Wikipedia:WikiProject Gaelic games/Manual of Style
This is a style guide for articles that come within the scope of WikiProject Gaelic games. Note that this is intended as a guide, and it may differ as a result of Wikipolicy or participant consensus. In the event of a conflict with IMOS, IMOS prevails.
Avoid using words such as "currently".
- Biography outline — featuring footballers, hurlers, coaches and managers
- County team outline
- County board outline
- Club outline
Accessibility
[edit]Cork
[edit]"For red colors with a white font, the brightest color red that works is #B60000 (see MOS:COLORS)". This, stated by an Associate Professor in Wisconsin, affects Cork navigational boxes and tables within articles.
Below is the Cork Hurling Team of the Century, with white font on #B60000
Derry
[edit]See Tyrone.
Donegal
[edit]"#FCF75E" and "green" are used for Donegal navigational templates, so that they do not appear in Category:Potentially illegible navboxes.
Below is the Donegal 2012 All-Ireland SFC winning team, with green font on #FCF75E.
Kerry
[edit]Yellow is used for Kerry navigational templates to prevent a clash with Meath. Teams from Kerry and Meath have met on many occasions, including in the All-Ireland SFC finals of 1939, 1954 and 1970. Note that, while File:Colours of Kerry GAA.svg describes itself as using "gold", FFFF00 is actually yellow. Other options, such as FFDD02, cause the template to appear in Category:Potentially illegible navboxes.
Below is the Kerry 1997 All-Ireland SFC winning team.
Louth
[edit]See Cork.
Mayo
[edit]Red–green colour blindness is "the most common form" of colour blindness.[1] This affects Mayo navigational boxes and tables within articles.
Below is the Mayo 2013 All-Ireland SFC losing team, with #E00000 font on a white background and the green as a border. #E00000 is used instead of red for the same purpose that is explained at the section on Tyrone. See also the section on Cork.
Tipperary
[edit]Blue–yellow colour blindness is another form of colour blindness.[1] This affects Tipperary navigational boxes and tables within articles.
Below is the Tipperary 2016 All-Ireland SHC winning team, with white font on a blue background and the gold as a border.
Tyrone
[edit]Red text against a white background causes a template to appear in Category:Potentially illegible navboxes. #E00000 text against a white background does not have this effect.
Biographies
[edit]Layout
[edit]- References and footnotes above external links.
- Succession boxes below external links (or references where no external links are present).
- Team navboxes below succession boxes (or external links or references where no succession boxes are present).
Players
[edit]One section called "Playing career" and subsections called "Club" and "Inter-county" if the individual has only been a player without being a coach or manager.
- Additional section called "Media career" if the individual has worked in broadcasting and/or has a newspaper column, etc.
- Additional section called "Coaching career" if the individual has been a coach without being a manager.
- Additional section called "Managerial career" if the individual has been a manager.
- Additional section called "Coaching and managerial career" if the individual has been a coach and manager.
One section called, for instance, "Early life" above the section called "Playing career" if information is verifiable. One section called "Personal life" below career section(s) if information is verifiable. Wikipedia is not gossip.
Capital letters
[edit]He was the chairman of his club
, not the Chairman of his club. He was the "only president of the Gaelic Athletic Association from County Kerry", not "the only President of the Gaelic Athletic Association from County Kerry". This follows the style used even for world leaders, e.g. Erskine Hamilton Childers "is the only Irish president to have died in office".
Use county team
(uncapitalised) for all page and category titles, e.g. Kerry county football team, Category:Cork county hurling team, as opposed to Kerry senior football team or Cork GAA Senior Hurling Team. This aids navigation and allows for inclusion of information on teams at different grades where this is available, e.g. the minor and under-21 sections at Clare county hurling team. Titles such as "Kerry senior football team" or "Cork senior hurling team" can then redirect to the main title to preserve any incoming links.
Uncapitalised titles are consistent with representative teams in other sports, e.g. Trinidad and Tobago national netball team or New Zealand national rugby union team.
Capitalised first G, uncapitalised second g in Gaelic games
. Not gaelic games.
Capitalised G and uncapitalised f in Gaelic football
. Not gaelic football. Not Gaelic Football.
Uncapitalised h in hurling
. Not Hurling (unless at the beginning of a sentence, or in a competition name, e.g. All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, or in the name of an organisation, e.g. Blackrock National Hurling Club).
All-Ireland
. Not All Ireland. Not all-ireland. Not all Ireland. Not All ireland.
Sam Maguire Cup
. Not Sam Maguire cup.
Liam MacCarthy Cup
. Not Liam MacCarthy cup.
Fitzgibbon Cup
. Not Fitzgibbon cup.
Sigerson Cup
. Not Sigerson cup.
Wicklow County Board
and the chairman of the Wicklow County Board
but the county board
and the chairman of the county board
.
Leinster Provincial Council
and the chairman of the Leinster Provincial Council
but the provincial council
and the chairman of the provincial council
.
Competitions
[edit]Final, semi-/quarter-finals
[edit]Final (in the tournament bracket context) is singular – there is only one final match per event. Semi-finals and quarter-finals are plural when used as nouns unless in the context of a particular group: "Cork lost in the semi-finals" and "the quarter-finals were held on 28 June", but "Kilkenny's quarter-final victory" and "Kerry lost a quarter-final match in 2012" (adjective usage), and "Waterford advanced from the Munster Senior Hurling Championship to the All-Ireland SHC quarter-final" (a specific, singular q.-f. being referenced). The plural "finals" can be used in unusual constructions, e.g. "Mayo lost two consecutive All-Ireland Senior Football Championship finals, in 2012 and 2013."
Semi-final[s] and quarter-final[s] are hyphenated, not single-word, and not two separate words. When appearing at the start of a sentence, in a heading or in another capitalised context, only the first part is capitalised, as with any other hyphenated compound. In any other context, none of these words are capitalised.
Champion, championship, championships
[edit]Championship is always singular when speaking of a specific event, and always plural when writing of a series or multiplicity of events:
- "Tipperary won the 2009 Munster Senior Hurling Championship". (single event)
- "Kerry won eight All-Ireland Senior Football Championships when Mick O'Dwyer was manager". (multiple events)
"Championship" is only capitalised when used as part of the official name (or common short or extended version) of an event, e.g. "Leinster Senior Hurling Championship", "Dublin Senior Football Championship Championship", but not in a context such as "the team's third championship", even when in reference to the same event.
"Champion" is only capitalised when in reference to an official title or common alternative form of it: "Henry Shefflin is a ten-time All-Ireland Senior Hurling Champion", but "Dublin, the reigning champion, defeated Mayo by a scoreline of 7–25" to 0–13" ("champion" by itself is not a capitalised title like Reverend, Pope, Duke or Admiral, even if it precedes a name).
League
[edit]League is always singular when speaking of a specific event, and always plural when writing of a series or multiplicity of events:
- "Waterford won the 2015 National Hurling League". (single event)
- "Kerry won three National Football Leagues when Mick O'Dwyer was manager". (multiple events)
"League" is only capitalised when used as part of the official name (or common short or extended version) of an event, e.g. "National Hurling League", but not in a context such as "the team's third league title", even when in reference to the same event.
Disambiguation
[edit]If an article already exists in the location you intend to create, the following disambiguation should be used.
Clubs
[edit]Move any existing xxx GAA
to #007000
, inserting the name of the county board to which the club is affiliated into the parentheses.
Create the second article at xxx GAA (County)
, for example Erin's Own GAA (Cork)
.
Then convert the undisambiguated title to a disambiguation page, i.e. Erin's Own GAA
.
So:
St John's GAA (Antrim)
, rather than St John's GAA (Belfast)O'Donovan Rossa GAC (Antrim)
, rather than O'Donovan Rossa GAC Belfast
Footballers
[edit]- Create
xxx
asxxx (Gaelic footballer)
. - If
xxx (Gaelic footballer)
already exists:
- Move
xxx (Gaelic footballer)
toxxx (County Gaelic footballer)
, inserting the name of the county board to which the player's team is affiliated after the opening parenthesis. - Create the new article at
xxx (County Gaelic footballer)
. For example, Paddy Kennedy (Sligo Gaelic footballer) is correct as Paddy Kennedy (Kerry Gaelic footballer) also exists and Paddy Kennedy (Gaelic footballer) is a disambiguation page.
- If
xxx (County footballer)
already exists:
- See Joe Dooley example under "Hurlers" below.
- Move
xxx (County footballer)
toxxx (Club footballer)
, inserting the name of the club to which the player's county board is affiliated after the opening parenthesis. - Create the new article at
xxx (Club footballer)
. Remember to update the redirect so that the original title goes to the disambiguation page for people with the same name as the players.
Snr
andJnr
are used in the titles of Bernard Brogan (Snr/Jnr); Dermot Earley (Snr/Jnr); James McCartan (Snr/Jnr) and Tom Spillane (Snr), as they are in Mark Killilea (Snr/Jnr), Brian Lenihan (Snr/Jnr), Brendan Menton Snr and Christy O'Connor (Snr/Jnr).
Hurlers
[edit]- Create
xxx
asxxx (hurler)
. - If
xxx (hurler)
already exists:
- Move
xxx (hurler)
toxxx (County hurler)
, inserting the name of the county board to which the player's team is affiliated after the opening parenthesis. - Create the new article at
xxx (County hurler)
. For example, David Forde (Clare hurler) is correct as David Forde (Galway hurler) also exists and David Forde (hurler) is a disambiguation page.
- If
xxx (County hurler)
already exists:
- Move
xxx (County hurler)
toxxx (Club hurler)
, inserting the name of the club to which the player's county board is affiliated after the opening parenthesis. - Create the new article at
xxx (Club hurler)
. For example, Joe Dooley (St Rynagh's hurler) is correct as Joe Dooley (Seir Kieran hurler) also exists and Joe Dooley (hurler) is (or ought to be) a disambiguation page. Remember to update the redirect so that the original title goes to the disambiguation page for people with the same name as the players.
Snr
andJnr
are used in the titles of Richie Power (Snr/Jnr); Kevin Fennelly (Snr) and Liam Boyle (Snr), as they are in the titles listed under "Footballers".
Sports administrators
[edit]The standard disambiguation is Seán Murphy (sports administrator)
, as seen with the OCI's Pat Hickey and the GAA's Patrick Breen. But sports administrators are not necessarily notable.
Categories
[edit]Category:St Joseph's (Laois) Gaelic footballers
, not St Joseph's (County Laois) Gaelic footballers, not St Joseph's Gaelic footballers (Laois).Category:Sarsfields (Cork) hurlers
, not Sarsfields (County Cork) hurlers, not Sarsfields hurlers (Cork).
Naming conventions
[edit]The Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA)
and the GAA
thereafter. This is to aid North American readers, who think the letters "GAA" represent "goals against average".
All-Ireland Senior Football Championship (SFC)
then, for instance, the 2019 All-Ireland SFC
in county team and player articles, or others referring to multiple competitions.
All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship (SHC)
then, for instance, the 2009 All-Ireland SHC
in county team and player articles, or others referring to multiple competitions.
Gaelic games only use Derry
or Doire
, e.g. Derry GAA
. Alternative titles are never used.[2]
Redirects
[edit]Consensus exists from RfD that creating a redirect for a future season (directed towards the page of the relevant team) may discourage the eventual creation of the article. According to the same discussion, red links are preferred "to encourage article creation where appropriate" and "the target articles should not have detailed season-by-season information anyway".
The same could be said to apply to a redirect for an edition of a competition, such as the creation of a redirect for 20xx All-Ireland Senior Football Championship (e.g. to All-Ireland Senior Football Championship) or a redirect for 20xx Christy Ring Cup (e.g. to Christy Ring Cup), particularly before it is scheduled, might delay the creation of the relevant page when the time arrives. Similarly so, to a redirect for a final, such as 20xx Lory Meagher Cup final (e.g. to Lory Meagher Cup or 20xx Lory Meagher Cup).
Scores
[edit]Use en-dashes (the "–
" Unicode character or the character entity code "–"
), not a "-
" hyphen (minus), between scores and between date ranges, per the Manual of Style, on dashes.
Words and phrases
[edit]Irish-language words and phrases should be marked up using {{langx}}, thus: {{langx|ga|Páirc na hÉireann}}
.
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Facts About Color Blindness". NEI. February 2015. Archived from the original on 28 July 2016. Retrieved 29 July 2016.
- ^ Barry, Stephen (30 January 2018). "'It will not happen again': BBC apologise for Londonderry GAA reference". Irish Examiner.