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Published 13:49 1 Dec 2021 GMT
Updated 13:49 1 Dec 2021 GMT
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Oisin Foley was DCU's Fitzgibbon Cup goalkeeper for a couple of years.[/caption]
"The important thing for us was that there was a couple of lads in the club with a vision to get the club back going again when it was going bad and things were on the slide. They set their sights on a ten year plan and put in hours and hours of work in coaching and encouraging us."
"That's what makes the wins and the promotions even sweeter now. It's not only brilliant for players to say I'm hurling senior and I'm playing senior football, it's for those lads who put everything into us. They can say that they played such a big part in that too."
Their dual approach is similar in a way to the men of the moment in Loughmore-Castleiney but while the Tipperary club were traditionally footballers rather than hurlers, it's the other way around here in this Wexford district.
"It was always just give the football a rattle when you were knocked out of the hurling. Hurling was always given more time within the club in years gone by because of that tradition from the 90s. But now we give them both the same time and effort and as players that mix is really enjoyable and that has helped us along the way.
"We might hurl away for 45 or 50 minutes and then we'd go down and kick football for half an hour then. The majority of lads would play both, there's only a handful that wouldn't because we all enjoy it.
Next year, they'll be senior footballers and for now, it's all football as, after a decade in which they've won Junior B (2011), Junior A (2012), Junior (2014) Intermediate A (2017) and Intermediate (2021) county titles, they've set their sights on a run in Leinster.
"Two of the boys that were on the panel when they won the Junior D in 2011 are still with us. One of the lads is only 28 and he's played football in every single grade in Wexford from Junior D to senior. It's crazy, since 2011, there's only been one year (2011) since then we haven't made it to a county final.
https://twitter.com/Cbeg_Bmurn_GAA/status/1459851125574750210
"We still have a relatively young team now. Our oldest fella is only 32 and he's still a chap at heart. There's a good few 25/26 year-olds. It would have been the same core group of lads that would have come through and would have won things together. They came straight into the senior then at 17 and that has stood to us all.
"We've probably lost nearly more than we've ever won. We've played in 15 county finals in the last ten years and we've only won seven. Losing finals is probably more important than winning them. You see how devastated everyone is and you have to to get over it together. After going through the hurt of that, the memories you make and the things you remember then when you win, they'll stay with you forever."Tyrone send open letter to GAA over Allianz sponsorship
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