Month: April 2022

Home / Month: April 2022

Brian Hogan (2016) and Keith Hogan (2015) are recent Kilkenny county winning captains

FOR THE SECOND successive year on Sunday, it was a member of the Hogan family who was lifting the cup after the Kilkenny senior hurling final.

The novelty lay in the fact that they both play for different clubs.

On Sunday, Brian Hogan was savouring leading O’Loughlin Gaels to glory a year after his brother Keith had done the same for Clara.

Two brothers have lifted the Kilkenny SHC cup with different clubs in the last two years as captains. Must be unique in the #gaa ? @hogie81

Click Here: — eoin quigley (@EoinQuigley) October 31, 2016

Source: eoin quigley/Twitter

Sunday’s victory sparked celebrations for the multiple Kilkenny All-Ireland winner, in stark contrast to the dejection at losing the decider a year previously.

Advertisement

“Last year was a bit of an awkward situation,” admitted Hogan, when speaking to TG4′s GAA BEO after the game.

“I’m just after coming from having a few words with my brother. He’s delighted for me. Look I was delighted for him last year.

“Obviously there was huge disappointment at losing on a personal level. It was a complicated situation. Thankfully we don’t have that situation this year. It’s a fantastic moment.”

Keith and Brian Hogan in opposition in the 2015 Kilkenny county final

Source: Donall Farmer/INPHO

Brian and Keith Hogan embrace after the 2015 Kilkenny county final

The background to how the brothers ended up playing for different clubs stems from when Brian was born, the Hogan family lived in Kilkenny city and he played for the local O’Loughlin Gaels club.

The family then moved to Clara, just outside Kilkenny city, before Keith was born.

Brian continued to play for O’Loughlin Gaels as he stayed going to St John’s NS in Kilkenny city. Keith attended primary school in Clara and that then became his club.

SEE SPORT
DIFFERENTLY

Get closer to the stories that matter with exclusive analysis, insight and debate in The42 Membership.

Become a Member

A 2016 county final face-off was prevented when Clara lost out at the semi-final stage this year to Ballyhale Shamrocks, who then lost out 0-19 to 1-12 against O’Loughlin Gaels on Sunday.

Brian Hogan with his son Jack after Sunday’s game

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

The success marked O’Loughlin Gaels fourth Kilkenny senior hurling crown with Brian Hogan a constant feature in all of those wins – 2001, 2003, 2010 and 2016.

The target now will be to emulate their achievement in 2003 and 2010 by progressing to win in Leinster. A semi-final against Offaly’s St Rynagh’s or Wexford’s Oulart-the-Ballagh awaits on 20 November.

“The first in the club’s history (was) in 2001, I was on the team and it’s a memory that stuck with me forever.

“The guys up there, it sounds a bit cheesy, but they’re my brothers in terms of growing up hurling with them and training with them every second night.

Henry Shefflin congratulates Brian Hogan after Sunday’s game

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

“It’s just fantastic to go back up to the club now and meet the people you’ve grown up hurling with, coached you and everything.

“To be at the top of Kilkenny hurling, it’s so difficult. To have got there is just a great feeling.”

The42 is on Snapchat! Tap the button below on your phone to add!

Limerick will be in action in Division 1B next season

Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO

MUNSTER SENIOR WINNERS James Ryan and Paudie O’Brien have not been named in the first Limerick senior hurling squad selected by new manager John Kiely, but there is a recall for attacker Seanie Tobin.

Kiely, who has taken over from TJ Ryan, has released his primary 39-man Limerick panel ahead of a 2017 season which will see them feature in Division 1B of the Allianz hurling league and face Clare in the Munster semi-final.

Advertisement

Garryspillane player Ryan and Kilmallock’s O’Brien are two well-known players not included with both starting in the 2013 Munster senior final triumph against Cork. Ryan is understood to be considering his inter-county future.

Limerick hurler Paudie O’Brien

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

Click Here:

Murroe-Boher forward Tobin also played in that game but returns to the panel after departing last March due to a lack of game time in the spring.

  • 2013 Munster title winning forward departs the Limerick senior hurling panel

Wayne McNamara has retired since the 2016 championship concluded while forward Kevin Downes is a long-term absentee after tearing his cruciate ligament injury.

New players that have been named include Kyle Hayes, who captained Limerick in September’s All-Ireland minor hurling final, and Stephen Cahill, who lined out for the Limerick senior footballers this summer.

SEE SPORT
DIFFERENTLY

Get closer to the stories that matter with exclusive analysis, insight and debate in The42 Membership.

Become a Member

Robbie Hanley and Robbie Egan – who played for Kilmallock in the 2015 All-Ireland senior club final – along with 2016 All-Ireland club victor with Na Piarsaigh, Peter Casey, are also drafted in.

Na Piarsaigh player Peter Casey

Source: Cathal Noonan/INPHO

Seamus Flanagan (Feohanagh-Castlemahon) and Lorcan Lyons (Monaleen) are other promising youngsters that are called up.

Kiely has included the entire Limerick starting side that he steered to glory in the 2015 All-Ireland U21 final victory against Wexford.

Limerick hurling manager John Kiely

Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO

The panel is likely to be open-ended with club commitments set to potentially dictate involvement in the early stages of the 2017 season as Patrickswell and Monaleen are both featuring in Munster club clashes next Sunday.

Limerick Hurling Panel

  1. Declan Hannon (Adare)
  2. John Fitzgibbon (Adare)
  3. Dan Morrissey (Ahane)
  4. Tom Morrissey (Ahane)
  5. Richie McCarthy (Blackrock)
  6. Paul Browne (Bruff)
  7. Sean Finn (Bruff)
  8. Richie English (Doon)
  9. Pat Ryan (Doon)
  10. Darragh O’Donovan (Doon)
  11. Nicky Quaid (Effin)
  12. Seamus Flanagan (Feoghanagh/Castlemahon)
  13. David McCarthy (Glenroe)
  14. Kyle Hayes (Kildimo/Pallaskenry)
  15. Barry O’Connell (Kildimo/Pallaskenry)
  16. Gavin O’Mahoney (Kilmallock)
  17. Barry Hennessy (Kilmallock)
  18. Graeme Mulcahy (Kilmallock)
  19. Robbie Egan (Kilmallock)
  20. Robbie Hanley (Kilmallock)
  21. Tom Condon (Knockaderry)
  22. Andrew La Touche Cosgrave (Monaleen)
  23. Lorcan Lyons (Monaleen)
  24. Seamus Hickey (Murroe/Boher)
  25. Seanie Tobin (Murroe/Boher)
  26. Alan Dempsey (Na Piarsaigh)
  27. Shane Dowling (Na Piarsaigh)
  28. Ronan Lynch (Na Piarsaigh)
  29. Michael Casey (Na Piarsaigh)
  30. Peter Casey (Na Piarsaigh)
  31. David Dempsey (Na Piarsaigh)
  32. Colin Ryan (Pallasgreen)
  33. Seanie O’Brien (Patrickswell)
  34. Diarmaid Byrnes (Patrickswell)
  35. Kevin O’Brien (Patrickswell)
  36. Cian Lynch (Patrickswell)
  37. Barry Nash (South Liberties)
  38. Gearóid Hegarty (St. Patrick’s)
  39. Stephen Cahill (Tournafulla)

The42 is on Snapchat! Tap the button below on your phone to add!

Conor Nash (right) at Irish International Rules training last November

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

TEEN PRODIGY CONOR Nash has admitted that turning his back on Meath GAA and Leinster rugby to forge an Aussie Rules career was a ‘massive call’ for him.

Nash’s last game of Gaelic football came at the weekend when he powered Simonstown Gaels to a maiden Meath SFC title success.

Meath legend Trevor Giles said recently that Nash is a GAA superstar in waiting while Leinster rugby wanted to sign him up to their academy.

Advertisement

Conor Nash in action for Leinster U18’s in 2014

Source: Ken Sutton/INPHO

Click Here:

That would have meant studying at UCD for the 18-year-old who completed his Leaving Cert this year and a potential professional career on his doorstep.

But the sky-scraping midfielder passed it all up for the opportunity to make his name in Australia with Hawthorn who won a three-in-a-row of AFL titles between 2013 and 2015.

“It was a massive call for me,” admitted Nash.

“It was probably back in February that I was offered the deal by Hawthorn. I went out and then came back and was given a lot of time to make a decision.

“Rugby was a massive opportunity for me and if I’d stayed, I would be playing rugby, hopefully with Leinster up in UCD.

Conor Nash playing in an Ireland U18 Clubs International in 2015

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

“The rugby boys, the Leinster lads, they were very sound and said, ‘look, if you do come back then you’re certainly not off the books’.”

SEE SPORT
DIFFERENTLY

Get closer to the stories that matter with exclusive analysis, insight and debate in The42 Membership.

Become a Member

Hawthorn have been tracking Nash for three years and hope that living with Derry’s Conor Glass, another recruit from GAA, will stave off any homesickness.

Nash has been fine tuning his AFL skills for months with the help of Longford star and ex-Essendon player Michael Quinn.

He’s also received advice from former Aussie Rules players Tadhg Kennelly and Tommy Walsh from Kerry. Meath great Colm O’Rourke is Nash’s club boss at Simonstown and said he’d ‘love to see’ the wonder kid tearing it up for Meath at Croke Park some day.

We can't wait to see him in brown & gold! pic.twitter.com/oUpnatrtQ5

— Hawthorn FC (@HawthornFC) October 30, 2016

Source: Hawthorn FC/Twitter

(Click here if video doesn’t play)

“Playing senior for Meath would certainly have been something I’d have liked to give a crack to,” said the former St Pat’s student.

“It can’t happen now. It might happen in a couple of years, we’ll see how things pan out.”

Nash struck two points in Sunday’s county decider.

But he flies out to Australia on November 15 and won’t be available for the club’s AIB Leinster championship clash with Rhode on Sunday week.

“It’s going to be a new experience, an opportunity to test myself,” he said. I think with the support network and the opportunities at Hawthorn, if I get stuck into training I know in my own head that I’ll be fine and that I’ll succeed.”

The42 is on Snapchat! Tap the button below on your phone to add!

Clerkin plays his club football with Currin.

Source: Donall Farmer/INPHO

THE LONGEST-SERVING inter-county Gaelic footballer in the country has announced his retirement.

Monaghan’s Dick Clerkin was the last player still in action to have made his inter-county debut in the 90′s, first lining out in the league for his county in the winter of 1999.

Clerkin made the announcement this morning in an excellent column written in the Irish Examiner newspaper.

End of the road! 😥🔵⚪️❤️ pic.twitter.com/lvwBFdxeQT

— D Clerkin (@clerkin_d) November 1, 2016

Source: Dick Clerkin/Twitter

The 34 year-old made 179 appearances for the county and in recent years, he finally enjoyed major success in Ulster, winning the 2013 and 2015 provincial senior football titles.

Some men carry the piano,others play it, @dickclerkin8 could do both!!thats me done with carrying you now!#enjoyretirement pic.twitter.com/DFudicxLWm

— Darren Hughes (@darrenqz) November 1, 2016

Source: Darren Hughes/Twitter

Dick Clerkin retires after playing a record 169 senior games for Monaghan since 1999, scoring 3-107. He made 54 SFC appearances.

— Colm Shalvey (@ColmShalvey) November 1, 2016

Source: Colm Shalvey/Twitter

Clerkin paid tribute in his column to Monaghan’s achievements despite limited resources.

Advertisement

“I have witnessed a remarkable transformation in the psyche of Monaghan football during my career.

“Motivated by pride, sustained by hard work, validated with success. I am not going to patronise with thanks the countless people who have contributed to making Monaghan football what it is today.

Best of luck @dickclerkin8 on your retirement!! Always wore his heart on his sleeve for @monaghangaa .Top man off the pitch aswell #warrior

— Aidan O Mahony (@GmailMahony) November 1, 2016

Source: Aidan O Mahony/Twitter

“Striking an almost perfect balance between club and county, Monaghan football and all those responsible, should be held up as a shining example of what can be achieved with relatively limited resources.

“Supporters, administrators, sponsors, and mentors, all with a like-minded sense of duty and passion, for something bigger than ourselves.”

Whoops!
We couldn’t find this Tweet

His last appearance in Monaghan colours was during their drawn Ulster semi-final with Donegal on 25 June at Kingspan Breffni Park. He came on as a substitute in that game but did not see game time in the replay or their subsequent shock qualifier loss to Longford.

With two Ulster medals, the longest-serving inter-county Gaelic footballer has retired
Previous
1 / 10Next

  • Escorting a dog off the pitch in a 2008 league game against Cavan
    Source: Morgan Treacy/INPHO
  • Celebrating hitting the net against Derry in 2008
    Source: Cathal Noonan/INPHO
  • Up against Cork in the 2009 National football league final
    Source: Cathal Noonan/INPHO
  • Celebrating a 2009 qualifier win over Armagh with Banty
    Source: James Crombie/INPHO
  • Tussling off the ball with Sean Cavanagh in 2011
    Source: Morgan Treacy/INPHO
  • Head to head in 2010 with Paul Galvin
    Source: James Crombie
  • The agony of missing a scoring chance against Down n 2012
    Source: Morgan Treacy/INPHO
  • Huge satisfaction after the 2013 Ulster semi-final win over Cavan
    Source: Donall Farmer/INPHO
  • In action against Diarmuid Connolly in the 2014 All-Ireland quarter-final
    Source: Cathal Noonan/INPHO
  • Celebrating Monaghan’s 2015 Ulster title win
    Source: Cathal Noonan/INPHO
Previous

  • Source: Morgan Treacy/INPHO” title=””>
  • Source: Cathal Noonan/INPHO” title=””>
  • Source: Cathal Noonan/INPHO” title=””>
  • Source: James Crombie/INPHO” title=””>
  • Source: Morgan Treacy/INPHO” title=””>
  • Source: James Crombie” title=””>
  • Source: Morgan Treacy/INPHO” title=””>
  • Source: Donall Farmer/INPHO” title=””>
  • Source: Cathal Noonan/INPHO” title=””>
  • Source: Cathal Noonan/INPHO” title=””>

Next

The42 is on Snapchat! Tap the button below on your phone to add!

Click Here:

THIRTY YEARS on and it’s still the soundtrack of the GAA championship. Other television stations have secured broadcasting rights and encroached on viewership figures, but we always seem to gravitate back to The Sunday Game.

Maybe it’s the warmth that radiates from presenter Michael Lyster or the energy surrounding the panelists that keeps us coming back. Or perhaps it’s the eternal link to our childhood etched in the intro music. In any case, there will always be something about The Sunday Game that would make us grieve a bit if it ever left us.

2016 was another dour championship overall but the flagship GAA programme still managed to eke out some significant moments throughout their transmissions.

Colm O’Rourke and Joe Brolly deriding Tipperary Football

At the outset of the football championship, it was reported that Tipperary had lost some 11 players from the previous year’s panel. Work commitments, personal reasons and a preference for hurling were among the causes for the drop-off.

But Liam Kearns managed to orchestrate a Tipperary charge that would not only exceed expectations, but obliterate them. It started with an upset against Cork and ended with a respectable defeat to Mayo in the All-Ireland semi-final. You can throw in an emphatic All-Ireland quarter-final win over Galway in there as well, just to illustrate the strength of their achievement.

Advertisement

Source: MuscularChristianity/YouTube

But at half-time in the Munster final against Kerry, Joe Brolly and Colm O’Rourke were already planning Tipperary’s funeral.

Amidst the sniggering, Colm O’Rourke managed to blurt out:

It’s not a proper championship match in the context of say a Donegal v Monaghan game where every ball was fought for.

Omissions on the Team of the Year

Two notable exclusions from The Sunday Game Team of the Year sparked division online.

Of course social media should never be perceived as the most accurate way of gauging the general consensus, but conducting surveys everyday is a strain on resources so it will have to do.

After the team was announced, the irksome reaction on Twitter focused on the absence of Tyrone’s Peter Harte and Ryan McHugh of Donegal from the final cut.

Joe Brolly’s strange obsession with Mayo

This isn’t necessarily a moment, rather a sequence of incidents which revolve around Joe Brolly’s peculiar interest in Mayo. His Sunday Independent columns tend to contain offensive references to Mayo football but his actions as a Sunday Game pundit sometimes expose a side of him that is longing for Mayo to win the All-Ireland.

SEE SPORT
DIFFERENTLY

Get closer to the stories that matter with exclusive analysis, insight and debate in The42 Membership.

Become a Member

On the day of the drawn All-Ireland final, Brolly produced a Mayo jersey and vowed to wear it if Mayo won the game. In explaining his inspiration for the gesture, Brolly told this heartwarming story.

I’ll tell you a story. A beautiful young girl – Laura Donnellan – before she died of cystic fibrosis, she asked me ‘I want you to do something for me’. She had very little time to live. She said ‘Look, if Mayo win the All-Ireland, I want you to wear the Mayo jersey in the Sunday Game studio after the final whistle’.

“Her mother reminded me during the week. She said ‘I hope you’ll be faithful to your promise to my daughter. She’ll be watching down’. The Mayo board actually sent me the jersey – the number 13 which I will wear. It gives you an idea of how important it is and how special it is to everyone in Mayo. The team are bound to understand that this is the time and it’s more than just a medal and more than just a cup.”

When picking his GAA moment of the year after Dublin finally settled the tie, Brolly paid tribute to another Mayo person – this time Shane Halligan, the Mayo kitman. Halligan was close to death last year, before being rescued by a lung transplant. Brolly’s own personal history with organ donation is well documented and he told the studio that he visits Halligan every time Mayo are in Croke Park.

“That transformation from death to life I think it’s something very special. Gaelic football in the end is something that’s just fun for us but that’s serious business.”

Marty Morrisey’s stirring speech ahead of the All-Ireland Hurling Final

All-Ireland final day is perhaps one of the few occasions when the Irish diaspora feel closest to home. And when commentators read out the names of those watching/listening from all pockets of the world, the distance shortens a little bit more because no matter where you are in the world, we’re all following the same game together.

Marty Morrissey’s speech ahead of this year’s hurling All-Ireland final had a unifying effect on us all.


Source: /Streamable

Pat Spillane advertising his coaching services 

It was a bizarre moment during a Sunday Game highlights show in June when Pat Spillane put his name forward for inter-county management.

He begins by verbally laying out his credentials for management before declaring that Cork’s current slump could be revitalised by the assistance of an outside manager.

But he doesn’t quite take the significant step to directly advertise himself for the job.

The42 is on Snapchat! Tap the button below on your phone to add!

Click Here:

WITH THE PAIN of last year’s final defeat to Clara still fresh in the memory, O’Loughlin Gaels centre-back Brian Hogan couldn’t contain his delight after his side scored a surprise victory against Ballyhale Shamrocks in this year’s Kilkenny SHC final.

The former Cats defender was beaming after their 0-19 to 1-12 victory against TJ Reid, Henry Shefflin and Co yesterday, and struggled to explain how important the victory was to the club, their first county title since 2010.

“I can’t say how much this means, it’s unreal,” club captain Hogan told Newstalk’s Oisin Langan after the game in Nowlan Park.

“It’s always worth it. In Kilkenny, they are [county titles] so bloody hard to get.

“I’d be lying if I said there wasn’t some soul searching done over the winter.

“The panel were just so focused after the disappointment of last year.”

Advertisement

Hogan and his team-mates formed a united front this campaign, and embarked on a fundraising mission to build a gym in the club.

But it was a speech from his fellow stalwart Martin ‘Gorta’ Comerford after last year’s final that Hogan felt really brought the players together.

“Anyone who is the dressing room last year after we lost to Clara will know where that [motivation] came from.

“Gorta was captain last year and he said some words in the dressing room.

“We didn’t talk about it all year until today really. It was emotional. He just said, ‘look lads it’s in our hands to come back next year and it’s a test of what we’re made of’.

“We didn’t make a big deal of it during the year and today was the day to bring it back to the forefront, to use it in a constructive way.

“And we did I think. You could see that in the second half. There was no way we were losing that match, no way.”

An emotional Comerford, who scored two points in the win, was equally delighted but keen to highlight how difficult the Kilkenny crown is to win, especially considering the gaps in the club schedule.

SEE SPORT
DIFFERENTLY

Get closer to the stories that matter with exclusive analysis, insight and debate in The42 Membership.

Become a Member

“The Kilkenny championship is not conducive to many games sometimes.

“There are two parts to the season. You start off in April and then there’s a big break.

“We could go 12 weeks without a competitive game which is absolutely ridiculous but we just have to try to peak at the right time.

“It’s difficult to get that right. And we did, and we’re absolutely delighted to get over the line.”

Comerford singled out Mark Bergin for particular praise after the forward chipped in with 11 points from placed balls.

Mark Bergin celebrates the win.

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

“Mark is always a star for us, he’s a great club man,” Comerford added.

“He hit the frees spot on, one after the other.

“I suppose when he’s up against a free-taker of TJ Reid’s standard you want to be on your game. Thankfully Mark hit frees from all angles.

“It’s a dagger in the opposition’s heart every time they go over.

“After last year’s pain and hurt we’re delighted to put the club back in a good position going forward.”

The42 is on Snapchat! Tap the button below on your phone to add!

Click Here:

HIGHLY-RATED MEATH footballer Conor Nash has completed a deal to join AFL outfit Hawthorn.

Having already spent time in Australia training with his new teammates, the club opted to offer Nash a professional contract. And the 18-year-old, who also grew up playing rugby, will be joined at Hawthorn by Derry’s Conor Glass, who signed with the club last October.

“I grew up playing Gaelic footy and rugby and that’s where I was spotted,” Nash told the Herald Sun. “I’ve been three times out here I think and each time have gotten in with the boys and become a full-time player for those couple of weeks that I’m there and training.”

Advertisement

Hawthorn has signed Irishman Conor Nash as an international rookie.

📰: https://t.co/p93zFSwlBZ pic.twitter.com/Q0rPcQOUAR

— Hawthorn FC (@HawthornFC) October 30, 2016

Source: Hawthorn FC/Twitter

But Nash, who helped his GAA club Simonstown Gaels to their first-ever county championship yesterday, may now not be available to play for Colm O’Rourke’s side in the Leinster quarter-final tie against Rhode, with pre-season in Australia starting next month.

“I’d love to see him playing for Simonstown and centre-field for Meath, but he could play rugby for Ireland, he’s had offers there, and now he’s got the offers of Aussie Rules, so we wish him well,” O’Rourke told RTÉ.

“But at the same time I’d love to see him back. I’d like to confiscate his ticket and let him go out in January.”

The42 is on Snapchat! Tap the button below on your phone to add!

Click Here:

KIERAN DONAGHY IS a player you’d love to have on your team, but hate to play against. Aggressive, brash, physically imposing and an in-your-face approach. A win at all costs mentality. A divisive figure, you either worship him or can’t stand him; there’s no real in-between, as he admits himself.

Click Here:

“If you look at me on the pitch, I’m easy not to like,” he says. “I know that like, it’s the way I play. Definitely up in Dublin I wouldn’t be number one, public enemy number one is what I’d be.”

But beyond the on-field persona, there’s much to like, and admire, about the Kerry footballer. Still formidable in size, Donaghy is best described as a gentle giant. He’s softly-spoken, intelligent and, believe it or not, level-headed.

In recent media appearances to promote his autobiography, Donaghy has spoken about his future, the black card, Philly McMahon and GAA pensions. His book, after all, is about his GAA career.

But what of Kieran Donaghy the person? He’s known as one of the most recognisable Kerry footballers of recent time, winner of six Munster titles, four All-Irelands, three league crowns and three All Star awards. But what of the young lad from Tralee who came through a difficult childhood and the tragic death of his father?

Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO

We read of his rags to riches story into football stardom and the incredible success he’s enjoyed during a sparkling career, but perhaps the most revealing aspect of it is the personality behind the facade.

Advertisement

“I’m no saint on the pitch but that’s the way I play,” he tells The42. “I play on the edge and do what I have to do to win a game but people don’t know the other side of me. They probably think I’m referencing Joe Brolly in my book’s title (What do you think of that?) but I’m not.

“If I wanted to reference Joe Brolly properly I would have called it ‘What do you think of that, Joe Brolly?’ but I’m asking the reader that question.

“Read it and tell me what you think of me. If you still hate me that’s fine but I think people will get a better understanding of why I play the way I play and what drives me as a player.

“I’m a bit of a softie underneath it all. That’s me, I was predominately raised by two women and they brought me up the right way and to respect my elders and when I cross the white line yeah I turn into this guy who’s trying to win for Kerry or Austin Stacks or Munster or for Ireland.”

As he’s entered the twilight of his career, that competitive streak has remained but perspective has been gained. It was once all about winning and the cut-throat environment that such a mindset engendered. Losing simply wasn’t an option.

“I would have cut your hand off to win,” he admits. But now football is not all about winning. He still loves it, no doubt, but there’s more to it than that; the friendships, the team-mates, the life lessons and the journey.

Source: The42.ie/YouTube

“I came to the realisation in doing this book and the way last year finished up is that of course you want to win the All-Ireland, it’s the ultimate goal,” he explains.

“Every other year when I didn’t win the All-Ireland I was completely in a hole for a few weeks after, feeling all sorry for myself and getting all down about it but when I did this book I came to realise that I’m very lucky to be on the journey.

“To have 12 years as a Kerry senior footballer, to contest eight All-Ireland finals, to win four of them. To be on a county like Kerry and deliver for them on the big stage and then there’s the flip side of that, be on a county like Kerry and not deliver on the big stage.

Advertisement

“There has been days I’ve let Kerry, there’s been days I’ve let myself and my family down with my performances but that’s just with what comes with it but then there are times I’ve given them huge pride and I’ve given myself pride in what I’ve been able to do on the big days for Kerry.

“The trust the management teams, my respective management teams of Jack, Pat and Eamonn have shown me. I’ll always be thankful for them, it’s been unbelievable and I think I’ve come to realise that it’s more than just about a result or medal or winning an All-Ireland.

“I’ve come to a point where I’m thinking you know what ‘it’s been a great journey, it has been a hell of a ride and I’ve enjoyed every minute of it and wouldn’t change a thing.”

Whether that ride is over just yet remains to be seen. Donaghy has insisted his decision on whether or not to continue his inter-county career into 2017 won’t be made until the New Year.

Until then, his focus is on his first love – basketball.

Donaghy returned to playing senior basketball for Tralee Warriors last year and helped his side return to the Super League top tier for this season. It has given him a new lease of life.

“It probably is my first love,” he reveals. “I’d consider myself a natural basketball player, much more natural on a basketball court than I am on a football pitch. It’s the sport I was better at when I was younger and probably still better at today.

Source: The42.ie/YouTube

“It’s definitely a sport which today is an enjoyable sport to play and almost pressure-free for me. I’ve been lucky enough to win and achieve all my goals in basketball and the reason I’m back playing was to bring the Super League back to Tralee and all the good young players for Tralee, try and be a good mentor for them for two or three years before the body just doesn’t allow me to play basketball at the highest level anymore.

“I’m delighted that it’s going so well. I’m really enjoying it. We beat an excellent Swords Thunder team from Dublin in a cup game at the weekend. We had a 1,000 people at it, we had to turn people away.

Advertisement

“The atmosphere, they’re turning off the lights and doing players intros. We’re trying to jazz it up as much as we can. The reaction we’re getting on Facebook from parents and kids who were at the game, they’ve been blown away by it. If the rest of the league could nearly copy us down in Tralee and get that atmosphere at all the games in the National Basketball League and it got supported by basketball people in general, who watch all the NBA.

“Go down and watch your local guys play. Go watch your Templeogues, your Swords, your DCU Saints. Go watch those guys play, the young Irish players and the talent levels are very high in the league. There are excellent Irish players and of course every team has a very good American. I’d encourage people to get out and watch it.

Donaghy’s return to basketball coincided with his return to form for Kerry. He featured in 11 league and championship games this year for Eamonn Fitzmaurice’s side.

After a frustrating couple of years with injury, 2016 was a good one for the forward as he returned to peak form and enjoyed an extended period in the starting XV until Kerry were dumped out at the semi-final stage by Dublin.

“I don’t think it did me any harm,” he says when asked whether basketball has helped his football career.

Donaghy with his daughter Lola-Rose.

Source: Cathal Noonan/INPHO

“I played for the first time in seven years last year and I went on to play 11 games in a row for Kerry in both league and championship and played quite well in most of them and covered a lot of ground. It definitely did me well, I was in great physical condition, I was very fit after the basketball.

“I was doing basketball and I was training with Damien Ray and the Kerry backroom team when it came to fitness. I came in a very good position with a good base and was able to attack it from where I wanted to attack it.

“A lot of the skills are transferable but I think the biggest one and most important one is the decision making. In a basketball game you can touch the ball 130-150 times, sometimes more.

Advertisement

“You’re touching it every time you go down the court, you’re touching it in defence, touching it every time you grab a rebound and you can make decisions constantly. You could make up to 200 decisions where as in football, in the 2014 final, I was nominated for man of the match and I touched the ball 11 times but I made nine or 10 good decisions with that and that comes from the basketball, learning how to make the right decisions all the time.

“There’s obviously the hands and vision, in basketball you have to use your peripheral vision to see what’s around you and I felt I probably used that to the best of my ability on a football pitch for Kerry.”

Whether you like him or not, Donaghy leaves an impression.

On his whistle-stop media tour, he popped into our Dublin office last Monday to complete a full morning of interviews. The same questions, the same answers. Over and over again; it’s the modern way.

Source: Andrew Paton/INPHO

So when he’s asked about basketball, and something other than football and whether he’ll be around next year, he speaks passionately. He deflects the attention away from himself and uses the opportunity to promote the sport, still very much a minority one in Ireland, and to endorse the product he’s very much part of.

“I run a basketball camp every year at Halloween in Tralee,” he continues. “I’m delighted to be part of that and delighted to be helping bringing that back to Tralee. Now I can say to my kids in my camp, which I couldn’t say the last three of four years, that’s there’s something to aim for with the Super League.

“When I was a young lad going to Dungarvan for a basketball camp, we had an American coach who told us to sleep with the ball. I went home every night for I’d say about six or seven months until I got too annoyed where I was rolling over onto a basketball every night and I threw it out. I listened to the coach and I slept with the ball every night to get my hands used to the ball and that’s what he was saying, I can tell kids now to do stuff and they can do it with an aim.

“Signing autographs for kids after the game, young guys on the Warriors team who wouldn’t be used to it signing autographs and seeing their face doing that, seeing kids looking up at these guys, now they have an aim and a goal to chase and we didn’t have that in Tralee for the last seven or eight years.

“It’s back, it’s fantastic and it’s definitely given be a new lease of life.”

Advertisement

The42 is on Snapchat! Tap the button below on your phone to add!

PAUL FLYNN ADDED club glory to his inter-county success in 2016 as he helped Fingallians to the Dublin intermediate football championship title this afternoon.

The Swords club defeated Ballymun Kickhams 2-16 to 2-7 and their emphatic nine-point victory not only secures a first title since 1957 but qualification for the Dublin SFC.

Having fallen at the final hurdle in 2012, 2013 and 2014, Fingallians will feel their time has come as they return to the senior ranks after been relegated in 2011.

Click Here:

Advertisement

Flynn and his team-mates will now face St Joseph’s of Louth in the Leinster IFC quarter-final on Saturday 5 November at Cluskey Park.

There are good days & bad days and nothing beats this GREAT Day. Thank U @GarristownGFC for the facility & @BallymunGAA for a sporting game pic.twitter.com/XsyNZ11BbB

— Fingallians (@Fingallians) October 30, 2016

Source: Fingallians/Twitter

The42 is on Snapchat! Tap the button below on your phone to add!

It’s Bank Holiday Sunday so here are 16 of our favourite pictures from the sporting week
Previous
1 / 16Next

  • Andy Murray looks delighted to have won the Austrian Open.
    Source: Ronald Zak
  • A view of the action from the Six Day Event at the Velopark in London.
    Source: Adam Davy
  • Dwyane Wade greets fans after his first match for the Bulls.
    Source: Matt Marton
  • Dublin team-mates Ciaran Kilkenny and Kevin McManamon.
    Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO
  • Guillemo Ochoa gets himself in a tangle at the Nou Camp.
    Source: Manu Fernandez
  • Henry Shefflin with his son Henry Jnr.
    Source: James Crombie/INPHO
  • Micheal Magill and Emmett McFadden.
    Source: Presseye/Andrew Paton/INPHO
  • Sergiu Ciobanu celebrates after today’s marathon with the race director.
    Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO
  • Stephen O’Keeffe is dejected at the final whistle
    Source: Ken Sutton/INPHO
  • Stephen Kenny celebrates with his sons Fionn and Eoin.
    Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO
  • Tony Kelly jumps for joy.
    Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO
  • Blaine Scully goes flying to the corner.
    Source: CameraSport/Simon King/INPHO
  • John Muldoon leads his players off the RDS pitch.
    Source: James Crombie/INPHO
  • Ryan O’Dwyer with his son Oisin.
    Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO
  • Rory Byrne leads the Castlebar Mitchels celebrations.
    Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO
  • The O’Donovan brothers.
    Source: Dan Sheridan/INPHO
Previous

  • Source: Ronald Zak” title=””>
  • Source: Adam Davy” title=””>
  • Source: Matt Marton” title=””>
  • Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO” title=””>
  • Source: Manu Fernandez” title=””>
  • Source: James Crombie/INPHO” title=””>
  • Source: Presseye/Andrew Paton/INPHO” title=””>
  • Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO” title=””>
  • Source: Ken Sutton/INPHO” title=””>
  • Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO” title=””>
  • Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO” title=””>
  • Source: CameraSport/Simon King/INPHO” title=””>
  • Source: James Crombie/INPHO” title=””>
  • Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO” title=””>
  • Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO” title=””>
  • Source: Dan Sheridan/INPHO” title=””>

Next

The42 is on Snapchat! Tap the button below on your phone to add!

Click Here: