James Kielt

James Kielt
Personal information
Irish name Séamus Ó Caoilte
Sport Gaelic football
Position Right Half Forward
Born 1989 (age 34–35)
Derry, Northern Ireland
Height 1.9 m (6 ft 3 in)
Club(s)
Years Club
2006-
Kilrea
Inter-county(ies)
Years County
2009–2018
Derry
Inter-county titles
Ulster titles 2
All-Irelands 0
NFL 0
All Stars 0

James Kielt is a Gaelic footballer who plays for the Pádraig Pearse's Kilrea club and previously for the Derry county team. He played as a forward for both club and county.

Playing career

Club

Kielt had a very successful underage career with Kilrea.

Inter-county

Kielt was captain of the Derry Minor team which were runners-up in both the Ulster Minor Championship and All-Ireland Minor Championship in 2007. Earlier that year he won the Ulster Minor Football League with the county. The following year he reached the Ulster Under 21 Championship with Derry Under 21s, but they were also defeated.

In 2009 he was drafted into the Derry Senior side. Derry reached that year's National League final, but were defeated by Kerry.[1] Kielt made his ChampionshipA debut later that year in the Ulster Championship against Monaghan.

After missing the 2012 season and opting out of the 2015 championship, Kielt retired from inter-county football in October 2018.[2][3]

College

Kielt started playing for Queen's University Belfast from 2007/08. The university finished runners-up to Donegal in the 2009 Dr McKenna Cup.

Honours

Inter-county

Senior

winner (0) runner up (!) 2011

Under-21

Minor

Club

Notes

  • A. ^ The Championship is the premier inter-county competition, made up of the four provincial Championships (in Derry's case the Ulster Championship) which are knock-out and the All-Ireland Championship (see current format)

References

  1. ^ Heaney, Paddy (1 May 2009). "No substitute to winning for the Kingdom". The Irish News. p. 62.
  2. ^ "Blow for Derry as Kielt and McGoldrick call time". Hogan Stand. 18 October 2018.
  3. ^ "Derry duo retire while speculation grows over Lynch". The Irish News. 18 October 2018.