Seamus McIntyre

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Seamus McIntyre
Personal information
Sport Dual player
Football Position: Full Back
Hurling Position: Full Back
Born 1971
Kenmare, Kerry, Ireland
Died 2001 (age 29)
Occupation Garda Síochána
Club(s)
Years Club
Kenmare
Gort
Ballincollig
Inter-county(ies)
Years County
1990's
1990's
Kerry (F)
Kerry (H)
Inter-county titles
  Football Hurling
Munster Titles 0
All-Ireland Titles 0 0
League titles 0 0
All-Stars 0 0

Seamus McIntyre (1971–22 April 2001) was a dual player from Kenmare, County Kerry.

Background[edit]

McIntyre was born in 1971 to PJ and Mamie McIntyre. His father was a Garda as well as a former Kerry hurler and footballer and a GAA administrator, while his mother had been very closely involved in the Community Games movement. He had a brother, Padraig, and a sister, Geraldine.[1]

McIntyre had been an outstanding campaigner with the Kerry hurlers in the 1990s, playing against top teams such as Clare, Offaly, Tipperery, Kilkenny, Galway and Waterfprd. He also played with the Kerry junior football team during this time winning a Munster Junior Football Championship medal with them in 1995. He played with the Kenmare club before his work with the Garda Síochána took him to County Galway where he joined the Gort club and later to County Cork where he joined Ballincollig.

To date he has been the only person to captain a Garda College team to a Fitzgibbon Cup Final in 1997 when they lost out to UCC.

Death and legacy[edit]

On 22 April 2001, McIntyre and fellow Kerryman and Garda George Rice were in Cork responding to an emergency call when their patrol car when they lost control and collided with a hackney travelling in the opposite direction. Both died as a result. Rice (age 45) was a husband and father of three and McIntyre had been engaged at the time of the accident. The accident was due to a faulty gearbox and in 2007 the court approved a settlement order for the families in the sum of €75,000.[2][3]

An annual hurling tournament in his name is played each year between Garda teams from around the country.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "McIntyre, Seamus - HoganStand". hoganstand.com. Retrieved 15 February 2019.
  2. ^ "Faulty gearbox led to garda deaths in 2001 Late garda's family settle for €75k". Independent.ie. Retrieved 15 February 2019.
  3. ^ "Garda Seamus McIntyre, Kenmare – Emergency Services Forum". Retrieved 15 February 2019.