A working theory: camogie is, quietly, one of the most LGBTQ+-positive sports in Ireland. You wouldn't know it from the mainstream coverage, which skews towards the "first and only" framing that women's sport always gets lumbered with. But if you talk to anyone who has played camogie to any serious level in the last ten years, the story they tell is this: it's been fine, it's been fine, it's been fine for longer than the men's game, and most dressing-rooms worked it out for themselves a decade before anyone wrote a policy about it.
The reasons are culturally specific, but they aren't mysterious:
Women's sport got there first
Across almost every team sport in the English-speaking world, women's codes were measurably more LGBTQ+-visible before men's codes. This is not because the players are more likely to be queer in some essentialist way; it's because the cultural cost of being out in women's sport has, for decades, been lower. Less money, less press scrutiny, smaller sponsorship stakes, and — crucially — less policing of masculinity to protect. A Camogie dressing-room in 2012 was already, in practice, an environment where an out player was unsurprising. A Gaelic football dressing-room in 2022 was still getting there.
The generational reset happened faster
Ladies football and camogie absorbed the post-2015 generational shift earlier than Gaelic football and hurling. That generation — players born roughly in the 2000s — went through school in an Ireland where their openly queer classmates were normal. By the time those players were in adult championship sides, the question of LGBTQ+ inclusion was not even live in most dressing-rooms. It was answered.
The national body was, unusually, in front
The Camogie Association's internal equality work has often been ahead of the men's GAA on specific inclusion questions. That hasn't always been loud, and it hasn't been perfect, but it has been directional — and the effect compounds across a decade.
Where the stories are
You will find more LGBTQ+ stories in camogie than you might expect. Most are not in the newspapers, because most are about ordinary careers rather than coming-out milestones. They're in:
- Under-age coaching. A disproportionate share of young camogie coaches, across most counties, are queer women who went back to the club to coach when their playing careers wound down. If you've had an under-12 camogie coach in the last decade, statistically, a meaningful percentage of you had a gay one.
- Inter-county welfare. The welfare officers at the women's inter-county layer have been quietly competent at LGBTQ+ support for longer than most observers credit.
- The parish level. Dozens of camogie clubs have at least one out or quietly-out senior player whose orientation is simply not a topic because the rest of the club has worked out it isn't a topic.
So where does this site come in?
GGA.ie isn't going to out anyone. We don't write profiles of real camogie players unless they've given us direct, signed consent to be profiled, and even then we default to not doing it. What we do:
- Original fiction set in the camogie world — e.g. The Long Puck, Strapping Up — so that the texture of these careers is written down somewhere for the next cohort of young camogie players to read.
- Honest commentary about what the coverage misses. The "first openly gay X" framing matters when it's a real first, but it's long past the point where it captures the actual state of women's GAA sport.
- A directory that lists inclusive camogie sections of GAA clubs. If your club has one and it's not listed, we'd love to hear from you.
If you're a player considering writing about your career
Get in touch. We will go at your pace, run the piece past you any number of times, and publish it under whatever level of anonymity you prefer — your own name, a pen name, "Anonymous, Leinster panel 2018–24", whatever. The stories don't have to be dramatic. A piece about coming back from a cruciate injury and taking your girlfriend to the county dinner is exactly the kind of thing we want to publish.
Email fiction@gga.ie or hello@gga.ie.
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