Skorts controversy: Dublin and Kilkenny camogie players may be sanctioned for wearing shorts
Kilkenny
and
Dublin
senior
camogie
teams at the Leinster Senior Semi Final who wore shorts instead of the
regulatory 'skorts'
almost saw the match being completely called off.
The 30 women, 15 from Kilkenny wearing black shorts and 15 from Dublin kitted out in navy shorts, may still face sanctions after they stood determinedly on the pitch at St Peregrine's GAA club, Blanchardstown as the national anthem started at the kick-off time of 3.30pm on Saturday.
The move was part of a campaign to allow women the choice to wear shorts instead of the obligatory skorts, which are skirts with shorts underneath.
Referee Ray Kelly from Kildare, told the teams, Kilkenny managed by Tommy Shefflin and Gerry McQuaid for Dublin, that they would have to get changed in skorts or the match would be abandoned.
READ MORE
[
Skorts: What are they and why are we suddenly talking about them?
Opens in new window
]
As Amhrán na bhFiann was being played , the Dublin team walked off while the Kilkenny side stayed standing shoulder to shoulder until they too left the pitch after the anthem finished.
Confusion reigned with hundreds of onlookers wondering if the game would go ahead or what was happening as many did not notice the women wearing shorts.
Several minutes later, the Kilkenny team came back onto the pitch wearing their skorts while the Dublin side seemed to be making their minds up as to what they would do.
Players in their camogie skorts during the match. Photograph: Nick Bradshaw
About five minutes later the Dubs came out of the changing rooms, now wearing the mandatory skorts. Eventually it was game on.
Aoife Lanigan, Kilkenny PRO said she believed that the plucky move by the players will certainly make GAA management take note. But there could still be sanctions to face.
'They could face big fines and the players having their names written in a match report by the referee. The players were making a point for all to see (within the Camogie Association). When all three associations combine, the question will surely be why do women have to continue wearing skorts?'
[
Camogie Association 'committed' to players after proposals to allow shorts fail
Opens in new window
]
Many camogie players find the mandated skirt-short hybrids restricting, but it seems they will be stuck wearing them until 2027 at least. The Camogie Association, the GAA and the LGFA previously revealed that 2027 was the proposed date for their plans for full integration between the three.
Camogie players are obliged to wear skorts as under rule 6(b) of the sport's code ordains that playing gear must include a skirt/skort/divided skirt. The issue is that most players hate wearing them, arguing that they restrict their freedom, largely because the shorts are of the 'compression' kind, and they would prefer to wear regular shorts.
Kilkenny captain Katie Power in shorts with referee Ray Kelly and Dublin's Aisling Maher again in shorts ahead of kick off. Photograph: Nick Bradshaw
Secondary school Kilkenny supporter Tara Kelly believes the women 'should be allowed to have a choice of what they wear whether it is skort or short. It should be about comfort not having to be kitted out in one or the other.'
Numerous other female supporters agreed with one teenager who did not wish to be named adding: 'I think the shorts look good and the women certainly look much more comfortable'. A number of men did not even notice they were wearing shorts instead of skorts at the start of the game.
Kilkenny ultimately picked up a 4-11 to 2-12 victory over Dublin.
A Gaelic Player Association (GPA) spokesperson said: 'The GPA fully supports players having the right to choose between shorts or skorts and our position on this will not change.
'It is unacceptable that female athletes are being compelled to wear gear that they believe compromises their performance and well-being. We stand firmly with any player or team who opts for shorts and commend the Dublin and Kilkenny players for asserting that right today.
'These athletes were put in an impossible position — wear what they believe is right or face the prospect of the game being abandoned. As always, players chose to compete.
'We now call on the Camogie Association to listen to players and respect their autonomy'.
Last year London club Thomas McCurtains launched its 'Shorts Not Skorts' campaign, and it all came to a head last weekend when two proposals were put to camogie's congress calling for the rule to be changed.
Both proposals were defeated. And the issue cannot be up for discussion again until 2027.
More than 60 per cent of the delegates vote against Tipperary and Kerry's motion that wanted the skirt/skort/divided skirt wording removed completely and replaced with 'shorts', while 55 per cent said no thank you to Meath and Britain's proposal that shorts be offered as a choice alongside skorts.

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


The Irish Sun
2 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
Potential blow for Kerry GAA on the horizon as rising star flies to Australia to negotiate AFL switch
A GAA legend hit out at the AFL for poaching Irish talent UNDER THE RADAR Potential blow for Kerry GAA on the horizon as rising star flies to Australia to negotiate AFL switch ANOTHER rising GAA star could be set for a move to Australia, according to reports. Per the Irish Examiner, Kerry starlet Ben Murphy is set to fly to Australia this week to visit the Brisbane Lions. 2 Ben Murphy, left, could be set for a move to the AFL Credit: Thomas Flinkow/Sportsfile It is believed that the Lions are one of two AFL clubs speaking to the Austin Stacks youngster who helped the Kingdom win the U20 Munster final against Cork last April. He was also named in the 2024 Electric Ireland GAA Minor Star Football Team of the Year. Should he be snapped up by Brisbane, Murphy would be one of a number of Kerry players currently plying their trade Down Under. Cillian Burke joined Geelong last year, with Mark O'Connor a teammate. Meanwhile, Rob Monahan is with Carlton Blues in Melbourne. GAA players making moves to the AFL has been a polarising topic in Ireland, with some complaining about the process by which it takes place. Back in February, Kerry U20 boss Tomás Ó Sé slammed the AFL for poaching young talent. Five-time All-Star Ó Sé does not begrudge any youngster going Down Under but has a dim view of how the Aussie professional outfits go about their business. He said: 'I think it's wrong what's going on. 'I know for a fact that there's an Under-20 player in Kerry being rung by coaches from an Australian club telling him how he did in matches after watching him. Inside Sharlene Mawdsley's 'delicious' yet atypical Tenerife holiday with GAA star boyfriend Mikey Breen 'And if it was a professional . . . I don't know what the rules are. "If it was soccer or rugby I don't think they'd be allowed to do that when the fella is doing his Leaving Cert. 'Don't get me wrong, fellas think I'm completely against going out. "If the offer is there, I'd wish him all the best and I'd always wish him all the best and I hope there's success out there and it's brilliant. 'But as a Kerry man, I hate the way it's done. 'I just hate the way there's 15 years going into a young fella and it's just, 'Oh yeah, we'll have that fella there and we'll shoot off'.' The previous December, former Kerry and AFL star Tommy Walsh urged the GAA to be proactive in tackling the issue. Speaking on The Mike Quirke Podcast, Walsh made it clear that he doesn't want to stop players from leaving or deny them the opportunity - but would like to incentivise them to stay. 'AGGRESSIVE' Walsh told former Kerry player and selector Quirke that the AFL issue 'isn't going away' because the recruitment rules around international players are favourable. He said: "I think it's going to be a really difficult one to get your head around and to try to see any change in the numbers that are going over. They're a very aggressive organisation. "They want to grow and Ireland is a market for them. So, as I said, it isn't going away. It is something that's probably going to get bigger. "It's up to the GAA, nationally and locally, they need to get in front of it and to put something together so that at least if they do come to a guy, that we already have him down a particular path possibly before they even get to them. "From a player's point of view, it's great because their conditions are going to improve, if you are one of those guys. "And if you never end up going to Australia, this Australian problem we'll call it, has improved your life here. So it may well be a good thing for player welfare going forward."


Irish Times
9 hours ago
- Irish Times
Mason Melia building towards thrilling end to St Pat's chapter ahead of Tottenham move
Richmond Park is the League of Ireland's Cape Canaveral – the latest rocket to be launched from there is Mason Melia . We borrow the introduction from The Bard of Burgh Quay. Back in 1982, Con Houlihan was referring to Paul McGrath just before he landed at Old Trafford. Houlihan never laid eyes on Melia, having passed away 13 years ago this month. In December, as Ian O'Riordan noted in these pages , Con would have turned 100. Comparing a player to McGrath, at any point in their career, is like comparing a sports columnist to Houlihan. It is unfair, even foolhardy. READ MORE Melia turns 18 in September. Come January he will be training down Hotspur Way alongside Richarlison and Dominic Solanke, becoming Irish football's modern test case, an unintended consequence of Brexit that prompted the best teenagers to stay home until they are legally permitted to sip a pint of plain. ' Tottenham have a plan for me,' he informed a handful of reporters recently. 'We'll take it step-by-step here and see how I'm feeling in January and go from there.' St Patrick's Athletic understood the assignment, negotiating the sort of seven-figure fee that Shamrock Rovers now seek for Victor Ozhianvuna and Michael Noonan. It is what Cork City could have received for Cathal O'Sullivan until his cruciate ligament snapped for a second time in three seasons. [ Behind the scenes at St Patrick's Athletic's academy, where the next Mason Melia may already have arrived Opens in new window ] The past two years of impressive displays may not be enough for Melia to storm past Mathys Tel and Mohammed Kudus in the Spurs pecking order, never mind Richarlison and Solanke, but no more can be asked of the club he joined from Bray Wanderers at 14. Last night, in Istanbul against Besiktas, Melia made his twelfth European appearance for the Inchicore institution. 'I'm still only 17 but I've played over 80 games in senior football now,' he remarked. 'I think everything has worked out the way I would like it to work out.' He also has 20 goals and six assists. 'I've grown into more of a man. I'm feeling more physical and ready for a bigger challenge.' Beşiktaş (a) ⏳ 📸 Eoghan Connelly — St Patrick's Athletic FC (@stpatsfc) There will be moments to savour between now and Melia's move to London in December. On Sunday, if Shelbourne have their way, it will be his last FAI Cup game for St Pat's. Bizarrely, St Pats versus Shels down by the River Camac is not being televised as RTÉ instead choose the Saturday night rerun of last year's final between Drogheda United and Derry City. Melia's last game for the Saints is also scheduled to be against Shelbourne at Tolka Park on Saturday, November 1st at 7.45pm. Primetime. If the Dublin rivals are still scrapping for a European spot, an electric atmosphere will be broadcast by Virgin Media. Both TV stations were absent from Tallaght stadium last week as Tammy Abraham plundered a hat-trick for Besiktas before half-time. Despite an impossible task, the St Pat's fireflies were a constant nuisance as Melia, Simon Power and Kian Leavy refused to accept their fate. RTÉ slept on their League of Ireland coverage and lost it to Virgin, but by securing the FAI Cup rights until 2027 they may provide the final stop on Melia's farewell tour. A possible ending has Stephen Kenny guiding St Pat's to the decider at the Aviva Stadium on Sunday, November 9th. The cup final is still the best advertisement for Irish soccer. If the 2025 version pairs Pats against a double-chasing Shamrock Rovers, with Melia, Ozhianvuna and Noonan on show, it would certainly capture the zeitgeist. Or we will get a completely different narrative, like Bohs v Shels or Derry City v Cork City. Let's see how the last 16 pans out. As the light declined in Turkey on Wednesday evening, St Pat's club photographer Eoghan Connelly captured the entire travelling party with the Tüpraş Stadyumu backdrop. Melia is among them, pointing at the match ball as if to suggest a freakish hat-trick was in the post. 'I kind of like attention,' the teenager told us. 'If you've had attention, you're doing something right. I've dealt with it since I was young, I have a good family behind me. Everyone keeps me humble. I think I'm humble.' The son of north Wicklow, whose mother Pamela ferries him 50 kilometres to training in Abbotstown, has taken flight of late. Mason Melia heads home for St Patrick's Athletic against Sligo Rovers at Richmond Park. Photograph: James Lawlor/Inpho Last Sunday he made it 2-0 against Sligo Rovers with a header off Brandon Kavanagh's corner. Four minutes later, he powered past Ollie Denham before a scandalous rollover touch grounded Rovers goalkeeper Sam Sargeant and allowed him finish from an acute angle. The only pity was the absence of a camera behind the goal where Con Houlihan used to stand. Up Next Dreams will be dashed or kept afloat tonight as the cup serves up three localised last-16 duels. Waterford go to Turners' Cross to face a troubled Cork City, Salthill face Galway United in Eamonn Deacy Park and Kerry host Cobh Ramblers at Mounthawk Park.


Irish Daily Mirror
16 hours ago
- Irish Daily Mirror
Pat Spillane blasts major GAA decision as an 'embarrassment' and an 'insult'
Pat Spillane, in his thoughts on the 2025 season, has called the GAA's decision to host the jubilee team celebrations before the All-Ireland finals an 'embarrassment' and an 'insult'. The Kerry legend is still involved in the media . He wrote a typically entertaining column in the Sunday World and voiced his opinion on several issues. Among them was the jubilee team celebration. Each year, the winning All-Ireland team from 25 years ago is invited to Croke Park to celebrate their achievement. However, the GAA has changed the running order in recent years, with the jubilee team now presented to the crowd before the game rather than at half-time. "Having the presentation of the jubilee team in front of a couple of thousand people is an embarrassment and an insult," Spillane wrote in his column. He also criticised the organisation for their pre-final entertainment, saying the NFL will pull out all the stops for their game in Dublin this September. "America's NFL will be here in a couple of months. They're going to take over Dublin for the week. They're going to have street parties. They're going to have fan zones. They're going to have marching bands. They're going to have a festival of American football in Dublin for the week," he wrote. "Surely to God, when it comes to the All-Ireland senior football final and the All-Ireland senior hurling final, the GAA could up its game? Instead, it's a box-ticking exercise. They're going through the motions." The decision to change the jubilee presentation pre-match has drawn criticism in some quarters, with Offaly requesting that their 1998 team be presented at half-time. Kilkenny were honoured before this year's final, and the ceremony made headlines after DJ Carey's name was booed pre-match. Carey's name was met with jeers and boos from the crowd as it was read out under an hour before throw-in. The Croke Park stadium announcer said of the nine-time All-Star winner: "Full forward DJ Carey from the Young Irelands. He scored 1-4 on the day, claiming his third All-Ireland of five in total and he would end the year with the eighth of his nine All-Star awards. DJ is not with us today." The five-time All-Ireland winner recently pleaded guilty to 10 counts of defrauding a number of people out of money while pretending he had cancer.