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HomeIrish AbroadUSGAA's Historic All-Ireland Junior Football Team: Cultivating Future Talent

USGAA’s Historic All-Ireland Junior Football Team: Cultivating Future Talent

USGAA County Team Sows the Seeds for Future Players

The Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) is an Irish international amateur sporting and cultural organization, focused primarily on promoting indigenous Gaelic games and pastimes, which include the traditional Irish sports of football, hurling, and camogie, as well as handball, the Irish language, and more.

TAKING THE FIELDS OF GLORY
VINCENT BEACH
est. 2006
OF SERVICE WITH 6 YEARS

USGAA County Team Sows the Seeds for Future Players

United States GAA (USGAA), the organization that manages Gaelic games in the U.S. (excluding New York City), will enter a team in the All-Ireland Junior Football Championship tournament for the first time, with games taking place in Ireland in mid-July.

While thousands of Irish, Irish Americans, and other nationalities play the sport across the country, the Jr All-Ireland Football team is made up of homegrown players, young men 18-28 born in the US, many of whom have come up from child level through youth and onto the adult game. The introduction of the Jr All-Ireland team now gives every child that starts the sport the opportunity to one day represent the USGAA – development at its finest.

The process to select the team began in Chicago in October 2023, with 80 players arriving for a weekend of games. From that, an interim panel of 36 was selected. Through a series of camps in Tampa (January) and Philadelphia (March), the final squad of 28 was selected.

There are over 160 GAA clubs throughout the USGAA region who welcome both men and women to join and continue the legacy of Gaelic games. More information can be found at www.USGAA.org.


Vincent Beach
Vincent Beach
*Vincent Thomas Francis Xavier Beach is a proud Greater Clevelander and emigrant of Michigan (GO BLUE!). He joined the St. Pat's Gaelic Football Club in 1999 and, with much help, is the current caretaker of the Cleveland St. Pat’s – St. Jarlath’s GAA. His Irish is a cross of dialects from the University of Cincinnati (suaimhneas síoraí d’anam Edgar Slotkin) and An Cheathrú Rua. With his wife, Michelle, he enjoys watching time absolutely fly by as their three children grow. His other hustles are coaching CYO basketball at St. Mary of Berea, teaching Construction Management at CWRU, and laying down some engineering skills on local water/wastewater projects. His 1912 farmhouse and twelve darling hens beg for attention.
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