Connect with us

News

Celtic experience best season in club’s history

Published

on

CELEBRATIONS: Senior A team manager Brian Spillane (left) with team captain John McDonagh and vice chairman and assistant manager Tim Jones celebrate a great season for the senior side. Photo: Marie Carroll O’Sullivan

 

All that glitters might not usually be gold - but the silverware currently on display at Celtic Park in Ballydribeen certainly reflects a truly golden season in the proud 44-year history of Killarney Celtic Football Club.

In what has been the most successful season in the club's history – which has just drawn to a close - in terms of dream achievements, it just couldn’t have got any bigger or better for the club at all levels with a haul of trophies and successes that was totally unprecedented in Kerry soccer.

Leading by example, the senior team won the Premier A Championship and the Greyhound Bar KO Cup double for an incredible third year in a row, once again proving absolutely invincible under the direction of astute manager Brian Spillane.

In addition to that remarkable achievement, Celtic clinched the Munster Champions League – having competed against some of the top sides in the province – and in a novel all-Celtic final, the club’s A team overcame the challenge of the B team in the Celsius Menswear Cup decider. And it didn’t end there.

Having won the Jimmy Falvey Memorial Cup and the keenly contested Denny Youths League in convincing fashion, the club’s swashbuckling youths team created their own wonderful chapter in the annals of Kerry and Irish soccer when they registered a dramatic FAI Youth Cup final victory over fancied Cork side Douglas Hall in a tension-filled penalty shootout.

This season will be remembered as the greatest ever in the history of Killarney Celtic with so many triumphs to celebrate, so many cups to hold aloft and so many achievements to be proud of.

Progressive club chairman, Paul Sherry, said the success story is due mainly to the priority given to the underage policy over the years with several hundred players, in all age groups, turning up for training.

“There is great dedication shown by everybody involved in the club, from the officials, the coaches, the backroom teams, the parents and, of course, the players and the enthusiasm shown week in and week out is just infectious,” he said.

“We have just completed a remarkably successful season and that is to be celebrated but we remain hugely ambitious and we still harbour a great desire to win the elusive FAI Junior Cup after coming so close in recent seasons,” Paul added.

​​​​​​​CLUB HISTORY

Amusing as it might seem now, the Celtic story started at a Wolfe Tones concert with the seeds for the birth of a new soccer club in Killarney sown to strains of ‘A Nation Once Again’ in a packed Gleneagle Hotel ballroom.

Pals Mikey Daly, from O’Connell’s Terrace, and Billy Healy, of Dalton’s Avenue, were enjoying a night on the town 44 years ago when the talk turned to the beautiful game.

“Billy was playing with Pretty Polly and I was with the Franciscan Youth Club and we decided over a few pints that we’d form a club,” Mikey, later recalled.

A common belief that the fledging club took its name and its colours from Glasgow Celtic are well wide of the mark, however.

“Killarney already had an Athletic and a Rangers so Celtic was the first name that came to mind,” Mikey said.
The first set of jerseys weren’t green and white hoops either, rather a fetching shade of yellow.

“We bought them in Jimmy O’Brien’s sports shop for 33 punts. We went for yellow simply because it was all he had,” Mikey said.

Renting playing space in local fields for years, Celtic eventually acquired its own base and Celtic Park is now one of the finest grounds in the south west, befitting of the most successful club in Kerry soccer.

And such is the progress that is being made, it’s safe to assume that the best has yet to come.

Advertisement

News

Halloween celebrations in KCC

Published

on

By

KCC’s annual charity fancy dress and walk day was a huge success.

The event was raised by the 5LCA group as part of their leisure and recreation task.

The fancy dress competition proved hugely popular, and the school paraded all their costumes through the national park on a perfect Autumn morning last Wednesday.

The students raised over 700 euro for the therapy dog charity My Canine Companion, a charity close to the school’s heart as Jet the therapy dog came from them. 

The school also ran an art competition in the form of posters and mask design. There were lots of prizes and house points for the winners.

Continue Reading

News

Tributes paid to the former Mayor of Kerry

Published

on

By

Former Cathaoirleach of Kerry County Council and long-serving Fine Gael councillor Jim Finucane has passed away at the age of 68.

Mr Finucane dedicated almost three decades to public service, serving a total of 29 years as an elected representative on Tralee Town Council and Kerry County Council.

During that time, he served as both Mayor of Tralee and Mayor of Kerry. Mr Finucane was chairman of Kerry ETB; he was instrumental in the growth and success of Kerry College, ensuring education was accessible to everybody regardless of age and background.

He was first elected to Tralee Town Council in 1986 as the only Fine Gael councillor.

The former Mayor was heavily involved in Kerry’s response to welcoming Ukrainian families and recently earned the honour of becoming Ireland’s first Honorary Consul of Ukraine for the South-West.

Tánaiste Simon Harris, who worked with Mr Finucane when he was chair of Kerry ETB, paid tribute to his late colleague describing him as a “deeply proud Kerry man” who “left Kerry better than he found it.”

Mr Harris said those who had the privilege to know Jim will remember a man of warmth, humour and enthusiasm.

Tralee Chamber Alliance also paid tribute to Jim’s leadership, generosity and compassion which they said, “helped shape the Tralee and Kerry that we know today.” He is survived by his wife Sheila, children and grandchildren.

Mayor of Tralee Cllr Terry O’Brien said Tralee MD members are heartbroken at the loss of a man who always had Tralee and the community at the heart of everything he did.

Continue Reading

Last News

Sport