Covid-19 Update: 23/04/21 - Underage Return to Training

Monday, 26th April is a significant date for Gaelic Games as our clubs continue the resumption of underage club  training activity across the 32 counties. It is the date when activity finally resumes in clubs all over Ireland.

This will be a particularly special day for our young people and their supportive coaches in clubs in the 26 Counties who have missed out on so much fun and the opportunity to play our games, and who will now get to follow the return being enjoyed by members in Antrim, Armagh, Derry, Down, Fermanagh and Tyrone since earlier this month.

To help the return to play we have developed the following resources to support players, coaches, and clubs.

Coaching & Games Development Return to Gaelic Games Infographic

Return to Training Advice

The opportunity to play was limited by factors outside of our control. But what we can control over the next number of months as we return to training and playing games is the quality of the experience that we can provide our players.

In this regard I would strongly encourage our clubs, coaches, development officers and those responsible for planning and organising fixtures to ensure everyone benefits from a multitude of playing opportunities when games are allowed to resume. Let us all work towards providing as many games opportunities as possible over a longer season, consider allowing more substitutions – or even unlimited – and provide alternative formats to provide a playing environment that creates the best possible experience for all our young players.

The GAA Kellogg’s Cúl Camps will begin in July and John West Féile na Gael and Féile Peil na nÓg festivals to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the tournament will be held on the 21st and 28th August respectively. This will be different to regular Feile and will be localised with smaller numbers of teams at venues but full details will follow over the coming months.

Earlier this year the GAA, LGFA and Camogie Association launched a new Gaelic Games Player Pathway, which can be accessed HERE.

Its purpose is to develop players holistically (as players and people) by providing them with The Right Support at The Right Time. The right support, at this time when games are allowed to resume, is to provide meaningful games opportunities to re-engage all our players.

Those of us with a responsibility for nurturing the development of our next generation of players should be mindful of the fact that the benefit of lifelong participation in Gaelic games is not something that we should measure in terms of cups or medals or competitions won. Gaelic Games is about People. It should be about friendships, positive experience and feeling a valued part of something that belongs to all of us.

This vision aligns with the Player Pathway, an important mission statement for coaching and games development. The Pathway is underpinned by six key principles and they should guide and influence our decision making over the next few months. The principles are:

  1. ‘Club is Core’ – Club is central to nurturing a love and passion for our games and sustaining communities and lifelong participation
  2. ‘Player Centred’ – We develop the player and the person
  3. ‘Quality Coaching Experiences’–Our coaches create an enjoyable coaching environment to meet needs and welfare of the player
  4. ‘As Many as Possible for as Long as Possible’ – Our Pathway prioritises long-term development with a games programme that supports recruitment, development and retention of players
  5. ‘Connection’– Our Pathway promotes Connection through relationship-building opportunities, communication and teamwork
  6. ‘Inclusive’ – Gaelic Games are for All, regardless of abilities, background, beliefs or identities

 

Our return to activity has been made possible by the massive national effort which has taken place to thwart the spread of the virus.

On behalf of the Association, I pay tribute to the significant work done by so many clubs and volunteers in this regard and urge all to continue to play our part and abide by all of the advice and guidelines from health authorities and by completing the Gaelic Games’s Return to Play Health Questionnaire before every session.

We hope that a full return for all club activity through the resumption of outdoor sport for adults in the 26 Counties will happen in the near future.

Life since March 2020 has taught us many things. It has made us appreciate what we have, including an appreciation of what our games and our clubs and our friends and communities mean to us.

From Monday, more clubs get the chance to take the first step into what will ultimately be a post Covid world with the return of juvenile club training. Full details and resources on the resumption of activity is available at https://learning.gaa.ie/covid19

It is a glorious opportunity to continue to bring health and happiness and fun back to young people through our games. Let us all work to ensure that we seize this opportunity.

Helen O’Rourke, LGFA CEO

 

 

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