Pamela Fitzgerald (camogie)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- This article is about the Irish athlete. For the wife of Lord Edward FitzGerald, the Irish revolutionary, see Lady Pamela FitzGerald.
Pamela Fitzgerald (born 1984 in Cork, Ireland) is a camogie player from Newcastle West, Co. Limerick, Ireland. She has played for her county at a number of levels, including senior camogie on 3 occasions. She also represents her hometown over the summer months, and captains the Trinity College camogie team during term time.
She is the Honorary Secretary of the Dublin University Central Athletic Club (DUCAC) Executive Committee [1] which oversees the 50 sporting clubs in Trinity. In this arena she has been a tireless worker for the 'less privileged sports' who argue against the large funding allocated to Rugby, Cricket and Rowing. In a March 2006 article by Trinity News, Pamela was declared to be the 9th most powerful student in Trinity, the highest female on the list.
Pamela is actually probably most notable for her reputation off the pitch. She first came into public knowledge in late 2003 as the Gaelic Athletic Association launched its campaign to promote camogie, with its famous 'Chicks with sticks' campaign. Pamela was recruited as one of the poster girls. The campaign met with mixed results, and its slogan's obvious connections to transsexualism were widely criticised.
Despite the controversy, Pamela has continued her modelling career with moderate success. She has featured, and customarily lambasted, in the Life section of the Sunday Independent on a number of occasions, most recently being called a 'human balloon'. She was holding a balloon at the time.
[edit] External links
- Presentation from Trinity College, Dublin showing an image of Pamela Fitzgerald.
- Camogie News on the "Chicks with sticks" campaign of the GAA.
- [2] A short pbio of Pamela Fitzgerald regarding her role in DUCAC