‘It was an honour’- two-time All-Ireland winner calls time on Kilkenny career

TWO-TIME ALL-Ireland winner Ger Aylward has announced his inter-county retirement from Kilkenny.

Aylward becomes the latest Cats player to step away after Paul Murphy also called time on his Kilkenny career as Brian Cody’s side prepare to face into the 2021 season.

Glenmore’s Aylward made his senior debut for Kilkenny in 2013 and went on to win three Leinster SHC medals as well as an All-Star award in 2015.

“Would just like to take this opportunity to thank family and friends for the support of the last seven years,” Aylward said in a statement.

“It was an honour to wear the black and amber. Time to call it a day.

“Thanks for the memories.”

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Aylward suffered a cruciate ligament injury in 2016 and continued to struggle with injury in recent seasons, including hamstring and shoulder issues.

Huge thanks to Ger Aylward for his service to Kilkenny hurling over the past number of years claiming 2 All-Ireland’s and 3 Leinster titles. Enjoy the retirement, well deserved! pic.twitter.com/mWeVBbKnxO

— Kilkenny GAA (@KilkennyCLG) January 16, 2021

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Tipp star McCarthy kicks three goals in impressive debut with new AFLW club

TIPPERARY’S AISLING MCCARTHY is certainly settling into her new surroundings at the West Coast Eagles, after making an impressive debut this weekend.

McCarthy became the first Irishwoman — and first non-Australian — to move Australian Football League Women’s [AFLW] clubs last year after switching from Western Bulldogs to West Coast Eagles. 

The Cahir clubwoman made her debut for the Eagles this weekend in a practice match against the Fremantle Dockers where she kicked three goals in the first quarter.

The Eagles scored four goals in total, losing out by 5.7 (37) to 4.3 (27) as they continue to prepare for their opening game of their second AFLW campaign against Gold Coast on 30 January.

McCarthy, who won All-Ireland intermediate titles with Tipperary in 2017 and 2019, links up with the Eagles following two impressive seasons at the Bulldogs.

AFL Womens 2021.

PRACTICE ROUND
Day 1 Highlight

Huge debut by @aish_mac for @eaglesaflw with a Best On Ground performance which included kicking 3 Goals in the 1st Quarter (of the teams 4 goal total) as the Eagles narrowly lost out to Fremantle Dockers 4.3.27 to 5.7.37 pic.twitter.com/7fL5NXwmB2

— AFL Ireland Womens (@AFLIrelandWomen) January 16, 2021

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‘I wanted my AFL career to go on for 10 or 12 years but everyone has a different journey. I’ve accepted that’

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Glass competes for possession with Sam Powell-Pepper during an AFL game last August.

Source: AAP/PA Images

ASKED TO DESCRIBE the lowest point of his four-and-a-half-year Australian odyssey, Conor Glass’s mind immediately jumps back to a 2019 AFL game against Collingwood.

Hawthorn won 67-63 on a night where Irish housemates Glass and Conor Nash both appeared for the winning team in front of 66,407 supporters at the historic Melbourne Cricket Ground.

On a personal level, however, the Derry native was deeply unhappy with his performance.

“I had a shocker of a game,” he tells The42, ”it was just one of those days where you can’t do anything right.”

Returning home to his Melbourne apartment and feeling “pretty low”, Glass made the mistake of flicking through social media. As an athlete in the spotlight, not least a professional player, it can be a dangerous game.

Some comments under the club’s accounts were targeted at him and did not make for kind reading. 

“I did the stupid thing of going on social media and I wasn’t getting nice things said about me.

“That obviously put me in a pretty shit spot so after that moment I just made sure not to look at social media because it can be pretty bad at times. 

“You’re kind of scrutinised in everything you do. You’re scrutinising yourself, the coaches are and the fans on top of that. So it can be pretty hard to build that motivation and confidence up again.

“But that’s where the resilience and mental toughness comes in. I feel like I’m better off for it now that I went through it and I’ve learned how to deal with it.

“Hopefully it’s something I can pass onto other players in the county (Derry) if they’re struggling with it because I’ve lived and breathed it for five years.”

Thankfully for Glass, he endured nothing like the intense media scrutiny directed at Tyrone’s Conor McKenna during his false positive Covid-19 saga at the tail end of his AFL career. 

“They were all on about him getting Covid and it was just a false test,” he says of the notoriously critical Australian media. “They were kind of putting up posts as if it was a bad thing and they didn’t care about his mental health or his actual wellbeing.

“They all just want to make the best story so they’ll go to any depth to do so and have no real thought about the person they’re writing about. Thankfully I’d nothing really to that extent.”

Glass attempts to make a catch during a 2019 showdown with Collingwood.

Source: AAP/PA Images

Glass worked closely with the club’s in-house sports psychologist Tarah Kavanagh to help him regain his confidence during those tough days. 

“She would have helped me through those tough times after that Collingwood game when I was feeling a bit down she would have helped me get out of that spiral I was in,” he recalls.

“So it was good in that regard of helping you in times when you were finding it tough but then also putting in steps of how to get better and not lose your concentration during games.

“So it’s just the small thing that people don’t really think about but they make a hell of a difference.”

It’s an experience he is confident will stand to him as he resumes his inter-county career with the Oak Leafers almost five years after his departure. A hot-shot minor, he left after finishing 6th year at St Patrick’s, Maghera.

Hawthorn had been tracking Glass since he was 15. He’d already made three trips to Melbourne to visit the club’s facilities before he signed as an international B rookie in October 2015.

By the time he was 18, the Glen man had won three county and Ulster club minor titles with the Watty Graham team, in addition to two MacRory Cups and a Hogan Cup with Maghera and an Ulster minor crown with Derry.

Glass tackles Donegal’s Jamie Brennan during the Ulster MFC quarter-final in 2014.

Source: Cathal Noonan/INPHO

He live many sportsman’s dream in enjoying a professional lifestyle in a sun-drenched paradise. But it was no holiday. It’s a punishing game, one that many GAA players struggle to adapt to physically.

The training is extremely demanding and it’s a highly pressurised environment competing with elite young Australian talent who’ve played the sport all their lives.

Moving to the far side of the world on his own as a teenager undoubtedly helped build a mental resolve and maturity in Glass. 

There were injuries along the way and sure, he’d have liked to have made more than 21 top-level appearances for the club, but such is life. 

“Obviously I wanted my AFL career to go on for 10, 12 years but everyone has a different journey,” he remarks. “I’ve accepted that.”

The pandemic ultimately played a role in his decision to return home last October.

“The club and I had a number of conversations about what was best for me in the future,” he explains.

“The whole unknowns in the AFL with salary caps and list sizes, they couldn’t really offer anything at that moment in time because they just didn’t know.

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“Then they was a waiting period of one or two months where I had to wait. They said they still wouldn’t know until the AFL came out and implemented the list sizes.

“To be honest I could have stayed out and pursued another few clubs and seen what that had to offer but at that moment in time I was keen to come home with the whole Covid situation and growing up wanting to play Gaelic. My heart was then in the GAA.

“So we thought the best decision for me was to go home and pursue Gaelic.

“With Derry being a young team and my university and stuff as well, it because pretty clear that I was probably going to head home and pursue what I’m doing now.”

Glass has nothing but good things to say about Hawthorn, the same club Ciaran Kilkenny had a brief stint with in 2012.

“Hawthorn has a rich culture and it’s known as the family club. That’s exactly what they are. Never once did I feel out of place or like I didn’t belong there. 

“They’ve a rich history of success as well and they didn’t let that success get to their heads. They treated everyone on the same level and focused more on the person rather than the athlete.”

Delving deeper into the club’s philosophy of developing people first, Glass says: “No-one wants to play with someone who’s a dickhead. You want to be playing with someone that you’re friendly with, who you can get along with.

“If you have that relationship off the field, it’s a lot easier on the field as well. I think that’s something we can definitely bring in and it will only make the team better.

“It’s in the All-Blacks book Legacy that there’s no dickheads. Everyone’s there for the same reason, there’s no real individuals there. They’re all striving towards the same goal. And then your culture is just what you stand for.

Glass runs with the ball during a team training session at the Ricoh Centre, Mulgrave, Melbourne.

Source: AAP/PA Images

“You live and breathe it on and off the field. It’s kind of what you’re known for, so that’s something we need to bring. So it’s just about striving towards that each year and living and breathing it, on and off the field.” 

Managed by the league’s longest-serving head coach Alastair Clarkson, he became the first Irishman to represent the club when he made his debut in 2017. 

As it happened Glass’s family were visiting from Ireland when he got word he was in line to make his first AFL appearance the following weekend.

“They were originally going to head home the week before but then they extended their stay for another week because I was playing that weekend,” he recalls.

“It was in Perth as well, I’ve a few cousins over there as well. It was just the whole occasion of making my debut and being the first Irishman to play for Hawthorn, having the family there to celebrate it with me.” 

The club housed him with Meath native Nash from the get-go and the pair formed a close bond over the years.

“We’re friends for life,” he smiles. “We’ve actually been chatting pretty much everyday about a few small things. We spent pretty much five years living together so I can’t get rid of him now.”

Housemates Glass and Nash train together during the lockdown.

Source: AAP/PA Images

He left as a boy and returns as a man, ready to become a leader for Derry. 

Glass made his senior debut just days after flying back into the country. It came almost five years to the day when he signed on the dotted line with Hawthorn.

An October league game in a cold and empty Celtic Park against Longford couldn’t have been further from lining out in sunnier climes at a packed MCG, but Glass felt at home.

“I was chatting to Rory [Gallagher] and I wasn’t sure if was able to play that week because I was fresh off the plane.

“He said he’d give me some game-time and it was probably the best thing he could have done just giving me that experience of playing at the elite level again and chucking me in at the deep end.

“It was something I grew up wanting to do and pulling on that jersey for the first time was pretty surreal and hopefully there’s plenty of good days to follow.”

He is not shy about stating his ambition when it comes to this Derry team.

 ”A lot of the boys playing now I grew up playing with through school, club and even county level. We did it tough going down to Division 4 but hopefully it’s going to be a big year for us now. For myself and a lot of people in Derry, we’re not a Division 3 team.

“We should be pushing for All-Irelands and getting back to where we were in ’93.”

Glass reacts after Armagh knocked Derry out of the Ulster SFC.

Source: Lorcan Doherty/INPHO

So that’s the aim, to compete for Sam Maguire with Derry?

“I think so. The amount of success we’ve had through college level and minors…we should be pushing for Ulsters, 100%. And if we’re pushing for Ulsters at the elite level then there’s no reason why we can’t go on and do the whole thing.” 

Chrissy McKaigue spoke in the past about bringing ideas from his tenure at the Sydney Swans and implementing them in Slaughtneil, who subsequently enjoyed remarkable success.

Glass is determined to have a similar impact with the Glen and Derry.

“It’s something I want to bring in and it’s probably something I’ve noticed ever since I got back to Derry that there is a good culture and it’s a good group of lads,” says the 23-year-old.

“I suppose just the standards around training. The extras before and after training – the extra touch sessions everything like that is massive over in Oz. Just the 1 percenters that you can get to get ahead of other counties, just doing that extra touch and having that ball in your hands more than anyone else.

“So it’s just the training standards of training those extras, not physically but more just smarter and probably the mental IQ as well rather than just running up and down the pitch. You have to be smart on the field.

“One thing I’ve noticed ever since being back is they’re doing everything right at the moment. They’re pretty much a professional set-up. It’s not as if they’re doing the wrong things, they’re doing everything right and everything they can to get out of the players. So it’s pretty good to see.” 

Conor Glass after kicking a goal for the Hawks in round 12 of the 2020 AFL season.

Source: AAP/PA Images

Now taking lectures as a first year accountancy student in Ulster University, he’s still adjusting to living back at home and training on his own in winter conditions.

“My dad won two Sigersons [with UU], that’s one of my reasons for going to Jordanstown was to try get more Sigersons than him,” he laughs. “I think that’s the only thing he has over me.”

It’s all up in the air at the minute, but inter-county action has been slated to return at the end of next month.

“Back living with the parents now. Obviously would have enjoyed not being in lockdown, spending a lot of time in the house.

“It’s not ideal but it’s good being home and being around family and friends again. Just being back in my hometown and living this lifestyle, I don’t mind it at all.  

“Originally when I got back Derry were allowed to train away because of their elite status.

“When the season ended and the second lockdown started, just having the motivation to get up and train in the mornings with the unknowns of when we’re going to be back training and playing.

“Hopefully the date of the 27/28 of February when the league starts goes ahead and at least it’s something to work towards rather than the unknowns of going out and training for no real reason.

“A lot of the boys I’d be friendly with from Hawthorn are back training at the minute. They’ve sunny days of 30 degrees and here’s me sitting about with lockdown in -3 or -4. I guess there is a bit of jealousy.

“But it’s the decision I made and I don’t regret making it at all.”

Winning 10 All-Irelands in the most caring, kind and inoffensive way and the week’s best sportswriting

“THE GREATEST LEGACY any manager or coach can leave is the part they play in shaping, moulding, and developing the people they lead. And we were all so blessed, lucky, honoured, and so greatly privileged to have been guided by Éamonn Ryan.

“Some of the greatest managers in the history of sport have left a wonderful legacy in terms of success but those empires were still often constructed at a great human cost; players were hurt by how their careers finished, or how they were casually discarded when the end-game arrived.

“The easy and often lazy response is that the ruthlessness applied to the regime is what made the regime in the first place. I always struggled to understand that viewpoint when one of the most successful managers in modern Irish sport won 10 All-Irelands in the most caring, kind, and inoffensive way imaginable.

“Éamonn never dropped anyone off the panel; players knew themselves when it was time to go. Is that soft and avoiding being the bad guy? Soft doesn’t win 10 All-Irelands and nine league titles. The good guy doesn’t necessarily have to become the bad guy just for the sake of it.”

After the tragic passing of legendary Cork football manager Éamonn Ryan, his former player Valerie Mulcahy explains what set him apart as “the absolute best” in the Irish Examiner.

“I grew up in a small village, and when Suttons closed their store in the village, we took it over and spent our time delivering coal around the place in a hand truck, mixing grass seeds, loading feedstuffs onto horse and butts.

“When work was done, we were down at the field watching the local junior hurling team, who were stars to us. I was already hooked. A few years earlier, when I was six or seven, my father worked for Suttons in Thurles. I’d watch the local Sarsfields training and fall in as the ball-boy for Jimmy Doyle’s father, Jerry, who was the goalie.

“There wouldn’t be a net so I’d be behind the goals hoping he’d leave the ball in, so I could run after and throw it back to him. Tipperary would soon win three-in-a-row, they were on top of the hurling world. I assimilated all this stuff, it became part of the fibre of my being.”

The Irish Examiner have also republished an excellent interview with Ryan by Tony Leen from January 2015.

‘If a Hollywood scriptwriter had come up with the extraordinary story of Agnes Keleti – the world’s oldest Olympic champion, who celebrated her 100th birthday on Saturday – as a piece of fiction, they surely would have been told to rein it in.

“Fleeing the Nazis, surviving the Holocaust with a false ID, and later escaping the Soviet clampdown on Hungary? Competing in a first Olympic Games aged 31 before going on to win more medals than anyone else in Melbourne four years later? And then, just for good measure, passing her century bursting with a rare energy and unquenchable zest for life? It sounds like magical realism. Yet it was all true.

“These 100 years felt to me like 60,” Keleti said, as she celebrated with a cake with fireworks fizzing from it and a smile so wide it could have lit up Budapest. It served as an instant pick-me-up, especially in these grim and monochrome times.”

Sean Ingle of The Guardian on ‘The Queen of Gymnastics’ — Agnes Keleti.

“As the chief scout for Novara — an Italian soccer team based in a small town west of Milan and, that season, struggling at the foot of Serie A — Cristiano Giaretta was used to unsolicited calls from agents offering players that might be of interest.

“When a Portuguese agent named Miguel Pinho got in touch with Giaretta in 2012 to recommend a teenage midfielder at Boavista, he might easily have disregarded it. His job involved tracking hundreds of players across much of Europe. He had never heard of Pinho, and he had never heard of Bruno Fernandes.

“Nor, really, should he have. Though Boavista is traditionally the second team in Portugal’s second city, Porto, financial turmoil had, at the time, left it struggling in the third division. Its youth system had a good reputation, but by common consensus the cream of the country’s endless supply of young soccer talent was corralled in the academies of its big three clubs: Benfica, Sporting and F.C. Porto.”

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In the New York Times, Rory Smith maps out the unusual career path of Bruno Fernandes, the best player in a Manchester United side currently sitting top of the Premier League.

“In the ad, Butler slides into his closet, where he picks out some clothes, decides between two pairs of cowboy boots, and then slides back out to finish packing for the NBA bubble. Here was Butler: A jokester. An affable superstar. It was such a twist to his public persona. He was the complete opposite of what he had been known as for the bulk of his career, perhaps because, once again, he’d been willing to work for it.

“I’m constantly doing stuff to try to let people in on that side of me, because I get it,” Butler said. “If you believe what you see online, I’m an asshole, I’m a bad team-mate, I’m a bad guy, yadda, yadda, yadda, yadda. But when you take all of that out because that’s just what I am as a basketball player, who am I?”. Wine in hand, Butler tried to answer his own question by talking about his ambitions and, more insightfully, all the things he loves.”

In GQ, Zito Madu speaks to Jimmy Butler of Miami Heat about how he became the breakout star of the NBA bubble. 

“There was a time, early on in her life, where Trinity Rodman thought she might follow in her father’s footsteps, though. She remembers playing basketball in an after-school program with her brother D.J. She liked to dribble, drive to the hoop and playing against her sibling fueled her competitive desire. But basketball was never her true love.

“As I got older and older, I just told myself that I needed to play one sport, to focus on it and get good,” recalled Rodman. “Soccer was just my home sport, what I was most comfortable with. So I started working harder and got better and better and better.”

Trinity Rodman, daughter of NBA great Dennis, is a rising US football star and was selected No. 2 overall in the 2021 NWSL draft. Pablo Maurer tells her story in The Athletic.

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“Over the last decade, the Irish therapist has worked with an A-list cast of sporting talent. Champion sprinters, NFL stars, top-10 golfers: they’ve all made their way to his Realta Clinic in Carlow, searching either for an edge in performance or a cure for their pain — sometimes both.

“Antonio Brown, wide receiver for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, calls him the “crazy Irishman”, a description Geoghegan says is accurate. But if there’s a touch of madness to his ways, an increasing number of sporting titans see method in it. It doesn’t take long to realise why he can divide opinion.

“It’s going to be horrible to hear this and it breaks my f***ing heart (to say it): Irish sportspeople train harder than the best sportspeople in the world, but they don’t train correctly,” says Geoghegan.”

Cathal Dennehy speaks to Anthony ‘Star’ Geoghegan — the Carlow-based therapist who has worked with Olympic champions and NBA superstars, in the Irish Examiner.

Here are the benefits your membership of The42 will deliver this week

ANOTHER WEEK OVER, another to begin, as 2021, or 2020 2.0, continues.

Lockdown number three hasn’t exactly been easy, but thankfully we have plenty of sport on TV to keep us all occupied for now. 

Likewise, there’s plenty on The42‘s membership platform to keep you ticking over. And, of course, we have another busy week coming up.

By joining our membership scheme, you are gaining access to a host of exclusive podcasts, newsletters, prizes and insights along with supporting our free and independent journalism.  

If you haven’t already done so, you can sign up for a €5 a month – or a discounted €42 a year – at members.the42.ie.

Here’s a look to the week ahead.

Tomorrow’s Rugby Weekly Extra is a members’ mailbag special with top rugby analyst Eoin Toolan joining our own Murray Kinsella.

Shane Keegan returned with a brand-new season of the How To Win At Dominoes coaching podcast, exclusive to The42 Members, last week, and the always-interesting Eamon O’Shea kicked us off.

This week, he’s joined by Cork U20 football boss Keith Ricken, another deep thinker and renowned coach, so it’s sure to be another good one. 

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Keith Ricken is in the How To Win At Dominoes hotseat this week.

Source: Bryan Keane/INPHO

It’s 60 not out for our sportswriting podcast Behind The Lines, as Gavin Cooney is joined by British author and Financial Times columnist Simon Kuper.

For our 59th episode last week, Gavin was joined by French writer Philippe Auclair to talk about France, Cantona, Wenger, his music career, and much more — and that, and the full back catalogue – featuring the likes of Gary Lineker, Rick Reilly, Robert Lipsyte, David Walsh, Malachy Clerkin and Caitlin Thompson – is available to everyone who signs up.  

Members can also get access to the back catalogues of our limited series run podcasts, including The Football Family with Paul Dollery, The Rise of Kenny with Kevin Brannigan, and season one of How to Win at Dominoes with Dundalk coach Keegan.

The week will also feature another round of our Insiders newsletters, covering GAA, rugby and soccer, with plenty to dig into and discuss in spite both on and off the field. 

Our bylines series of sports essays continues apace – the most recent by Maeve Higgins is available now – and our latest members prize draw also takes place.  

‘I’m grateful and privileged to play both’ – a closer look at the inter-county dual player

IT’S NO SECRET that dual players at inter-county level are more so associated with women’s Gaelic games.

Orla O’Dwyer (centre) is one of the country’s most high-profile dual players.

Source: Oisin Keniry/INPHO

That concept seems to be a thing of the past at the top level in the men’s game, though it was once commonplace for players to play both football and hurling for their county.

Cork great Teddy McCarthy made history by winning an individual All-Ireland double in 1990, while Seán Óg Ó hAilpín so very nearly followed in his footsteps nine years later. Galway’s Alan Kerins is another prime example, featuring in both deciders in 2001, winning the football but losing the hurling. Offaly’s Liam Currams, Dublin’s Des Foley, and plenty of others from Cork; the list goes on as you take a trip down memory lane.

In recent years, many have tried combining both at the top level but the big decision is ultimately necessary.

Just look at Dublin football star Con O’Callaghan, a fine hurler with Cuala who’d surely be welcomed to the county set-up with open arms. Chrissy McKaigue, who has just played football with Derry of late. Galway’s Daithi Burke, who concentrates solely on small ball at inter-county level. And that’s but a few examples.

Ever-growing demands and logistical roadblocks seem to make it virtually impossible in the men’s game. The inter-county dual player is very much a dying, if not dead, breed. But things are very different when we look at ladies football and camogie. 

While Cork greats Briege Corkery and Rena Buckley — who amassed a remarkable 36 All-Ireland medals between them — are among the most renowned at inter-county level through the years, there are plenty of high profile ones still in the game at the minute.

They’re highlighted each and every year — but often through a fixture clash controversy rather than through sheer praise for those who play two codes at the highest level.

Just look at 2020 alone where Cork’s dual dilemmas hit the headlines week in, week out. Five players — Hannah Looney and Libby Coppinger are two of the big names who spoke out most — were at the centre of numerous storms with strike action threatened at one point, but thankfully, it never came to that.

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Briege Corkery and Rena Buckley in 2015.

Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO

Same-day clashes were avoided in the end, though many questions were raised after the controversial All-Ireland ladies football semi-final between the Rebels and Galway. It all started long before the late venue change. Ultimately, it stemmed from the failure of the LGFA and Camogie Association to co-ordinate their fixtures — a constant problem over the past few years.

Ask any player, they want to play both. There are numerous challenges, demands and roadblocks year in, year out, but it’s worth it.

Disappointing decisions have come out of the LGFA and Camogie Association’s respective Congresses over the past few months, with motions to facilitate and recognise dual players rejected at both. Both Associations have expressed their support clearly since, however.

“We do support the dual player, but we can’t design an entire fixtures programme around a player,” as Camogie Associaition Ard Stiúrthóir Sinéad McNulty told The42 in an interesting interview during the summer.

Speaking to The42 in the lead-up to December’s All-Ireland football final, Coppinger discussed those incidents in particular, and how mentally difficult it is to bounce between both at times.

She went on to explain how balancing the two sports is all she’s ever known.

“I grew up playing both. When I got to play with Cork, it was great to get to play both up there because if you commit to one playing inter-county, the other one doesn’t get seen to much at club level. So I’ve been delighted to be able to play both and represent Cork with both.

Libby Coppinger after the 2020 All-Ireland football final.

Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO

“It has been crazy sometimes but for me anyway, it’s gotten… not necessarily easier but management and everything have been more helpful for me in the last couple of years, just taking decisions out of my hands. Sure I’d love to be out every night of the week training… most of the time anyway! I hate to say no to sitting out or anything like that when you’re not necessarily injured.

“Even the last two or three years, Ephie [Fitzgerald] and Paudie [Murray] have worked together great. Our backroom team as well, our two strength and conditioning coaches will always make the call and then we don’t have to decide, they’re just it taking out of our hands and that’s really helped me manage the workload and everything like that.”

Having done so in the past on several occasions, Tipperary ace Orla O’Dwyer — who also stars for Brisbane Lions in the AFLW — echoed Coppinger’s words, saying she loves both and wants to play both despite the noise and potential dual clashes.

“I always say that I’m very lucky in Tipperary that they’re allowed to have dual players, that the camogie and football work well with that, that there is no real shame about it,” she said, with Aishling Moloney and Roisin Howard among the other Premier stars to balance both of late.

“But I know it has been a big topic in the last couple of years, even with a lot clashes. It’s very unfair on some of the girls, but I suppose it just comes down to fixtures and how that will work.

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“I know there’s lots of games that need to be played and they have to get them played by certain dates. With this year especially [2020] with everything that was going on, we didn’t even know if there would be a season, it’s so hard to know and it was probably very hard to justify with fixtures and stuff. But I think down the line that there should be an easier kind of way to finalise fixtures and just have it prepared in advance. It’s hard to know.

“I just always say I’m grateful and I’m privileged to be able to play the both and continue and I hope that, with the rest of the girls that they do get the chance to continue to play dual for their county.”

There are many other inter-county dual players dotted around the country, who often go under the radar a little more. There’s a cohort in Limerick, while others like Niamh O’Dea (Clare) and Megan Thynne (Meath) also spring to mind.

Megan Thynne is a star. Has been incredible for both @meathladiesMLGF and @OffMeathCamog over the past few years.

Great video with Jerome here, sums her up. pic.twitter.com/UIjJqu9jeE

— Emma Duffy (@emmaduffy_) November 10, 2020

“It’s a great time to be a dual star,” the latter — a permanent fixture for the Royals in both codes over the past few years — said last year, insisting the concept must be celebrated.

“I’m happy to be playing games. I’m not complaining they’re on the same weekend. In future, there’s loads of dual players out there that would like to play both, and hopefully it’ll improve further.”

There’s “no secrets,” she noted on the balancing act, but the general question has arisen of late if it is feasible to continue playing both.

For a period, Tipperary and Cahir star Howard didn’t think it was. In college at University of Limerick [UL], she played both and enjoyed incredible Ashbourne and O’Connor Cup success.

As a result, inter-county commitments were impacted and she chose to focus on football for a period.

Howard (11) after UL’s 2020 Ashbourne Cup success.

Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO

“I just found it very hard going into the two inter-county set ups straight away. I suffered a lot of niggly injuries. It just kind of prevented me from kind of getting to a decent stage of performing at my best at the important times of the year.

“So that’s why I decided to step back from playing both at inter-county level. At the same time, when I look back I was younger then and I probably wasn’t looking after my body as well as what I do now. That definitely has a massive impact; just eating wise and sleeping better and things like that.”

But she’s currently back in full swing with both, and wouldn’t change a thing.

For now, anyway. Like pretty much everyone else. That’s the general consensus.

“I do enjoy playing both and it’s definitely something that I want to keep continuing to do,” she concludes, making it a general consensus across the board. “They’re two very different set ups, which is very enjoyable as well.

“It’s an honour to represent your county at one sport, never mind two. I really do enjoy it.”

It’s just a question of will — or, can — it continue…

Originally published at 07.30

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Positive update on Bríd Stack after horror incident, with Cork great to make full recovery

CORK LEGEND BRÍD Stack has been released from hospital and is “expected to make a full recovery” after sustaining a worrying injury in a horror incident on her Aussie Rules debut yesterday.

“Scans revealed Stack has a stable fracture of the C7 vertebra and no injury to the surrounding nerves,” a statement from Greater Western Syndey [GWS] Giants reads.

“She does not require surgery but will wear a neck brace in the short term. She is expected to make a full recovery and will remain in Australia and a key part of the team as she rehabilitates from her injury.”

The Australian club confirmed yesterday that the 11-time All-Ireland winner and 2016 Footballer of the Year had been hospitalised “following spinal precaution protocols” after a fourth-quarter challenge in a practice match against Adelaide Crows; the action blown up early as a result.

Cork LGFA, for whom Stack represented with distinction until she retired from inter-county football two years ago, relayed some “positive news” from Australia shortly after, reporting that the 34-year-old was set to make a full recovery.

And the Giants issued a further, detailed update this morning.

Bríd Stack has been released from hospital but is set to be sidelined following an incident in a tackle during yesterday's practice match.

— GWS GIANTS (@GWSGIANTS) January 18, 2021

“This was an incredibly unfortunate accident and we’re thankful that Bríd has avoided serious injury,” Giants Head of Women’s Football, Bri Harvey, said, with Stack released from hospital late on Sunday night to re-join the Giants squad, who are based in Adelaide for at least the next two weeks.

“Bríd and her family have made incredible sacrifices to come to Australia to play in the AFL Women’s competition and we will be supporting them all the way through her recovery.

“We’d like to thank all those who provided Bríd with the best possible care both at the ground and in hospital across Sunday.”

Stack’s AFLW ambitions for 2021 have likely been dashed as a result, the Rockchapel star facing a lengthy stint on the sidelines.

Thanks to all in @GWSGIANTS for such good care of @BridStackie
Wishing Bríd a full & speedy recovery,no doubt @KeaneCarthach Snr & Jnr will take good care of you 👍@eastcorklgf @mid_cork @NorthCorkLF @westcorkladies @stvalsladies @NewcestownGAA @RockchapelGAA @LadiesFootball https://t.co/9wGIcUHF72

— Cork LGFA (@CorkLGFA) January 18, 2021

Adelaide midfielder Ebony Marinoff is facing a similar outcome, having been referred directly to the Tribunal for the dangerous tackle on Stack.

AFLW report that Marinoff has been charged with “forceful front-on contact” and that the incident was assessed as “careless conduct, high contact with severe impact.” 

Stack moved Down Under before Christmas with her husband, Cárthach, and their one-year-old son, Cárthach Óg, eventually pursuing the AFLW dream after some convincing by fellow ladies football great and now team-mate, Cora Staunton, and Giants’ head coach, Al McConnell.

Yesterday’s incident came at the end of a difficult week for her personally, following the death of Cork’s legendary manager Eamonn Ryan.

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‘A much-needed base we can call our own’ – Waterford join counties breaking new ground

NEW GROUND WILL continue to be broken in women’s Gaelic games with Waterford becoming one of the few counties in the country to own their own pitch outright.

Waterford player Aoife Murray and members of the field development committee, Michael Ryan, Crohan McGregor and Edel Curry with chairperson John Frewen at the new site.

Source: Patrick Browne

Waterford LGFA announced this morning that a new facility is being built in Dungarvan; an 11-acre site secured beside the stunning Déise Greenway after six years of work behind the scenes.

The news comes as work continues on Armagh ladies’ field of dreams at McKeever Park in Killeen.

“It seems crazy. It’s 2018 and we’re the only ladies county team in Ireland to have that,” as Orchard chairperson Sinéad Reel told The42 a little over two years ago, when they became the first inter-county side in Ireland to have a base dedicated solely to ladies football. Cork’s camogie grounds in Castle Road, Mahon, opened in 2012.

  • ‘It was’t acceptable’ – Making history with a ladies football only centre of excellence 

Ultimately, the GAA own inter-county facilities across the country, and this often causes issues due to the fact that ladies football and camogie are governed by separate organisations. This was clearly seen in December’s All-Ireland semi-final debacle.

Plenty of fundraising has been completed in Waterford since the idea was born in 2015, and the hope is that it will serve players in the county for future generations.

Work on the field is expected to commence by the summer, and the facility will consist of a state-of-the-art pitch with a pitchside spectator stand, changing rooms, coach and car park and a full six lane running track around the perimeter of the pitch.

The facility will be available for all county and club teams across all grades in Waterford LGFA, along with the wider community both locally and nationally.

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Yes we have started the ball rolling, great to see other counties following the trend 👏👏⚽️⚽️ pic.twitter.com/BKSVOCqVVm

— ArmaghLGFA (@ArmaghLGFA) January 18, 2021

“It will mean that county players will no longer have to travel to different GAA fields around the county, not knowing where their next training session will be on a weekly and even daily basis,” a statement reads, with funding fully planned and works expected to be completed by the spring of 2023.

Edel Curry, secretary of Waterford LGFA’s field development sub-committee said

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“It is the intention of the Waterford Ladies Gaelic Football Association to provide a multifunctional playing and facilities development in what is a strategic location in the county,” Edel Curry, secretary of the field sub-committee, said.

“We firmly believe that it will be a key driver for the greater development of the entire area in terms of sporting, social and economic advancement. Our project will greatly enhance the participation of all age categories in our sport and look forward to its immediate commencement.

“The youngsters who will benefit from this development will be our stars of the future and hopefully bring continued All-Ireland glory.”

“We are so proud of this achievement and thankful to everyone who contributed to what will be an amazing state of the art facility,” chairperson of Waterford LGFA John Frewen added, with two former county stars echoing their words.

Pictured at the new Waterford LGFA site are young players Ellie O’Connor and Elsie May Shaw with sisters and Waterford players Aoife and Emma Murray.

Source: Patrick Browne

“It is a huge testament to the progressive vision and commitment of Waterford LGFA members, supporters and administrators,” Michelle Ryan, who announced her retirement last year, noted.

“This will be a very valuable asset to Waterford LGFA moving forward as it will create a much-needed base that we can call our own. 

Four-time All-Star Mary O’Donnell added: “It’s fantastic to see the Waterford LGFA are in a great position to finally achieve the dreams of past and present players in owning their own ladies Gaelic football pitch.”

You can read the statement in full here.

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‘When Mam and Dad died, we could never get them back. But sport is only sport’

GALWAY CAMOGIE LEGEND Thérèse Maher speaks candidly about the loss of her parents in her upcoming episode of Laochra Gael.

The GAA series, which is in its 19th season on TG4, has featured some fascinating stories in recent weeks with Kevin Cassidy and Ryan O’Dwyer both proving to be hits with viewers.

2013 All-Ireland winner Thérèse Maher is the subject of this week’s episode, and fans are in for another excellent instalment of the series.

Maher talks about her happy upbringing as one of 11 children, as well as her long wait for a senior All-Ireland title with Galway. She had to endure five decider defeats before finally lifting the O’Duffy Cup.

She also opens up about the death of her mother in 2008 and the passing of her father a few years later.

“My mother got sick when I was in college in 2003 and she got five good years, and it came back in July [2008] and rapidly progressed then. She’d only come home from hospital the day before the All-Ireland.

“I remember she had her maroon tracksuit on at home in the kitchen the morning before I left, and my brother Vinny stayed at home from Dublin that day to sit with her. But she didn’t have a particularly good day.”

Galway lost that final to Cork, and Maher had hoped that a victory might lift her mother’s spirits.

“It wasn’t to be,” says Maher.

“I remember speaking to her afterwards and she was like, ‘Thérèse, don’t be upsetting yourself. It’s not your fault.’ It was always her way to put you at ease.

“When I came home on the Monday, she’d actually gone back into hospital. My mother passed away in October. She had such life and love to give, she really didn’t want to die.

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“All the firsts after that were tough; Christmas was very hard. I wanted the day to go as fast as it could.

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“I couldn’t wait for January and February to come back because sport gave me an outlet, it gave me something to channel that anger that I was feeling because she was just at a time where we were all grown up, we were able to give something back to her. 

“She was only 64 when she passed away. Camogie gave me a focus, it gave me something to get me out of the house.”

Maher goes on to talk about the death of her father who been living with Parkinson’s disease before his passing.

In 2010, she announced her engagement to her husband David and was hoping that her father would be able to walk her down the aisle.

“On the morning of the wedding, my father unfortunately wasn’t able to go,” she recalls. “I know he was disappointed for me, and I suppose every girl envisages her father walking her down the aisle but it would have been unfair for me to ask him to do it.

“But we’d a lovely morning, I’d got him the suit anyway so we got him dressed up. We took some photos and he told me I looked beautiful which is what every daughter wants to hear on their wedding day.

“I came back from the honeymoon in late January and he passed away on 21 February. At the end of anyone’s days, all anyone has left is their memories and I’ll be forever grateful to have those photos with him and that he was alive on my wedding day, even though he wasn’t there.”

Thérèse Maher’s Laochra Gael will be shown on TG4 this Thursday at 9.30pm.

Reigning All-Ireland champions Galway to face Mayo in Connacht opener

THE REIGNING ALL-IRELAND U20 football champions Galway will take on Mayo in their opening game of this year’s championship.

Captain Jack Glynn lifts the trophy after the 2020 All-Ireland U20 football final.

Galway were pitted against their old rivals at the semi-final stage when the draw was made for the Connacht U20 championship last night. When the counties met at the U20 preliminary round stage last February, Galway progressed after a 3-2 penalty shootout win.

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Roscommon were drawn to play Leitrim at the quarter-final stage with the winners there taking on Sligo at the other semi-final tie.

Draw for Connacht U-20 Championship made tonight, games at the Connacht GAA COE

QF Apr 3rd@RoscommonGAA v @LeitrimGAA

SF Apr 10th@sligogaa v Ros/Lei@Galway_GAA v @MayoGAA

Final April 16/17 #ConnachtGAA

Dates subject to change depending on restrictions.

— Connacht GAA (@ConnachtGAA) January 18, 2021

The draw for the Connacht minor championship also took place last night. Roscommon, the reigning champions in this grade, will meet Mayo in the quarter-final and the winners will advance to take on Galway. The other semi-final will see Sligo face Leitrim.

The draw for the U-17 Connacht Football Championship made tonight. All games at the Connacht GAA COE

QF Apr 2nd@MayoGAA v @RoscommonGAA

SF Apr 9th@Galway_GAA v Mayo/Ros@sligogaa v @LeitrimGAA

Final Apr 13th#ConnachtGAA
Dates subject to change depending on restrictions

— Connacht GAA (@ConnachtGAA) January 18, 2021

All games will be played at the Connacht GAA Centre of Excellence in Bekan in Mayo. They have been provisionally fixed for dates in April but those are subject to change depending on restrictions.

Fixtures

Connacht U20 football championship

3 April: Quarter-final

  • Roscommon v Leitrim
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10 April: Semi-finals

  • Sligo v Roscommon/Leitrim
  • Galway v Mayo

16/17 April: Final

Connacht minor football championship

2 April: Quarter-final

  • Mayo v Roscommon

9 April: Semi-finals

  • Galway v Mayo/Roscommon
  • Sligo v Leitrim

13 April: Final

 

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