logo
New faces in Ireland squad to face USA next month

New faces in Ireland squad to face USA next month

RTÉ News​22-05-2025
Three players are in line to make a debut for Ireland in a two-match series against USA next month.
Niamh Gowing (Railway Union) and Katie Larmour (Belfast Harlequins) have been rewarded for standout club seasons with call-ups.
Amy Handcock, the highly-rated 19-year-old UCD scholar, is also included after some impressive appearances at Under-19 level.
Jessica McMaster of Ulster Elks is also named in a senior Ireland squad for the first time since 2017.
The squad also boasts a core of experienced leaders. Captain Sarah Hawkshaw and Róisín Upton return to the fold, both with deep ties to US hockey from their college years at the University of Massachusetts and University of Connecticut respectively. They are joined by the likes of Elena Neill, Hannah McLoughlin, and several other stalwarts.
The squad will travel to Charlotte, North Carolina for a two-match series on 7 and 8 June
Both games will take place at 3pm Irish time at UNC Charlotte, the home of USA Field Hockey's international programme.
The matches will provide high-calibre international opposition as preparations intensify ahead of the EuroHockey Championships in August.
The teams are no strangers to each other, having last met during Ireland's impressive silver medal campaign at the FIH Hockey Nations Cup in Chile earlier this year.
Head coach Gareth Grundie said: "This is a great early opportunity to test ourselves against a strong USA side as we build toward the EuroHockey Championships in August.
"Playing top-level opposition away from home is exactly what we need at this stage of our preparations, and it's a valuable chance for both established players and new faces to challenge themselves in a competitive environment."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Second boxer dies after being hospitalised on same card as fellow fighter
Second boxer dies after being hospitalised on same card as fellow fighter

Irish Daily Mirror

timean hour ago

  • Irish Daily Mirror

Second boxer dies after being hospitalised on same card as fellow fighter

The boxing world has been left reeling after it was confirmed that a second fighter has died on the same card in Tokyo. On Saturday news emerged that Japanese boxer Hiromasa Urakawa had succumbed to his injuries after being hospitalised with a brain injury following an eighth-round knockout defeat to Yoji Saito on August 2. On Friday it was confirmed that Shigetoshi Kotari also died from the injuries he sustained on the same night. Both men were 28 years old. Urakawa's record featured 10 wins with seven KOs and four defeats. Urakawa underwent surgery in a bid to save him but Ring Magazine have now reported that he has tragically passed away. He is the third boxer to die of injuries sustained in the ring this year, following Kotari and Irishman John Cooney, who died back in February. Cooney suffered an intracranial haemorrhage in his fight against Nathan Howells. The World Boxing Organisation (WBO) said in a statement on social media: "The WBO mourns the passing of Japanese boxer Hiromasa Urakawa, who tragically succumbed to injuries sustained during his fight against Yoji Saito on August 2 at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo. "This heartbreaking news comes just days after the passing of Shigetoshi Kotari, who died from injuries suffered in his fight on the same card. We extend our deepest condolences to the families, friends, and the Japanese boxing community during this incredibly difficult time." John Cooney (Image: Brian Lawless/PA Wire) The Oriental Pacific Boxing Federation has now bought about rules changes following Kotari's injuries and tragic death. From now on OPBF title fights will be 10 rounds, rather than the 12 that are normally common practice in title fights around the globe. Ring Magazine said: "The Ring is deeply saddened to learn of the passing of Hiromasa Urakawa. Urakawa, 28, died Saturday from a brain injury he suffered during a stoppage loss on Aug 2nd in Tokyo. Our sympathies are with the Urakawa family at this time." Earlier this year Mark Dunlop, the manager of Irish fighter Cooney, said he "can't blame anybody" following his tragic death and added" "John knew the dangers, the family know the dangers... everyone involved in boxing know that it carries a risk."

How the Jesuit experience shaped Ger Brennan, the new Dublin football manager
How the Jesuit experience shaped Ger Brennan, the new Dublin football manager

The 42

time3 hours ago

  • The 42

How the Jesuit experience shaped Ger Brennan, the new Dublin football manager

THE QUOTE FROM St Ignatius Loyola, a Basque soldier turned priest who formed the Jesuits, holds that, 'Give me the boy until he is seven, and I will show you the man.' It is from the Jesuit approach to education, and again, we are quoting here; 'concentrated on the holistic development of the individual, encompassing intellectual, spiritual and moral growth,' that the new Dublin senior football manager Ger Brennan is rooted. In a Podcast back in 2021 for Belvedere's Faith and Services Programmes, he told of how he prays the Jesuit Examen (examination of the conscience) every day. How he listens to the school song, 'Only in God,' and related how he tries to invoke compassion in his dealings with young students in UCD, where he is the Gaelic Games development officer. Appointed on a three-year arrangement as Dessie Farrell's successor, he is now once of the most closely scrutinised figures in Irish sport. He's not alone in professing his religious beliefs in the GAA. Nonetheless it makes him unusual. On 20 January 2014, just a few months after he won the All-Ireland title, he went along to St Dominic's in Cabra to launch Catholic Schools Week. He told students there, 'I am someone who believes strongly in Jesus Christ, I believe in God incarnate and I believe that Jesus is the example, the X-Factor, for people to follow their lives by. 'It's something I've been fortunate enough to have accepted and believed in from a very young age starting at home and it's something which I drift from time to time . . . but . . . once you experience the love of Christ in your life, be it through a personal, deep or more public experience there's no getting away from him. 'For me, faith, love of God is always an invitation, a freedom of choice and it's something we can choose to accept or something we can choose to ignore. I think there are many challenges in the world which support us in ignoring that love of God in our lives but I think if we keep continuing to focus on the goodness within young people and believe within yourself I think everything will work out fine.' At the time, he was in St Kevin's, teaching Religion, Irish and History. He was also the School Chaplain. The launch of Catholic Week wasn't afraid to ask itself some fundamental questions. Brennan told those gathered that the holistic approach to education should include the 'invisible reality' which he summed up as 'my soul, my spirit, my faith in Jesus Christ.' For the modern intercounty footballer and now manager, it all seems a little… unlikely. But so much of Brennan is unlikely. Advertisement He grew up in Dorset Street and his pathway to the fee-paying Belvedere College was through a Social Diversity Programme that took in students on scholarships. While attending Belvedere, he naturally fell into playing a little rugby and was a couple of years ahead of Cian Healy. Absolutely none of this is building up to some corny rags to riches narrative by the way. The Brennans were high achievers in their own right. Brennan bringing Sam Maguire to meet a child in hospital. Morgan Treacy / INPHO Morgan Treacy / INPHO / INPHO Their sporting pedigree can be traced to Ger's uncle Fran who played soccer for various teams including Drumcondra, but mainly Dundalk from 1966 to 1973. He won an international cap in a friendly against Belgium in 1965 in Dalymount Park. Another uncle, Tom Brennan was featured in an Irish Press report from February 1975. He was an early prominent member of the Liffey Valley Club and that day he took first place in the National Senior cross-country championship in Belfield, running seven and a half miles of a twisting, challenging route in 36 minutes and 59 seconds. He beat the course record by 29 seconds and among those left in his wake included the late Jerry Kiernan, Danny McDaid and Tom O'Riordan. Ger Brennan grew up playing Gaelic football with St Vincent's, but he wasn't what you might call your typical Vincent's man from Marino, in coming from the north inner-city. By the time he played championship for Dublin, he became just the third man from the north inner city to represent the county in the previous 60 years. The others were Anton O'Toole and Paddy Cullen. In an area with a population of around 120,000, you can see again how rare it is. On the pitch, he was there from the start of the Pat Gilroy era as they transformed themselves and Gaelic football. He made some critical interventions. In the 2011 All-Ireland final, he caught Kerry's Declan O'Sullivan with the kind of hit that either gets a red card or turns a tide. O'Sullivan subsequently lost possession for two plays in which Dublin grabbed a goal and a point. In his debut season playing with Dublin. Andrew Paton / INPHO Andrew Paton / INPHO / INPHO He kicked two points against Mayo that defied belief After retiring in October 2014, he continued to play on for St Vincent's and became a high-profile supporter for a 'No' vote in the 2015 Marriage Equality referendum. Writing in The Irish Independent at the time, he said, 'I know I'll be targeted for it and labelled for it. It would have been easier to keep my mouth shut and not rock the boat. But I'm sick of the accusations being flung around that if you vote 'No' you are homophobic. I know I'm not homophobic; my gay friends and family can attest to that. I am voting 'No' because I don't want our Constitution to deny that it is a good thing for a child to have a mother and a father. 'The Universal Declaration on Human Rights proclaims that everybody is equal in dignity and it holds that marriage is a male-female union. I don't think the Declaration of Human Rights is homophobic. I'm voting 'No'.' Along the way, he got his first break coaching at county level under Niall Carew at Carlow in 2020. His involvement with UCD brought him further into that world but all the same, it was a small surprise when he took over Louth following Mickey Harte's shock departure in 2023. Bringing the Wee County to their first Leinster title in 68 years represented a modern-day Gaelic football miracle. He could do anything he wanted after that, but Dessie Farrell stepping down in Dublin made him the obvious move. A decade ago, you could happily have made the argument for hours on end that the easiest job in Gaelic football was that of the Dublin manager; plenty of players, great facilities, nobody living too far from home, permanent residents of Croke Park, and so on. Those arguments have dried up. Different rules will apply for Brennan. Old Dublin town hums with the possibilities. Who is coming back? Where are they at? What levels can they reach? What happens next will be fascinating. Comes with the gig.

‘The first time I ever cut weight, I was 8 years old'
‘The first time I ever cut weight, I was 8 years old'

The 42

time4 hours ago

  • The 42

‘The first time I ever cut weight, I was 8 years old'

THE PAST 12 months are as close as it gets to downtime for an elite athlete with Olympic aspirations. In Jack Woolley's case, this less hectic period has been badly needed. These days, the Irish taekwondo star is based in Madrid, training in a club with a big group of international athletes. He moved there after finishing in seventh place at the 2024 Paris Games. It was not the medal win he had hoped for, but it was an improvement on the disappointing round-of-16 exit at the Tokyo Olympics. Not that he has been away long enough to feel homesick, however. Woolley was back in Ireland for an extended period earlier this year to compete in the eighth season of RTÉ's Dancing with the Stars. 'I wanted to enjoy the process for what it was,' he tells The 42. 'I didn't want to have another competitive environment. So I think after week three, I was easier on myself, I was allowing myself to make mistakes.' Competing with pro partner Alex Vladimirov, Woolley lost out in the final to fellow Olympian Rhys McClenaghan and Laura Nolan. Woolley calls the experience 'the best thing I've ever done,' adding: 'I had some time to myself. I never was able to do that, especially after Tokyo. Because it was put back a year [due to the pandemic], we only had a three-year gap between Tokyo and Paris, so that flew by.' Previously, taekwondo required its athletes to put in four years of preparation ahead of the Olympics, but it has been shortened to two. For the last 12 months at least, Woolley has been able to 'have a life and look at things outside the sport a little bit more'. He explains: 'Since I was eight years old, my focus has been to get to the Olympics and perform. This was the first time I'm here for myself, and I've seen so much self-growth in the last six to 12 months.' So after Paris, for once, the path ahead was not obvious. 'It was like: 'Okay, if the sport ended tomorrow, what do I have?' And that was the question that you have to start to ask yourself.' Woolley turns 27 next month. He is a young man in most people's eyes, but old for a taekwondo competitor. 'Unfortunately, in my sport, you never really see anybody go past 30,' he says. Consequently, the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles are set to be his last hurrah in the sport he has devoted his life to. One aspect he is unlikely to miss is the inherent focus on weight required for an athlete of his calibre. Jack Woolley is consoled by coach Robert Taaffe after the 58kg Repechage at the Paris Olympics. James Crombie / INPHO James Crombie / INPHO / INPHO Not every single weight class is in the Olympics — it is every second weight class. In Tokyo and Paris, he competed at 58 kilos. He has moved up to 63 now, because '58 was impossible to make'. He continues: 'I haven't made 58 kilos since the Games themselves last year. So I've moved up to 63 and I feel a lot healthier and more comfortable. And this is the path I'm going to take. But there's no 63 in the Olympics, so it's a 10 kilo jump to 68.' This year, he will participate in a couple of events at 63, including the World Championships in October, and test a few at 68, although he has not made a final call on competing at 58 or 68 for the 2028 Los Angeles Games. 'I would be considered tall for 58 but not so much at 68, so we're going to see if my game can hold up in the heavier weight class,' he adds. 'I walk around at 65, 66. It wouldn't be necessary to cut weight. 63 is fine, I just eat a little bit cleaner and don't eat after training the night before I make weight. 'But anything lower than 62, I struggle with.' The need to cut weight in combat sports can often create an unhealthy mindset, which has affected Woolley in the past. 'I've spoken about being very self-conscious and struggling with eating disorders and body dysmorphia and stuff like that. I think, unfortunately, that's what comes with weight making sports; we don't fight at our natural weights, and that can be difficult. Advertisement 'Sometimes, for me, it was bringing in weighing scales to school. The first time I ever cut weight, I was eight years old. It's kind of crazy. 'And now, in these last 12 months, knowing that I don't need to go back to 58, and if I do, it's not right now. So I'm trying to develop a healthier relationship with my body and my eating. 'Being here in Spain, I think it helps quite a lot, because we're training twice a day. I need fuel for performance, not cutting weight so consistently like in previous years. 'Also, the eating times here are structured around training sessions. They eat dinner quite late, and I've just noticed a big shift in my energy. I've not gained a lot of weight. I'm not uncomfortable with how I look. 'Sometimes I can look in the mirror. I can be too heavy for myself, but five minutes later, I can look in the mirror and be skinny. It messes with your head, the sport. 'Sometimes I look at these heavier guys and think: 'I wish I looked like that.' Then, it's a catch-22 because when I do put on the weight, I look at the 58s and I'm like: 'I wish I looked like that.' 'But I'm adapting to it. And I'm in a much better position than I was this time last year.' Being an elite athlete is a constant battle to evolve and improve. Documentaries and books, such as 'The Inner Game of Tennis' by W Timothy Gallwey, have helped the Dubliner better understand himself. 'It's all about managing your mindset and not being so critical of yourself. It's something I've needed, because when I make a mistake, I kind of shut down, whereas I need to see the positives of how to fix it, focus on myself and who's in front of me. Because often, you can have exterior pressure. You look at the crowd, scoreboards, the refs and stuff like that. That's something I have struggled with. 'So a lot of our training now is based on focus and staying in ourselves, in the moment, and not getting panicked when something doesn't go our way.' Woolley has been paying increasing attention to areas of psychology and mental health of late. Not long after the Tokyo Olympics, he was the victim of a vicious, random assault in Dublin city centre that left him hospitalised. Reaching Paris in 2024 was particularly taxing. The qualification system began before the Tokyo Games had even started. You qualify through ranking and pick up points by medalling at various competitions along the way, and the top six advance automatically. 'So we were trying our best and going to every competition possible, travelling the world, trying to block this person from getting medals, even though I had got my points,' he recalls. 'It was all very technical, mathematical, crazy.' So in 2023, Woolley competed in no fewer than 22 competitions. 'And that was 19 weight cuts. And people see these mad weight cuts online with MMA fighters. And it's like that in our sport. 'To do it 19 times, I was cutting seven kilos for every competition. 'And to do 19 of them in a year, two or three a month, sometimes, it just got very overwhelming. 'And then when I didn't qualify automatically and had to go through the qualifiers, especially then with the assault that had happened, everything just kind of built up.' As a top-level athlete, Woolley became proficient at 'shutting things out'. If something entered his mind that did not relate to competing and winning medals, he tried to push it aside. 'I think I did that way too much,' he says. 'I never addressed a lot of the issues that I was having with the weight, with the assault, with losing at the Olympics in Tokyo, there was a lot of pressure on me, and then when I didn't get in through ranking, it hit me like a wave. I was having panic attacks, suffering badly with my anxiety. I was waking up in the morning, not wanting to go to training. 'I had a habit of just dragging myself there, because if I wanted to go to Paris, then I needed to qualify through the event that was on in March 2024, so those treatments were very difficult, and I managed to qualify. 'It wasn't like a switch that I flicked that I was able to be alright again. It was an ongoing process. 'I think after the Games in Paris, I was able to step back and deal with that. Unfortunately, it happened at a pretty bad time, six months out from the Olympics. But I'm one of those people who don't want to have any regrets. I don't want to think 'what if' or anything like that.' Woolley is aiming to qualify for a third successive Olympics in Los Angeles. Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo There is a video of the moment Woolley qualified for the Paris Olympics. He drops to the floor, and the sense of relief is palpable. He wanted to prove that reaching Tokyo was no fluke, having also narrowly missed out on Rio as a 17-year-old. 'I know it's doable, but it did take a lot to get there, a lot of psych work, meeting with people to talk about how I'm feeling. I was checking in with somebody every day to make sure I was focused and not getting distracted by anything, and just solely on the game, and that's what I did. 'Even in the lead up to Paris, once I had qualified, nothing changed. I still had the same focus to put in the best performance possible. 'Hopefully now, with a better environment and better headspace going into LA, I'm able to walk away with a medal.' Nowadays, he can put more focus on the sport itself, rather than 'having to train in a load of jackets to try to lose weight and sweat. Sometimes, you're just so focused on what the scales say that you don't pay too much attention to the tactical side of things. But the fact that I don't need to stress about that, it's been really good and [there have been] fewer competitions and just focusing more on training, which is something I've never really had before.' **** 'I can wear both my medals and my identity with pride.' Irish taekwondo Olympian Jack Woolley shares why representation isn't just about visibility, it's a victory, both on and off the mat.#Pride | #Pride2025 I @Irishtaekwondo I @TeamIreland I @worldtaekwondo — The Olympic Games (@Olympics) June 20, 2025 Outside of sport, too, Woolley feels happy. He recently got engaged to Dave, a personal trainer, whom he met in 2021, although the wedding will likely have to wait until after LA. The Irish star also recently teamed up with the Olympics to produce a video (see above) in which Woolley declares he is 'proud' to be a gay man. Woolley came out when he was 15, and while he has not hidden his sexuality since becoming a public figure, he says 'sometimes I find it uncomfortable to talk about' and often felt 'there was no point in talking about it'. He adds, 'Sometimes the personal life isn't well received by the sporting community.' Earlier this year, when Woolley posted news of his engagement to Dave, the Tallaght native was taken aback by the ignorant responses he received. 'There was a big increase in homophobia online, just comments and DMs. I've seen messages from people before they knew. It was like: 'You're my role model, can you give me a shout out, blah, blah, blah, we love you and your style.' 'And then they see I'm in a same sex relationship, I get a load of abuse off them. 'One minute, you're telling me I'm your role model. And now, I'm getting this abuse off you. 'I can just press block and that's the end of it for me. But that's just the way I was brought up. I'm a bit more thick-skinned. A lot of people might struggle with stuff like that, so if I'm able to raise awareness and put my name out there, and show the good and the negative side of being a gay athlete, it might help others in the future.' Woolley says 'nobody cared' when he came out in secondary school nearly 12 years ago, but he has had to deal with abuse in sport. 'I can say it doesn't affect me, but sometimes it does. You never know who's going to be at these competitions or who you're going to bump into. 'I've seen competitors that are going to be at your competition commenting on stuff like this, telling me to get out of the sport, I'm not welcome in the sport and everything like that. 'In 2022, I was walking into the ring against an opponent, and his supporters were shouting slurs at me. That was the first time I had it in person. 'I could have gone one of two ways. I could have panicked and lost that match, or I could have done what I did, and I laughed at them. I won the match, and then I just laughed at them again and walked off. 'But it can be tough. I'm able to act one way, but as I'm sitting at home and thinking about it, it can be quite difficult, because nobody else has to experience that.' In this climate, with homophobia particularly prominent on various social media platforms, Woolley can understand why some athletes and others might be reluctant to speak openly about their sexuality. 'I've had a good few DMs from people who are struggling, especially since being so open about it on national TV [during Dancing with the Stars]. 'Even talking about how I met my fiancé and his struggles — because I came out at 15, he didn't come out until he was 35. So that's two completely different stories. 'I do have his permission, but we do talk about it. And if people are struggling, I have no problem chatting with them, seeing how it fits into their lives. 'I think everybody's different. It'd be wrong of me to turn around and tell everybody: 'Oh yeah, come out. It's great.' I don't know other people's situations. 'It's not my job to do that, and I'm not going to sit around all day. But if I can help them on an individual basis — it's not something I can say for everybody — but do what's best for you is the most important thing, talk to somebody, find somebody you're comfortable speaking to, whether they even understand, or it's just to get it off your chest.' Whether it's dealing with homophobic hatred or coping with the intense pressure of a big taekwondo event, for Woolley, this past year has been all about being better equipped at handling his emotions in fraught circumstances. 'There was a saying my coach said to me the other day, and I'm trying to remember the exact words. ''You can't control the storm, but you can control how you act within it,' or something like that. It's just stuck with me. I can't control what's going on, but I can control how I react.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store