chris fields
9.7K posts

chris fields
@chrisfieldsmma
owner/founder of Team KF mma. Head coach at Team KF
Dublin Katılım Eylül 2012
163 Takip Edilen7.5K Takipçiler

@DennyRants Great guy spent a month with him in Mexico for pendreds camp one of the good guys
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🇦🇷 🇭🇷 Barrio coming out to Dublin’s The Script. He trained out of SBG here for a few years before heading to Croatia, and is a general gentleman #FNC27
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The Cairo Gang were a notorious British squad whos mission was to break the IRA in Dublin, to unpick the clandestine web that Michael Collins had spun across the city from pubs, shops, and council offices. The Brits called them the Dublin District Special Branch, it was the Dubs that gave them theyre more mythological nickname. Some of the men had indeed served in British intelligence across Egypt and Palestine during the Great War, others were said to haunt the Cairo Café on Grafton Street.
They came to Dublin in 1920 with their notebooks and guns. Demobilised officers and a handful of active-duty men. Dipping in and out of rented rooms, sitting behind lace curtains on Baggot Street or leaning over the banisters of anonymous boarding houses. Taking names and discrete photos. The Cairo Gang mostly lived inconspicuously in the field, moving between digs, swapping coded reports, and drawing up a list of republicans marked for death.
Collins had his own answer to this challenge. His unit, the notorious Squad, was an assassination team built on loyalty, ruthlessness and speed. They were young, mostly Dublin lads, some scarcely older than the revolution itself. Collins knew that if he allowed the Cairo Gang’s operation to mature, then the IRA’s Dublin network might not survive the winter. War of Indepenance would be lost.
Hell was unleashed on the morning of the 21st of November 1920, a date that Dublin would remember simply as Bloody Sunday. Dawn had barely settled over the red brick terraces when IRA teams fanned out across the south inner city. Their goal was not chaos but decapitation, a precise strike meant to collapse British intelligence in a single hour.
They raided boarding houses on Pembroke Street, Morehampton Road, and other quiet addresses where the Cairo Gang slept behind closed doors. By the end of the morning fourteen men were neutralised and another would die later. They included intelligence officers, courts martial officers, a Royal Irish Constabulary sergeant, and one civilian tragically caught in the crossfire of history.
The impact was immediate. Surviving agents fled to the heavy stone embrace of Dublin Castle. British intelligence operations in the city were effectively paralysed. Collins, for the moment, had secured the upper hand, and his coup reverberated far beyond Dublin’s canals. It was a propaganda triumph. But if the IRA expected their attacks on military targets would inspire a similar retaliation on legitimate IRA combatants they would be mistaken. British "justice" has always involved brutal collective punishment upon civilians.
That afternoon, a mixed group of RIC men, Auxiliaries and rabid Tans stormed Croke Park where Dublin and Tipperary were meeting in a challenge match. They opened fire on the crowd without warning and indescriminately. Fourteen civilians were killed, including Tipperary player Michael Hogan, and dozens more were wounded. A sporting field became a bloodbath and public fury swelled in the days that followed.
The Cairo Gang vanished from Irish history in that single morning, but the consequences of their elimination carried forward.Without the crippling of British intelligence in 1920, without the growing military and political pressure that followed, it is difficult to imagine London agreeing to negotiate. The Treaty that emerged in December 1921 was shaped by the momentum created during those violent years, and the strike against the Cairo Gang was one of the blows that forced the door open.

Dublin City, Ireland 🇮🇪 English
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From #Italy🇮🇹:
Parents and teachers, boys and girls from 39 children's services in Brescia and its province wrote for weeks, on white strips of fabric, the names and ages of the 20 thousand boys and girls killed in Gaza, giving life to the installation
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105 years ago today in Croke Park, Tipperary took on Dublin before a capacity crowd. Suddenly, at 3:25pm, armoured cars and trucks containing rabid Black and Tans, British Auxiliaries, and RIC surrounded the stadium. Without warning they stormed the grounds, opening fire indiscriminately. Rifles and revolvers were savagely unleashed against the helpless spectators and players.
Terrified victims were shot in the back as they frantically tried to escape. Some desperately scrambled over walls and squeezed through narrow exits. The British butcher's guns riddled the unarmed civilians mercilessly for almost two minutes. Those lucky enough to escape the atrocity within Croke Park were met by the machine guns of an armoured car outside, on St James Avenue.
Among the victims were three boys; Jerome O’Leary aged 10, John William Scott aged 14 and William Robinson aged 11. All were killed, with William dying of his wounds 2 days later. A young girl called Jane Boyle and her fiancé were due to marry 5 days after the match. She would die in his arms that fateful day. Even 2 players were shot, Michael Hogan and Jim Egan. Hogan died. Dozens more were seriously wounded in the hails of bullets.
When the gunsmoke settled over the massacre the full human cost was counted. 7 had been shot dead at the scene. 5 more later succumbed to their injuries. 2 people were crushed in the desperate stampede. Many more were wounded. All were murdered by the British forces who had supposedly sworn to protect them. This cold-blooded carnage by the Crown was just the latest in a generations-long tradition of barbarity against the Irish people. Sadly this would not even be the only "Bloody Sunday" atrocity perpetrated by British forces in Ireland.
But Bloody Sunday 1920 would prove a watershed moment in the history of Anglo-Irish relations. Ireland was about to change again forever...
Ar dheis Dé go raibh a n-anamacha :
Jane Boyle (26)
James Burke (44)
Daniel Carroll (31)
Michael Feery (40)
Mick Hogan (24)
Tom Hogan (19)
James Matthews (38)
Patrick O’Dowd (57)
Jerome O’Leary (10)
William Robinson (11)
Tom Ryan (27)
John William Scott (14)
James Teehan (26)
Joe Traynor (21)




Dublin City, Ireland 🇮🇪 English
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There’s a clip of Troy Parrott’s Republic of Ireland winner from RTE which won’t get taken down for copyright.
The commentary is sensational.
HLTCO@HLTCO
Get those framed and on the mantelpiece Troy Parrott.
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@itaintkarate @PetesyCarroll With him handing over a load of cash at the end
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@chrisfieldsmma @PetesyCarroll There's no way he ever actually rolls with anybody. His movements are waaay too awkward and wrong for him to have actually put anything to use. Guarantee all his sessions look just like this one
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