logo
Wexford to host the 2026 All-Ireland National Vintage Championships – ‘It is a huge honour to be asked'

Wexford to host the 2026 All-Ireland National Vintage Championships – ‘It is a huge honour to be asked'

Irish Independent13 hours ago
The All-Ireland National Vintage Championships, also known as the Vintage Rally is organised by the Irish Vintage Society.
The big announcement was made on Sunday, July 13 during the annual Clohamon Vintage and Heritage Weekend, which was attended by thousands of visitors during the country's heatwave.
Club secretary Eilish Kavanagh said that the weekend was fantastic and filled with history, dancing, and plenty of vehicles.
"It was absolutely fantastic. Far more than we expected turned out. If I had to estimate I would say around 2,500 to 3,000 people attended over the two days,' she said.
On Saturday, visitors were in for a treat with storytelling held in the storytelling house, stew cooked in the old famine pots, and a brand new dancefloor for the jiving competition.
"It was costing too much to rent a dancefloor each year and we have a few carpenters on our committee. After four or five meetings they had it built - we have a good crew. And the dancefloor was full from start until finish, it was great,' she explained.
On Sunday there were plenty of tractors, vintage vehicles and steam engines on show with a wide assortment of vendors selling a number of products, items and food, with bacon and cabbage on hand and cooked in the famine pots again.
There was also great entertainment planned for the children, with an area enclosed space being created in one of the fields so children could safely ride around in their bikes and miniature tractors.
On being selected as the host of next year's All-Ireland National Vintage Championships, Eilish said they were very proud and grateful to receive the call.
"It is a huge honour to be asked, just fantastic. We already had visitors from the UK at our heritage weekend, but we will be expecting representatives from every club in the country to attend next year. It is going to be amazing.'
"I just want to thank everybody, but especially our small committee. We are very dedicated and we give up our time as volunteers to get things done – but it is for the love of it,' she added.
She added that planning for the event is already under way and that they have entertainment already booked for the championships which will take place on July 11 and 12.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Praising David Clifford's two-pointers simply highlighted Donegal's lack of same
Praising David Clifford's two-pointers simply highlighted Donegal's lack of same

Irish Daily Mirror

time41 minutes ago

  • Irish Daily Mirror

Praising David Clifford's two-pointers simply highlighted Donegal's lack of same

hi Mom,I won't be phoning home tonight as I normally do after the All Ireland final but my love to Spot and, as always, I'm wondering about craic and of the pint in I've lost my voice screaming at the television here trying to find out what on earth was going on all through the second-half from had RTE here for the locals, yer man from Laois, your wan' from Liverpool and the guy with the baseball cap from Hong of us were left wondering are Kerry and Donegal playing different rules?Kerry were kicking two pointers through the first-half, indeed RTE's Darragh Maloney was in thrall as David Clifford pulled successive triggers."This is the first two-pointer in an All-Ireland final," he noted just before the 10th minute. And then as the next score was the same: "This is for two again, that's great from David Clifford, it is just what you'd expect." READ MORE: Shane MacGowan's love for Tipperary GAA, the Shannon Rovers funeral jersey - Siobhan MacGowan reflects on a brother less ordinary... A little later he was even more complex about it: "Who said 'Hammer the Hammer'?" before Clifford, taking his time, executed a perfect two-pointer on half-time, the poise, the timing, the it was Tomas O'Se who, talking in 2021 of the 'hammer' explained "In Kerry, it is how we describe going after the opponent's strongest point."O'Se is also a man who said "One man's grief is another man's punchline."And he called it at the half-time break speaking with Joanne Cantwell: "I would say Jim McGuinness is livid," and "unless Donegal can come up with a couple of two-pointers and a goal I'd still be favouring Donegal."The former Nemo Ranger with five All-Irelands and five All Stars was bringing up a reasonable point; why was he the only one?The second half began, mom, and it was as if Donegal had never heard the new rules, did they not get the memo from Jim Galvin's people?It seems inconceivable that Maloney with Eamonn Fitzmaurice on co-comms didn't want to discuss this, just why were Donegal not trying to score two-pointers - Kerry had 11 two-point attempts in the have come from a time when even RTE tired of a succession of Statler and Waldorf argumentative begrudgers engaging in a series of never-ending pre-game, half-time, full-time spats with the emphasis on the they at least asked questions about games, just as somebody needed to ask just why Donegal were not pursuing two-pointers/goals.I'm willing to bet 50 percent of the estimated viewing audience were experiencing the same sense of what on earth are we watching."This day last year we were talking about a seagull," offered Maloney at one point in the first-half, "well I know I've mentioned it now...".The commentary nearly got to analysis when offering "Eight points (behind) is a long way off from Kerry even with two-pointers and that sort of thing." And just as the 66th minute of the 70 was about to tick in: "They may as well start throwing the kitchen sink at Kerry, it's 26-19! Turned out David Clifford's punchline was Donegal's has been three winners of this year's All Ireland series, the 2025 Dairygold and Kerrygold double. That's Tipperary, Kerry and the RTE hurling commentary team who were excellent analytically, technically. See you soon, love to all at home and to Sally at Peadair's and the way she'd look at you PS: My best moment?: RTE's Damien Lawlor getting the last word in at half-time, wondering if we had already seen the 2025 'memory'. "We had a situation in the noughties, do you remember Joanne, Henry Shefflin was only on the ball for 16 seconds and scored 1-7, 1-8 - it is looking like this for David Clifford already." Get the latest sports headlines straight to your inbox by signing up for free email alerts.

Line of Duty star hails ‘elite' David Clifford as a ‘joy to watch'
Line of Duty star hails ‘elite' David Clifford as a ‘joy to watch'

Irish Daily Mirror

time5 hours ago

  • Irish Daily Mirror

Line of Duty star hails ‘elite' David Clifford as a ‘joy to watch'

Actor Martin Compston was blown away by David Clifford's first-half performance in the All-Ireland final, hailing the Kerry forward's 'elite' showing against Donegal. Line of Duty actor Compston joined a string of celebrities which included comedian Kayleigh Trappe as he featured on the BBC's coverage of this afternoon's All-Ireland final. Clifford was sensational in the first-half, racking up seven points, the last of which was a sensational two-pointer right on the hooter after a long spell of possession from the Kingdom. At the interval, Compston - who played professional soccer before becoming an actor - was asked what might be going through the Donegal players' heads at half-time, to which he responded: "Your man Clifford is a joy to watch, he genuinely is elite level. "There's just some times when you need to get out of your own head. Simple ones Murphy would normally stick away (He missed) and you're thinking like 'it's just not going to be your day.' "But you just need to get that out of your head and keep going." Clifford's score on the stroke of half-time made it a seven point game at the break and put Kerry just 35 minutes away from a first All-Ireland in three years and a 39th in their history.

‘GAA never looked so glam' gush fans as Jacqui Hurley wows in jumpsuit worth over €550 on RTE ahead of All-Ireland final
‘GAA never looked so glam' gush fans as Jacqui Hurley wows in jumpsuit worth over €550 on RTE ahead of All-Ireland final

The Irish Sun

time7 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

‘GAA never looked so glam' gush fans as Jacqui Hurley wows in jumpsuit worth over €550 on RTE ahead of All-Ireland final

FANS declared "GAA never looked so glam" in response to Jacqui Hurley's outfit on Up For The Match on the eve of the All-Ireland final. Hurley was joined by fellow star Des Cahill as hosts of the show that served as a preview for the Advertisement 2 Jacqui Hurley and Des Cahill presented Up For The Match on RTE Credit: RTE 2 Jacqui Hurley stunned fans in a dark blue jumpsuit from Hugo Boss Credit: Instagram/jacquihurley7 The Cork woman blew fans away with her outfit: a dark blue jumpsuit from Hugo Boss. While Meanwhile, her hair was styled by Sian Sharkey, her make-up by Julie Adam, and her overall look by Catherine Manning. Praising their work , Hurley posted: "Takes a village". Advertisement Read More on GAA Fans flocked to the comments on her A second commented: "Lovely meeting you last night! You looked gorgeous 😍" A third posted: "Wow!! You look just fabulous Jacqui! 🔥" and a fourth said: "Seriously, GAA never looked so glam 🔥🙌" A fifth hailed: "Gorgeous Jacqui 😍❤️Enjoy the match today" and a sixth said: "Gorgeous jumpsuit on you Jacqui, you look beautiful ❤️" Advertisement Most read in GAA Football While Hurley and Cahill were anchoring Saturday night's show from the RTE studio, And one surprise moment saw Ferris Bueller's Day Off and Lion King star Matthew Broderick make an appearance. He was from Kilcar, where he and wife And the American opened up on how he considers the county his second home since his family first visited when he was a child. Advertisement He explained: "It started because my parents came here for were just driving around. "They ended up stopping here and rented a house and then did it again and again and then bought a little house and brought us there. "We spent summers here from the time I was maybe ten years old." Advertisement At this point, Broderick showed off the 'Broderick Cup' and revealed how it was named in honour of his late dad. He continued: "My father loved sport and he loved coming here particularly. "When he was in Cill Chartaigh, he'd always come and watch the games and matches. "After he died, there was a little fund set up to help the youngsters here, the under-14s, and somebody decided to make a cup and make a game to win the Broderick Cup." Advertisement

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