You are at nothing until you’ve done the 2 in a row in both codes
Yes, the proper GAA counties.
The roll of honor is:
Cork, Galway, Wexford
Offaly who were robbed of the honor in the last minute of 1995.
@Bandage - can you set a GAA discussion thread up that’s limited to posters from Cork, Galway and Wexford given our opinions are the ones that truly matter now?
So long as ye stay in it I’d happily second that
@GeoffreyBoycott has watched a documentary where BOD goes to a field on the 12th and meets some generic orange men. If orange men are good enough for BOD then they should be good enough for everyone else.
Although @GeoffreyBoycott has never personally visited the north he is now an expert.
They seemed like a grand bunch of lads up in Loughgall.
I’d say after meeting BOD they’re probably thinking of taking back the 26, by asking firmly
Yep he’s a shauneen /prick of a west brit Dub
He’s actually a hardy oul bastard who has achieved more in his life than any of us no marks ever have or will. He seems happy, settled, is married to a beautiful woman, and is doing his bit for peace as he sees best, but as you were.
He’s a bit of an uncle Tom but I couldnt disagree with your sentiments there …
Brian can walk with the royals and the peasants and treat each equally, a great trait.
He’s a proper hard man. Anyone who says otherwise is an insecure little fool. You don’t be good at what he was great at without it.
I suppose it all depends on whether you consider running with a ball under your arm to be achieving anything.
He put his head in where Gerard Cavlan wouldn’t put a dog.
I was thinking more of the tackling tbh, but you could apply that maxim to pretty much anything at all.
In fairness his father was a highly regarded GP on the Northside. I’d consider him to have achieved far more in life than his son.
And played rugby for Ireland
And I wouldn’t, but there you go. Doctors are ten a penny.
Robbed of a cap.