
‘Life & soul of the dressing room' – Heartbreaking football team tribute to teen who died in Carlow swimming tragedy
A CARLOW football team has paid emotional tribute to "beloved" teen Peter Byrne who tragically died in a swimming incident.
The young player for New Oak FC passed away after getting into difficulty in the water at Cloghristick, Milford, Co
Advertisement
The emergency services, including the ambulance, fire brigade and
Peter is believed to have been swimming with friends when he got into difficulty in the river in the Milford area of the county - around eight kilometres from
The teen, who had just finished Transition Year in the local CBS secondary
It's believed that they then decided to go swimming.
Advertisement
Read more in News
And the student's friend saw him get into difficulty in the water and tried to help him.
New Oak FC took to
They wrote on
"Peter was a pocket rocket in the team over the last number of years.
Advertisement
MOST READ IN THE IRISH SUN
Breaking
Exclusive
Exclusive
"Small in stature but big in personality. He was a huge character with a touch of Roy Keane about him, not afraid of anything or anyone."
They continued: "Peter was the life and soul of the dressing room and training and will be sadly missed by his coaches Ernie, Danny and all his teammates who have not only lost a fellow player but a friend.
Five people killed in 48 hours on Irish roads as Gardai issue safety appeal after telling 'dreaded news' to families
"On behalf of everyone at New Oak FC we would like to offer our deepest condolences to Peter's family and friends.
"Our thoughts and prayers are with all who loved him. May Peter's gentle soul Rest in Peace."
Advertisement
The local community was also left devastated by the news of his sad passing, with a few taking to the comments section to express their condolences.
One person said: "What heartbreaking and awful news, may he rest in peace. Sincere condolences to his family, friends and also your club."
Someone else wrote: "So sorry to all Peter's family, friends and teammates. I can't begin to imagine how you all must be feeling.
'GREAT PLAYER'
"Thinking of you all at this sad time. He was a great player, may Peter rest in peace."
Advertisement
A third wrote: "Condolences to all his teammates, may his gentle soul Rest in Eternal Peace, Forever Young."
Mayor of Carlow Fintan Phelan described it as a 'terrible incident' and said he was 'shocked and saddened' by what had occurred.
He sent his sympathies to the young man's family and also the friends who witnessed the tragedy.
The
Advertisement
'My thoughts are with them all at this incredibly difficult time and my thoughts are also with his friends who were there when this terrible incident happened. Look, it's a sad and difficult time for them all.'
In a statement yesterday a Garda spokesperson said: "Following a search operation involving Gardai and emergency services, the Garda Water Unit recovered the body of a male, aged in his late teens, from the River Barrow at Milford, Co. Carlow, yesterday evening, Tuesday 17th June 2025.
"His remains have been transferred to Waterford University Hospital where a postmortem examination will take place in due course. A file will be prepared for the Coroner."
No funeral arrangements have been made as yet.
Advertisement
1
Peter Byrne passed away after getting into difficulty in the water on Tuesday evening
Credit: SOCIAL MEDIA COLLECT

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


Irish Examiner
an hour ago
- Irish Examiner
Kicking off Lions tour against Argentina in Ireland is profitable for everyone
This is about the game-time and the cash. In the first place, Andy Farrell has 38 players he needs to use in the first three games of the British and Irish Lions tour and the first instalment will take place at the Aviva Stadium against Argentina on Friday night. In the second place, it is about filling the coffers of the Lions machine and the four home unions who are part of the caravan. Gate receipts from this game will yield in the region of €3m (£2.55m) after costs, which goes towards the Lions' bottom line, with a dividend to come to the unions involved. Unlike the last time the tourists opened an adventure to Australia – with the crazy cash-grabber in sweltering Hong Kong in 2013 – this has a less manufactured look to it. Certainly, it suits the Argentinians and the Irish. The away team will pick up circa €1m (£850,000) for their efforts – double their take-home from the pre-New Zealand tour game against the Lions in Cardiff in 2005 – and the Irish Rugby Football Union will collect the wedge for the hire of the dancehall, plus the honour of a first Lions game on its soil: a fitting way to round off a season celebrating its 150th anniversary. So you see why the Pumas would love to set the Lions off to a bad start. Their chances are not great given this Test is outside the international window and Felipe Contepomi, their coach, is relying heavily on their Super Rugby Americas contingent for what is their opening game of the season. Meantime, the noises coming from the Lions camp are all very positive. England's Tommy Freeman, for example, sounds as if he is straining at the leash to get started. And what can we expect? Read More Freeman looks to North for inspiration ahead of Lions' trip Down Under 'Without giving away too much, hopefully a lot of tries,' he says. 'Instinctive playing; we're not going to be there to set stuff up and go through phases for the sake of going through phases. We want to score off the back of anything we can. The guys we've got in the backline, there are threats people have to offer and the ballplayers can put us in those spaces. It's going to be a lot of fun and dangerous, I think. 'It's the best of the best, isn't it? You're all there for a reason. It's how quick everyone is learning the plays, learning the calls. It's how quick everyone is learning that and getting on board with it. 'I've played around Fin [Smith], Mitch [Alex Mitchell] and the Saints lads, but with the others, we've got to know each other and the way they move the ball and do things. You pick up cues here and there so it's all about adapting and how quick we've learned off each other in the past few weeks.' According to the attack coach, Richard Wigglesworth, his own working relationship with Johnny Sexton is developing in the same vein of learning. For the group he is confident about the end result. 'I think the Lions way will find itself to ultimately go and try and win a Test series,' he says. 'You can have: 'Oh, this is what we want it to look like,' but if it's all on the line in the third Test and it's raining, it's going to look different. Read More Farrell throws down the gauntlet as opportunity beckons for chosen Lions 'The Lions way is us being the best prepared we can, whatever the circumstances, whatever the context of that game. Because we want to come out with a successful tour, both on and off the field.' The target then is for everyone to be richer from the experience. Guardian

The 42
an hour ago
- The 42
A New York All-Ireland final and Croke Park championship meetings - Kerry and Cavan's history
WHEN CAVAN ARRIVE in Killarney this Saturday, it will mark the first championship fixtures between the sides since 2013. They don't share a storied rivalry. There's not that much in the archives. Prior to that six-point win for Kerry in the All-Ireland quarter-final, they collided in the 1997 All-Ireland semi-final where the Kingdom also triumphed. And then there's the 1947 All-Ireland final which has become a major part of GAA lore on account of the fact it was held at a baseball field in New York. It was certainly an unusual choice of setting, and it would not be the last time the Big Apple would host a Kerry-Cavan clash. The meetings may have been infrequent, but the ones that have occurred amount to a rich and fascinating history between the counties. **** 1947 All-Ireland Final, Polo Grounds, New York: Cavan 2-11 Kerry 2-7 We begin with the most documented tie of the lot. The motivation for bringing the All-Ireland final to New York was to mark the 100-year anniversary of the Great Famine and honour the Irish diaspora who fled to America as a result. A famous encounter followed, immortalised by the words 'just five minutes more' from legendary broadcaster Micheál O'Heir. There had been technical difficulties involved in organising the radio coverage at the Polo Grounds for people back home in Ireland, and O'Heir made the plea to prevent anyone on the airwaves who might disconnect the line. 📸 Members of the Cavan & Kerry squads raise a toast aboard the RMS Queen Mary as they sail home from NYC after the All-Ireland Football Final of 1947 🚢 🗽 🤝 #GAA #Sportsmanship #Legends 💙🤍 💛💚 — John Joe O'Reilly Memorial Monument (@johnjoememorial) October 1, 2022 Footage of that game has been well preserved. Images have been refined and enhanced. One particular shot captures some of the Kerry and Cavan contingent enjoying a drink together on board the Queen Mary while travelling back to Ireland. A book by Mick Dunne called 'The Star Spangled Final' is one such resource that captures the game and the events around it. Another is 'The Fairytale In New York' by Anglo Celt editor, Paul Fitzpatrick. He explains how Cavan played against Kerry at a tournament in London earlier that year, around the same time that Congress passed a vote to play the All-Ireland final in New York. 'As they were coming off the field, the Cavan and Kerry lads were saying, 'Look we'll see ye in New York in September.' 'Simon Deignan was playing at wing-back for Cavan, and went on to win three All-Irelands. He was also a referee. He refereed the Munster final between Kerry and Cork. Then a couple of months later, he was playing against Kerry in the final,' Fitzpatrick says. Air travel was in its infancy in those days but the teams travelled by plane. It took 29 hours to reach the States, according to Fitzpatrick, and the flight was 'unbelievably hairy.' Members of that Cavan team won two more All-Irelands in 1948 and 1952, but have remarked to Fitzpatrick that the '47 outshone them both. The experience exposed them to another world of living. 'The New York thing was just insane, really. You still had rationing in Ireland as well. The Cavan players all said that they couldn't believe that everywhere was lit up, everywhere had full electricity, the shops were full of food.' Advertisement The baseball grounds were not well received by the players as there was very little grass, making the surface difficult to play on. Another inconvenience was the mound of earth in the field where pitchers throw the ball during baseball games. But Cavan still prevailed by four points to become All-Ireland champions having lost the 1943 and 1945 finals. The team was packed with interesting characters, including Willie Doonan who served for the British Army during the war. 'They came from all walks of life,' Fitzpatrick continues. 'John Joe Reilly at centre-back was a commandant in the Irish Army and was nailed on certain future Chief of Staff in the Army before he died. And then you had John Wilson, who went on to become Táinaiste. 'Mick Higgins was born in New York the day that Michael Collins was shot.' The Fairytale of New York by Paul Fitzpatrick. In 1997, 50 years after the 1947 encounter, Kerry and Cavan returned to New York to play out a National League game in Randall's Island. Kerry won 1-12 to 0-8 with Maurice Fitzgerald accounting for 1-10 of the Kerry tally. A tribute match to mark the anniversary of another tribute match. A huge Cavan crowd travelled to honour a team that had just given them a summer to remember. 1997 All-Ireland semi-final: Kerry 1-17 Cavan 1-10 In 1997, Cavan ended a 28-year famine for an Ulster senior title. Their U21s had won a provincial crown the previous year before going on to contest the All-Ireland final. Interestingly, Kerry were their opponents as Cavan lost out by four points. Martin McHugh, an All-Ireland winner with Donegal in 1992, had just come on board as the new Cavan manager. And after losing the 1995 Ulster final, he helped them conquer the province with a one-point win over a Derry team that had won the 1993 All-Ireland. 'Cavan had lost the first round in Ulster seven years in a row, and then McHugh came in,' Fitzpatrick explains. 'The buzz in the county was insane. 'It probably inspired a full generation. In 2020 [when Cavan won the Ulster final], they didn't get that, because obviously it was the height of Covid so kids didn't get to go to the games. They didn't have a proper homecoming or anything.' Kerry were experiencing a drought of their own in those times. They were into their 11th year without a visit from Sam Maguire. That's a lifetime in their world. And when Fintan Cahill crashed home a goal just before half-time, Cavan were 1-7 to 0-9 in front. They could have been even further in front had Peter Reilly's shot not been saved by Declan O'Keeffe. However, Kerry survived the scare and a Mike Frank Russell goal shortly after his introduction from the bench propelled the Kingdom to a 1-17 to 1-10 victory. 'Cavan lost by seven points, but really that flattered Kerry,' says Fitzpatrick. 'They added on a few scores at the very end of the game. It was Maurice Fitzgerald who beat Cavan that day. A couple mark their wedding day by attending the 1997 All-Ireland semi-final between Kerry and Cavan. 'It was seen as a disappointment, because I think even at the time, people knew it was an unbelievable opportunity. Kerry were nervy enough, hadn't won in 11 years. At that stage, Cavan still had an insane support. Related Reads 'You couldn't be happy with Saturday' - Paul Geaney gets ready for charge at Sam Maguire New kickout mark penalty to apply in this weekend's inter-county senior games How will eliminated teams reflect on 2025 Sam Maguire exit? 'There was a couple who got married that day, and they got Seán Quinn's helicopter up to Croke Park and went to the game in their wedding clothes. It's unbelievable. The place went bonkers that time.' 2013 All-Ireland Quarter-Final: Kerry 0-15 Cavan 0-9 In the aftermath of 1997, Fitzpatrick felt that the prevailing sense in the county was that Cavan had arrived. Or, to put it another way, they had returned. Cavan were a dominant force in Ulster during the early 20th century, and 1997 inspired belief that more success would follow. But aside from contesting the 2001 Ulster final, Cavan drifted. Fitzpatrick points to the years between 2009 and 2012 as being particularly grim. 'A bad culture' developed as the county became Division 3 strugglers. But then a shift occurred in 2011. A first Ulster minor title in 37 years was followed by an Ulster U21 four-in-a-row between 2011 and 2014. Some of those emerging stars lined out for Cavan when they arrived in Croke Park to take on Kerry. Among them was Killian Clarke who was named at corner-back while Dara McVeety was added as a late change. Many predicted the breakthrough would be further down the line, but Fitzpatrick disagreed. '2013 was probably as good a chance as any because Monaghan beat them by a point in the Ulster semi-final and [Monaghan] beat Donegal in the final. We're all looking ahead to the years to come and, in actual fact, that was a big opportunity.' After being diverted down the old qualifier route that season, Cavan picked up wins against Fermanagh, Derry (after extra-time) and London. They also defeated Armagh in the Ulster championship earlier in the summer. But by half-time against Kerry, they were 0-11 0-2 down. Cavan's Killian Clarke tackling Kerry forward Darran O'Sullivan in the 2013 All-Ireland quarter-final. Cathal Noonan / INPHO Cathal Noonan / INPHO / INPHO They added seven points in the second half with a more spirited display but were wasteful in front of the posts. Kerry always had them at arm's length. Terry Hyland was the Cavan manager at the time, and his defensive style of football didn't suit some of the Cavan purists. 'It made sense because a bit like the current team, they were leaking so many scores,' says Fitzpatrick. 'The problem Terry had was trying to improve that style as the years went on. He went too far the other way. The supporters were getting a bit pissed off in 2013. 'A friend of mine was in the front row of the Hogan stand [for the Kerry game]. Ronan Flanagan went to take a sideline ball and he kicked it back to [Alan] O'Mara in goals, which obviously would be common enough. This ould fella in front of him, leaned across the barrier and threw his program at Flanagan. This was like a Cavan old timer who was still in the catch and kick mode.' Despite the optimism around their successful youths, the titles didn't pour in. They would have to wait until that famous Covid Ulster final in 2020. Players like Pádraig Falkner, Gerard Smith and Ciarán Brady featured along with Clarke and McVeety. A reward at last. There is some disappointment around what those players didn't win, but there is plenty of gratitude for what they did deliver for the county. 'There's huge respect for those fellas at the same time. They brought us from the bottom to Division 1. We're still reliant on probably eight lads that have 100 caps on the senior team at the minute.' Another meeting with Kerry awaits this weekend. Another instalment in the archives.


Irish Examiner
2 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
Freeman looks to North for inspiration ahead of Lions' trip Down Under
Tommy Freeman was a 12-year-old kid still learning his rugby apprenticeship at the remote Culford School in Sussex when George North rampaged his way around Australia and etched his name into the padded pages of British and Irish Lions history. It started at Suncorp Stadium in Brisbane, in the first Test against the Wallabies, when the Welsh wing blitzed his way from the tourists' own 10m line, beat four players and wagged his finger at a flailing Will Genia before touching down. 'If I could do what he did it would be pretty good,' said Freeman who will join Scotland's Duhan van der Merwe and England counterpart Marcus Smith in an exciting Lions back three against Argentina in Dublin on Friday night. North didn't stop there in 2013. A week later and he was picking Israel Folau up and carrying him like a dumper truck would a pile of sand while ploughing ahead with the ball. Seven days later and he scored again as the Lions sealed a 2-1 series victory. Of all the players Freeman could have chosen when asked for his formative Lions memories, none seem so relevant given North, like Freeman now, was a Northampton Saints player at the time and a guy who could put in a hell of a shift at centre if required. 'For him it was similar to me with the size. I don't think he was looked at as a centre, it was 'if he could have a go and try it', and he happened to be pretty handy there. There are probably similar aspects to our games and when he was flying he was pretty unstoppable and pretty awesome to watch. 'There are definitely bits of the game but he could back it up as well. The game has changed massively. You have got the out and out wingers who stay out on their wings and run pretty fast and chase pretty hard whereas now it is just a centre playing on the wing these days, I would say.' Chris Boyd, the former Saints director of rugby who worked with Munster as a consultant last season, once said that Freeman could operate anywhere along a back line apart from No.10. He's clearly a handy man to have around right now. The player himself has spoken about the advantages that come with being able to slot into different roles and how this allows him to be a better teammate for those around him. Impress your peers, Andy Farrell has said. He's well poised to do that. There are others who bring versatility to the table but, when it comes to the two wing positions, it is Freeman, van der Merwe and the Irish pair of Mack Hansen and James Lowe who will be jostling for the starts come the first Wallaby Test in Brisbane. The Irish pair has the benefit of so much face time with Farrell and so many of the Lions coaching staff, but Freeman has built up an eye-catching body of work with his club and with England where his poaching instincts are only part of the package. Pace, power, fancy feet, and height Still only 24, he boasts pace, power, fancy feet, and height. Some of his assists have been more spectacular than his tries and there is ample evidence of a relish for the defensive game in the form of some thundering and critical tackles. This is a player who has overcome adversity too. Diagnosed with epilepsy as a kid, he was rejected by Leicester Tigers aged 16 and before a growth spurt that took him to 6' 2'. Eddie Jones took him off at half-time in his last game with England. And it's less than two years since he failed to make the World Cup. Freeman's Dublin audition won't be hurt by the presence of eight other Englishman in the first XV, and the fact that he will be operating off a half-back axis of Alex Mitchell and Fin Smith that he knows so well from their experiences together at Franklin's Gardens. That sort of in-built understanding has the potential to paper over what are sure to be some cracks in the early stages of this Lions operation with Freeman serving notice of a commitment to play some heads-up rugby now and in the weeks to come. "The intention, he says plainly of the approach, is to score lots of tries. 'Instinctive playing. We're not going to be there to set stuff up and go through phases for the sake of going through phases. We went to score off the back of anything we can. 'The guys we've got in the backline, there are threats people have to offer and the ball players can put us in those spaces. It's going to be a lot of fun and dangerous.' Read More Farrell throws down the gauntlet as opportunity beckons for chosen Lions