9 awards for Limerick as 2020 All-Star hurling team is named

CHAMPIONS LIMERICK HAVE bagged nine winners in the 2020 PwC GAA-GPA All-Star hurling team.

Burke, Barron, Morrissey, Reid and Kelly amongst the winners.

John Kiely’s team were crowned league, Munster and All-Ireland winners last year, a level of dominance reflected in this selection that was announced tonight.

There is a third award for defender Seán Finn while Dan Morrissey, Cian Lynch and Aaron Gillane are the Limerick players honoured for the second time. There are first All-Stars for Limerick hurlers Nickie Quaid, Diarmaid Byrnes, Kyle Hayes, Gearoid Hegarty and Tom Morrissey.

Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO

Beaten finalists Waterford have three winners in defender Tadhg de Búrca, midfielder Jamie Barron and attacker Stephen Bennett, the latter the only other first-time player honoured this year.

Galway defender Daithi Burke and Kilkenny attacker TJ Reid are both included for the fifth time in the All-Stars while Clare’s marquee figure Tony Kelly wins his second accolade.

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From the five counties honoured, there are only three players from the previous 2019 team that make the cut here in Finn, Reid and Gillane.

2020 Hurling All-Star Team

Goalkeeper

1. Nickie Quaid (Limerick – Effin)

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Defenders

2. Seán Finn (Limerick – Bruff) – Previous winner in 2018 and ‘19.
3. Dan Morrissey (Limerick – Ahane) – Previous winner in 2018.
4. Daithí Burke (Galway – Turloughmore) – Previous winner in 2015, ‘16, ‘17 and ‘18.

5. Diarmaid Byrnes (Limerick – Patrickswell)
6. Tadhg de Búrca (Waterford – Clashmore Kinsalebeg) – Previous winner in 2015.
7. Kyle Hayes (Limerick – Kildimo Pallaskenry)

Midfielders

8. Jamie Barron (Waterford – Fourmilewater) – Previous winner in 2016 and ‘17.
9. Tony Kelly (Clare – Ballyea) – Previous winner in 2013.

Forwards

10. Gearóid Hegarty (Limerick – St Patrick’s)
11. Cian Lynch (Limerick – Patrickswell) – Previous winner in 2018.
12. Tom Morrissey (Limerick – Ahane)

13. Aaron Gillane (Limerick – Patrickswell) – Previous winner in 2019.
14. TJ Reid (Kilkenny – Ballyhale Shamrocks) – Previous winner in 2012, ‘14, ‘15 and ‘19.
15. Stephen Bennett (Waterford – Ballysaggart)

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Dublin’s Fenton and Limerick’s Hegarty are crowned 2020 GAA Player of the Year winners

DUBLIN’S BRIAN FENTON and Limerick’s Gearoid Hegarty have been announced as the PwC GAA-GPA Player of the Year award winners for 2020.

It marks the second time Fenton has won the award after being previously honoured in 2018 while Hegarty lands the hurling equivalent for the first time.

Dublin’s Ciaran Kilkenny and Mayo’s Cillian O’Connor were the other nominees for the football award while Clare’s Tony Kelly and Waterford’s Stephen Bennett were on the hurling shortlist.

Fenton becomes the first player other than Meath’s Trevor Giles (’96 and ’99) to win the Footballer of the Year award twice. It’s the seventh time Dublin have provided the best footballer from the season.

Hegarty is Limerick’s second winner of this accolade after Cian Lynch’s success in 2018.

More to follow…

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Mayo’s Mullin and Kilkenny’s Cody scoop Young Player of the Year awards

MAYO’S OISIN Mullin and Kilkenny’s Eoin Cody have collected the PwC Young Player of the Awards for their displays in the 2020 GAA championships.

The pair were announced as the victors for these individual awards on the ceremeny televised tonight on RTÉ.

Congratulations to Oisin Mullin Kilmaine Gaa on being named PWC GAA/GPA All Stars Young Player of the Year 2020 ⭐👏
#gaelicplayersassocation #PwCAllStars #GAABelong #GAA pic.twitter.com/AFZwosSR2O

— Mayo GAA (@MayoGAA) February 20, 2021

Well done to Eoin Cody on winning the @PwC Young Hurler of the Year for 2020. https://t.co/qfYNQpwZRQ

— Kilkenny GAA (@KilkennyCLG) February 20, 2021

It is the sixth time a Mayo player has won the young footballer award after Keith Higgins (2006), Cillian O’Connor (2011 and 2012), and Diarmuid O’Connor (2015 and 2016) were previous recipients.

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Mullin, who also won an All-Star football award this week, saw off Mayo team-mates Tommy Conroy and Eoghan McLaughlin for this honour. The Kilmaine youngster was in terrific form as Mayo lifted the Connacht title and reached the All-Ireland decider.

Cody emerged as a bright prospect on the Kilkenny team triumphed in the Leinster final and then contested the All-Ireland semi-final. He had progressed from helping his club Ballyhale Shamrocks lift All-Ireland titles before seeing off the claims of Waterford’s Iarlaith Daly and Tipperary’s Jake Morris, who were also on the shortlist.

He is the third Kilkenny player to secure this accolade after James ‘Cha’ Fitzpatrick in 2006 and his club-mate Adrian Mullen in 2019.

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The latest reminder of Limerick’s dominance as hurling Allstars round off 2020 campaign

THE LAST TIME nine All-Star awards were being handed out to one county in the wake of a hurling season was 2008.

That was the year that Kilkenny’s golden generation turned in their most complete display, blowing away Waterford with an awesome showing on the biggest day in the hurling calendar.

It replicated the feat achieved by Kilkenny teams twice previously in 1983 and 2000. No other county has supplied that total of players to an All-Star selection until last night when Limerick matched that figure.

In a subjective awards scheme, it stands as a benchmark of excellence. In reaching it with nine winners, Limerick provide further evidence of the brilliance they served up in the 2020 campaign. It was a turbulent and fractured hurling year yet John Kiely’s team coped best of all to take all the major hurling prizes on offer as a collective before they landed these honours as individuals.

The 2020 All-Star XV is a Limerick-controlled unit and that feels fitting. They went three better than the 2018 edition, although last year was played out under different terms and conditions, less games meant less scope for debate in examining the claims of various players.

Five first-timers were rewarded from the Limerick ranks. If Gearoid Hegarty was the star turn in the country, then Nickie Quaid, Diarmaid Byrnes, Kyle Hayes and Tom Morrissey put in the type of seasons that captured their growing influences. There is a feel-good factor to Quaid’s recognition, a player who toiled during some murky times for Limerick hurling and also maintains a fantastic family sequence of All-Star number ones after his father Tommy and cousin Joe before him.

There were second awards for Dan Morrissey, a player who stepped up when entrusted with the firefighting mission after Limerick’s full-back issue emerged, along with Cian Lynch and Aaron Gillane, who completed a brilliant personal night for the Patrickswell club.

The standard-bearer for Limerick is their number two Sean Finn, consolidating a spot he has held since 2018. His third successive award places him in the exalted company of Pat Hartigan, Joe McKenna and Gary Kirby, the only other Limerick hurlers to achieve that three-in-a-row, and is representative of his outstanding defensive play.

With one county providing two-thirds of the selection, there was not a huge amount left for the remaining to scrap over. Waterford suffered most on final days against Limerick in 2020 but stll got a trio of awards. Tadhg De Búrca’s year was rounded off a desperate note in tearing his cruciate ligament for the second time but his form was terrific prior to that in propelling Waterford deep into the championship. It was a breakout year for Stephen Bennett with his attacking performances, exemplified by the good stuff that enabled Waterford’s stirring second-half comeback against Kilkenny.

A third win for Jamie Barron afer his all-action midfield shows nudges him up amongst the county’s great in this particular pecking order. Brick Walsh on four and John Mullane on five are the only Deise performers ahead of him on this list.

For Galway’s Daithi Burke and Kilkenny’s TJ Reid, their fifth awards arrived as a signal of enduring hurling class. Burke’s winning run was interrupted in 2019 after four on the spin but he came back to collect this latest All-Star. It bumps him up to five, the same tally as Galway’s leaders Joe Canning, Joe Cooney and Pete Finnerty.

Reid’s maiden accolade arrived in 2012, his stature rose significantly with his blistering ’14-’15 form while as the elder statesman of the Kilkenny forward line, he has now spearheaded their fortunes in style as noted by being lauded in this fashion in ’19-’20.

And then rounding off the selection is Tony Kelly, a solo act who lit up Clare’s outings with dazzling score-taking against the likes of Limerick and Wexford. It would have appeared outlandish after his 2013 heroics to suggest he would be waiting seven seasons for his second honour but he was a lock after this year’s form.

Much like the football equivalent, there are less hard-luck stories this year than usual.

Will O’Donoghue is the primary one though after a year fuelling the engine room for Limerick. He may have received cameos in 2018, coming on in the 67th minute of the final, but his role has spiked in prominence since then for his team and he has rewarded that faith by management with the level of his performances.

Captain Declan Hannon must have been another strong Limerick challenger while Austin Gleeson had some excellent moments, doing plenty to channel Waterford in the right direction. At opposite ends of the pitch, Kilkenny’s Conor Delaney and Galway’s Brian Concannon played in a bright and impressive fashion.

But the overriding sense is of a team packed with Limerick leaders.

And that’s a theme in keeping with the hurling year.

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Here’s what’s coming up this week for members of The42

ANOTHER WEEK OF Level 5 lockdown ahead, but at least it’s another one packed with quality content for members of The42.

Thankfully, sport is keeping us occupied through these difficult times and there’s plenty more where that came from here.

Over the past few months, members have had access to host of exclusive podcasts, newsletters, prizes and insights, while also supporting our otherwise free and independent sports journalism.

So for those in the club — and for those considering signing up — here’s a flavour of what’s coming up for The42 members this week.

(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.)

On Monday’s Rugby Weekly Extra, regular analyst Eoin Toolan joins Murray Kinsella to look ahead to Round Three of the Six Nations, and discuss what Ireland need to get back on track against Italy.

There’ll be no shortage of Ireland-Italy preview and review content.

Source: Billy Stickland/INPHO

The focus switches to sportswriting on Tuesday as Gavin Cooney welcomes our latest guest to Behind The Lines. This week we’re delighted to welcome Tim Wigmore, sports journalist with the Daily Telegraph and author of The Best: How Elite Athletes Are Made.

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Previous guests on the series include Gary Lineker, Wright Thompson, Anna Kessel, Malachy Clerkin, Caitlin Thompson, Dion Fanning and last week’s contributor, John Leonard, with all episodes available to members of The42.

Coaching takes centre-stage on Wednesday as Shane Keegan‘s popular podcast, How To Win At Dominoes, continues. Neil Manchip, Shane Lowry’s coach and high performance director of Golf Ireland, is in the hot seat for what should be another great chat.

Others fascinating thinkers to feature across the two seasons are Paul Kinnerk, Dr Ed Coughlan, Cliodhna O’Connor, Padraig Harrington, Gary Keegan, Pat Lam and Cheddar Plunkett.

Lowry and Manchip back in 2010.

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On Saturday, members can avail of a bonus post-match episode of Rugby Weekly Extra, with immediate reaction to what unfolds in Rome for Andy Farrell’s men.

In more good news, Feburary’s Bylines Essay will also be available to digest. It’s with IFTA-winning director Dave Tynan, director of Dublin Oldschool and Heartbreak.

And as always, we’ll have our weekly Insiders newsletters for GAA, Soccer and Rugby fans spread out through the week.

Plenty there, and much more to come in the coming weeks and months.

So, if you fancy treating yourself to more top-class sports coverage while supporting our independent journalism, why not join us at members.the42.ie?

‘He was an incredible man’ – Hegarty dedicates Hurler of the Year award to late Limerick physio

THE DAY BEFORE he was named Hurler of the Year, Gearoid Hegarty and his Limerick team-mates formed a guard of honour for their late physio Mark van Drumpt, who died after a long battle with cancer.

“I got much more emotional than I thought I would,” admits Hegarty. “It just shows you how much he touched us all.”

During RTÉ’s All-Stars broadcast on Saturday night, the Limerick half-forward dedicated his award to van Drumpt.

Speaking now, Hegarty recalls how the physio helped him during his own U21 days.

“He was an incredible man. He was battling cancer. Mark has been physio for 13 years with Limerick. He spent five years with the footballers, and then eight years with us. He was involved with us in the U21s and that’s where I got to know him.

“I got a real bad injury in the Munster final in U21. We were playing Clare in Ennis and they were going for four-in-a-row and I got a real bad injury in my ankle.

“The specialist that I went to see in Santry was mad for me to get surgery in the few days after the game. There was three weeks between every game at U21, I always remember. It was a couple of days after the Munster final. We beat Clare and the specialist was mad for me [to have an operation. It was, ‘surgery, surgery, surgery.’

“Mark van Drumpt couldn’t enforce it more that he didn’t believe that I needed surgery. He was going against the specialist opinion that I didn’t need surgery.

“He said, “If you need surgery by the end of the year by all means you can go for surgery but I don’t think you should go for surgery now. Try rehab it as best you can and see what happens over the next couple of days and weeks.’

“We were playing Galway in the All-Ireland semi final and he did an unbelievable job to get me back for that game. He looked after me so well and it’s always something that I remembered.

“And that was probably my best game in the U21 that year. He was proven correct in his opinion. He went over and above what he needed to do for me in that moment and he always did that from then on. 

“He’s been fighting a savage battle with loads of ups and downs. He was told eight years ago that he had max two years to live. He was such a battler, an incredible person and full of craic.

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“Always someone you could go have a bit of craic with before training – getting strapped or rubbed or whatever. He’s with lads dealing with injuries at their worst times and he was always such a great guy do be dealing with. Unfortunately he took a bad turn in the last six months or so.

“Even the lead up to the All-Ireland final he was with us on the Friday night. He was with us at every training session. As somebody said other people with his sickness wouldn’t have been able to get out of bed and he was still coming to training with us.

“It was sad to see the deterioration. Sadly cancer took over in the last couple of months and it was quite sad. Obviously it was extremely sad that he passed, but it was nice to go to his funeral in difficult circumstances and give him a great send off yesterday.

“A young man leaving a young family behind – life is cruel but what can you do?”

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“Leonie [his wife] told me he was quite sick in 2018 as well and she asked him what was the one thing he wanted to see before he died. Because they always expected that it was coming.

“As I said he was told eight years that he had not long to live. He always said he just wanted to see Limerick win an All-Ireland.

“He got to see two really. It’s never a nice time to go but I suppose he did go just after we won a second one for him.”

Gearoid Hegarty and Will O’Donoghue celebrate as the final whistle sounded in the All-Ireland final.

Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO

Hegarty admitted that “people telling you that you weren’t good enough” was a massive motivator for him during his career. The night the hurling All-Stars were announced, his sister’s boyfriend showed him a message from a Limerick GAA internet forum in 2016 that read:

‘There’s no way Gearoid Hegarty should be on the panel. He’s too slow. His hurling isn’t good enough.’

After also picking up an All-Star, Hegarty said 2020 was even more special because of his own individual performance in the final. The St Patrick’s man was unhappy with his display in the 2018 win over Galway.

“I woke up the next morning with mixed emotions, in all honesty,” he said. “I was incredibly delighted [that we’d won]. The team is the most important thing 100 times over

“I was extremely proud that we had finally won the All-Ireland but I was disappointed with my own performance. I didn’t play as well as I would have liked, and I was taken off.

“This year, it was brilliant to be on the field when we won the All-Ireland. I know that sounds stupid but I wasn’t on the field in 2018. It was really nice to be on the field in 2020.

“In 2018, that’s probably a mistake I made leading into the All-Ireland final. I was after having a really top class quarter-final and semi-final, and I suppose I was going into the final with all guns blazing.

“There was probably a bit of attention on me going into that game. I probably read a bit too much into it. It’s pretty much impossible nowadays not to see it, unless you go into a dark room and don’t go on social media. 

“The thing I did this year was just processed it a bit more, just talked about it. I used Caroline a lot more in 2020 than I would have before. I sat down with her, gave her a phone call before the games, and just talked about what’s important.”

‘I was sort of in shock’ – Brian Fenton on congratulatory text from Jack O’Shea

AMID THE FLURRY of WhatsApp and Twitter messages Brian Fenton received on Saturday night, one stood out from the rest.

It arrived from Kerry legend Jack O’Shea, whose astonishing list of achievements in the game are being hunted down by the 27-year-old Dublin star.

O’Shea won Texaco Footballer of the Year four times, six All-Stars and seven All-Irelands. Fenton now has two GAA/GPA player of the year gongs, five All-Stars and six All-Irelands in his collection.

O’Shea has long been regarded as the greatest midfielder to ever play the game, though Fenton is already firmly in that discussion. 

“He got my number off someone I knew,” explains the Raheny man. “I came across his and that was a lovely moment and I text him back.

“I was sort of in shock,” he adds.

“I obviously never saw him play but he’s always regarded as the gold standard, and something that you’re always trying to achieve. So that was a lovely, lovely moment last night.”

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Fenton’s father, also called Brian, hails from Spa in Kerry and always held O’Shea in high esteem.

“I just showed him and he was amazed. He was trying to get the connection. I sent him a screenshot of it so we both have it.

“I remember I was at a Kerry game when I was 12 or 13 and we were sitting a couple of rows back in the Hogan Stand. Jacko, I didn’t know him I was a child, and he was walking up the sideline to do some punditry.

“There was a bit of cheering from the crowd and my dad stood up and roared, ‘Go on Jacko.’ He wouldn’t [usually] be massively cheering or anything like that but with that reaction I was like, ‘Jesus, this fella must have been good.’ So it obviously meant a lot to the family.

“For people like that to reach out to you it’s very kind. I said to my sister sitting beside me, remind me to do that in 30 or 40 years’ time to text that player. It’s a lovely touch, a really nice touch.”

Brian Fenton of Dublin with his PwC GAA/GPA Footballer of the Year award for 2020.

Source: Brendan Moran/SPORTSFILE

Fenton says he understands the decisions of Jack McCaffrey and, more recently, Paul Mannion to step away from Dublin duty given the commitment levels involved. 

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“It consumes your life,” he admits. “Paul Mannion has achieved everything and has just said, ‘Look I want to go and pursue other things in my life’ and that’s important.

“Jack obviously has his career and stuff and similarly with Paul but hopefully he’ll be rejoining us.

“From my perspective, I think there is loads of time after when I’m 32 or 33 or 39, whatever Cluxo [Stephen Cluxton] is, to do other things in my life. I just love playing Gaelic football and that’s where I get my kicks.”

All indications are that Cluxton will be returning to the Dublin fold in 2021. Fenton remarked that his failure to win an All-Star last season wouldn’t matter much to the Parnells goalkeeper.

“Every year you’d be in the dressing room after an All Ireland final and we’d all start chanting ‘One more year, Cluxo, one more year!’ He’s a freak, he’s in the best shape. He’d be sending me 10 minute YouTube videos of abs sessions he’s doing and I’d be thinking ‘How are you doing this?’ He’s a freak, in the best possible way.

“He doesn’t care too much for All-Stars I’d say. Everyone knows Stephen Cluxton is the greatest and it doesn’t take an All-Star in 2020 to remind us of that, he will always go down as the best ever.

“I’m just so lucky to know him personally. Just as I look over my laptop screen here, I see a picture from Philly McMahon’s wedding and it’s me and Stephen Cluxton in one of those photo booths.

“I have pictures of Stephen Cluxton all around my house, it’s a bit weird! He’s just a legend.”

– First published 12.46, 22 Feb

Cork star O’Connor retires after 9 All-Ireland senior wins and 11 All-Star awards

CORK CAMOGIE STAR Gemma O’Connor has announced her retirement from the inter-county game.

Gemma O’Connor in action in the 2018 All-Ireland senior final.

Source: Bryan Keane/INPHO

O’Connor is one of the most successful players in the sport having collected nine All-Ireland senior medals and has a record 11 All-Star awards.

The St Finbarr’s player confirmed her decision to the Evening Echo tonight that she was bringing a glittering playing career with Cork to a close. Her last appearance was in November’s All-Ireland semi-final loss against Kilkenny in Páirc Uí Chaoimh.

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O’Connor made her county senior debut in 2002 and celebrated the first of her All-Ireland triumphs that year before the last one arrived in 2018. Her run of All-Star recognition began in 2004, the start of six awards in a row, before the record-setting 11th was landed in 2018.

Gemma O’Connor celbrates Cork’s victory in 2018.

Source: Bryan Keane/INPHO

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Inter-county GAA to resume at Level 4 with May start at earliest for 2021 season

THE GAA 2021 season is set to start in May at the earliest with inter-county GAA only permitted under Level 4 restrictions after Government’s revised ‘Living With Covid-19′ plan was issued today.

Taoiseach Micheál Martin revealed that Level 5 Covid-19 restrictions will be extended in Ireland until 5 April, a decision which means inter-county training is unlikely to resume until after that date.

With county teams expected to be given a four-week pre-season, the competitive inter-county action could then begin in early May.

There was confusion initially after the document was released with the Government grouping elite sport and inter-county GAA as only permissible at Level 4. This was an error with it later clarified that elite sport can continue as planned, meaning Ireland’s Six Nations campaign, the start of the League of Ireland season, and horse racing remain on the sporting agenda for the month of March.

In another GAA development, senior club championship games can now be played under Level 3 restrictions after the release of today’s plans. Last year such matches could only take place when the country had entered Level 2.

The Taoiseach did raise the prospect of a GAA season commencing in May along with non-contact training for juvenile players, when he revealed that are a review of the Government’s plan will take place before 5 April.

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“A review will look into the possibilitiy of allowing some outdoor gatherings, some sport, construction and an increase of the 5km travel limit.

“We will then look at, coming up to the fifth of April, what more we can do in relation to some sports and other activities.

“And we will wait until the week before the fifth of April to make an assessment on that.”

– Reporting by Fintan O’Toole and Sinead Farrell 

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Retirement decision still lingering for Dublin star but AFLW move off the cards…for now

EACH YEAR SINCE 2018, Dublin forward Lyndsey Davey has contemplated retirement from inter-county duty. 

She linked up with the squad as a 14-year-old in 2004, played in her debut All-Ireland final at 15 and won her first All-Star when she was just 16.

At 31, she has spent well over half her life as a Dublin senior footballer. 

After being coaxed back into the set-up by Mick Bohan each winter, Davey planned on making campaign number 17 her last in 2020. 

A firefighter based in Dublin airport, Davey remained coy about her plans in the aftermath of the four-in-a-row victory and admits she has yet to make a decision about returning in 2021.

“No one knows what is happening at the moment with regards to the season ahead so I haven’t made a decision at the moment,” she says.

“The body is good, and I suppose with everything that is going on with Covid work is my main priority. Thankfully Mick has been great there hasn’t been any pressure on committing to the season.

“Normally with work I’m very reliant on getting cover for my shifts from other crews but because of Covid we can’t swap crews so we have to work our own roster so that is a challenge we’d have to look into.

“Look, there‘s no decision having to be made yet because we don’t know what the season will look like. Are we looking at another winter championship possibly? Thankfully we are a bit out from that so there’s time to decide what we want to do.”

Three of her Dublin team-mates – Sinead Goldrick, Lauren Magee and Niamh McEvoy – are part of the growing Irish cohort playing in the AFLW.

It’s an opportunity Davey has considered in the past and while she hasn’t ruled out the prospect of heading Down Under at some point in the future, it’s unlikely to happen anytime soon. 

“I was looking into it at the beginning of last year but [decided not to go] just because of my career which is something I am very focused on. I would have started my paramedic training last year, I explored the option but I was happy to stay here with my job to be honest.

“I would never turn down an opportunity and I always definitely explore the options and see. At the moment I am doing my paramedic training and my internship is a two-year programme so I only started that in September so I have still a good way to go in that before getting qualified as a paramedic.

“That would be my main focus at the moment. It would definitely be an opportunity at the moment that I would not see as feasible and I am happy in my career.”

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If she does decide to make the move in a couple of years, she need only look to the likes of Cora Staunton and Brid Stack for inspiration. 

39-year-old Staunton scored four goals for Greater Western Sydney Giants last weekend, while Stack spent two seasons in inter-county retirement before she signed with the same club aged 34 ahead of 2021.

“I don’t know if my body will be in the same position at that age, but we’ll see what happens,” she says of Mayo great Staunton.

“I’m just trying to get through year to year at the moment. It goes to show what you can do when you do look after your body. She’s had a really long career and she’s still flying, which is massive credit to herself.” 

Because of the short AFLW season, Ladies footballers can fly home after it finishes and line out with their counties in the All-Ireland championship. But as the Australian league expands, Irish players may be forced to chose between GAA and professional sport.

“At the moment I think it is fantastic for the players who have the opportunity go over because that is what they want to do and that is great,” Davey says. 

“We have girls over there and it is great they are able to do that but I think in the long term every season there seems to be more games added to the schedule which means the season is going further and further into the year.

“The finals are in April this year so if this was a normal season it would be encroaching further and further into the league. Whereas if that goes into mid-summer, down the line it is going to have be a case of girls making the decision of either playing one or the other.

“But then it is up to how understanding a manager will be if a player misses half the season and the comes back just for the beginning of the championship.

“I think that is something that will cause an issue for players down the line where they will have to make that decision.”

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