Binding: Hardback
Date Published: 12 Sep 2024
The first recorded game of ladies' Gaelic football was played in St James' Park, Dublin, in 1920. Players competed in ankle-length skirts, watched by a sizeable crowd. But the game was not authorised by the GAA and, in the decades that followed, the sport was kept to the sidelines, a popular novelty act at local fairs that was branded unsuitable 'for frail feminine fingers'. The message was clear: Gaelic football was unladylike.
But, by the time of the first ladies' Gaelic football final in 1973, the Evening Press was reporting, 'there is a future for this latest craze in the Irish sporting world'. And when, a year later, the Ladies' Gaelic Football Association (LGFA) was founded in Hayes' Hotel in Thurles, County Tipperary in July 1974, the future for this new craze was undeniably set in motion.
From its carnival origins to record-breaking attendances, from writing the rule book to a membership of nearly 200,000, from the earliest All-Stars to game-changing partnerships , this definitive history of ladies' Gaelic football captures the extraordinary growth of a national sport, one that defied traditional gender norms and exceeded all expectations, to enter the mainstream and travel the world.
Lavishly illustrated and drawing from national, club and personal archives, Unladylike is for the players, the fans, the kit-washers, the sandwich-makers and the supporters alike, and confirms the best is yet to come.