton man, but he did a fine job breaking up attacks and throwing his weight around at the other end. Should have scored early in the second-half. 7 RYAN MANNING: Provided a delightful ball back into the box for Ireland's opener and came close to scoring himself during a productive 66 minutes on the pitch. 7 JACK TAYLOR: A shock choice for the advanced role that most expected Smallbone to play, but he made a nuisance of himself. Had chances with a mistimed header and a blocked shot. 6 ADAM IDAH: An often frustrating evening for the Celtic man. At times he could be seen throwing his arms in the air when his runs weren't spotted. 6 SUBS: Evan Ferguson (for Taylor 58): Tried to freshen up the attack. 6 Killian Phillips (for Doherty 66): Conceded a late free in a dangerous position. 6 Jake O'Brien (for Manning 66): Was involved in a busy spell for the Irish defence. 6 Festy Ebosele (for McAteer 80): Not on long enough to rate Andrew Moran (for Smallbone 80): Not on long enough to rate Liam Scales (for Brady 85): Not on long enough to rate SENEGAL: Yehvann Diouf 7; Antoine Mendy 7, Abdoulaye Seck 6, Abdou Diallo 7, Ismail Jakobs 6 (El Hadji Malick Diouf 85); Habib Diarra 7, Mamadou Camara 6 (Cheikh Sabaly 77), Krepin Diatta 7 (Lamine Camara 63); Abdallah Sima 6 (Ismaila Sarr 63, 8), Boylaye Dia 7 (Cherif Ndiaye 77), Iliman Ndiaye 6.