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Irish U-12 team's football washes up Welsh beach
Irish U-12 team's football washes up Welsh beach

BBC News

time29-04-2025

  • Sport
  • BBC News

Irish U-12 team's football washes up Welsh beach

Sometimes when you are playing football, a wild kick can send the ball over a fence or into a garden where you didn't really mean it to how about sending the ball... over the Irish Sea?Well, when 12-year-old Celyn was searching for driftwood on his local beach in Anglesey, he made a strange discovery nestled between some the battered ball had been left behind by visitors, Celyn and his dad were amazed to see that written on the side was 'Finglas United Under-12s', a team based in a suburb of Ireland's capital city, Dublin. Celyn's dad Andrew, who runs a campsite nearby, said: "The beach is at the bottom of our fields and isn't the easiest place to get to. "We saw it belonged to a team in Dublin which was quite a shock and not what I expected. I wouldn't like to think how long it had been in the sea... we've found ropes and things like that washed up before but never a football."Andrew and Celyn explained that the ball was quite battered but was good enough to have a kickabout about the find on social media, Finglas Football Club pointed out that their under-9s found success at a tournament in Blackpool over Easter weekend but admitted that "a bit of shooting practice" may be needed for their under-12s team!

Mystery as Irish football found washed up on Welsh beach
Mystery as Irish football found washed up on Welsh beach

BBC News

time22-04-2025

  • Sport
  • BBC News

Mystery as Irish football found washed up on Welsh beach

While a football missing its intended target may be nothing new, an Anglesey family were surprised to find a ball washed up 80 miles from its home on the other side of the Irish Sea.12-year-old Celyn was searching for driftwood on his local beach at Porth y Nant with his father, Andrew, when they made the discovery nestled between some rocks on Easter suspecting it had been left behind by visitors, upon closer inspection they were shocked to see that emblazoned on the side was Finglas United Under-12s - a youth team based in a north western suburb of Dublin. Andrew, 47, who runs a campsite nearby, said: "The beach is at the bottom of our fields at Pengraig and isn't the easiest place to get to."I saw this football and booted it towards Celyn, only later realising where it had come from as it's not somewhere you'd expect to see a ball."A google search later and we saw it belonged to a team in Dublin which was quite a shock and not what I expected. "I wouldn't like to think how long it had been in the sea.... we've found ropes and things like that washed up before but never a football." It is not known how the ball ended up in the Irish Sea, but Andrew said, "the ball is quite battered but was good enough for us to have a kickabout with".Finglas' under-9s found success at a youth tournament in Blackpool over the weekend, and joked that "a bit of shooting practice" may be required for the under-12s group."There's missing the target," the club wrote on Facebook, "and then there's the football ending up in Wales missing the target".Andrew added: "It's had quite a response on Facebook, I'm sure its too battered for the club to use again but it would be nice to see it return home."

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