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'75% of handpasses are fouls' - Barry Kelly wants GAA to consider fundamental rule change to hurling

There are now over 100 handpasses per game, with Barry Kelly estimating three-quarters are illegal
There are now over 100 handpasses per game, with Barry Kelly estimating three-quarters are illegal

Four-time All-Ireland final referee Barry Kelly says next year's GAA Congress must seriously consider a motion to amend the handpass rule in hurling.

Kelly has just completed his term on the Standing Committee on the Playing Rules (SCPR) and has been part of a group that reported a 40% increase in the number of handpasses in inter-county hurling in the past five years.

Last season there was an average of around 100 per game.

"The handpass itself was not a big factor when it was down at 10 or 15 per game," Kelly says. "But now it is an intrinsic part of a team’s make-up and weaponry.

"The rule calls for a clear strike of the ball with the hand but in fact it has just become a release. And if you actually watch club or county teams in warm ups, they make no attempt to even try to strike."

Kelly feels there will be strong support for a Nenagh Éire Óg motion at the 2025 GAA Congress, calling for an amendment in the handpass rule.

The motion, proposed by two-time All-Ireland winning full-back, Conor O’Donovan, states that it will be a foul "to either handpass the ball or palm the ball directly from the same hand that is holding the ball."

Under the proposed Nenagh Éire Óg motion, when hand-passing, players would have three options. They can strike the sliotar with a) the non-holding hand or b) with the original holding hand after bouncing the ball off the hurl, or c) with the original non-holding hand after bouncing the ball off the hurl.

It is a technical foul to intentionally drop the hurl.

"At the moment there are 100 handpasses a game, three-quarters are fouls and they are going unpunished," Kelly adds.

"It’s difficult to clamp down on them all but Conor’s motion seeks to change the handpass completely and it was trialled at third level recently with the stats making really interesting reading.

"In an inter-county game last summer there was one handpass for every one-and-a-half hurl passes.

"But in third level recently – with the proposed alternative handpass in trial - we had 170 stick passes and just 21 handpasses. The trial rule change meant teams had to change their style of play and it had an effect on the game."

Kelly (above) feels that even if the motion doesn’t get the necessary support this time around – which he hopes it will - it will bring about a greater level of thought around the area of the handpass.

"We’ve just become accepting of it," he says. "And if a ref blows three or four per game, the crowd get on to him. It’s not fair on refs, especially the younger and newer ones.

"The other stat is that 95% of handpasses are retained by a team so hurling is very much a possession game. I know we change but hurling was never meant to be a game all about possession.

"Football is gone so possession based that people have switched off looking at games in droves. The possession game is not a good spectacle.

"I think if the rule did change and Conor’s motion came in, it would make it easier on referees. There would be no doubt about the ability to make a clear strike. At the moment we are asking refs to do a job that is impossible."

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