Dubs star Goldrick ruled out of AFLW Finals with hamstring injury

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DUBLIN STAR SINÉAD Goldrick has been ruled out of this year’s AFLW Finals after undergoing surgery for a hamstring which she picked up in Melbourne’s victory over Fremantle last weekend.

A report on the Melbourne Demons website reads that scans on the injury later confirmed that Goldrick had torn the hamstring tendon.

The Dublin defender subsequently underwent surgery on Wednesday following a consultation with a surgeon.

This is a huge blow for Goldrick who is in her second season with Melbourne, along with Dubs teammate Niamh McEvoy. The pair missed out on the AFLW Finals last year due to the Covid-19 pandemic, and injury will prevent Goldrick from lining out again this year.

Goldrick has been a star performer for Melbourne in the 2021 campaign, featured six times and missing just two games with unrleated injuries.

Fellow Dublin star Lauren Magee, who is in her debut season in the AFLW, also joins Goldrick and McEvoy at the Demons.

Some unfortunate news for one of our Irish stars. 😔

Sinead Goldrick will miss the rest of the @aflwomens season with a hamstring injury.

📝: https://t.co/u4YNO5T28e

— Melbourne AFLW (@MelbourneAFLW) March 25, 2021

“It was a devastating blow for Sinead, who has quickly become a much-loved, respected, and very important member of our team. Her elite speed and fierce competitiveness will be missed as we head into the finals next week, ” General Manager of AFLW Daniel McPherson told Melbourne Media.

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“We are grateful that Sinead was able to get the corrective surgery done so swiftly. This gives her the opportunity to start a structured rehab program sooner than would otherwise have been the case, under the watchful eyes of our medical team, before heading back to Ireland later in the year.

“She will have the added benefit of a ‘rehab buddy’ in the coming weeks, with Krstel [Petrevskialso] undergoing the same procedure yesterday.”

Tuohy returns from injury for 2020 Grand Finalists Geelong as new season continues

ZACH TUOHY HAS returned from injury for Geelong ahead of their AFL Round 2 clash with Brisbane at home on Friday.

The Laois native missed his side’s opening round defeat to Adelaide after previously picking up a back injury in February. 

The AFL website writes that Tuohy has been recalled to the starting team for the 2020 Grand Finalists after impressing in a VFL hitout, which is the reserve league.

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He slots into the centreline of the team that will host Brisbane at the GMHBA Stadium, while Kerry man — and 2015 All-Ireland minor winning captain — Mark O’Connor is also named to start in the backs.

Tuhoy reached a significant milestone in his AFL career when he became the second Irish player to reach 200 AFL appearances after Jim Stynes, having joined Geelong in 2017 from Carlton.

The Cats went on to reach the Grand Final last year, where they lost out to Richmond in what was his 205th AFL game.

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O’Connor made his debut for Geelong in 2017 and reached the half century mark of AFL appearances in 2020.

Club call and family first – Down star eyeing glory after AFLW stint and three-and-a-half years away

EXACTLY A YEAR ago this week, Down footballer Clara Fitzpatrick packed up three-and-a-half years of her life in Australia and returned home.

And after breaking back into the county set-up straight away, she is aiming to help Down back to the Senior ranks again.

Down star Clara Fitzpatrick lined out with St Kilda in the AFLW last season.

Source: PA Images/Inpho.

Having represented the Mourne County for a handful of years before she emigrated to Australia in 2016, Fitzpatrick, 30, went on to play Australian Rules on a social and professional basis, before the Covid-19 outbreak proved to be the trigger to come back home.

She remains uncertain as to where her long term plans lie, but for now, she is determined to make the most of her second chance with Down.

“I was planning on coming home last May for a holiday, but with everything that was happening we just decided to up and go,” said the Bryansford club player.

“It was a bit chaotic, three-and-a-half years wrapped up in three days. It was very much pack up and say your goodbyes.

“It was amazing to come home. I feel it was the right call. I wasn’t sure if I’d ever get to play with the club again, you don’t know when your last game will be or how many years you have left. Last summer was brilliant, to get that bit of football with the club and my old team-mates. To be honest it was like I had never left, which is a good feeling.

“Just being close by with my family, that’s the big thing that Covid has shown us. Family means everything so to be at home with the family and friends, you can’t replace that.”

Since her return along with her travelling companions – sister Laura and friend Aoife – Fitzpatrick is back working in her local community. Her physiotherapy skills are in high demand, rehabbing patients in the community post-surgery, and she admits she’s delighted to be able to get out and meet people in such a draining lockdown.

Playing with the St Kilda club in Melbourne, Fitzpatrick had a very successful first season in the AFLW, but being unable to work in her trade under the strict sports visa restrictions meant she wasn’t in a position to play a second season.

“Most of the Irish girls go over on sports visas, but I had already been sponsored to work as a physio over there and I gave that up to go on the sports visa to play. I did give up a lot.

Fitzpatrick wears the Down shirt in 2012 and battles with Leitrim’s Lisa McWeeney.

Source: SPORTSFILE.

“Coming into the second year, St Kilda had offered me the sports visa to come back, but I wanted to have the opportunity to work as a physio and play so I applied for permanent residency. The Australian girls can both work and play, but because of our visas we were quite limited in what we could do.

“St Kilda were very good, they pushed hard for me to get an extension, but we had to call it by mid-November. They placed me on the inactive list as opposed to delisting me, with the expectation that I’ll be coming out to play next season.

“If it wasn’t for Covid I would still probably be in Australia. In an ideal world, the plan is to head back out in September or October but with Covid, everything is so unpredictable. With the way it’s gone it’s really hard to make any plans. I’ll see how things go over the next few months and play it by ear.

“To be honest I’ll be happy to play any sort of football this year. After the last couple of months there has been nothing in terms of collective sport, it’ll just be good to get out training and be able to play matches of any description again.”

After playing right through the underage grades for Down, Fitzpatrick made the step up to the senior team at the turn of the last decade. She quickly nailed down her spot in the middle of the field, a role she returned to in the most recent championship.

A two-point defeat to eventual champions Meath spelled the end of their 2020 season, but she thinks the team has the potential to achieve great things under the management of Caoibhe Sloan and Peter Lynch.

“It was really good to be back involved. Peter and Caoibhe have been amazing for Down Ladies, they have an unreal set up. They have focused on the development of young players coming through. They set high standards; it’s an impressive set-up to walk in to.

“As a team, we were a bit disappointed in the Meath game. Meath were very strong contenders and went on to do very well in the end, but we just weren’t able to catch them and we lost by a point or two. We can just learn from them and we can push on and work on our weaker points in the game.”

Even though her exploits with the oval ball caught the eye in recent years, Fitzpatrick singles out her success when representing Australasia at the 2019 GAA World Games as her career highlight.

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Fitzpatrick (right) embraces her teammate Tricia Melanaphy after helping Australasia to victory over Parnell Ladies at the 2019 Renault GAA World Games Ladies Football Irish Cup Final at Croke Park.

Source: SPORTSFILE.

A serious knee injury denied her a chance to play in Down’s 2014 Intermediate All-Ireland success, but winning any title at Croke Park is hard to beat.

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“That was amazing. Any ladies footballer’s dream is to play in Croke Park. I had missed out on the opportunity there before with Down and I am 30 now, so to have that opportunity to be able to play in Croke Park was unbelievable.

“I knew a few of the girls from playing college, county and provincial football over the years. It was pretty amazing, just a great experience from start to finish. To get the result we did was definitely one of the highlights in my life.”

Getting back to Croke Park and winning there with Down is priority number one now, she says.

“Collectively, the big goal will be to win the Intermediate title with Down. This Down team is a young team, we have some real young talent coming through.

“We want to become a senior team in the next few years, we want to work our way into Division 2 and then Division 1. It will be a year of hard work and, individually, everyone has been fantastic over the lockdown. Once we get back on the field again it’ll be great to be able to do it together again.”

Cavan, Dublin and Mayo players to feature as 2021 AFLW finals begin next weekend

THERE WILL BE plenty Irish interest in this year’s AFLW finals after the fixtures for the opening knockout games were revealed today.

The final set of fixtures in the regular series took place this weekend with the completion of the Round 9 fixtures today.

The Adelaide Crows and the Brisbane Lions have both booked spots in the preliminary finals on the weekend of 10-11 April. Clare’s Ailish Considine is part of the Crows squad while Tipperary’s Orla O’Dwyer is involved with the Lions, impressing in their 38-36 loss yesterday to the Melbourne Demons.

They will wait to discover the identity of their opponents with the winners set to emerge from next weekend’s elimination finals.

Melbourne, who have Dublin All-Ireland winners in Lauren Magee, Sinead Goldrick and Niamh McEvoy in their setup, will take on Fremantle next Saturday. Magee was the only one to feature in the success over Brisbane yesterday with Goldrick ruled out for the season after tearing a hamstring last week.

Collingwood will have Mayo’s Sarah Rowe and Cavan’s Aisling Sheridan, who both played today in their 31-17 loss to the Crows, available as they get set to take on North Melbourne, who will have Mayo’s Aileen Gilroy flying the Irish flag.

Here’s the full set of fixtures for the upcoming finals.

2021 AFLW Finals

Saturday 3 April – Elimination Finals

  • Melbourne v Fremantle
  • Collingwood v North Melbourne
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Weekend 10/11 April – Preliminary Finals

  • Adelaide v Melbourne/Fremantle 
  • Brisbane v Collingwood /North Melbourne

Weekend 17/18 April – AFLW Grand Final

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GAA county senior teams can train from 19 April, golf courses and tennis courts open from 26 April

Updated Mar 30th 2021, 6:31 PM

SENIOR COUNTY GAA teams will be allowed to return to collective training from 19 April, while golf courses and tennis courts will open again a week later on 26 April.

That latter date will also be when non-contact underage sport training in outdoor settings can again take place after the Government this evening announced the phased easing of public health restrictions during the month of April.

The green light for GAA inter-county collective training had been expected since earlier today to be from 19 April but it has been confirmed this evening that it is for senior teams only and does not include U20 or minor squads.

The resumption of GAA inter-county training will occur a week after club training at underage and adult level is allowed to take place again in Northern Ireland.

🔸 From 19 April: High performance sports including inter-county GAA training returns.

🔸 From 26 April: Tennis outdoors and golf can resume, as well non-contact training for under 18s.

— TheJournal.ie (@thejournal_ie) March 30, 2021

In a statement this evening, the GAA described the news ‘as hugely welcome’, while again stressing the importance of ‘no collective training sessions’ before the indicated return dates.

After this announcement, the GAA hope ‘to be in a position to confirm the fixture calendar and competition structures for inter county by the end of next week’.

The new date for training resumption would potentially put the weekend of 15-16 May as the starting date for competitive matches as the GAA have consistently stated their desire to allow teams have a four-week collective pre-season.

Certain high performing athletes ‘as approved by Sport Ireland’ can also train again from this date. Both of these are now permitted by the Government’s decision to expand elite sports to include them.

A general view of Tullamore Golf Club.

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

From 26 April it is allowed for ‘outdoor sports facilities’ to reopen around the country, that will include golf courses and tennis courts. Indoor facilities including clubhouses linked to these sports are to remain closed.

Non-contact outdoor training for underage teams across all sports is permitted from this date. These training sessions must be in pods of up to 15 and includes all exercise activites that can be delivered outdoors including dance. The measures here are subject to the prevailing public health situation.

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The FAI responded tonight to the easing of restrictions by acknowledging ‘the work of Government and its agencies to facilitate the return to training on 26 April, in pods of 15 for all underage players’.

CEO Jonathan Hill also assured ‘all amateur adult teams that this return for underage players is the first step towards a return to football for all grassroots players as Ireland eases out of lockdown’.

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GAA to confirm new fixture plan next week, warn against early return to training

Updated Mar 31st 2021, 12:04 PM

THE GAA WILL finalise competition structures and dates for the 2021 inter-county season by the end of next week following yesterday’s government announcement.

Collective senior inter-county training is permitted to resume from 19 April and it is expected that a regionalised National League will begin in mid-to-late May.

But in a letter to club and county secretaries last night, GAA president Larry McCarthy and director general Tom Ryan did not offer any indication of when the leagues and championships will kick-off. 

They also warned that counties who resume training early will be punished and potentially put the return to play “in serious jeopardy”.

With clubs in Northern Ireland permitted to return to training on 12 April, counties by law could also train. But Croke Park have stressed the need to comply with the collective training ban from counties in the north and south.

“These are hugely welcome developments and allow us finally to begin planning on-field activity for the remainder of 2021,” the letter co-signed from McCarthy and Ryan said.

“However, it should also be noted that these dates are conditional and will very much depend on what happens in terms of the overall COVID-19 picture in the coming weeks.

“For that reason, it is more important than ever that no collective training sessions are held between now and the Government indicated return dates. Breaches in this context will not only be dealt with under our own Rules but would likely put the broader plan to return to activity in serious jeopardy.”

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Before the 2021 master plan is unveiled next week, the GAA will seek further clarity on aspects of the return to training and games.

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“We also need to finalise competition structures and dates for the up-coming inter-county season, as well as ensuring advice is provided for all clubs in relation to how they can safely recommence underage activity (and in the case of the six counties, adult club training from 12 April),” it added.

GAA express ‘frustration and extreme disappointment’ after Dublin training breaches Covid-19 rules

Updated Apr 1st 2021, 11:25 AM

THE GAA HAVE confirmed that they will “pursue” allegations of Covid-19 training breaches “at the earliest opportunity,” and will “invoke any necessary disciplinary processes as appropriate”.

In a strongly-worded statement, the Association expressed “frustration and extreme disappointment” at recent reports of breaches of GAA and Government guidelines.

This morning, the Irish Independent published photos of Dublin players at an early-morning training session yesterday. It’s reported that at least nine players from the All-Ireland six-in-a-row winning side participated in the session at Innisfails GAA club in Balgriffin.

On Tuesday night, the Irish Examiner reported that Gardaí were investigating possible breaches of Covid-19 regulations with training sessions held by a club in West Cork.

These reports come the week it was announced that collective senior inter-county training is permitted to resume from 19 April, with a regionalised National League expected to start in May.

A letter was also issued to club and county secretaries afterwards, warning them that counties who resume training early will be punished and potentially put the return to play “in serious jeopardy”.

GAA statement in the wake of reports of training breaches. pic.twitter.com/Ob0pKpxOLX

— Fintan O'Toole (@fotoole13) April 1, 2021

The GAA’s statement, in full, reads:

“It is with frustration and extreme disappointment that the GAA acknowledges reports today of a potential breach of both our own Covid guidelines and those of the Government relating to the restrictions in place around team training.

“Less than 48 hours ago, the Association reiterated its commitment to these current guidelines and called for continued compliance in the weeks ahead.

“The GAA will pursue the allegations with the units in question at the earliest opportunity and will invoke any necessary disciplinary processes as appropriate.

“In the meantime, while we acknowledge that the overwhelming majority of Counties and Clubs have complied in an appropriate and responsible way with the restrictions currently in place, we once again call on our members and units to uphold the integrity of the Association as part of our ongoing efforts to play our role in thwarting the virus and ensuring a return to activity when it is safe to do so.”

Former GAA President Seán Kelly this morning called for Croke Park to issue a “formal sanction” after a number of Dublin footballers were reported to have breached Covid-19 restrictions.

“If it is true it is surprising and very disappointing – especially coming from the six in a row Dubs,” Kelly said on Newstalk Breakfast this morning. “There is a responsibility with that accolade to give good example.

“Every club and every county in the country are probably frustrated they can’t get back out on the field but there is a roadmap there; the GAA have outlined the guidelines and everyone will have to stick by them.

“I think the GAA will certainly have to look at it very strongly and you have to be consistent in the way you apply the rules.

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“They apply to everybody, whether you are All-Ireland champions or just at the bottom of the ladder.

“This is a serious situation and hopefully it was a once-off breach that won’t happen again because if it goes without some form of formal sanction then others will say why can’t we do the same?

“So, it has created a very difficult dilemma for the GAA.”

Earlier this year, suspensions were handed out to Down and Cork GAA over training breaches in relation to Covid-19. Down football manager Paddy Tally was suspended for eight weeks over a gathering, while Cork football boss Ronan McCarthy was hit with a 12-week ban following a team-building session in Youghal.

– with reporting from Emma Duffy

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Dublin training session a fresh headache for GAA as they close in on return to play date

IT’S BEEN A week of contrasting GAA developments.

Tuesday evening brought some welcome news for GAA chiefs that inter-county senior teams had received the green light to resume collective training from 19 April.

Seven days after that on 26 April, underage outdoor sessions in small pods of up to 15 can be held again.

The easing of restrictions didn’t provide certainty for county minor and U20 teams, it continues to see club players stuck in a waiting game before they can train again and there’s no clear roadmap for the GAA on the fixtures front for 2021.

But it was a positive after a turbulent start to the year and pointed to hope that they could get their games back up and running in the coming months.

Then the news has started to turn.

The GAA issued a reminder to counties and clubs in the wake of Tuesday’s Government announcement to be mindful of those return to train dates and to avoid the temptation to rush back before then.

On Tuesday night, the Irish Examiner reported that Gardaí were investigating possible breaches of Covid-19 regulations with training sessions held by a club in West Cork.

This morning the Irish Independent have reported that nine of Dublin All-Ireland winning team gathered for a collective session in Innisfails GAA club yesterday morning for a non-contact session, accompanied with photographs of their kickaround.

The club in Balgriffin has long been utilised during the successful run enjoyed by the Dublin footballers.

“Innisfails wouldn’t be one of those illustrious names normally associated with Dublin GAA, hidden away in the junior ranks on the fringes of the city, out in that no-man’s land between the airport and the concrete sprawl,” wrote Bernard Brogan in the opening chapter of his autobiography ‘The Hill’.

For Dublin to hold a training gathering at the pitch on Carrs Lane is not unusual but these are not typical times and this session will spark a more heated reaction.

It is a thorny issue for the GAA to grapple with. They have come down hard already this year on county managers who found themselves in hot water when defying training bans. Cork manager Ronan McCarthy and his Down counterpart Paddy Tally were both slapped with suspensions on the back of their team gatherings in January, at a time when Covid-19 numbers had escalated to alarmingly high levels.

Cork boss Ronan McCarthy.

Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO

Down boss Paddy Tally

Source: Philip Magowan/INPHO

What will the official response be now to a training session held by the biggest and best team in the country, who have set the benchmark in Gaelic football for the past decade?

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On the one hand it will be argued as to what harm was done by the training session. It took place in an outdoor setting, proven to be safer in terms of the transmission of the virus, the photographs point to all the players socially-distancing and there are clear benefits for group physical exercise.

Anecdotally it would seem not too dissimilar to scenes being played out in public parks around the country amongst smaller numbers over recent weeks with the improvement in the weather. After months confined indoors, the clamour for a shift to outdoor life has grown louder.

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But that indifference amongst some at it being regarded as front page national news will be countered by those who see the GAA as getting preferential treatment over the last while.

The celebratory scenes in the wake of the club finals around the country last autumn provoked fury in some quarters. That inter-county teams were approved on Tuesday for a return to training is not something that is widely welcomed. Gaelic football and hurling may be national sports but they’re not followed avidly by everyone in the nation.

With people still out of work and other services still shut, there will be frustration that the GAA was seemingly placed at the head of the queue in activities that are seeking to return to normal. This story adds to it and for those outside the association it may feed into the notion that the GAA continue to bend the rules during the Covid crisis.

For the GAA at national level the reaction will be interesting given the profile of the team and players involved. They are still trying to figure out what formats to put in place for their senior leagues and championships this year. Examining the calendar seemed their main current focus with the new fixtures plan due to be announced at the end of next week but this is an added complication.

On Tuesday the GAA warned teams that early returns to training would potentially put the return to play ‘in serious jeopardy’.

This morning they expressed ‘frustration and extreme disappointment’ over the reports and will ‘invoke any necessary disciplinary processes as appropriate’.

It remains to be seen if this affects the hopes to get everything up and running again in a few weeks.

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Dublin suspend manager Dessie Farrell for 12 weeks following players’ Covid breach

Updated Apr 1st 2021, 5:36 PM

DUBLIN GAA HAVE suspended men’s senior football manager Dessie Farrell for 12 weeks after a number of Dublin footballers were photographed attending a training session yesterday morning in breach of Covid-19 guidelines.

The Dublin County Board apologised “unreservedly” on behalf of its players and management, describing the training session as “a serious error of judgement”.

A statement released on Thursday evening read: “Dublin GAA acknowledge that, following an investigation this afternoon, there was a breach of Covid-19 guidelines yesterday morning.

The County Management Committee have suspended Dublin Senior Football manager Dessie Farrell for 12 weeks with immediate effect. The Dublin senior football management and players recognise that this was a serious error of judgement and apologise unreservedly for their actions.

An Garda Síochána said earlier on Thursday that it was in the process of making enquiries into reports of the regulation breaches after photographs of the morning training session were published in today’s Irish Independent.

The GAA also released a statement to confirm that they would pursue the allegations “at the earliest opportunity,” and would “invoke any necessary disciplinary processes as appropriate”.

In response to a query from The42, Gardaí said they would issue fines if potential breaches of the public health regulations are identified. 

“An Garda Síochána is making enquiries into reports of alleged breaches of Covid Regulations,” a Garda spokesperson said. 

“The Health Act 1947 (Section 31A-Temporary Restrictions) (Covid-19) (No.10) Regulations 2020, as amended, are currently in force.

“Regulation 11 places restriction on training events. Regulation 11 is not declared to be a penal regulation.

“If Gardaí identify potential breaches of the public health regulations (travel restrictions) a Fixed Payment Notice may be issued where appropriate.

“An Garda Síochána has no further comment at this time.”

Speaking on Newstalk’s Lunchtime Live today, Minister of State for Sports, Jack Chambers said action needed be taken. 

“I was really disappointed and frustrated to see those photographs,” said Minister Chambers. “Many GAA players are important role models.

“In fairness to many inter-county players, they’ve shown great leadership over the last 12 months in trying to reinforce the public health message in our response to Covid.

“So to see a training session in breach of the rules is extremely disappointing and surprising as well. I know the GAA has said in a statement in the last 48 hours that any breaches will be properly dealt with and we need to see that now.

“It absolutely is [a slap in the face to Dublin GAA supporters] and the majority of people are upholding the public health advice when it comes to really important occasions like funerals, like family gatherings – many people are isolated or frustrated and I accept people are in a very difficult space.

“If we see blatant breaches of the rules, that undermines the integrity of the broader public health messaging and that’s why I think many people will be very disappointed this morning when they read what has happened.”

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Meanwhile, Alan Dillon TD, who is Fine Gael’s spokesperson for Tourism and Sport, also called for clarity on the incident.

“The photographic evidence in today’s Irish Independent of a number of Dublin footballers and a coach engaging in a training session is highly disappointing,” said the former Mayo footballer.

“An immediate investigation must take place and I believe it is up to Dessie Farrell and the Dublin management team to make a statement in relation to this breach of the public health guidelines. Innisfails GAA club must also clarify why training was allowed to take place on their grounds.

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“It is possible that the Dublin players shown training in the photos were there under pressure from the Dublin management team. We all understand the ultra-competitive environment of the Dublin panel but there is no excuse for an organised training session in breach of Covid guidelines.

“I would warn against any knee jerk reactions or indeed targeting of abuse at the players in question here. We need a full investigation to establish what happened.”

Alan Dillon during his playing days with Mayo.

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

“We are currently at the highest level of health restrictions. The reason for this is simple; to save lives and keep people out of hospitals.

“Covid numbers are still very high and our frontline workers, made up of thousands of GAA members, are out working for us every day in hospitals, ambulances, schools, at garda checkpoints, shops and across a variety of sectors. They are our championship team and are playing a blinder.

“In the GAA world, the Dublin senior football team are the most revered. They have achieved the ultimate success repeatedly and are deservedly lauded for that. However with that comes responsibility in their role as GAA and sports ambassadors – responsibility to the GAA community, their clubs, to their families, supporters and to those who look up to emulate them.

“This training session in Malahide simply should not have happened. Organised training cannot take place currently – it is against the national health guidelines and GAA rules. It is particularly galling that this should take place mere days after a circular from the GAA made it clear that there should be no organised events or training.

“We are all eager to return to GAA pitches with clubs and counties. But we can only do so in a safe manner. Blatant breaches of the rules such as this one, will inevitably delay a return. By sticking to the guidelines and supporting each other, we can all get back to the sports we love.”

‘One of the all-time greats in Cork’ – saluting the career of a nine-time All-Ireland winner

AT THE END of it all, it seems there isn’t one game that can sum her up.

Nine All-Ireland medals and a record 11 All-Stars — in both attacking and defensive positions — goes some way towards illustrating her distinction. But it still only scratches the surface of Gemma O’Connor’s imprint on camogie.

Three people from her county and club camogie connections were consulted for this documentation of her inter-county career, as well as one of her colleagues in the Defence Forces. And none of them could identify just one game that captures the depth of her quality.

There’s long pauses and racking of brains as they go back through the archives in their mind, trying to muster an answer that can do her justice. Instead of a game or a memory, they each settle on one word to cover the spread — consistency.

Because O’Connor didn’t just perform once in a while. Or even every couple of games. She was stepping into the breach game on game before anyone needed to look for her help. A colossus of her sport in every way.

“You were actually afraid to come up against her because you would literally be blown out of it,” says four-time All-Ireland winner, and fellow Cork legend, Jenny O’Leary about the towering strength of her former county teammate. 

O’Connor’s recent decision to retire from Cork is not hugely surprising given the length of her service that stretches all the way back to 2002. She’s the latest from her generation of talents to step away as the conveyor belt keeps churning out fresh rebel blood.

But she will be a notable absentee when the 2021 season gets underway.

The St Finbarr’s star will be regarded as one of Cork’s “all-time greats,” according to another one of O’Connor’s Cork teammates and coaches, Fiona O’Driscoll.

And when you retrace the steps, it’s clear that the growth of O’Connor’s status was years in the making.

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One To Watch

O’Leary is a few years older than O’Connor, but for the most part, their Cork careers ran alongside one another. They were both starlets on the 2002 team that defeated Tipperary in the All-Ireland final. 

It was their first time to taste O’Duffy Cup success, with a 17-year-old O’Connor starring in the half-back line. The match report in the Irish Independent, written by Cliona Foley, reads that O’Connor “refused to give any quarter” in that game. Even as a teenager, she was catching the eye.

O’Leary’s memory of her talent goes back even further than that.

“I remember her even at underage and people were talking about her. I think it was U12, people were talking about this young Gemma O’Connor and she’s one to watch.

Gemma O’Connor storming out onto the Croke Park pitch.

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

“I used to watch her myself and she was just so skilful. She had it from a very young age, she just had it. People always talk about people who have a bit of magic and she definitely had that.”

O’Driscoll was the star of that 2002 All-Ireland, pocketing 3-2 in a nine-point victory over the Premier County. After retiring from inter-county camogie, she later joined the Cork backroom team following an invitation from then-manager John Cronin.

Coming from a PE teaching background, she was initially recruited as a physical trainer. That later developed into a coaching role which ran for the 2005, 2006 and 2007 seasons. Cork won two more All-Irelands during the time of her involvement.

“I suppose you have such confidence as a young player when you come onto a team and nothing seems to faze you,” O’Driscoll recalls of what she saw from O’Connor from her sideline view.

Intemperance of youth may have been a slight issue in her younger years but she grew out of that as time went on.

“She seemed to be confidently developing her skills and her striking,” O’Driscoll continues.

“Temper would have been one of her bigger challenges earlier in her career. She might be easily riled which could end up distracting her.

“The other thing that was huge [for her] was her ability to play in so many different positions. She ended up in the half-back line, half-forward line, the full-forward line this past year and she could play in so many different positions.

“She was willing to take that on and that was a big thing for me.”

Good Soldier

When former Galway camogie player Claire Spelman was sent to Cork to be stationed at the Collins Barracks, she didn’t know what to expect.

O’Connor was based at the Barracks too but the pair didn’t know each other. Not yet anyway.

At Cadet school, Spelman was always told to familiarise yourself with the local area of your Barracks and integrate yourself into the community. She started that process by purchasing the Evening Echo and getting to grips with the Cork way of life.

One day, she received a call inviting her to join the St Finbarr’s camogie club. It seemed like a strange fit according to some of the soldiers she was working with at the time. Spelman was based on the north side of the city and the Barrs is situated on the south.

But the woman on the phone was offering her a home to play camogie and she was eager to try it out. That woman who called was Gemma’s mother, Geraldine O’Connor.

“It would have been a bit daunting because you didn’t really know anyone, you’re settling in,” Spelman remembers.

“So joining the Barrs helped submerge me into Cork life and the culture. I remember the accent even is a strong Cork accent and I wouldn’t be used to it. It was a great way to meet people.

O’Connor decked out in her army gear

Source: Sgt Rena Kennedy

“That phonecall from Gemma’s mother impacted majorly on my life because I wouldn’t have made the friends [I have]. I’ve lifelong friends from the Barrs now and I played with the Barrs up to 2016 which was eight years, nearly nine years.”

Spelman turned out to be a good omen for the club. After years of trying to become senior camogie champions in Cork, they finally triumphed in Spelman’s debut season.

The locals tell her that she’s “haunted” with the luck she brought to them in 2006 as they defeated Imokilly in the final.

While Spelman was new to the scene, she could appreciate the impact this achievement was having on her teammates.

At the barracks, Spelman and O’Connor were working in different departments. They didn’t serve together on the same missions overseas either.

But they gradually got to know each other through playing camogie with the Barrs and the Defence Forces.

“They were all so welcoming. Now it would have been difficult for Gemma and the county players to balance both. She would have been training away with county but I would have gotten to know her later on as time went on.

“Even professionally as well. She works in the central medical unit in Cork and I’m based upstairs so our paths cross on stuff to do with work now. And we played camogie for the Defence Forces as well.

“She was as determined as she is now, as she always will be. She had a drive inside her to push and get the very best out of the players around her.

“She would have had a lot of players who had gone before her, would have played before her and she was nearly wise beyond her years on the pitch. Winning an All-Ireland at 17 in 2002 would have shaped her in terms of not being scared or stepping up to the mark.

“I think in the Defence Forces, there’s such teamwork and such camaraderie within a team spirit. It’s so transferable and one feeds into the other.” 

Claire Spelman and O’Connor representing the Defence Forces camogie team. Spelman is standing beside O’Connor on the far right.

Source: Sgt Rena Kennedy

Never Beaten

The 2017 All-Ireland final was one of O’Connor’s finest hours. Prior to the decider against their old rivals Kilkenny, O’Connor was not expected to start.

She had previously limped off during their semi-final victory over Galway with knee ligament damage. It was a fresh injury concern, exacerbated by a pre-existing ankle problem. She was looking at a recovery time of about six weeks and she only had three to get fit for the All-Ireland final.

In short, she couldn’t play. At least that’s what manager Paudie Murray told the press right up until the final moments before they took to the field in Croke Park.

But one person wasn’t buying their story. Then Kilkeny boss Ann Downey refused to believe O’Connor was fully ruled out “unless she’s after losing a leg.”

O’Driscoll laughs when Downey’s take at the time is put to her.

“That would be a fair assessment. Gemma would go through a brick wall for ya and she wanted to be playing.

“There’s been so many times during her career when most ordinary people wouldn’t get through what she got through in terms of injuries, and come out of it to play so well in games where she wasn’t expected to play at all.

“That comes down to her involvement in the army and the mental toughness and physical training they would go through. It’s not a quality that everybody would have and I think, as a supporter in more recent years, if there’s any player injured and you’re thinking will they make it, won’t they make it?

“You’d be giving Gemma every chance of making it.”

Downey’s prediction was an accurate one. Not only did O’Connor start that final in 2017, she excelled throughout with a heavily strapped knee and capped it off with a powerful long-range point in the final stages to draw the tie.

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Julia White popped up with winner for Cork shortly after.

Retirement naturally came to O’Connor’s mind in recent years. She’s never been afraid to talk about the end publicly before, mentioning it as far back as 2015.

Speaking to RTÉ Sport’s Jacqui Hurley at the time, she name-checked her old Cork teammate O’Leary as an inspiration and a player she continues to aspire to be.

“I suppose we had a good friendship and camaraderie,” a humbled O’Leary says about the bond they shared in a Cork jersey. She now lives in Armagh and plays club football with the Emyvale club in Monaghan.

“We both worked really hard on and off the field and we had that mutual respect for one another as well. Even when Gemma retired, I sent her a Twitter message, and I always remember her using the term, ‘We are Cork.’

“It sounds very simple but when you’re in a team huddle and she’s grabbing onto her Cork jersey and her eyes are nearly bulging out of her sockets and she’s like, ‘We are Cork!’ She has that affect on everybody and I suppose I was drawn to that as well. I had the utmost respect for her and you’d listen to her when she speaks.

“She’s just the kind of person that will say the right thing and knows how to play and how to drive everybody else on. It’s quite humbling for her to have said that I drove her on but in fact, she keeps driving me on as well.”

O’Leary can relate to O’Connor’s journey to retirement, having effectively called time on her Cork career twice before finally finishing up at the start of 2015. Her first brush with retirement was in 2013 when a question about her intentions for the future caught her off guard.

She knew it wasn’t the end, coming back for one more rally with Cork the following year and ending the 2014 season as All-Ireland champions. She bowed out on a winning note, in addition to all the other successes she earned during her career.

But, no matter how satisfying the end, there is still a sting that comes with retirement, one that O’Connor may well feel as the distance grows between her and the Cork dressing-room.

“I’m sure Gemma will agree that she loves training and loves being fit. She loves the camaraderie with the girls and everything that goes with being a county player. I missed all of that and I did find it very difficult to accept that. But I just kept myself very busy. I took up football here with Emyvale in Monaghan.

“I was able to focus on my club camogie a little bit more. I had that outlet as well. You just kind of have to keep yourself busy. County is such a routine and it’s such a big part of your life.

“It directs what you do every single day but when that’s taken away, you have to find a new routine. It’s difficult and I suppose it took a couple of years before I was fully away from it. The girls got to the final in 2015 and I had mixed emotions around it. But once I got to Croke Park and sat in the stand, it was then I [realised] I don’t miss the pressure of all this and the stress of a big game.

“It’s kind of a year later that you process it enough and accept it enough.”

At the time of that RTÉ interview in 2015, O’Connor was dealing with the loss of her mother Geraldine who had passed away from cancer. She had a great relationship with her mother who was one of her first mentors in camogie.

In a previous interview with The42, O’Connor talked about how she felt lost after her mother’s death and admitted that she started losing her love for camogie during this time and would have to wait until 2017 to rediscover her passion again.

Her Barrs teammate Spelman is indebted to the O’Connors for linking her up with the club after her move to Cork, and she can remember the impact Geraldine’s death had on the family.

A heavily strapped O’Connor playing in the 2017 All-Ireland final.

Source: Gary Carr/INPHO

“Gemma’s parents and her brother Glenn were coming to everything. I couldn’t get over the commitment they had. Even now with the ‘Can’t See, Can’t Be’. Especially for female sports, it’s so important to have role models.

“Her mother defies that and then how she was there for her all the time. And so proud of her. She was so strong, and it was very difficult. It was 28 September 2015 when her funeral was. It was a very difficult time for Gemma, my heart went out to her even at the funeral.

“Even the eulogies and the way herself and Glenn spoke about their mother with such heartfelt respect. I know it’s difficult for everyone to lose their parents and I would understand that, but I just think the love and respect in that family.

“They were just so strong as a unit, all of them.”

O’Connor didn’t say much in the dressing room, according to O’Leary. But the times she did speak were purposeful and left the group with something to think about. Coaching could well be in her future if that’s what she wants, and O’Leary hopes she remains involved in some way to nurture the young talents that are coming down the line.

Under O’Connor’s wing, they couldn’t be in safer hands. A rebel legend always.

“Definitely in Cork she’ll be remembered as one of that all-time greats anyway,” says O’Driscoll about how O’Connor will be remembered in camogie circles.

“Just to do what she did for so long at such a high level.

“She had a huge impact on the players around her and her team-mates. Just for camogie people or sports people watching somebody… I remember a friend saying to me when people refer to a person by just one name, she’s just known as Gemma.” 

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