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Published 11:44 28 Mar 2018 BST
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He must have felt like nothing changed when he heard his new teammates speaking as Gaeilge at training. The majority of these Cuala hurlers were educated through the Irish language in gaeilscoilleanna. Scoil Lorcain is the local primary school and Coláiste Eoin is the local secondary.
"It's incredible. There are so many in the club that speak Irish. Even our own team, I would say upwards of 90% can speak Irish," he said in an interview with AIB GAA earlier this year.Our native tongue is a huge part of this culture in Cuala. Many of their players go by their Irish names rather than their English. Take the side's centre forward Colm Ó Cróinín, take Cillian Ó Séanáin, take an Laoch na hImeartha from Saturday evening's final, Seán Ó Móráin. Moments after completing the serious feat of winning two Tommy Moore cups in a row, the side's spiritual leader performed his post-match interview with TG4's Micheál Ó Domhnaill trí Ghaeilge. It wasn't Gaeilge briste though. It was smooth, confident Irish. He gave his thoughts on the game and this wasn't some sort of token gesture to look good. His pronunciation was perfect, his tenses made sense, he even nailed the saorbhriathar, there was no stuttering. This man is a Gaeilgeoir.
"An méid oibre atá déanta againn. Tá sos beag tuillte againn anois."Níl dabht ar bith faoi sin. https://twitter.com/SportTG4/status/977621801751605249 In an age where many people's only problem with TG4 is their lack of English commentary, it's a refreshing reminder that the culture, the tradition upon which the GAA was founded and developed still exists. It also lets us all know that it's not impossible to keep those traditions. These Cuala lads weren't born in the Gaeltacht. They're no different to any of us but still in their Dublin county final with Kilmacud Crokes, 20 out of the 30 players on the pitch had Gaeilge, having graduated from Coláiste Eoin. https://twitter.com/ShaneJHayes/status/977703717096091648 Slaughtneil is another place where Gaeilge is everywhere, where identity and promotion of our culture is the lifeblood. They won the All-Ireland camogie title on the same weekend. Efforts like these, working together for the good of the cause. That's what builds a team spirit. That's what sets these two clubs apart. Former Tipperary hurler a Timmy Hammersley is envious that such a tradition doesn't exist in his own club, Clonoulty Rossmore. https://twitter.com/TimmyHammersley/status/977622187959078912 He's not the only one.
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