
Irish camogie players triumph after skorts backlash and can now wear shorts
The sport's ruling body on Thursday ended the obligation to wear skorts – a portmanteau of shorts and skirt – and said players could choose to wear shorts.
A special congress of the Camogie Association voted in a landslide – 98% of 133 delegates – to change a dress rule that critics said was archaic and deterred girls and women from taking up Ireland's female version of the Gaelic game of hurling.
Brian Molloy, the association's president, said: 'We are pleased to announce that delegates have voted by an overwhelming majority in favour of giving players greater choice in their playing attire.
'From midnight tonight each individual player will have the option to wear skorts or shorts – adding choice while maintaining the professionalism and uniformity of our team kits in both colour and design.'
Traditionalists had favoured skorts – a hybrid garment comprising an overlapping fabric panel over compressor-type shorts – as feminine but many players said the garment was uncomfortable and affected their confidence on the pitch.
Years of discontent flared into mutiny in recent weeks. On 3 May Dublin and Kilkenny players turned up at their provincial Leinster semi-final in shorts. They changed into skorts after the referee threatened to abandon the game but the protest galvanised solidarity and calls for change.
Government ministers expressed support for the players, female lawmakers from the opposition party Sinn Féin wore shorts to parliament, and the sport's administrators faced being grilled by parliamentary committee.
The Camogie Association, which in 2023 had upheld the ban on shorts, bowed to the pressure by holding the special congress on Thursday to vote on a motion to change the rule.
Sign up to Headlines Europe
A digest of the morning's main headlines from the Europe edition emailed direct to you every week day
after newsletter promotion
Aisling Maher, the captain of Dublin's camogie team, welcomed the decision. 'It's a victory for players who are presently playing inter-county, it's a victory for young players coming up who now have a choice about what they wear,' she told RTE on Friday.
'You have to see the positives in this. The beginning of the All-Ireland championship has never got as much attention or publicity. Hopefully some of that attention will stay with camogie in a more positive light.'
Hashtags

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


Telegraph
20 minutes ago
- Telegraph
ITV Racing tips: Ascot and York
Saturday's UK and Irish racing Flat Ascot (1.10-5.15pm, Sky Sports Racing) York (1.25-5.00, Racing TV) Chester (1.30-5.30, Sky Sports Racing) Gowran (1.45-5.40, Racing TV) Newcastle (1.52-5.55, Sky Sports Racing) Windsor (5.45-8.45, Sky Sports Racing) Salisbury (6.00-8.30, Racing TV) Free-to-view racing coverage ITV4 – 9.30-10.30am: The Opening Show ITV1 – 1.30-4.30pm: Live racing from Ascot & York Ron Wood's selections NAP: Calandagan (4.10, Ascot) 2pt win @ 7/4 with Betfred ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Next best: Almaqam (2.40, York) 1pt win @ 5/6 with Betfred ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Others: Daneh Of Dandy (1.40, Ascot) 1pt win @ 16/1 with Betfred ⭐⭐ Pocklington (2.00, York) 1pt win @ 11/2 with Betfred ⭐⭐⭐ Cajole (2.20, Ascot) 1pt win @ 5/1 with Betfred ⭐⭐⭐ Sword (3.00, Ascot) 1pt win @ 22/1 with Betfred ⭐⭐⭐ Moon Flight (3.20, York) 1pt win @ 14/1 with Betfred ⭐⭐ Bullet Point (3.35, Ascot) 1pt win @ 10/3 with Betfred ⭐⭐⭐ Odds provided by Betfred and correct at the time of writing. Stars denote strength of selection (maximum five). If you already have a Betfred account and are looking for a new bookmaker to use for this week's racing, check out more free bets from the best betting sites, reviewed by our experts. 1.40 Ascot – Princess Margaret Stakes (Group 3, 6f; ITV1 & Sky Sports Racing) Dance To The Music would have been the pick in this one, but she's a non-runner, so in her absence a chance is taken on the James Tate-trained DANEH OF DANDY. This filly won at Ripon on her debut in a novice contest that Tate took in 2019 with Under The Stars, who then landed this race at 25/1. 2.00 York – Class 2 Handicap (6f; ITV1 & Racing TV) POCKLINGTON just lost out when the selection for a competitive handicap at Newcastle last month but he should build on that seeing as he had been off for 311 days. The return to turf ought to be fine for Geoff Oldroyd's four-year-old, who caught the eye at this course on his final start last year. 2.20 Ascot – Valiant Stakes (Group 3, 1m; ITV1 & Sky Sports Racing) CAJOLE is just preferred to Royal Dress. The latter sets the standard, but the selection has the potential to be up to this. The dam of Cajole, Persuasive, won the Sandringham Stakes at Royal Ascot before landing a Group 3 race at Sandown and, in her four-year-old season, progressing to win a Group 1. Cajole, for the same connections, was second in the Sandringham last month then finished runner-up in a Listed race at Sandown that did not unfold to suit her. Trained by John & Thady Gosden, she is likely to improve some more. 2.40 York – York Stakes (Group 2, 1m 2½f; ITV1 & Racing TV) The Ed Walker-trained ALMAQAM sets the standard here, having most recently defeated the subsequent Group 1 winner Ombudsman in the Group 3 Brigadier Gerard Stakes at Sandown. The selection won't want the ground to dry out too much but should have too much for his six rivals. Stanhope Gardens is a possible threat but still needs to make quite a big step up on his fifth-placed finish in the Derby to trouble the selection. 3.00 Ascot – International Handicap (Heritage Handicap, 7f; ITV1 & Sky Sports Racing) SWORD is a hold-up horse who stays further, so he will be suited by this big-field contest up the stiff Ascot straight. Trained by David O'Meara, this son of Kingman didn't get a clear run at York on his latest start and there's little doubt that he is capable of bettering his current mark. 3.20 York – 'Jump Jockeys' Nunthorpe Handicap (Class 4, 5f; ITV1 & Racing TV) MOON FLIGHT is a tricky customer, being headstrong (including when going down to the start) and sometimes having an issue with the stalls, and he has been out of sorts lately. But he is capable of a useful level when he does things right and he is an interesting contender now he makes his debut for David O'Meara. 3.35 Ascot – Class 2 Handicap (1m; ITV1 & Sky Sports Racing) The obvious one is BULLET POINT, who won three handicaps in a row before finishing second over course and distance in the Royal Hunt Cup, 'winning' his race in the wrong group. There's probably still better to come from this William Haggas-trained four-year-old, who will be ridden by Tom Marquand. 4.10 Ascot – King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes (Group 1, 1m 4f; ITV1 & Sky Sports Racing) CALANDAGAN is an off-the-pace runner who can be a bit tricky, but he gained an overdue first Group 1 success in France on his latest start and he should reverse June's Coronation Cup form with Jan Brueghel. Read our full horse-by-horse King George preview. Selection: Calandagan 2pt win @ 7/4 with Betfred Go to site > Are there any other horses of interest away from the ITV cameras? Words Of Truth (1.10, Ascot) made his debut in a really strong Newbury maiden and has since been gelded. He should improve. Another to look at is Spoken Truth (5.40, Gowran Park). He should be better for his seasonal reappearance and the step up in trip to 1m 1½f is in his favour. It feels like now or never for this well-bred colt by Frankel who is a brother to Irish 1,000 Guineas winner Homeless Songs. When is the next big racing festival? The week-long Galway Festival kicks off in Ireland on Monday, followed a day later by Glorious Goodwood. Check out the latest Glorious Goodwood free bets and betting offers. The latter is a five-day fixture and is set to feature Field Of Gold, possibly the best horse in the world, in the Sussex Stakes on Wednesday, one of three Group 1s at the meeting. What does NAP mean? NAP is a word used in betting circles to describe a prediction that a tipster thinks has a particularly strong chance of winning. Many horse racing tipsters pick out a 'NAP of the day', which is their favoured selection from all the races across the different meetings. The term NAP derives from the French card game Napoleon. When players of this game thought they had a particularly strong hand that they would win with, they would shout 'Napoleon'. Star ratings explained ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ - confident selection ⭐⭐⭐⭐ - strong fancy ⭐⭐⭐ - fair claims ⭐⭐ - tentative choice ⭐ - minimum confidence


BBC News
20 minutes ago
- BBC News
Former UFC star McCann to make boxing debut in Belfast
Former UFC star Molly McCann will make her boxing debut on the undercard of Paddy Donovan and Lewis Crocker's world title contest at Windsor Park next month. Liverpool's McCann, who retired from MMA in March following defeat by Alexia Thainara at UFC London, said she wants to "win a world title within eight fights" after signing with Eddie Hearn's Matchroom Boxing earlier this opponent for the 13 September fight in Belfast has not yet been 35-year-old won 14 of her 22 fights across a 10-year MMA boxers Caoimhin Agyarko and Tyrone McKenna have also been added to the Windsor Park middleweight Agyarko, 28, will face 30-year-old Englishman Ishmael Davis while 35-year-old McKenna will take on fellow Irishman Dylan Moran. McKenna stopped Moran in the second round of their welterweight contest last have also confirmed Patrick Brown, who represented Great Britain at the 2024 Olympics, and Commonwealth Games bronze medallist Aaron Bowen will appear on the bill, with more fights still to be this week, Windsor Park was confirmed as the venue for Donovan and Crocker's fight for the vacant IBF welterweight Park last hosted a boxing event in August 2018 when two-weight world champion Carl Frampton defeated Luke Jackson of and Crocker's rematch will be the first world title bout between two fighters from the island of Ireland. The first meeting between the pair on 1 March was a final eliminator for the IBF title and ended in controversial fashion with Crocker taking the win by disqualification in front of a 8,500 crowd at the SSE Arena in his native Belfast.


BreakingNews.ie
20 minutes ago
- BreakingNews.ie
EU and US could reach framework trade deal this weekend
The European Union and the United States could reach a framework deal on trade this weekend, ending months of uncertainty for European industry, EU officials and diplomats said on Friday. The deal would likely include a 15 per cent baseline tariff on all EU goods entering the United States and probably a 50% tariff on European steel and aluminium, the officials and diplomats said. Advertisement US President Donald Trump on Friday said there was a 50/50 chance or perhaps less that the United States would reach a trade agreement with the European Union, saying Brussels wanted to "make a deal very badly". "I would say that we have a 50/50 chance, maybe less than that, but a 50/50 chance of making a deal with the EU," he said. Tánaiste Simon Harris said the EU is preparing for all eventualities - as the bloc has agreed €93 billion worth of counter tariffs against the United States. Officials are hopeful a deal could be reached to establish a 10 to 15 per cent tariff on Irish goods heading into America - after Japan secured a similar arrangement. Advertisement The Government said agri-food products like molasses, pure bred horses and sugar have been removed from the counter tariffs - a benefit to Ireland of €33 million, should they go ahead. Harris a deal with the US is still the best outcome - but countermeasures are ready to go "It says to America we want a deal, but it also says we're preparing for all eventualities," he said. "You need to trade with us as well, it's in the interest of the United States to do business with Europe. Advertisement "So let's now get back to the table here, let's get a deal over the line, but let Europe to continue to prepare for all eventualities." Seamus Coffey from the Irish Fiscal Advisory Council believes even a 15 percent tariff on pharmaceutical products would have an impact. "With this added uncertainty they might look to change their supply chain, have more production in other areas," he said. "They can do that pretty quickly and even Donald Trump has admitted that and saying that he was giving the pharmaceutical up to two years to change. "But if this 15 per cent was to come in in early August, that would have a big impact on pharmaceutical exports from Ireland."