All-Ireland winning defender opts out of Clare hurling set-up for 2021

ALL-IRELAND SENIOR winner Seadna Morey has opted out of the Clare hurling panel for the coming season. 

The pacey defender’s departure was confirmed through a statement by his club Sixmilebridge last night.

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Morey, who also won a National League crown and three All-Ireland U21 titles with the Banner, made his debut in 2012 and won a Celtic Cross under Davy Fitzgerald the following year. 

The 27-year-old played every minute of Clare’s 2020 championship campaign in Brian Lohan’s first season in charge.

Earlier this week, Morey cited injury concerns and work commitments as the reasons for his withdrawal from the squad, though he hasn’t ruled out a return down the line. 

Sixmilebridge say he will continue to line out for the reigning Clare SHC champions.

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“Thanks for the memories and lots more to be made as the next chapter begins,” the statement added.

Two-time Ashbourne Cup winning manager takes over Dublin camogie

ADRIAN O’SULLIVAN HAS been appointed as the new Dublin senior camogie manager.

He replaces outgoing boss John Treacy (Cuala), who was in charge for just one campaign.

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O’Sullivan led UL to back-to-back Ashbourne Cups in 2018 and 2019, while he worked as coach with Westmeath (2016, 2017) and Kildare (2019) hurlers in recent years.

He coached Thomastown to the senior Kilkenny camogie title in 2020 and was coach as Clonkill won the SHC crown in Westmeath the year before.

O’Sullivan also worked with the Limerick minor and intermediate camogie teams that won All-Irelands in 2014, in addition to Kilkenny’s All-Ireland intermediate win in 2016.

Former Galway and Dublin hurler Donie Fox will join his management team.

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RTÉ unveil contenders for Young Sportsperson and Manager of the Year – who should win?

RTÉ HAVE UNVEILED the list of contenders who have been nominated for the Young Sportsperson of the Year, and Manager of the Year for 2020.

Five top athletes have been shortlisted for the Young Sportsperson of the Year category while six names have been put forward for the Manager of the Year gong.

Snooker player Aaron Hill, who pulled off a sensational victory over six-time world champion Ronnie O’Sullivan at the European Masters, is among the nominees along with Kildare boxer Katelynn Phelan.

Mayo defender Oisín Mullin is also in the running for the Young Sportsperson award, while Limerick mountain bike star Oisín O’Callaghan and Meath darts player Keane Barry complete the shortlist.

The Manager of the Year group also contains plenty of strong candidates for the honour.

Brian Dowling is included in the list after guiding Kilkenny to a senior All-Ireland camogie title in 2020, while Dublin ladies boss Mick Bohan is also in the mix after their four-in-a-row triumph last year.

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All-Ireland-winning Limerick manager John Kiely is among the other contenders along with Dublin boss Dessie Farrell, Joseph O’Brien, and Shamrock Rovers manager Stephen Bradley.

The RTÉ Sport Awards 2020 will be held on Thursday 28 January at 10.15pm on RTÉ One.

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So, who do you think should win the awards that up for grabs? Let us know your thoughts in the comment section below.

The nominees for the RTÉ Sport 2020 Manager of the Year award

🏆Brian Dowling
🏆Dessie Farrell
🏆John Kiely
🏆Joseph O'Brien
🏆Mick Bohan
🏆Stephen Bradley

Find out the winner on Thursday 28 January on @rteone

Read more here: https://t.co/uXzN4xOHAR pic.twitter.com/v2LwgWE3Pr

— RTÉ Sport (@RTEsport) January 23, 2021

RTÉ Young Sportsperson of the Year Nominees
Aaron Hill 
Katelynn Phelan 
Keane Barry 
Oisín Mullin
Oisín O’Callaghan 

Manager of the Year Nominees 

Brian Dowling
Dessie Farrell
John Kiely 
Joseph O’Brien 
Mick Bohan 
Stephen Bradley 

Four-time All-Star Higgins becomes the latest Mayo retirement

FOUR-TIME ALL-Star Keith Higgins has become the latest high profile retirement in Mayo, as he departs the squad after 16 seasons of senior inter-county football.

The 35-year-old, who has also lined out for the Mayo hurlers in the past, excelled in both attacking and defensive positions.

He was selected to mark some of the top forwards in Gaelic football, and was a consistent performer for Mayo throughout his career.

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“The time has come to step away,” Higgins said in a statement published on his Twitter page.

“It’s been an unbelievable journey and an absolute privilege. Thank you.”

Higgins was afforded less game time for Mayo in recent seasons, but steps away from the squad with eight Connacht SFC titles and a National League triumph in 2019.

The Ballyhaunis clubman follows on from fellow Mayo stars Seamie O’Shea, Tom Parsons, Chris Barrett, Donal Vaughan and David Clarke who all recently announced their inter-county retirements.

The time has come to step away. It’s been an unbelievable journey and an absolute privilege. Thank you. ❤️💚 pic.twitter.com/qgNcT35cZE

— Keith Higgins (@keithhiggins7) January 23, 2021

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Higgins picked up his four All-Stars in 2012, 2013, 2014 and 2017 while also being crowned the All Star Young Footballer of the Year in 2006.

“Mayo GAA would like to thank Keith for his commitment over the last number of years at underage and senior level,” a tribute message on the county’s official Twitter page reads.

“We wish him all the best.”

Keith Higgins has today announced his retirement from Inter County football after 16 seasons with the Mayo. Mayo GAA would like to thank Keith for his commitment over the last number of years at underage and senior level. We wish him all the best https://t.co/nSp7dFLRId pic.twitter.com/vgI9gaQqCA

— Mayo GAA (@MayoGAA) January 23, 2021

The many sides of Jerry Kiernan and the week’s best sportswriting

1. “I think I have definitely moved on. When I was pressing the ‘f**k it button,’ subconsciously, I was playing out those roles but, for me, it was important not to consider myself a victim or a survivor [of abuse]. They are important words for me to avoid in many respects because I think if you carry that stuff around, I think it is not a healthy frame of reference to keep yourself in.

“That is something that has helped me move on but, then again, I listened to the Where Is George Gibney? podcast and a few more about Jeffrey Epstein and to be honest I did get emotional. It did bring up stuff that I know I probably have not dealt with in many regards but even listening to other people’s stories and feeling real deep emotions and sadness – letting a few tears roll down my eyes as I am doing the dishes in remote New Zealand, that for me is fine.

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“I feel so much sadness for the people who it happened to. For me, when I hear these stories, I see how it destroys people’s lives. And it does. It destroys people. There was a fella I met for coffee a couple of times after the book came out. He was telling me his story – he went to meet the Pope. He had been raped by a Christian Brother in school. The Christian Brother was moved over to Africa and he was doing the same over there so this guy took it upon himself to go and hunt down this ‘priest’.”

Gavin Cummiskey revisits John Leonard’s award winning book ‘Dub Sub Confidential’ with former Dublin goalkeeper John Leonard 

2. “Last month, shortly after the final whistle had sounded in Croke Park and Limerick reclaimed the All-Ireland hurling crown, Munster began their Champions Cup campaign at home to Harlequins with just two Limerick-born players in their starting team. Jubilant street celebrations on what should have been a special occasion for the city were instead replaced by an emptiness, but for a couple of hours at least, Limerick’s gloomy night sky was lit up by the Thomond Park and Gaelic Grounds floodlights, which were shining as the minor squad trained ahead of yet another Munster final success. There they were, the heart and soul of a sport-obsessed city, standing tall just over a kilometre away from each other, providing brief solace in these surreal pandemic times.”

Cian Tracey investigates how Limerick’s hurling success is damaging Munster rugby

3. “I spent the 1990 World Cup living on the Phipps Bridge Estate in South London. Tough part of town. They used to film exterior scenes for “The Bill” in the complex and natives joked it was difficult to tell fake cop cars from real ones so “run first, pose for the cameras later” was the policy of the smarter hoodlums. On the day Ireland played Romania, my Uncle Finny and I set up shop in the kitchen of his family homestead there, the telly a small portable but a fridge full of Lowenbrau within arm’s reach. As the game wore on, Auntie Peggy wandered in and out warning us to pipe down, the volume rising with drink and the realisation Ireland might actually eke through. Eventually, she gave up reprimanding and joined the fray.

By the time Dave O’Leary and Packie Bonner performed their heroics, dozens of concerned neighbours had gathered on the street outside, worried about the vehement nature of the domestic dispute they were so avidly eavesdropping. They thought the Irish were at war when we were at play. Thankfully, nobody called the police. Not the done thing there.”

Dave Hannigan recalls watching 1990 World Cup on one of South London’s toughest estates

4. “They cried, they laughed, they reflected. For those who knew Jerry Kiernan, this had all come too soon, a traumatic, impossibly grim situation that made no sense. On Wednesday night, Kiernan had been texting friends shortly before going to bed, cracking a joke to one of them about Donald Trump. Hours later, he was gone.

“The 67-year-old passed away in the early hours of Thursday morning and the cause is not yet known, though Kiernan had been struggling with his health for months and dealing with stomach complaints.”

Cathal Dennehy reflects on the life of Jerry Kiernan, the hardiest of bastards as a runner, the most honest of analysts, the most caring of coaches and a man who taught so much

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5. “There were many sides to Jerry Kiernan. That’s the first thing you need to know. The guy you saw on RTÉ, the TV pundit who dropped quick-witted, cut-throat assessments about Irish athletes? That was just one. To his rivals, the men he traded blows with on the road, track, and at cross country through the ’70s and ’80s, he was the hardiest of bastards, a classy performer possessed of plentiful speed and oceans of endurance, either of which he could utilise to take you to a place you’d really rather not go.

“To the students at St Brigid’s Boys School in Foxrock, where Kiernan worked for 40 years, he was an oracle, a mullet-sporting font of wisdom who could cite Aristotle just as easily as Haile Gebrselassie. The students who had him through the years have the same stories: Kiernan didn’t just lecture, he listened, seeing a whole lot more to childhood development than getting good grades.”

Cathal Dennehy speaks to Ciara Mageean about her ‘father figure’ Jerry Kiernan

‘People probably think we’re a bit obsessed. Sometimes you have to be’

Updated Jan 24th 2021, 12:00 PM

Collingwood’s Irish duo Sarah Rowe and Aishling Sheridan.

Source: AAP/PA Images

THEY’RE LIVING THE Australian dream, but those back on home soil are never too far from their thoughts.

“It’s very difficult for people in Ireland at the minute,” Sarah Rowe shakes her head, sitting next to her Collingwood team-mate, Aishling Sheridan, not long in the door from training.

“We’re both so grateful that we’ve had the opportunity to travel and that we’re over here in a team environment. We know that it can be taken away from you at any minute.” 

Team-mates, friends and housemates for quite some time now on both sides of the world, the Irish duo are gearing up for another season in the AFLW. It’s Rowe’s third with the Pies, Sheridan’s second; this one beginning like the last one ended, amidst the Covid-19 pandemic.

The return Down Under wasn’t exactly straightforward between visas, long-haul flights, restrictions and uncertainty about where they would end up before their eventual return to Melbourne.

Mandatory hotel quarantine brought the pair to Perth, cooped up in side-by-side hotel rooms for 14 days before bering reunited for Christmas.

“We had to do our quarantine in Western Australia so there were really no rules there, no face masks, no social distancing, no real speak of Covid,” Cavan star Sheridan recalls.

“It was quite normal, nightclubs and everything like that are open as normal as pre-Covid. We obviously had to fly back to Victoria, to Melbourne, where we are now. We still have to wear masks but there’s no cases, it’s not that serious. We’re very lucky, to be fair.”

Sheridan facing West Coast Eagles last year.

Source: AAP/PA Images

Training individually in their hotel rooms was challenging and “does take a toll on you mentally and physically,” both concede, but it had to be done. They got through it, and kept themselves occupied through the 14 days.

The focus was plain and simply on navigating quarantine on a day-by-day basis, before linking up with their team-mates and returning to the intense, top-level environment that semi-professional sport brings.

“We had gym equipment and stuff in the rooms so we were able to keep up strength that way but running fitness was something we were semi-worried about,” Sheridan admits.

“We got out of quarantine Christmas Day, which was a Friday and then we got to do a running session the Saturday, 10 and-a-half, 11 kilometres. You kind of felt sluggish but it was good to get that in.”

“We had never not ran for two weeks ever before,” Mayo forward Rowe jumps in. “It was about trying to get your body right again.”

A couple of sessions and a flight to Melbourne later, they were straight back into the deep end. Fitness testing ensued and Collingwood’s Irish duo were soon in the thick of another relentless pre-season training slog. But to no complaints.

“Once we got back in, we actually didn’t feel too bad and our fitness stayed quite good,” Sheridan smiles. “Two weeks isn’t going to kill you, especially when you keep doing HIIT classes and stuff, you are keeping that fitness base going.”

“You forget the intensity and the load that you put through your body, though,” Rowe adds. “You could train twice a day at home in Ireland but it’s just not the same.

“The physical contact, the hits that you’re taking… we found ourselves firstly, starving, and secondly, just absolutely wrecked.”

Rowe facing Armagh in the 2020 championship.

Source: Sam Barnes/SPORTSFILE

Training evenings mean convening at the club from 4pm to 10pm, with time dedicated to video analysis, education with coaches and various other meetings alongside skill sessions and a collective group pitch session. Afterwards, there’s food and recovery.

“It’s a long evening, it’s essentially a full days’ work in the evening time so it’s hard for some girls who are working part-time as well,” the Ballina native acknowledges, both parties thankful to have so much time to dedicate to their adopted sport.

It’s all worth it, and more. It always has been, each and every step of the way.

“We say people probably think we’re a bit obsessed,” Rowe smiles.  “Sometimes you have to be.

“You essentially wake up every morning and ask yourself, ‘How can I be a better athlete.’ That means you have to take into account everything in your life; the people, the influences, your strength and conditioning, your nutrition, your mindset. It’s actually hard to switch off from it because there’s so much to consider.”

They can’t stress enough how important mindset has been through it all, finding journaling and goal-setting extremely helpful along the way.

Life at Collingwood certainly has been an adjustment, but a necessary one with psychology and physical preparation certainly further ahead in the AFLW than on home soil.

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“Ireland is starting to catch up but I suppose you’re comparing a semi-professional environment to an amateur environment,” Sheridan explains. “We have a psychologist on site with our team, we have our doctor, our trainers, our physios.

“You’re not going to have a psychologist at every county training session, it’s amateur. There is that little bit of difference. You’re training in a club with a gym so you’re able to do your prep for training, you’ve S&C coaches and you can access the club gym on rest days. Everyone can go to the one club gym.

“It’s hard to compare but Australia would be a little bit more ahead.”

Rowe on the ball for Collingwood last season.

Source: AAP/PA Images

Rowe, of course, feels the same, with the psychologist’s input in particular a huge boost when the going gets tough, whether that be due to injury, issues in ones personal life or what not else.

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“If someone comes to training in some kind of mood, you’re taught, ‘You need to leave your feelings at the gate,’ but if you want to be sad, talk to the psychologist or go home and cry about it.

“We’re in a working environment, it’s training focused. You can’t really decide when you want to be happy and sad in that environment but there’s resources outside and pockets when you need it.

“For instance, injuries; that’s a really big challenge for people… rehab, you feel like you’re broken, you’re essentially not important to the team anymore. You go from being a player who’s valued to being a player who doesn’t matter.

“The psychologist plays a huge part, even just having small conversations and helping you change your language around what you’re thinking. It’s just an unbelievable resource that we have, and we’re very fortunate to have it all the time.”

Sheridan nods furiously beside her, the pair in tune with each and every word they utter. 

Just like the 12 other Irish players on the books of AFLW clubs for the 2021 season.

It all kicks off on 28 January and runs for 12 consecutive weekends until mid-April, with TG4 announcing on Friday that it will broadcast weekly matches and highlights.

“It’s essentially a really short season, every weekend you have a game whereas at home you might have a weekend off,” Sheridan, who came through the CrossCoders programme, nods. “Once the games start, it’s pretty much straight into it.”

And Collingwood are first up on Thursday, opening the season with a highly-anticipated clash with Carlton at Princes Park.

Sheridan facing Donegal in the 2019 Ulster championship.

Source: Oliver McVeigh/SPORTSFILE

The main goal for both Rowe and Sheridan is to improve both as a team and as players, with the Melbourne outfit hoping to build on their stronger 2020.

“As time goes on, you get more comfortable with the game, you develop,” the former explains.

“At the start, it’s all about learning the game. Ultimately, what Irish people miss, I think, when they come over here is that instinct because we haven’t grown up playing the game. You know where you have an opportunity, it’s like, ‘Do I, don’t I?’ You have a second to think and when you hesitate on that second, the opportunity is gone. You see that in Irish players, thinking, ‘Will I go, won’t I go?’ There’s a lot of that.

“The longer you’re out here, the more you experience, the more game time you get, the more education you get from the coaches, the better that instinct gets. That’s a big focus for us, to keep understanding and educating ourselves more on the game.

“We’d obviously try our best to look after the controllables — the eating, the sleeping, the strength and conditioning and the running. You can control all of that but the game is what we need to zone in on.”

Both deep thinkers and philosophical in their ways at times, they’re happiest when in the thick of deep conversation, challenging and learning form one another. They’re all about looking forward, but often too, it’s important to take stock and reflect on the past.

It’s something they’ve found helpful through the pandemic, taking multiple learnings from 2020 as a whole. Their biggest, to finish?

“To appreciate what you have in your life at all times, and don’t take anything for granted,” Sheridan answers almost immediately. “That was the big thing for me.

Rowe and Sheridan at their Collingwood Guernsey presentation night.

Source: Aishling Sheridan Instagram.

“Over here when we’re in Australia, being able to meet your friends, and then hearing what’s happening at home, you take it for granted. If I was put back into that situation, how would I react?

“Appreciating your surroundings and not taking anything for granted, and then trying to be as positive as possible. I know times are difficult and it’s really hard but trying to look for the best in everything if you can.”

Rowe agrees, casting her mind through the many lessons learned in 2020.

“For me, I’m always very conscious of being present,” she concludes. “It’s a conscious decision you make — if you’re in someone’s company and you decide, ‘Okay, I’m listening to them but thinking about something else.’ Be there, listen to that person. There’s always something to learn from someone else.

“Engage with people, ask people questions; I think you can learn a lot from that. It’s really powerful what it can do for you as well. I think you appreciate the present then, time doesn’t pass you by.”

No matter what it throws at them, neither will let 2021 pass them by. That’s a given.

***

Sarah Rowe and Aishling Sheridan were speaking to The42 on an Instagram Live for Dingle-based gym D-Movement.

A defensive star for 16 seasons, was Higgins the best Mayo produced in modern era?

THE LAST ACT for Keith Higgins in a Mayo jersey saw him play a peripheral role.

He watched on as All-Ireland dejection visited Mayo once more in a decider, an unused substitute for the eerie December occasion that rounded off the 2020 championship. It would prove his final involvement in the Mayo football ranks.

Five weeks on, the 35-year-old signed off yesterday evening on that chapter in his life with a simple 18-word tweet. 

After 16 senior campaigns and 165 competitive appearances, 75 of those in championship, Higgins was finished.

The time has come to step away. It’s been an unbelievable journey and an absolute privilege. Thank you. ❤️💚 pic.twitter.com/qgNcT35cZE

— Keith Higgins (@keithhiggins7) January 23, 2021

He did his county some service. Sights of him in action had become limited last season, a Connacht final second-half introduction the only exception, but acting as a bystander for a high-pressure game against Dublin seemed an ill-fitting way for him to bow out.

For so long Higgins had been immersed in those battles with Dublin, a key protagonist when they suffered disappointment and part of a select group, along with David Clarke and Alan Dillon, who did start in two championship wins over their capital rivals.

In both of those successes, Higgins was central to the pulsating endings. In 2006 the point Ciaran McDonald swept over into Hill 16 is etched into minds but before the kick it was a lung-bursting run upfield from Higgins to gather from Ger Brady before offloading to Kevin O’Neill that proved crucial.

Source: officialgaa/YouTube

In 2012 as Mayo withstood a furious Dublin rally that chipped away at their advantage, they were clinging to a three-point advantage when Stephen Cluxton dropped a ’45 into a packed goalmouth. When the ball broke towards the net, it was Higgins who caught it and skipped clear of danger, the last player in possession when Joe McQuillan blew his full-time whistle.

Keith Higgins claims possession late on against Dublin in 2012.

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

His celebrations after that semi-final were not to be replicated on final day. Higgins was part of a Mayo setup for an All-Ireland final on seven occasions but six defeats and a draw was his lot. Up until December’s game he started them all, beginning as the young rookie tasked with quietening Colm Cooper in 2006, facing down Donegal six years later before the series of meetings with Dublin.

The only time he was substituted in a final was in the 74th minute of the 2017 epic. While his influence was diluted by the 2020 edition in not seeing gametime, it was an achievement to be still involved with Clarke the only compatriot also knocking around from that appearance 14 years previous.

That initial journey to the All-Ireland final in 2006 hinted at a future rich in promise. The same season saw Higgins crowned Young Footballer of the Year while he captained Mayo to U21 glory in Ennis against Cork, a pairing that would produce batches of senior players for their respective counties over the next decade.

Keith Higgins captained Mayo to All-Ireland U21 glory in 2006.

Source: Lorraine O’Sullivan/INPHO

And yet it was five years before Mayo would even reach the last four stage again, Higgins forced to grind his way back to the top and overcome personal setbacks like the red card he was shown on the night of John O’Mahony’s last stand as manager in June 2010 when Mayo were dumped out of the qualifiers by Longford.

The longevity of his career and his individual resilience are both impressive facets given how an early chunk of it panned out while his quality as a footballer also made him stand out.

Was there a better defender in the country in the 2012-17 time frame? That was when he hoovered up four All-Star awards, a number matched in that spell by team-mates Lee Keegan and Colm Boyle, along with opponents during his career in Karl Lacey and Jack McCaffrey. No defender outside of Kerry has won more All-Stars and while it is a selection scheme that it is subjective, it does point to the level that Higgins was operating at during the last decade.

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Rampaging half-backs caught the eye, Higgins was capable of slotting in there and unleashing his blistering pace to move upfield, but was just as comfortable in being detailed closer to goal to watch the most dangerous forwards in the country.

He was involved in some fascinating duels, the best of which was the two-game saga against James O’Donoghue in August 2014. That was during the Kerry man’s stellar Footballer of the Year season and while he hit the scoring mark then against Mayo, Higgins was still superb, particularly the few memorable block downs to deny O’Donoghue in the replay in Limerick.

James O’Donoghue has an attempt blocked down by Keith Higgins in 2014.

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

There were outings further up the pitch. He started the 2013 final at centre-forward before retreating to a defensive post before the end. Amongst all the Mayo final regrets, maybe that stands out the most. With Dublin having used all their subs, Eoghan O’Gara had to hobble around for the last quarter after damaging his hamstring. Higgins remained at close quarters and while it was difficult to appraise that scenario in a frantic finale, hindsight does make you wonder of how Mayo would have fared if he was released to join their attack before the end that day?

Latter years saw a stronger focus on rearguard duties but there were flashes of his fleet-footed and determined bursts that could unhinge defences in the goals he scored against Roscommon in the 2017 quarter-final replay and against Tyrone in the 2019 league.

Source: officialgaa/YouTube

His retirement is the sixth that Mayo have witnessed this month. It is a notable exodus and along with the departures in recent times of Alan Dillon and Andy Moran, it means so many of Mayo’s stalwarts that fought so hard for so long have departed.

There is a case to be made that Higgins was the best that Mayo produced in the modern era. He didn’t secure the Footballer of the Year accolade that others did while of the bunch that still remain there is time for Keegan, Boyle, Aidan O’Shea and Cillian O’Connor to embellish their CVs. 

But the athleticism, defensive instincts, versatility, hard-running and sheer persistence of Higgins over the years puts him in the upper echelons when these Mayo players are assessed.

And there is also the dual aspect to his story.

Hurling always consumed his interest, a constant presence for his club Ballyhaunis and different seasons with the Mayo team. He was centre-back for a Nicky Rackard Cup final success in 2016 in Croke Park, nine years after being the only Mayo player in a Connacht side of Galway hurlers under the tutelage of Ger Loughnane that contested an interprovincial decider at the stadium.

It was interesting to note yesterday in the Mayo GAA announcement that Higgins was retiring from inter-county football.

Perhaps there is another hurling chapter left to write in the story of a Mayo playing great.

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All-Star midfielder and Carnacon great open to Mayo return under new management

FORMER MAYO STAR Fiona McHale says she is open to a potential return to the Green and Red set-up in 2021 under new management. 

The Carnacon midfielder was one of 12 players to leave the panel in the summer of 2018, originally citing “player welfare issues” as the reason for their departure. She was vice-captain at the time.

After a lengthy saga and back-and-forth with then-manager Peter Leahy, and further drama involving Carnacon specifically, the group released a statement noting that “lack of communication, being undermined, intimidated, feeling isolated and eventually helpless in the entire situation” were the main reasons.

No Carnacon players — or then captain Sarah Tierney of Hollymount, among others — have since represented Mayo under Leahy’s watch.

But following the Westmeath native’s recent departure and the opening of applications for a new management team, questions are being asked about a potential return.

Long-serving McHale, an All-Star in 2016 who’s widely considered one of the best midfielders of the modern era, was happy to answer those questions on Midwest Radio yesterday, when asked if she was hopeful that she and her fellow Carnacon players could line out for Mayo again.

“Yeah, well I can only speak for myself personally,” she told Michael D. McAndrew.

“It’s always been a massive privilege playing for Mayo and it’s not anything that I ever took for granted. I played for Mayo for 14-15 years, and I obviously haven’t played now in the last three years.

“You only get a certain amount of time to play inter-county football. You’ve only a certain amount of years and then they’re gone.

“We obviously know there’s no manager in at the moment, or no management team, and we don’t know who that will be.

“If they saw me being able to add something to the squad, and if they saw me as part of their plans, I’d be definitely willing to have a conversation or think about it for sure.”

Despite controversial off-field matters and their disappointing championship exit at the hands of Armagh in 2020, Mayo have been a consistent force at senior level over the last few years.

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Following their last final appearance in 2017, they reached the quarter-final in ’18 and the semi in ’19.

With plenty of young talent in their ranks, the future certainly looks bright, and with a new county board in place — Des Phillips is the chairman — after problems in that department, it looks like 2021 will be all about the football.

McHale on the ball for Carnacon.

For now, McHale, who has dipped her toes into club coaching with the Claremorris mens’ senior football team, is focusing on the present, “tipping away at your own bits of training” through lockdown 3.0.

“It’s nice to have downtime,” the 33-year-old added, also reflecting on 2020 as a whole. “We were probably saying that during the first lockdown in March but obviously, it’s extended a lot longer than people envisaged.

“We had a relatively good year with Carnacon. We were very happy to win the county title at the end of the season. We were very disappointed to lose out to Kilkerrin-Clonberne in the Connacht championship. We probably didn’t do ourselves justice on the day, but they’re an excellent side and they’re only getting stronger every year.

“I’ll be looking forward to going back training again with the girls. I was playing with UL as well last year. It was literally the day before the O’Connor Cup was set to take place that everything was shut down because of Covid-19. We didn’t get to play it in the end.

“In a way now it’s kind of normal that I haven’t played a game in so long or anything like that but I don’t dwell on it. You just try and tip away at training and make the most of what you have really.”

In a wide-ranging interview, McHale also spoke about her role as vice chair of Next Gen, the GPA and WGPA, the late venue change of the 2020 All-Ireland semi-final and other off-field matters in ladies football, and AFLW being televised on TG4.

You can listen to the full interview here.

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‘What was put out to the general populous was basically that there was five troublemakers being let go’

HIS CLUB CAREER would go on for almost another decade, but Shane Curran’s days in the Roscommon jersey ended when John Maughan took charge of the county in 2006.

After two and a half seasons under Tommy Carr, Maughan’s appointment saw several senior players removed who were considered difficult to handle at the time.

Ex-Roscommon captain Curran was among the five dropped when the Mayo man came to the helm 15 years ago, an experience he recounts in his upcoming episode of Laochra Gael.

“For some reason, people weren’t happy with Tommy. I could never figure it out,” recalls Curran.

“I knew myself from the inside he was doing a brilliant job. He was removed as manager with two or three games to go in the league and I just felt we never recovered momentum after that. 

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He continues, “2005 peters out with a defeat to Louth and that was the end of that season. We weren’t to know it but it was the end of numerous inter-county careers.

“I remember vividly Sharon [his wife] coming in with the Roscommom Champion as it was at the time [saying], ‘Famous five have been dropped by new Roscommon manager.’ 

“What was put out to the general populous was basically that there was five troublemakers being let go. The county board never corrected the record which was wrong.”

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The former Athone Town goalkeeper goes on to speak about his decision to return to line out with club St Brigid’s as a 40-year-old, despite only recovering from a serious back operation.

“I ended up in front of the neurosurgeon in the Mater [Hospital] with a big decision to make. That’s to have a major back operation to try and just get back to walking, not even worrying about football.

“So I had the operation in 2010 and it was left in no uncertain terms that sport really is not an option going forward. It was nick or nothing whether I’d walk again actually.”

Defying medical opinion, Curran rejoined the St Brigid’s side and played a key role in their All-Ireland club success in 2013.

Shane Curran’s Laochra Gael airs on TG4 this Thursday at 9.30pm. 

Three-time Clare county winning manager takes over Limerick side Patrickswell

TOP LIMERICK HURLING club Patrickswell have turned to a highly successful Clare club manager to take charge of them for the 2021 season.

John O’Meara won three county titles as Sixmilebridge manager.

Source: INPHO

John O’Meara has been appointed as the new boss of Patrickswell and will be joined by Sean Chaplin as coach of a club that can call on the services of Limerick stars Cian Lynch, Aaron Gillane and Diarmaid Byrnes. He takes over from Limerick and club legend Ciaran Carey who has been in charge for the past couple of years.

Patrciskwell players celebrate their 2019 Limerick senior hurling final victory.

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

O’Meara steered Sixmilebridge to three Clare senior hurling titles during his six season reign between 2013 and 2018. Those successes arrived in 2013, 2015 and 2017 with the first a particular breakthrough as O’Meara guided the club to the top for the first time in 11 years.

Sixmilebridge did not manage to add a Munster title to their collection during that time, losing a final in 2013 to Na Piarsaigh.

Chaplin is also a Sixmilebridge native, who has been the Games Development Manager of Clare GAA in recent times along with having coaching roles with his home club and St Joseph’s Doora-Barefield.

*** Senior Hurlers management ***

Patrickswell GAA Club wish to announce that John O'Meara and Sean Chaplin have been ratified as Senior Hurling Manager and Coach.

We would like to extend a warm Patrickswell welcome to John and Sean.

— Patrickswell GAA (@patrickswellgaa) January 25, 2021

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Aside from their three well-known Limerick All-Ireland winners, Patrickswell can call upon other county senior panellists in Jason Gillane and Josh Considine, both also starting for the U20 team in 2020.

They won the county senior title in 2019 when Carey was manager and in 2016 when Gary Kirby oversaw the team. They exited at the semi-final stage of last year’s championship when losing a semi-final to eventual champions Na Piarsaigh by 1-25 to 0-17.

O’Meara has experience of Patrickswell from his own playing career. He lined out in 2000 when Sixmilebridge defeated the Limerick side by a point in the Munster senior club hurling semi-final.

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