Padge Kehoe - Teams

Teams

Wexford – 1955 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Champions (2nd title)
  • A. Foley
  • Bobby Rackard
  • N. O'Donnell (Capt.)
  • M. O'Hanlon
  • J. English
  • Billy Rackard
  • M. Morrissey
  • J. Morrissey
  • S. Hearne
  • Paddy Kehoe
  • N. Wheeler
  • Padge Kehoe
  • T. Ryan
  • N. Rackard
  • T. Flood
O. Gough
D. Aherne
Wexford – 1956 National Hurling League Champions (1st title)
  • A. Foley
  • Bobby Rackard
  • N. O'Donnell
  • M. O’Hanlon
  • J. English (Capt.)
  • Billy Rackard
  • J. Morrissey
  • J. Morrissey
  • S. Hearne
  • P. Kehoe
  • E. Wheeler
  • T. Flood
  • T. Ryan
  • N. Rackard
  • T. Dixon
Wexford – 1956 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Champions (3rd title)
  • A. Foley
  • Bobby Rackard
  • N. O'Donnell
  • M. Morrissey
  • J. English (Capt.)
  • Billy Rackard
  • J. Morrissey
  • S. Hearne
  • N. Wheeler
  • P. Kehoe
  • M. Codd
  • T. Flood
  • T. Ryan
  • N. Rackard
  • T. Dixon
Wexford – 1960 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Champions (4th title)
  • P. Nolan
  • J. Mitchell
  • N. O'Donnell (c)
  • T. Neville
  • J. English
  • Billy Rackard
  • J. Nolan
  • N. Wheeler
  • J. Morrissey
  • J. O'Brien
  • P. Kehoe
  • S. Quaid
  • O. McGrath
  • J. Harding
  • T. Flood
S. Power
M. Morrissey
J. Kennedy
Wexford – 1962 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship runners-up
  • P. Nolan
  • T. Neville
  • N. O'Donnell
  • N. Colfer
  • J. English
  • B. Rackard (c)
  • J. Nolan
  • P. Wilson
  • M. Lyng
  • J. O'Brien
  • P. Kehoe
  • P. Lynch
  • O. McGrath
  • N. Wheeler
  • T. Flood
Wexford – 1968 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Champions (5th title)
  • P. Nolan
  • T. Neville
  • E. Kelly
  • N. Colfer
  • V. Staples
  • D. Quigley (c)
  • W. Murphy
  • P. Wilson
  • D. Bernie
  • P. Lynch
  • T. Doran
  • C. Jacob
  • J. O'Brien
  • S. Whelan
  • J. Berry
J. Quigley for S. Whelan
P. Nolan
T. O'Connor
M. Jacob
M. Kinsella
S. Barron
N. Buggy
M. Browne
J. Furlong
P. Kehoe
N. Rackard
N. Power

Read more about this topic:  Padge Kehoe

Famous quotes containing the word teams:

    A sturdy lad from New Hampshire or Vermont who in turn tries all the professions, who teams it, farms it, peddles, keeps a school, preaches, edits a newspaper, goes to Congress, buys a township, and so forth, in successive years, and always like a cat falls on his feet, is worth a hundred of these city dolls. He walks abreast with his days and feels no shame in not “studying a profession,” for he does not postpone his life, but lives already.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)