I ’m not sure if it was Camus or Sartre who said, “everything I learnt in life I owe to football” but you get the picture: sport is about more than thumping a ball around.

That’s especially true in the city of Belfast where sports have been the cement holding together an often fractured city.

That doesn’t mean that everyone supported the same sides or favoured the same games but it is and was the case that those who loved sporting activities built character in our young people and spirit in our neighbourhoods.

Indeed, who would dispute the fact that sporting clubs did more for the wellbeing of our young people than all the worthy government youth initiatives combined?

And of course, there emerged over the years great icons of sport who put a smile on the face of Belfast. Champions of the ring, wizards of the wing, and masters of the fairway.

But they have been celebrated time out of number.

Now it’s time to doff our hats to the unsung heroes who chalk the pitches and clean the rigs, fill the drinking bottles and flog the raffle tickets.

For those are the volunteers whose hardwork, dedication and perserverence lie behind the success of our sportspeople and the vibrancy of our sporting organisations.

Over the next few years, we all hope to see a great resurgence of sport in Belfast as major investment is ploughed into our three major sporting venues with a view to triggering regeneration of our communities.
That will be a welcome development but let’s not forget that the sports volunteers, 40 of whom are being honoured in these inaugural awards, are the real sporting infrastructure of this great city.

Our thanks to sponsors Sports NI, ASDA, Westwood Centre and Smyths for making these awards possible and our congratulations to all those who made the final forty.
Go raibh rath is bláth ar bhur spóirt.

Conor McLoughlin
Sports Editor, Belfast Media Group

Lock us up and swallow the key!

I was in Donegal at the weekend and I asked a man how he planned to vote in the south’s up-coming referendum. “Well,” he told me, “ if Sinn Féin say no about something, I say yes”.

Big man of GAA celebrates in style

Veni, Vidi, Vinci . I came, I saw, I conquered, was the powerful message sent back to Rome by Julius Caesar when he won a war in Zela (currently known as Zile in Turkey. After spending two days with the Gaels of Glengormley, Mícheál Ó Muircheartaigh might well have sent a similar message back to headquarters. Throughout the two days he won the hearts of all who met him as he demonstrated his love and passion for the Irish language and Gaelic games.

That’s not the way to do it as summer nears

THERE’S nothing funnier for children to watch than a long-suffering wife getting battered with a cudgel by a short-tempered violent husband – or so you’d think if you watched a seaside Punch and Judy show.

Blues make it a double

Linfield replicated their end of season celebrations from 12 months ago as they lifted their second trophy in the space of a week, defeating Crusaders 4-1 in Saturday’s Irish Cup final.

My marathon highs and lows

HIGHLIGHTS 1. Sheltering in City Hall with marathon veteran from New York Fr Brian Jordan — chaplain to the trade unions of the Big Apple — before the 9am start while thousands were getting drenched outside waiting for the Lord Mayor Niall Óg to sound the starting horn (gun for off apparently decommissioned).

Who calls the shots in Europe?

I enjoy elections. I enjoy them so much, I was delighted when the Fianna Fáil wheeze of introducing electronic voting machines backfired, leaving them (and the taxpayer, of course) with machinery that couldn’t be used and cost a packet to store.