Mick Doyle (hurler)

Mick Doyle was a famous Irish sportsperson. He played hurling with his local club Mooncoin and with the Kilkenny senior inter-county team from 1907 until 1916.

Kilkenny - 1907 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Champions (3rd title)
  • D. Doyle
  • M. Doyle
  • N. Doyle
  • D. 'Drug' Walsh (Capt.)
  • D. Doherty
  • J. Kelly
  • T. Kenny
  • M. Gargan
  • D.J. Stapleton
  • D. Kennedy
  • J. Keoghan
  • J. Rochford
  • D. Grace
  • P. Lanigan
  • J.T. Power
  • J. Anthony
  • S. Walton
Kilkenny - 1909 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Champions (4th title)
  • M. Doyle
  • N. Doyle
  • D. 'Drug' Walsh (Capt.)
  • D. Doherty
  • J. Kelly
  • B. Hennebry
  • J. Delahunty
  • J. Dunphy
  • D. Kennedy
  • J. Keoghan
  • S. Walton
  • J. Rochford
  • M. Gargan
  • M. Shortall
  • J. Ryan
  • P. Lanigan
  • D. Doyle
D. Grace
Kilkenny - 1911 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Champions (5th title)
  • J.T. Power
  • P. Grace
  • D. Kennedy
  • J.J. Brennan
  • P. Lanigan
  • J. Keoghan
  • D. 'Drug' Walsh
  • S. Walton (Capt.)
  • D. Grace
  • J. Rochford
  • N. Doyle
  • T. McCormack
  • D. Doyle
  • M. Doyle
  • M. Gargan
  • J. Kelly
  • D. Doherty
Kilkenny - 1912 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Champions (6th title)
  • J.T. Power
  • P. Grace
  • D. Kennedy
  • J.J. Brennan
  • P. Lanigan
  • J. Keoghan
  • D. 'Drug' Walsh
  • S. Walton (Capt.)
  • D. Grace
  • J. Rochford
  • N. Doyle
  • T. McCormack
  • D. Doyle
  • M. Doyle
  • M. Gargan
  • J. Kelly
  • D. Doherty
Kilkenny - 1913 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Champions (7th title)
  • J. T. Power
  • J. Keoghan
  • J. Rochford
  • J. Lennon
  • D. Kennedy
  • D. Grace
  • D. Walsh (c)
  • M. Gargan
  • J. J. Brennan
  • P. Grace
  • D. Doherty
  • D. Doyle
  • S. Walton
  • M. Doyle
  • J. Kelly
Persondata
Name Doyle, Mick
Alternative names
Short description Irish hurler
Date of birth
Place of birth Mooncoin
Date of death
Place of death

Famous quotes containing the words mick and/or doyle:

    The real pleasure of being Mick Jagger was in having everything but being tempted by nothing ... a smouldering ill will which silk clothes, fine food, wine, women, and every conceivable physical pampering somehow aggravated ... a drained and languorous, exquisitely photogenic ennui.
    —Anonymous “Chronicler.” Quoted in Philip Norman, The Life and Good Times of the Rolling Stones (1989)

    When a doctor does go wrong he is the first of criminals. He has nerve and he has knowledge.
    —Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (1859–1930)