New jersey in GAA

Yellow diddies

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That is unreal nice. You could wear it anywhere - training, mass, restaurant and so on.

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Is Chin still a full time hurler or did he return to work ?

Did he get it in Turkey?

An away Wexford jersey? Just who do Wexford clash colours with?

The recent purple ones clashed, a little, with Galway.

That’s it.

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A money spinner

Davy will find a clash somewhere so he will

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Ballybricken

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Fair play for Chin to get the time off work for the photo shoot. Maybe he works shift…

I don’t know what he’s up to.

Antrim at the weekend?

When I asked our mutual Ballybricken contact about this a couple of years back it turns out that they did borrow the colours from Wexford.

Obviously

Fuckin money spinner. What’s the point of a second white goalie jersey?

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It’s stunning though.

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Jesus that goalie jersey is a lovely bit of kit.

Deutschland '88

Observations from yesterday. The Tyrone jersey is very tidy. The Limerick one is awful looking.

See, that should be the Kerry jersey, not that fucking abomination they currently have

In September 1924 as the hostile atmosphere of the recent Civil War lingered, a young Kerry side entered Croke Park to contest the county’s first All-Ireland final in nine years. It was a team formed from players who had been active on both sides of that tragic conflict in a county where the war’s final weeks was framed by horrifying atrocities. Though deeply divided by ideology, men like John Joe Sheehy, Con Brosnan, Joe Barrett and Paul Russell backboned a side that would dominate Gaelic football like none before or none after for decades to come. In the process, they forged a unique legacy. United by the Kerry jersey, this team symbolised to many the part Gaelic games could play in helping to heal the wounds and reconcile a society still traumatised by conflict.

This jersey commemorates the team that became arguably the greatest Kerry has ever produced. Their story is complex, but it has rightly endured – not simply because of what they won, but because of what they represented and how they have inspired generations of Kerry footballers.