Meath legend Seán Boylan says U20 row is a sad situation and an awful shame
Bernard Flynn and his management team resigned last month due to the unavailability of senior players. By Emma Duffy Friday 2 Jul 2021, 6:15 AM 17 hours ago 10,242 Views 0 Comments
Seán Boylan pictured at home with some stand out medals and awards from his career. Seán was helping to launch the Bord Gáis Energy GAA Legends Tour Series for 2021.
Image: Brendan Moran/SPORTSFILE
Seán Boylan pictured at home with some stand out medals and awards from his career. Seán was helping to launch the Bord Gáis Energy GAA Legends Tour Series for 2021.
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A professor of human performance says children can reverse negative health impacts associated with lockdown within three months of being regularly active.
It comes as underage non-contact outdoor training in pods of 15 people or fewer
Professor Niall Moyna is from the School of Health and Human Performance at Dublin City University (DCU).
He told Newstalk Breakfast: There are a lot of very, very happy parents in Ireland today. If this lockdown has taught us one lesson, it is the importance of sport to our society - not just the elite sport, but sport at the grassroots level.
Health expert praises outdoor exercise benefits
Updated / Sunday, 28 Feb 2021
20:17
Health experts say even a 15-minute walk every day will have a positive impact on mental health
Health experts say even a 15-minute walk every day will have a positive impact on mental health.
It comes as people across the country were out making the most of the spring sunshine today.
In Clontarf in Dublin, the springtime sunshine put a spring in people s step, as walkers and cyclists took to the paths and roads, and paddle boarders and swimmers took to the water.
Vehicle access to Bull Island was restricted, with gardaí on patrol in the area and at other popular public amenities around the country to ensure people were staying within 5km of home.
Kilkenny GAA players invited to get ready for action with new training seminar
The ‘Be Ready to Play’ programme will start on March 2
Reporter:
sport@kilkennypeople.ie
The programme will help players return to training post Covid in a way that will hopefully increase enjoyment, performance, and participation, while simultaneously reducing the risk of injury );
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The Gaelic Games family today launched ‘Be Ready to Play’, a Coaching and Sport Science programme in association with UPMC, official healthcare partner of the GAA and GPA, that will be delivered via webinars, website programmes, instructional videos and live online sessions.
The programme is a holistic coaching and performance plan that will be of great benefit to all club coaches and players, male, female, adult, and youth alike.