“This
is not sport at all but a sort of viciousness that cannot be tolerated,” the
Resident Magistrate at Newry contended.
Mr
Wilson had eight young men before him charged with affray at a football match
in Camlough when the home side were playing against Drumheriff
(Whitecross).
Sergeant
Joyce commented that the whole thing began as a result of a linesman’s decision
and his entering on the field of play.
When
he turned around a crowd of about three hundred were “in fisticuffs” and they
seemed to have lost all control.
Two
men were badly beaten. One player was
surrounded by a mob that seemed half mad. He had his head down and the crowd was beating him.
“I
have been in many fights,” the Sergeant rather strangely confessed to the court,
“but
this was most serious. I noticed a man
wielding a stick. He later claimed that
his brother was being badly beaten and he was trying to rescue him.”
Sensibly
Mr P J Curran, representing the defendants intervened.
“The
best test is the feeling that the men have towards one another afterwards.
I
guarantee that none of them bear any ill-will or malice”.
Of
course he was right.
……………….
Though
all this happened sixty years ago, it has been repeated religiously almost
every year since, not just between these two teams but at every South Armagh
GAA derby game in the county.
Shure,
isn’t that what it’s all about?