About Us

Durham Robert Emmets GFC is one of the most storied Gaelic football clubs in Canada. Founded in 1990, the club is a proud member of the Toronto Gaelic Athletic Association, competing in men’s and ladies’ football. Our club has a strong history of championships on the pitch, and of joy and fun off the pitch.

While training and matches currently take place in Toronto, we are proud of our Durham roots and work hard to connect with our Durham community. We welcome all players continuing their football careers, interested in learning a new sport, dusting off the boots after a break, or simply looking for a new family to join.

We keep a busy and inclusive social calendar, and are always looking for new members!

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Club History

General

Durham Robert Emmets GFC was founded in 1990, when Eddie Mangan became the club’s first president. Eddie, along with a core group of Irish immigrants who were then involved with other clubs in Toronto, saw the potential in their own sons to make the bones of a solid minor team to compete in the Toronto Minor League. They reached out to other families in Durham looking for players and so came the first team to play as the Durham Robert Emmets.

Our ladies team was added in 1992, and many championships and great memories for the club have ensued since that time.

Although the club have had a great number of great members who founded, built, contributed and carried it throughout the decades, two people stand out for their contributions as foundational members.

Brian Farmer, one of the founding members, is widely known as one of Canada’s godfathers of Gaelic games at the national and international level. Brian came to Canada in 1975, served as Chairman of the Canadian County Board for over 18 years and has spent a lifetime promoting the GAA in Canada. It is safe to say that the Durham Robert Emmets would not exist without Brian’s passion and commitment to the club, through sponsorship, management, recruitment and his continued and ongoing support of the club. Durham quite literally would not be blue and white without Brian Farmer. Brian was deservedly honoured as Toronto Irish Person of the Year in March 2006.

Elaine Mealiffe joined the Durham ladies team as a young lass in 1994, and she quickly became the backbone of the ladies team. From her days as a playing star, to management and through to club leadership, Elaine has been a constant for the women’s team since she first donned the blue and white. Elaine was instrumental in starting the Durham Shamrocks, a very successful youth program that the club undertook in the early 2010s. Whenever the club has had a need, Elaine has been willing and able to lend her passion, her commitment, and her love for the sport and for the community to help Durham achieve its goals.

League & Championship Titles:

Men’s

Toronto GAA Champions
2019
2015
2005
1993

Toronto GAA League Titles
2009
2008
2007
2003
1993

Ladies’

Toronto GAA Champions
2018
2014
2013
2011
2000
1998
1997

Toronto GAA League Titles
2019
2016
2015
2013
2012
2007
1999
1998
1997
1996

Men

Barr, Danny
Belton, Liam (Longford)
Cleere, Kian (Dublin)
Costello, Evan
Creery, John (Armagh)
Dillon, Owen (Offaly)
Farmer, Nishi
Farmer, Darren
Farrelly, Terry
Feeney, Emmet
Kilpatrick, Aidan
Lowe, Conor (Tyrone)
Mangan, Sean
McParland, Nathan
Merrick, Dhani
Mitchell, Aidan
Moley, Eddie
O’Kane, Peter
O’Neill, Brendan (Louth)
O’Reilly, Kevin (Armagh)
Quinn, Aidan
Savage, Colm (Down)
Sheehy, Enda
Sullivan, Joe (Kerry)
White, Darren

Ladies

Bowens, Laura (Meath)
Dunne, Laura (Kildare)
Kelly, Julie (Wexford)
Lynch, Susan (Cavan)
Mackin, Dearbhla (Louth)
McDonald, Marie (Wexford)
McHugh, Sinead (Kildare)
O’Brien, Diane (Dublin)
O’Donnell, Ashling (Waterford)
Power, Daire (Dublin)
Troy, Amo (Dublin)

The Minor League

Some would take the opinion that this is indeed where or how the club started. For it was here, in early 1990, where a core group of Irish immigrants currently involved in other clubs in the city saw the potential in their own sons to make the bones of a solid minor team to compete in the Toronto Minor League. They reached out to other families in Durham looking for players and so came the first team to play as Durham Robert Emmets.

The Durham minor team enjoyed a major share of positive events in its first year. In March 1991, twenty players attended the Skydome Games in Toronto where Mike Ensor, Aidan Laverty, Darren Farmer and Brendan O’Hara were selected as ball boys for the occasion. They capped off a great 1991 season by winning the minor championship.

Championship medals were presented to the minor team at the victory banquet in May by none other than TV presenter, newspaper columnist and footballer supreme, Kerry’s Pat Spillane. It was a night to remember and a tremendous thrill for Gaels, both young and old.

In June 1991, at the invitation of Kerry’s Michael Keane (Chairman of the New York Minor Board and present day Steering Committee member of the Continental Youth Championships), the team participated in a tournament in the Catskill Mountains, New York against New York Celtic and Rockland Hibernians. They acquitted themselves playing against much more experienced opposition, but it was a brilliant weekend for the team and supporters alike. Needless to say there are some stories that remain untold!

In 1992 Brian Healy was awarded the minor player of the year for Toronto with Darren Farmer picking up honors in the U-14 category. Darren would keep on improving his game and in 1995, was rewarded with the minor player of the year award.
Several minors have represented Canada in International Tournaments in Ireland including Brian Healy, Darren Farmer, Barry Farmer, George Curry Jr., John O’Donoghue, Mark Kerr, Brian Kelly and Mike Ensor.

There is no doubt that the evolution from this successful minor program played and continues to play a major role in the success and backbone of the present day Durham Emmets’ senior team. Today, minor programs have evolved in the City of Toronto and Durham GFC have now partnered with the Toronto Chieftains Youth Club for the development of all of our players under the age of 18 years.

The Men's League

In 1990, our first senior men’s team was created in Durham under the direction of Eddie Mangan, the club’s first president. The very first challenge match was played at Dunbarton High School in Pickering against Clan Na Gael, with further home games played at Dennis O’Connor High School in Ajax. Our first teams were comprised of some older players who were coaxed out of retirement alongside some promising minors and young recruits, which helped launch the club’s arrival to the football scene in Toronto.

After winning their first trophy – the McKenna Cup – in 1992 over St. Pat’s by a one point margin, the year 1993 saw the emergence of Durham to the next level. The club had its best year winning the Senior Championship, the Senior League, the League Cup, the Montreal 9-A-Side Tournament and the Brampton Owen Nolan Tournament.

It would be another ten years before the club would get their next title winning the Senior League in 2003.

The past few years have seen the retirement of many of the original minor team. We have been fortunate however with the willingness of many of these individuals to take on administrative roles within the club. Since reclaiming the Championship title in 2015, the team welcomed a new tide of immigration coupled with the fruition of the new youth program to provide a core group of players upon which we continue to build and compete.

Coming true to form in 2019, the men capped off the season with a stunning run to the Championship, winning the club’s fourth championship trophy in a victory over St. Vincent’s by a score of 3-8 to 1-7 in a hard fought final. Captain Johnny Naughton raised the cup for the boys in blue, while Nathan McParland was deservedly named 2019 most valuable player at the Toronto GAA banquet.

The Ladies' League

In 1992, with Gaelic football now firmly in place among the Durham community, the club expanded further with the formation of a ladies’ team under the guidance of Nuala McNamara (Dublin). Local recruitment in the Durham area began and saw fellow Irishwomen like Karen Lynch (Dublin), Pamela Doyle (Dublin), Caroline Thompson (Dublin), Pauline Gilsenan (Monaghan), Janet Brown (Dublin) join the team Some fresh faced Irish-Canadian teenagers like Colleen McNamara, Louise Sheridan and Erin Horgan helped boost the numbers, creating the core of the first ever ladies team in the blue and white.

Two years later, with the lure of a shorter commute to training and a vibrant social scene more Durham residents joined the team. Julie Hughes (Dublin), Elaine Mealiffe, June McAlarey and Majella McConville (Tyrone) left their current Toronto club The Irish Canadian to join Durham GFC. Shortly after that, the Scarborough contingent of the Irish Canadians also joined the Durham ranks. Ciara McNaughton and Denise Breau brought along friends Audrey Egan and Patricia Clarke and helped create a solid foundation for the ladies team.

The team now had an established core of athletic, competitive and enthusiastic players eager to keep improving. Their continuous recruitment paid huge dividends in 1996, when Erinn Lynch, Sarah Gowdy, Perry Quinton, Sarah Oliver, Deanna Adams, Sam Williams and Kristine LaMonday joined the team.

This massive injection of youth, along with the experienced existing players, saw 1996 become the most successful season to date for the ladies’ team, including the first championship victory in Durham’s short history. That year the Durham Ladies had a clean sweep of all competitions, taking the league, championship and 7’s titles. This was major turning point in Durham and Toronto Ladies’ Football with the new kids on the block putting their mark on the Toronto Ladies league.

For the next 10 years the Durham ladies continued to enjoy tremendous success. From 1996 to 2004 the ladies team won 19 different titles, including two more championships in 1998 and 2000. During this era outstanding players such as Kristen Lynch, Ally Fox, Ashley and Abbie Visser, Judith McGarrigle, Trish Shaw, Shannon Savage, Julie Mroczkowski and Heather Woodard entered the fold. While immigration was still low Stef Fitzpartick (Dublin) and Sandra Ramsbottom (Laois) joined the club for an extended summer holiday helping the team to victory.

As the late 2000s arrived, the original core of the team started to age, players got married, started families and surrendered to injuries. These were the leanest years in our story, and a similar story that was being played out in the whole Toronto Ladies League. However, the core group of Elaine Mealiffe, Sarah Gowdy, Heather Woodard, Erinn Lynch, Ally Fox, Ashley Visser, along with the newest/only Irish addition Lorraine White (Louth), were always willing to go the extra mile to ensure the team survived, with Elaine sliding seamlessly into the role of manager. Thanks also to some good work by the club in youth development, the ladies’ team had a few players promoted from the minor program while an immigration wave saw a return of Irish girls coming over for the summers again. This recruitment approach is what sustained us until 2011, at which point we began another chapter.

Starting in 2011, immigration from Ireland was the highest it had been since the 1980s. The increase in immigration, along with the ever-growing rise in popularity of women’s football in Ireland, led to a boon of new Irish players for the club. Enter Tracey Lyng (Cavan), Maria Flanagan (Offaly), Deirdre Murphy (Cork) and Caroline Murphy (Wexford). In the 2011 season, the team was a fantastic combination of veterans, youth, Canadians and Irish.

Compared to the previous teams, where much of the momentum was gained from playing together for so long, the team of 2011 showcased what the combination of experience, determination, athleticism and positive team play can achieve. 2011 saw the return of silverware for the girls as they won their fourth championship title. Just like the team of 1996, underdogs against the reigning champions, they grinded out a one point victory over St. Mikes.

2012 saw another injection of fresh new enthusiastic players. For the first time since the inception of the seven sanction rule, the ladies team filled all seven spots. The arrival of Julie Kelly (Wexford), Marie McDonald (Wexford), Susan Lynch (Cavan), Dearbhla Mackin (Louth), Laura Bowens (Meath), Laura Dunne (Kildare) and Sinead McHugh (Kildare) helped the ladies continue their winning ways in 2012 as they captured the League Cup.

2013 was the 25th anniversary of the Ladies League in Toronto, and it marked a return for the Durham ladies to the previous heights they had reached. The team had great stability, as most players returned, but also added Grainne Sheelan (Louth) in the back, Michelle Flynn (Kerry) in the mids, and filled two sanctions spots with Ashling O’Donnell (Waterford) and Diane O’Brien (Dublin) to bolster the forward lines. That year also marked the first of many recurring appearances for a Canadian, Karen Backus, who made several starring appearances in goals for Durham over the years. The ladies added another double to the trophy cabinet, winning both the League Cup and the Championship.

In 2014, the ladies continued their stellar showings, with a sufficient roster to enter a junior and senior team into competition. Louise Lynch (Cavan) joined the club that season, one of several players who would become longtime stalwarts for the team. The ladies showed their class all season long, winning both the Senior and Junior Championship finals on a historic day for Durham GFC.

Two more league titles followed in 2015 and 2016, with the addition of numerous players who came to be key parts of the Durham family. 2015 marked the next phase of the Louth invasion of Durham with Kate Cumiskey, Aine White and Carly McGrath all joining the club. The ladies also added Aishling O’Connor (Sligo), Ciara Lynch (Cork) and Mairead Finn (Waterford), to solidify a very imposing lineup.

In 2016, the Louth influence continued with Karen Duffy and Eimear White joining the team, along with Catriona Curran (Fermanagh). The ladies came up short in the championship finals in 2015 and 2016, but the core of the team was rebuilding again.

In 2017 and 2018, the club continued to renew itself, with the additions of Maeve Holland (Cork), Aoife McGovern (Cavan), Michelle King (Cavan), and Amo Troy (Dublin) and Daire Power (Dublin), who were among Durham’s first J1 visa players in quite some time. The combination of youth and experience led to another championship for the ladies in 2018, the seventh in the club’s illustrious history.

The 2019 season brought another influx of talent from Ireland coupled with existing veterans. Notable newcomers included Katie McManamon (Mayo), Niamh O’Gara (Dublin) and Kerry Corcoran (Kerry), who paved the way for the League Cup’s return back to the Durham GFC display case.

Over the years Durham have been very blessed to have attracted so many women who are fine players, but even better people, to the club. And so, we are stronger now than we were when we started. Amazing friendships and bonds have been created thanks to the connections made. Memories shared and parts we’ve all played in each other’s stories, both on and off the field, will be things that stay with us long after our playing days. The future looks bright for Durham!