Английская Википедия:Eye-gouging (Gaelic football)

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Шаблон:For Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Use dmy dates Шаблон:Use Hiberno-English Eye-gouging is a serious offence in Gaelic games where a player uses hands or fingers to inflict pain in an opponent's eyes. Such incidents are usually referred to as "eye-gouging" among players and in the media.

History

Colm O'Rourke, a player from the 1970s onwards, wrote this in 2022 for the Sunday Independent: "I was involved in quite a few skirmishes at club level but at that time there were basic rules of engagement. Anyone who kicked, spat or headbutted was fair game for a good hiding, but I had never heard of gouging until it became a problem in rugby".[1]

Incidents

2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship semi-final at Croke Park: Dublin's Rory O'Carroll in a photograph looking like he is gouging the eye of Colm Cooper as he lay on the ground while Jonny Cooper held his shoulder.[2] In a photograph was much publicised at that time.[3] Manager Jim Gavin investigated but was pleased O'Carroll had no problem to answer for.[4] But, with only the Sportsfile photograph of O'Carroll's index finger in Cooper's left eye and a lack of video evidence, O'Carroll was cleared to play in the 2013 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final.[5]

2015 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final: Dublin's Philly McMahon v Kieran Donaghy, McMahon banned for one game.[6][7] McMahon told Morning Ireland: "This is Gaelic football. We're grown men, we play a physical sport and at the end of the day the result is what ends it and we shake hands and get on with it."[8] Tomás Ó Sé and Ciarán Whelan downplayed the incident on The Sunday Game highlights programme.[9][10] Donaghy filmed for documentary saying McMahon gouged him in the eyes.[11][12]

2016 National Football League: Dublin again, Croke Park again, this time James McCarthy looking like he is gouging the eye of a Donegal player, Martin McElhinney in an incident that brought back memories of Patrick McBrearty being bitten in 2013.[13][14][15] McCarthy, who had actually just been shown a red card before he did this, escaped punishment and Dublin manager Jim Gavin said: "To be suggesting there was something malicious, I don't think that's very fair."[16][17] The Irish Independent called for McCarthy to be investigated.[18] But the incident was dismissed as a push by Setanta Sports pundits Senan Connell (former Dublin player) and Aaron Kernan (former Armagh player, see below) dismissed the incident as a push.[19]

Related incidents include Paul Galvin's two-month ban for attacking the face of Eoin Cadogan in the 2010 Munster semi-final replay.[20][21]

Armagh v Galway (2022 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship): Incident picked up straight away on live television.[22][23][24] Former Tyrone All-Ireland SFC winner Owen Mulligan defended the eye-gouging.[25] Joe Brolly did not, he said: "The eye-gouger, no doubt, will get 12 months as a minimum... Possibly longer than that. It is a scandal to see that in our games, deeply depressing."[26][27] Even hurlers spoke out against it.[28] The incident was satirised by Waterford Whispers News.[29] Colm Keys wrote in the Irish Independent that "The stigma of the eye-gouge will follow Armagh around for some time".[30]

See also

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links