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19th October 2016
03:13pm BST

"The real delay was the second round - seeding teams into A and B," PC Loughnane, Cappataggle club secretary, spoke with SportsJOE. "It wouldn't be fully the hurling board's fault that it wasn't played. It was just when they decided to change the championship to make an A and B - that was really it. "Because after we were beaten and had finished in the championship, we had to play more games to get to A. Some teams had three more games in those playoff groups, others had two. That was why the delay was in it and it just never really materialised between that and Christmas."It's been a series of unfortunate events ever since Cappataggle emerged from the league group back in the spring of 2015. They were due to play Beagh in the league semi-final but the pair would meet in their championship group in June so, between both clubs, they agreed to put a place in the league final on the line for that game, as well as the championship points. Of course, as luck transpired, they drew that game. Later in the year, in October, Beagh and Cappataggle were drawn in that same playoff group (with Tommy Larkins) to decide the fate of A and B championship clubs for next year. Once more, they put the league semi-final on that fixture along with the points for the playoff group and Cappataggle won by four to advance to the decider. There, they'd play Tynagh-Abbey/Duniry. Still, they wait for the fixture.
"They wanted to get the final played at the end of May (2016) when there was a break but we had four lads playing with the Galway under-21s then so we wouldn't have had them available," Loughnane explained. "So it wasn't played then and that was it. It's just been going on since and we're trying to arrange a date suitable for everyone. "We were beaten in August, we were beaten in a preliminary quarter-final, and our lads haven't lifted a hurl since. We had four lads in the Galway under-21 team and they were playing in August - they played Dublin in a semi-final. That ruled out a lot of days. "They played Dublin on August 20, then we were out in the championship the week afterwards. Then they were playing in the All-Ireland final against Waterford in the second week of September. Then when they finished with the under-21s, the footballers were in action."The footballers are still going. Cappataggle's sister club St. Gabriel's have a junior championship final this weekend so all the focus is on that for now. They've tried to schedule the league final (last year's league final) for the bank holiday weekend but Tynagh would've been missing boys and so it goes. For now, it is down for Saturday 5 November.
"We've never actually won the senior league because we were only promoted in 2014. So it would be an honour to win it."And, 18 months after they qualified for the semi-final, 13 months after they won the semi-final, four months after their opposition have stopped playing hurling, three months since their season ended, four weeks after the 2016 competition has been wrapped up, Cappataggle might finally get the chance and that honour to win their first senior hurling league. They might. Just don't expect them to take the trophy home if they win. The GAA Hour podcast is out every Wednesday. Subscribe here on iTunes or listen on Soundcloud.
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