Tag Archive for: Cuchulainn

CWL Winter Rounders League Ends Second Season in Style at Fenagh

The CWL Winter Rounders League Ends in Style at Fenagh Centre of Excellence

The second year of the CWL (Carlow, Wexford and Laois) Winter Rounders League came to a memorable close on the final day of action at the Fenagh Centre of Excellence, Carlow, confirming the competition’s growing status as one of the highlights of the winter rounders calendar.

With teams competing across Women’s, Mixed and Social Women’s competitions, the league once again attracted strong participation from clubs across the three counties. This year’s line-up included Cuchulainn, Myshall, Glynn Barntown, St. Martins, Kilanerin, Kilrush Askamore, Emo, Oulart The Ballagh, The Heath, Leighlinbridge and Castletown Liam Mellows, all of whom contributed to a highly competitive and enjoyable winter programme.

Going into the final day, the stakes could not have been higher. Tables across the competitions were exceptionally tight, with nothing separating the top three teams, ensuring a dramatic and exciting conclusion. The standard of play reflected that tension, with sharp skills, tactical awareness and determination on show throughout the day’s fixtures.

Ultimately, Glynn Barntown claimed the Women’s title, Cuchulainn emerged victorious in the Mixed competition, while Kilanerin were crowned champions of the Social Women’s grade, capping off a hugely successful league for all involved.

The day was further enhanced by the presence of several national officials. Paula Doherty, President of GAA Rounders, attended and presented the trophies in what marked her first official engagement as President. Her attendance underlined the importance of the CWL Winter League, which was also recognised earlier this year with the President’s Award at the 2025 All Stars.

Also in attendance was National Secretary Shirley Lennon, who presented referee awards in recognition of the vital role officials play in the success of competitions such as this. Additional support came from Mark Jennings, Development Officer, and Michael Meaney, Central Council Delegate. Their commitment was rewarded, as they were treated to a full day of high-quality rounders — a drive that was well worth it.

The action on the field concluded with Women’s and Men’s exhibition games, featuring the best players from across the CWL clubs. These showcase matches provided a fitting finale, highlighting the talent, depth and future potential within the region.

Following the games, players, officials and supporters gathered in The Hunter’s Rest, Fenagh, for the presentation ceremony. The relaxed and celebratory atmosphere reflected the spirit of the league, bringing everyone together after a long but rewarding winter campaign.

Now firmly established, the CWL Winter Rounders League continues to go from strength to strength. The competition is driven by an outstanding organising committee comprising Peadar Waters, Emma Reddy, Paul Cooper, PJ Lalor, Caroline Waters and Carmel Moloney.

As the second season draws to a close, attention has already turned to the future, with clubs and players eagerly looking ahead to what promises to be an even bigger and better third year of this standout winter competition.

CWL Committee Members
CWL Winter League Action
CWL Winter League Action
Cuchulainn Mixed Winners
Glynn Barntown Women’s Winners
Kilanerin Social Women’s Winners
Referee Awards Presentation
CWL Winter League Trophies

All-Ireland Senior Rounders 2025 – Semi-Final Previews

All-Ireland Senior Semi-Finals – Men’s, Mixed & Ladies

🎟️ Click here to buy tickets for All‑Stars

The road to the 2025 All-Ireland Senior Rounders Finals in Abbotstown reaches boiling point this Sunday in Dunganny, with six
semi‑finals stacked across the Men’s, Mixed and Ladies grades.

In the Men’s, Erne Eagles face

Breaffy after their free‑scoring group clash, while Carrickmacross Emmets bring the grade’s most consistent attack into a tactical duel with Glynn Barntown.

The Mixed line‑up pairs top‑seeded Eagles with the unpredictable Cuchulainn, and renews a tight rivalry between
Breaffy and Glynn Barntown.

In the Senior Ladies, unbeaten‑looking
Breaffy meet the dangerous Cuchulainn, while Glynn Barntown test their composure against the high‑ceiling Erne Eagles. Form points one way, history another — and with one win
separating every team from the showpiece, expect sharp fielding, cool pitching and some thunderous hitting.


🎟️ Click here to buy tickets for All‑Stars

📊 Senior Men’s Semi-Final Previews – 24 August, Dunganny

Erne Eagles (1st) vs Breaffy (4th) –

Erne have looked the complete package across the group phase: six wins from seven, scoring a shade over
eleven per game while allowing just under six. That balance produced the second‑stingiest defence in the grade and
kept them on the front foot in most contests. There is, however, one smudge on the copybook — a breathless meeting with
Breaffy earlier this month that finished 19–15 against them.

Breaffy arrive with a more boom‑or‑bust profile. They matched Eagles for wins but did it by swinging big:
the joint‑best scoring rate in the league — roughly seventeen a game — but also the loosest defence of the top four,
shipping close to twelve on average. In a semi‑final, that can be terrifying in the best possible way, especially when
you’ve already outslugged the top seeds.

Key stat: Breaffy’s healthy positive differential is powered by bursts of heavy scoring; Erne’s similar margin comes
from constant pressure at the plate backed by tidy fielding and pitching.

Prediction: If Breaffy catch fire early it could be a repeat of the league upset, but Erne’s depth and control late on still make them narrow favourites.


Carrickmacross Emmets (2nd) vs Glynn Barntown (3rd)

Few teams have hit the ball as relentlessly as Carrickmacross. Over seven games they piled up well over a century of
runs — about seventeen a game — while keeping opponents to a touch over six. That combination delivers the best
differential in the grade and explains their calm march to second.

Glynn Barntown aren’t far off the pace. They’ve been in double figures most days (around twelve to thirteen per outing)
and defend capably (roughly eight conceded). The earlier meeting matters, though: Carrick were comfortable winners,
bossing a 22–9 encounter where they controlled both the strike zone and the diamond.

Key stat: Across the run‑in, Carrick have been scoring about a full inning’s worth more per game than Glynn — a sign of late‑season momentum as well as depth through the order.

Prediction: Glynn will need near‑perfect catching and clean bases to stem the Emmets’ power. Form says Carrick, but expect it to tighten if Glynn turn it into a five‑innings chess match.

📊 Senior Mixed Semi-Final Previews — Dunganny

Erne Eagles (1st) vs Cuchulainn (4th)

The Eagles’ mixed side has flown just as high: six wins from seven with scoring close to fifteen a game and only a little
over seven conceded. They’ve ended contests early too — the 21–1 against Carrickmacross was wrapped after just
two innings, and they beat The Heath 9–1 while batting three. When these two met in May, Erne had the answers in a
five‑innings 23–12.

Cuchulainn have been the league’s great entertainers: three wins, four defeats, and almost as many scored as conceded.
They can trade punches with anyone — that 24–21 shootout against The Heath (five innings) proves it — but tight finishes
have gone the other way against Carrickmacross and Breaffy.

Key stat: Erne Eagles already own two wins this summer while batting three innings or fewer; Cuchulainn tend to be drawn into
high‑scoring games that ask a lot of their defence.

Prediction: Erne Eagles to control the tempo. If they hit the front early they will be hard stopped.


Breaffy (2nd) vs Glynn Barntown (3rd)

Breaffy have mirrored the men with six wins and a calm assurance: around thirteen‑plus per game scored and just over
seven allowed. They’ve posted statement victories — 28–13 over Kilmeena in four innings and 21–6 versus Carrick in
four — and, crucially, edged Glynn in their latest meeting, 9–7 with both sides batting the full five.

Glynn Barntown are live contenders. They’ve kept opponents to roughly eight a game and already clipped the top seeds,
out‑thinking Erne 10–6 (four vs five). There’s firepower too: 22–17 at Cuchulainn and a ruthless day at The Heath where
they won 19–2 while batting only two innings.

Key stat: Over the last fortnight Glynn’s run‑rate trend is slightly sharper than Breaffy’s, thanks to that two‑innings rout,
but Breaffy have banked the head‑to‑head.

Prediction: Breaffy by a whisker if it becomes a fielding battle; if Glynn open the taps early, expect a classic that goes the distance.

🏆 Senior Ladies Semi-Finals – Preview

Two places in the All-Ireland final are up for grabs. Form guides point one way, but the numbers hint at a lively afternoon.


Breaffy (1st) vs Cuchulainn (4th)

Breaffy arrive unbeaten, winning four from four with the most balanced profile in the grade — scoring a little under
fourteen runs a game and allowing just over five. That blend of calm batting and tidy fielding has been their hallmark all summer.

Cuchulainn are the wildcards. They’ve been one of the division’s liveliest batting groups — right around fifteen per game — but they’ve also leaked heavily, closer to
eighteen-and-a-half per outing. When the tempo rises, they can trade blows with anyone; when it slows, their defense gets asked hard questions. This was a nail biting semi-final last year.

Key thread: If Breaffy keep innings short and traffic off the bases, their control usually tells. If Cuchulainn turn it into a shoot‑out, this could swing.

Prediction: Breaffy, unless Cuchulainn land an early big inning.


Glynn Barntown (2nd) vs Erne Eagles (3rd)

Glynn Barntown have been steady and composed — about nine runs scored per game and conceding just under seven. They’re comfortable in tighter contests and typically win the small margins with clean catching and reliable pitching.

Erne Eagles are the volatility play. They score on a similar clip to the top seed — roughly thirteen to fourteen per game — but they’ve also been hit the other way more than anyone in the top four. That profile screams danger: when the bats click, they can overwhelm; when the game slows, they’ve given opponents chances.

Key thread: Pace of the game. A tidy, chance‑light semi suits Glynn; an open, base‑busy contest drags the Eagles right into their sweet spot.

Prediction: Glynn Barntown in a controlled game — flip a coin if it breaks into a slugfest.

Respect the Game – Respect Each Other

  • 👏 Cheer great catches – no shouting while a player is attempting to catch the Sliotar
  • ⚾ Respect pitchers  – tough job, big skill.
  • 🫡 Back the refs – no arguing calls.

Play hard. Play fair. Keep it positive.

Crunch Time: Key Fixtures Set to Shape the Championship This Sunday

📅 Sunday’s Championship Action

All eyes turn to Athlone, Tymon Park, and Mullahoran this Sunday as the Rounders Championship edges closer to the knockout stages.
 
With games running out, every result now carries weight — whether it’s for top spot, survival, or momentum. Breaffy’s Senior squads return to action aiming to extend their unbeaten runs, while Cuchulainn, Kilmeena, and Erne Eagles look to shake up the standings. It’s also a big day for the intermediate championship in Galway. Run rates, head-to-heads, and weather could all come into play.
 

Senior Ladies

Breaffy vs Cuchulainn 📍Athlone GAA | 🕧 12:30pm | 🧍‍♂️Ref: Jack All eyes will be on Athlone as defending All-Ireland champions Breaffy return to action for just their second match of the campaign. The Mayo side have lifted the last three national titles and opened their 2025 account with a dominant 15–1 win over Raheen, showcasing their depth, power, and ruthless streak.

Cuchulainn, meanwhile, have already played three matches, narrowly beating Raheen and losing tight encounters to both Erne Eagles (30–34) and Glynn Barntown (7–15). Despite sitting second in the table, their run rate is negative—an issue they’ll need to address quickly. Last year’s meeting between these two sides was a cracker, and Cuchulainn pushed Breaffy hard before ultimately falling short.

With scoring difference and final placings still on the line, Cuchulainn will be desperate to cause an upset. But they’ll need to produce their most disciplined performance yet to overcome a Breaffy team that knows how to finish games with precision.
🔮 Verdict: Breaffy by 6



Senior Mixed

Breaffy vs Cuchulainn 📍Athlone GAA | 🕑 2:00pm | 🧍‍♂️Ref: Jack

 

It’s a heavyweight clash as reigning All-Ireland champions Breaffy face high-flying Cuchulainn in a game that could define the top of the table. Breaffy may be sitting in sixth due to games in hand, but with a perfect 3–0 record and the best run rate in the group (+2.7), they’re still the team to beat.

Cuchulainn, meanwhile, have racked up some serious scores and sit second with three wins from five. Their recent 24–21 victory over The Heath showed their threat with the bat, but their defence will be tested by a ruthless Breaffy side. A win here for Breaffy keeps their title defence firmly on track. Cuchulainn will be out to prove they belong in that top bracket.
🔮 Verdict: Breaffy by 3 ⸻

 

Erne Eagles vs The Heath 📍Mullahoran | 🕚 11:00am | 🧍‍♂️Ref: Philip

 

Quietly effective, Erne Eagles are sitting third with a game in hand and a strong run rate of +1.0. Their dominant wins over Limekiln and Kilmeena have underlined their status as serious semi-final contenders.

The Heath have had a patchy campaign, with one win and three defeats. They’ve shown glimpses of promise but conceded 68 runs in four matches—far too many at this level. Erne Eagles look sharper, more consistent, and better equipped to handle pressure. The Heath will need to pull something special out of the bag to avoid slipping further down the table.

🔮 Verdict: Erne Eagles by 7 ⸻

 

Limekiln vs Kilmeena 📍Tymon Park | 🕚 11:00am | 🧍‍♀️Ref: Sarah

Two teams with 1–4 records, 17 points each, and almost nothing between them. This is make-or-break. Limekiln have been involved in multiple close games but struggled to close them out.

Kilmeena, meanwhile, got a huge morale boost last round with a shock 9–7 win over Glynn Barntown. This is the first time the two sides meet in senior championship action—and it’s a true knockout scenario. The winner stays alive in the semi-final hunt. The loser almost certainly exits.

🔮 Verdict: Draw 

 

Carrickmacross Emmets vs Kilmeena 📍Tymon Park | 🕧 12:30pm | 🧍‍♀️Ref: Aine

 

Carrickmacross are bottom of the table but showed huge improvement in their last outing with a 22–16 win over The Heath. They’ll be hoping to carry that form into this one and pull off another upset.

Kilmeena play earlier in the day against Limekiln, and the quick turnaround could challenge their depth and stamina. If they win the first, this becomes a must-win. If they lose it, this becomes a lifeline. Carrickmacross are fresh and finally finding their rhythm—Kilmeena could be caught cold late in the day.

🔮 Verdict: Carrickmacross by 1  

 

Senior Men

Breaffy vs Cuchulainn 📍Athlone GAA | 🕞 3:30pm | 🧍‍♂️Ref: Jack

Last year’s beaten finalists Breaffy are on a mission—and they’re doing it with style. Unbeaten in three, they boast a staggering +4.3 run rate, having brushed aside the likes of Michael Glavey’s (31–6) and Limekiln (21–11). Sitting just outside the top four due to games played, a win here would put them firmly back in the picture for top spot.

Cuchulainn are fourth, but their path is anything but secure. With losses to Erne Eagles and Glynn Barntown on their record, they’ll need something special to hold off the chasing pack. Their 2-run win over The Heath earlier in the season showed grit, but they’ll need much more to stop a Breaffy side in full flow. Cuchulainn are fighting to stay in the hunt so expect intensity.
🔮 Verdict: Breaffy by 5  

 

Limekiln vs Michael Glavey’s 📍Tymon Park | 🕧 12:30pm | 🧍‍♀️Ref: Sarah After conceding two walkovers in a row, Michael Glavey’s are set to line out again—but they’ll need to rediscover their form quickly. Bottom of the table with –9 points and a –4.2 run rate, their season has unravelled fast. But if they can put in a full performance, they could at least restore some pride. Limekiln haven’t had the season they hoped for either. Just one win from five has them stuck on 17 points, and while qualification nearly is now out of reach, a win here would ensure they finish the campaign on a high. Both sides are wounded. One will leave with a much-needed boost.
🔮 Verdict: Limekiln by 9  



Intermediate Mixed

Galway City Rapparees vs St. Clare’s 📍Galway | 🕧 12:30pm | 🧍‍♀️Ref: Shirley

 

Last year’s Junior champions Galway City Rapparees have stormed into Intermediate mixed with real intent, boasting two wins from two and the best run rate in the group (+2.4). A third win here would seal qualification and set up a winner-takes-all clash with Erne Eagles for top spot in early August.

St. Clare’s were unbeaten until they ran into an on-fire Erne Eagles side. They still sit second on 13 points, but their fate now hinges on this trip to Galway. A big win could book their place in the semis. A loss, and they will most likely be leapfrogged by both Galway and Erne. This is effectively a knockout game for St Clare’s . Expect fireworks in Galway.

🔮 Verdict: Galway City Rapparees by 4

 

Athenry vs Erne Eagles 📍Athenry | 🕛 12:00pm | 🧍‍♂️Ref: Peter

After a slow start, Erne Eagles are suddenly back in the mix. A commanding win over St. Clare’s has boosted their confidence and run rate—and if they beat Athenry here, they’ll leap to 14 points and set up a massive final game with Galway.

Athenry have been competitive, but a leaky defence (conceding 62 runs) has cost them. Even with three games played, they’re out of the running—but they’d love to spoil Erne’s charge and grab a statement win at home. Erne need this to stay alive. Expect them to show up.
🔮 Verdict: Erne Eagles by 6

 

Intermediate men 

🔵 Galway City Rapparees vs St Clare’s 📍 Galway | 🕑 2:00pm | 🧍‍♀️ Referee: Shirley

It’s a high-stakes finish in the Intermediate Men’s group as Galway City Rapparees take on St Clare’s, with top spot and semi-final pairings hanging in the balance. The Rapparees have turned things around brilliantly in 2025. After failing to win a single game last year—including a heavy defeat to St Clare’s in this corresponding fixture—they’ve emerged as one of the form teams of this season. A statement win over Kilmeena and a dominant performance against the Dublin Mets show just how far they’ve come. Their only blemish was a one-run loss to Emo in a thriller.

St Clare’s have also secured their semi-final place after seeing off the Mets and holding a valuable head-to-head edge over them. However, inconsistency has been an issue, with defeats to both Kilmeena and Emo. A win here could lift them as high as second depending on run rate, while a loss would likely see them finish fourth.

For Galway, it’s simple: win and they top the group. Lose, and they risk dropping to third—setting up a rematch with Clare’s in the semi-final. A full-circle showdown either way.

🔮 Verdict: Galway by 3

Junior Men

Galway City Rapparees vs St Senans 📍 Galway | 🕜 Throw-in 11am Junior Men – Group A

It all comes down to this for Galway City Rapparees, who host St Senans in the final game of Group A. But despite still being mathematically alive, the odds are stacked against them in a brutal run rate scenario that may yet punish one of the form teams of the group.

Galway come into this clash with 16 points and a run rate of –0.4, having won two of their four matches and received a walkover win against Elphin—crucially, walkovers carry no run rate gain.

St Senans, by contrast, sit on 18 points with a run rate of 2.1, and have already beaten Na Piarsaigh and Sporting Limerick convincingly. Even in last week’s narrow defeat to Kilmore (16–15), they showed they could mix it with the best. The Rapparees are now in the unenviable position of needing to beat St Senans by around 30 runs to leapfrog them and Na Pairsaigh on run rate. A win by 9 or 10 would have been enough in a normal situation, but the lack of a run rate boost from their walkover against Elphin means Galway are carrying a deficit both mathematically and psychologically.

To make matters even more frustrating, Galway already beat Kilmore, who are top finishers in the group, earlier in the campaign. If they manage to beat St Senans here, they could beat both of the group’s top qualifiers—but could still finish fourth and miss out on the semis. That would be an extraordinary and rare outcome in a six-team group format in rounders.

St Senans, with their current run rate cushion, can afford a close loss and still go through. Their 18(2)-10(5) win over Elphin earlier in the campaign did wonders for their run rate.

Expect Galway to come out swinging—they’ve no choice. For St Senans, this is all about scoreboard management. Even a loss could be enough… just as long as it’s not historic.

🔮 Verdict: St Senans by 4

Thanks to all the referees officiating this weekend.   It’s never an easy task, without refs we have no games.