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Mick Flannelly

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Mick Flannelly
Personal information
Irish name Mícheál Ó Flannaile
Sport Hurling
Position Right wing-forward
Born (1930-02-21) 21 February 1930 (age 94)
Waterford, Ireland
Height 5 ft 7 in (1.70 m)
Nickname Flan
Occupation Printer
Club(s)
Years Club
Mount Sion
Club titles
Waterford titles 15
Inter-county(ies)*
Years County Apps (scores)
1949-1965
Waterford 33 (10-24)
Inter-county titles
Munster titles 3
All-Irelands 1
NHL 1
*Inter County team apps and scores correct as of 17:39, 22 March 2015.

Michael Peter "Mick" Flannelly (born 21 February 1930) is an Irish retired hurler who played as a right wing-forward for the Waterford senior team.

Born in Waterford, Flannelly first arrived on the inter-county scene at the age of eighteen when he first linked up with the Waterford minor team. He made his debut during the 1949-50 league. Flannelly was a regular member of the team for over a decade and a half and won one All-Ireland medal and two Munster medals. Her was an All-Ireland runner-up on two occasions.[1]

Flannelly was a member of the Munster inter-provincial team on several occasions, but failed to win a Railway Cup medal. At club level he was a fifteen-time championship medallist with Mount Sion.

His father, Matt, enjoyed a distinguished Gaelic football career with Galway.

Throughout his career Flannelly made 33 championship appearances. He retired from inter-county hurling following the conclusion of the 1965 championship.

Family

Mick came from a sporting family. His father, Matt, was a Mayo man who moved to Tuam, Co Galway in 1902. Whilst there he won 6 county Galway senior football championships and then, having moved to Galway in 1910 he won a further 3 football championships. Between 1908 and 1920 he was a regular member of the Galway inter-county team and played in the All-Ireland final in 1919 when Galway lost to Kildare. He had played handball as a means of getting fit for football and after he moved to Waterford in 1920 continued with both games. In 1925, however, he decided to concentrate more on handball and in that year, partnered by Mick Batterberry, contested the All-Ireland senior doubles final. In 1928 he won his All-Ireland medal when he won the Junior singles championship for Waterford. That year, in company with Jack Flavin, they reached the All-Ireland senior doubles final only to be narrowly beaten. Matt had also played football during his handball years - with Ballytruckle at first and then Gracedieu. He played his last football game in 1933 - thirty years after he first graced the football fields of Galway.

Matt had five sons, Patsy, Matt jnr, Jim, Mick and Joe and all played with distinction for Mount Sion. Patsy won a county junior football medal in 1939 before illness struck and claimed his young life. In 1944 Matt and Jim figured in a losing display for the Mount Sion minor team that lost narrowly to a Dungarvan team that set up a seemingly unbeatable record of five minor crown in a row. In 1945 Jim and Joe were on the Mount Sion team that beat Cappoquin for the title. The age limit claimed Jim the next year but Mick and Joe remained together in 1946-48. Joe was there again in 1949 when he achieved a feat that is probably unequalled in Ireland - a fifth successive county minor medal. In 1950, without any Flannelly, Mount Sion won a sixth county minor title in succession, thereby breaking Dungarvan's unbeatable record.

Achievements

Every Gaelic family has its star and it is no reflection on his brothers to say that the brightest star in the Flannelly household was Mick. He is the most be-medalled Waterfod GAA player of all time having won 25 county medals in all grades: 15 county senior hurling, three minor hurling, 4 senior football and 3 junior football. He also captained Waterford to its second All-Ireland minor hurling title in 1948. In all, he played in 18 senior hurling county finals losing only three. He played in 4 All-Ireland senior hurling finals (including one drawn game) winning in 1959.

References

  1. ^ "Waterford GAA profile". www.hoganstand.com. Archived from the original on 13 January 2016. Retrieved 27 April 2010.