It was a great headline for a great story in the Irish Times.
“GAA and Rangers unite to promote Gaelic games.”
The piece was by John Fallon and Paul Cullen.
The piece was breathless in its enthusiasm.
An almost identical piece was in the Indo the same day by Brian MacDonald.
“The GAA and Glasgow Rangers had joined forces to promote Gaelic games in the Rangers heartlands of the West of Scotland!”
It gushed about the Glasgow club’s army of community workers opening doors for Gaelic games in what had been, heretofore, hostile territory for the Gah.
It seemed a great story that probably the only major football club in Britain who has never fielded a Republic of Ireland international was working with Cumann Lúthchleas Gael.
Surely it would only be a matter of time before Glasgow Rangers were playing Crossmaglen Rangers in a friendly in South Armagh!
There was only one problem.
It wasn’t true.
This journalist spent an interesting day last month unpacking a story that had been run in both the Irish Times and Irish independent on Monday 2nd March 2009.
I called Rangers FC’s PR department and I spoke a very helpful and very young sounding press officer.
He told me that he had been fielding phone calls from “across the water” all morning.
I believed him. He sounded at the end of his tether.
“We don’t have any official link with the Gee Gee Ay!” he pleaded.
I believed him.
He told me the kids had been “treated” to a visit to Ibrox where they had witnessed the Light Blues trounce lowly Hamilton 7-1.
He then kindly sent me the following club statement.
“There is no official link up with the GAA as such but we were delighted to welcome pupils from Glaschu Gaels and Tír Conaill Harps to a recent anti-sectarianism workshop at our Study Support Centre which is based at Ibrox Stadium.
This involved a group of school children from Glasgow and Co. Meat, Eire – primary and secondary school age – coming together for the workshop followed by a tour of the stadium and tickets for the Rangers v Hamilton SPL game on October 25 last year.”
I hadn’t the heart to return the call and point out that Rangers had been away to Hamilton on October 25th.
At that match the racist abuse of young Irish player James McCarthy was so bad that it made it onto Sky news.
Rangers did host Hamilton on December 6th and duly won 7-1.
As I was checking this out Rangers supporters message boards were going into meltdown. This wasn’t a positive development for the Shankhill Loyal.
I called Croker and spoke to Alan Milton in the press office. I told him who I was and that I was calling about the rangers story.
“News to us.” He sniffed.
I told him that the story was in both the Irish Times and the Indo (hence must be true).
“Yeah, that’s where we heard about it.” Another sniff.
I called the GAA president in Britain Bernie Keane.
“I don’t know much about this!” Bernie joshed.
“You’ll need to speak to John Gormley. He’s yer man!”
I duly called John Gormley-no-not light bulb banning John Gormley, but the ex-president John Gormley of the GAA in Britain.
If it is possible to sound ashen faced on the phone then that’s a fair reflection of John as he was heading from Luton to Glasgow for county board meeting. He had the Times ands the Indo on his lap.
Finally I caught up with John Fallon of the Irish times who was in Castlebar on the fateful night that the marriage of Glasgow Rangers and the GAA was announced.
A 25-year veteran of the quote unquote business Fallon confirmed the story. He had checked the quotes after the AGM with Gormley. The Irish Times man and me then quickly shared “source remorse” experiences.
I left this story with John Gormley getting back to me to confirm what he had been told by a GAA administrator in Scotland.
I’m still waiting.
It was a great headline though…………….
March25


James
Just to clear up any ambiguity in my closing paragraph, Alex Stevenson did not play for the Irish Free State.
He played for two different all-Ireland teams, organised by two separate associations.
April 16, 2009 at 6:22 am
James
Alex Stevenson was a Dublin-born Protestant who played a season and a half for Rangers in the early 30’s.
Irish international football was a complicated beast in that era, with the Dublin-based Football Association of Ireland, and the Belfast-based Irish Football Association both fielding teams called “Ireland,” and selecting players from the whole island.
The IFA team played in “St Patrick’s Blue” shirts until 1931, when they changed to green because they clashed with Scotland.
At least 38 players of the era appeared for both teams.
FIFA intervened when both associations entered the qualifiers for the 1950 World Cup (the Home Nations were not affiliated to FIFA until 1946), eventually passing a ruling in 1953 that the FAI team be called “Republic of Ireland,” and the IFA team “Northern Ireland.”
It also ruled then that each team could only select players who were citizens of their political jurisdictions, although the IFA team were still allowed to call themselves “Ireland” in the Home International tournament and select players from the Republic for that tournament IF the FAI agreed.
So Alex Stevenson did not play for the Republic of Ireland. He played representative matches for two different associations, each calling their team, “Ireland.”
April 15, 2009 at 4:31 pm
Mark C
Pretty sure Alex Stevenson, ex Irish Free State and Republic of Ireland manager played for Rangers. Just thought i would point out a slight innaccuracy in the report though no doubt this will be deleted like a number of my other posts that point out inconsistencies.
March 27, 2009 at 7:48 pm
John M
A great headline indeed. Also the only of promotion of GAA activities in Scotland I can remember seeing in the (admittedly short) time I’ve been following GAA.
I’ve had a Setanta subscription for a couple of years now, and have really gotten into gaelic football in particular. However when I tried to find out about fixtures in Scotland I was able to download a helpful document (from the GAA Britain website) which describes the 2008 league and championship fixtures as “blah blah blah”.
So I guess spurious claims of promotional links to Rangers FC do work, I had no idea there was a team called Glaschu Geals. Heres hoping I can actually find out something about them.
March 26, 2009 at 10:24 am