Castleknock Hurling and Football Club is a Dublin GAA club centered on the townlands of Carpenterstown and Diswellstown in the civil parish of Castleknock in Fingal, Ireland. It serves large parts of the suburban areas of Castleknock, Hartstown, Coolmine, Blanchardstown, Laurel Lodge and Clonsilla. The club plays the following Gaelic games at all age levels from nursery to adult: Hurling, Gaelic football, Camogie and Ladies' Gaelic football.

Castleknock Hurling
and Football Club
Cumann Báire agus
Peile Chaisleán Cnucha
Founded:1998
County:Dublin
Colours:Blue and Yellow
Grounds:Somerton, Tir na nÓg
Coordinates:53°22′24.95″N 6°24′31.98″W / 53.3735972°N 6.4088833°W / 53.3735972; -6.4088833
Playing kits
Standard colours
Somerton Park

It has a rivalry with the St Brigid's club.[1]

Grounds edit

The club's main grounds are located at Somerton Lane, Diswellstown. It also uses grounds managed by Fingal County Council at Porterstown, St.Catherine's Park and "Tir na nÓg" (beside Castleknock Community College).

History edit

The club's first major discovery was a then five-year-old Ciarán Kilkenny, whom it invited to participate in its "Tir na nÓg" sessions in 1998.[1]

The club began life in the tenth tier of the Dublin Senior Football Championship, later rising to the top tier.[1]

The club won the National Féile in 2007 and recently 2016 and 2017.

The club has teams from juvenile to senior level. It has 1500 members from 650 different families.[2]

A clubhouse worth about €1.5 million was about to be opened in 2019, as Kilkenny was winning All-Ireland titles around him. The man who opened it, Leo Varadkar, was Taoiseach and had nephews playing for the club at the time.[1]

Lar Norton is the coach of the Castleknock senior footballers.[citation needed] Maria Bergin from Naas is the club's full-time "games promotion officer", paid by the Dublin County Board to visit local schools and inculcate the children she finds there into football and hurling.[1] She runs a nursery for four to seven year-olds each Saturday morning in Carpenterstown to the west of Castleknock.[1]

Honours edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Meagher, John (31 August 2019). "Lattes and lineballs: How the GAA conquered the Dublin suburbs". Irish Independent. Independent News & Media. Retrieved 31 August 2019.
  2. ^ Castleknock about us

External links edit