*Caoimhe Harvey in action for Clare during the League this Spring. Photograph: Gerard O’Neill

An ability to lift communities is a trait of the GAAโ€™s which has been forgotten by sections of the Irish public criticising the continuation of inter-county games, Clare ladies footballer Caoimhe Harvey has said.

Clareโ€™s intermediate ladies footballers begin their All-Ireland campaign this Sunday in Banagher with Caoimhe Harvey expected to play a key role for James Murrihyโ€™s charges.

Dissenting voices slamming the allowance of inter-county games to proceed has frustrated Caoimhe and inter-county players across the country. โ€œThereโ€™s pros and cons to every situation, you could read articles until the cows come home, if the group of players are minding themselves. People are really putting the GAA down, I understand businesses are closed, a lot of business owners are going through an extremely tough time and seeing the GAA is still going ahead can be very tough for them but not a lot of cases have come out of the GAA and that is down to protocols put in place.

โ€œI wouldnโ€™t call us elite in any shape or form but there is definitely a level of responsibility on each person within a group and that is the same for any person in any workplace or anywhere, it is down to every individual and what they can do, we are gone back into a Level 5 lockdown but Iโ€™d rather be watching GAA on a Saturday or Sunday instead of God only knows what Iโ€™d have to watch instead. It is great to see the GAA backโ€.

She is adamant that a safe environment exists at inter-county training. โ€œIโ€™d be worried about COVID but it is great to have an outlet. The only time weโ€™re in contact with each other is when weโ€™re in full matchplay and full games, we donโ€™t meet each other outside of that, weโ€™re sticking to all the regulations, I know I wouldnโ€™t be here if I wasnโ€™t going to be safeโ€.

As Ireland entered a second lockdown, memories of the GAAโ€™s role in running charity fundraisers earlier in the year for groups and charities appeared to have been forgotten. The efforts had not vanished from the mind of Harvey nor her bank balance. โ€œBack in June I must have given โ‚ฌ400 or โ‚ฌ500 like most other people to different charities through GAA fundraisers. With Clare, we raised โ‚ฌ11,000 for four charities within our communities that might need the funds. People seem to have forgot that what GAA clubs really bring is they bring communities together, in the toughest of times it is the GAA that brings you out of itโ€.

The Querrin native added, โ€œIreland is known for the GAA, we send our sympathies to all the business owners that have had to close again but we hope we bring them joy and light at the end of the tunnel with the GAAโ€.

Caoimhe is appreciative of the fact that her 5km radius from home is also in one of the scenic parts of West Clare. โ€œI could be stuck in the city centre but Iโ€™m not. I look out and I see the River Shannon every morning, there mightnโ€™t be a house for one kilometre but weโ€™re blessed to have our five kilometre radius where we areโ€.

Her first year on the intermediate panel saw Clare then managed by Neil Moynihan lose out to Kildare in the All-Ireland final. โ€œWe lost to them in 2016 and in then in 2018 we had them in championship and only beat them by a small margin. It can go either way, there is a rivalry between us, we just want to get back to Croke Park and back to our bestโ€.

Sundayโ€™s tie may be an opening round but the stakes are high as the AIB employee highlighted. โ€œIf we donโ€™t show up against Kildare then the championship is more or less over. Weโ€™ll know after that game where we are and how weโ€™re set. We have a fantastic group of players, we just have to go out and play football. At the end of the day we can only play fifteen on fifteen, you can have all the tactics in the world but if the ball is there and itโ€™s going into the back of the net thatโ€™s where it should be goingโ€.

Concluding the club championship before the inter-county got underway was a unique experience in what Caoimhe described as โ€œa year of uncertainty for a lot of peopleโ€. โ€œIt was a shock for a lot of people for West Clare Gaels to have got to a county final, we are just focused on Clare but it was definitely weird playing club before county but the club was great and it was great for the girls to get to properly perform with our clubs because it was something we didnโ€™t get to do over the years. It didnโ€™t end the way we wanted it to go but everything happens for a reasonโ€.

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