Limerick call up youngsters to senior squad as All-Ireland winning defender opts out

LIMERICK HAVE CALLED up four players to their squad for the 2021 season while All-Ireland winning defender Paddy O’Loughlin has dropped out of the setup ‘for personal reasons for a while.’

John Kiely’s team commence their campaign next Saturday in the Gaelic Grounds against Tipperary after a terrific 2020 season that yielded All-Ireland, Munster and league triumphs.

They are currently operating with a 38-player squad, youngsters Colin Coughlan (Ballybrown) and Cathal O’Neill (Crecora-Manister) both joining for the first time. The pair are Leaving Cert students who won Munster minor medals in 2019.

O’Neill is a highly-rated attacker who scored 0-9 in that provincial final win over Clare while Coughlan is a wing-back. They both lined out last December when Limerick lost to Cork in the Munster U20 semi-final.

The Doon pair of Tommy Hayes and Barry Murphy have also been drafted in. They both featured when their club reached last year’s Limerick senior hurling final, losing heavily to champions Na Piarsaigh. 

Barry Murphy (left) in action for Limerick against Cork in 2018.

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

Murphy was captain of that side and is recalled after previously being involved in the 2018 All-Ireland winning summer. In the opening game in Munster that year, he came off the bench to score a goal against Tipperary.

Kilmallock defender O’Loughlin was part of last year’s victories while the UCC Fitzgibbon Cup winner had started three times in the 2019 championship against Waterford, Clare and Tipperary.

Be part
of the team

Access exclusive podcasts, interviews and analysis with a monthly or annual membership.

Become a Member

In another loss to the defensive ranks, Tom Condon retired in January after being involved for 12 seasons but Limerick will be able to call upon Richie English and Mike Casey during this season after their recovery from cruciate injuries.

The42 is on Instagram! Tap the button below on your phone to follow us!

Click Here: west tigers rugby store

Five hurling matches live on TV this weekend as inter-county GAA action returns

Seamus Callanan and Gearóid Hegarty facing off last year.

Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO

AS INTER-COUNTY GAA action returns this weekend, five hurling matches will be available to watch live on TV.

The 2021 National Hurling Leagues get up and running on Saturday, with the mouthwatering battle between Limerick and Tipperary the big one that evening [throw-in 5.30pm].

Earlier in the day, Westmeath and Galway go head-to-head at 2pm, with the action live on TG4, while Dublin and Kilkenny lock horns at 3.30pm, as eir Sport provide the TV coverage.

Click Here: north queensland cowboys jersey

The meeting of the 2020 and 2019 All-Ireland champions will be available to watch on RTÉ and on eir on the evening time, as John Kiely’s Treaty open their league title defence.

Live TV hurling coverage next weekend:

Saturday

⚪️ Westmeath v Galway, 2pm – TG4

🔵 Dublin v Kilkenny, 3.30pm – eir

🟢 Limerick v Tipperary, 5.30pm – eir & RTE 2

Sunday

🟡 Antrim v Clare, 1pm – TG4 app

🟣 Wexford v Laois, 1.45pm – TG4

🔴 Cork v Waterford, 3.45pm – TG4

— Fintan O'Toole (@fotoole13) May 4, 2021

On Sunday, TG4 are showing a double-header with all the action from Wexford-Laois (1.45pm) and Cork-Waterford (3.45pm) available to watch live on the Irish station.

There’s no GAA GO coverage available for the hurling tiers below Division 1, but counties in Division 2 and 3 have permission to stream their own games.

Meath are one who have announced a stream for their clash with Offaly on Sunday.

Support The Meath Hurling Team
We are Live Streaming Meath V Offaly Next Sunday.
Link to the match on https://t.co/G4BB4jQIun
will be available later in the week.#YourEdge#BestSeatInTheHouse#GAABelong pic.twitter.com/gpfY0I7szy

— Meath GAA (@MeathGAA) May 4, 2021

Be part
of the team

Access exclusive podcasts, interviews and analysis with a monthly or annual membership.

Become a Member

Football is scheduled to return the following weekend along with camogie, with the ladies football leagues kicking off on the weekend of 22/23.

This weekend’s live TV hurling coverage

Saturday

  • Westmeath v Galway, 2pm – TG4
  • Dublin v Kilkenny, 3.30pm – eir Sport 1
  • Limerick v Tipperary, 5.30pm – eir Sport 1 & RTE 2

Sunday

  • Antrim v Clare, 1pm – TG4 app
  • Wexford v Laois, 1.45pm – TG4
  • Cork v Waterford, 3.45pm – TG4.

Ladies football season layout confirmed, with matchday travel expenses covered through national league

THE LADIES GAELIC Football Association [LGFA] has confirmed its plans for the 2021 season.

Click Here: shopskm

The TG4 All-Ireland championships will run from July to September, meaning a split season — as reported by The42 — with the format as follows; inter-county league, inter-county championship and club, in that order.

The GAA are also following a county-before-club split season, while uncertainty reigns with regards camogie.

In this afternoon’s statement, the LGFA also confirmed that inter-county players will receive matchday travel expenses through the Lidl National Leagues. Players from travelling teams will be paid 30 cent per mile.

Very welcome to see match day travel expenses covered for @LadiesFootball National Leagues at 30c / mile.

Under continuing Covid guidance, players drive individually to games.

Progressive recognition of the cost of representing their county👏 https://t.co/VXQpzKX8WQ

— Gemma Begley (@GBegs) May 4, 2021

The Association’s Management Committee met last Thursday evening to nail down a fixtures plan for the coming months, following last week’s “positive” Government announcement.  

The decision was taken to commence the TG4 All-Ireland championships on the weekend of 10/11 July, with the All-Ireland finals slated in for Sunday, 5 September. Fixtures are already in place for the leagues, which kick off on 23 May and run until finals weekend on 27 June.

Confirmation from the LGFA that the All-Ireland championship will run from July to September.

So as expected, inter-county league — inter-county championship — club.

Inter-county players will also get matchday travel expenses through the league. pic.twitter.com/aNN3ZzZrYL

— Emma Duffy (@emmaduffy_) May 4, 2021

Draws for the All-Ireland championships will be made shortly, with the 2020 semi-finalists — Dublin, Armagh, Cork and Galway — seeded, as was the format last season.

Counties can commence their club championships when they are knocked out of the All-Ireland series.

Be part
of the team

Access exclusive podcasts, interviews and analysis with a monthly or annual membership.

Become a Member

Provincial championships will not form part of the All-Ireland inter-county series for 2021. They can be run later in the year, however, if provinces see an opportunity to do so (just Ulster went ahead with their competition in 2020).

The LGFA concluded the statement by adding its hopes to have full clarity on the recent Government announcement this week – with an announcement to follow on underage fixtures shortly.  

Champions Mayo to face Sligo in opener as Connacht senior fixtures released

CONNACHT CHAMPIONS MAYO will begin the defence of their provincial football crown on Saturday 26 June in Sligo.

The first provincial fixtures for the 2021 championship season have been released today with Connacht finalising their football schedule.

Mayo will travel to Markievicz Park for a Saturday afternoon clash with the home side on what will be the opening day of the 2021 championships across the country.

The following week will see Roscommon entertain Galway in Dr Hyde Park on Sunday 4 July. It will be a meeting of two counties that played each other in five Connacht final clashes between 2016 and 2019, both winning two apiece while they drew the first game in 2016.

If Mayo beat Sligo, then they will take on Leitrim on Sunday 11 July in Castlebar while if Sligo advance, the game will be held in Carrick-on-Shannon.

The Connacht final is down for Sunday 25 July.

The throw-in times for all those games have been confirmed, here’s the full list of fixtures.

2021 Connacht SFC Fixtures

Saturday 26 June

Quarter-final: Sligo v Mayo, Markievicz Park, 4.30pm.

Sunday 4 July

Semi-final: Roscommon v Galway, Dr Hyde Park, 2pm.

Be part
of the team

Access exclusive podcasts, interviews and analysis with a monthly or annual membership.

Become a Member

Sunday 11 July

Semi-final: Leitrim v Mayo/Sligo, Carrick-on-Shannon/Castlebar, 2pm.

Sunday 25th July

Final: Venue TBC, 1.15pm.

The42 is on Instagram! Tap the button below on your phone to follow us!

Click Here: Netherlands National Team soccer tracksuit

Mayo sweating on fitness of AFLW star after shoulder surgery in Australia

MAYO HAVE BEEN left sweating on the fitness of star forward Sarah Rowe, after the Collingwood Aussie Rules player underwent surgery in Australia last week.

Rowe had managed a shoulder problem through the 2021 Australian Football League Women’s [AFLW] season, despite fears in the opening weeks that it would inevitably rule her out.

The Kilmoremoy clubwoman battled through, enjoying an impressive individual season as she and Cavan’s Aishling Sheridan helped the Pies to the Finals Series.

Rowe, who has struggled with her right shoulder in the past and went under the knife shortly before signing for the Collingwood in 2018, posted a post-operation picture from Melbourne on Instagram last Tuesday, with the caption reading “BRB” — Be Right Back.

The42 understands it was an “anterior stabilising procedure of the shoulder,” and generally, a three to sixth-month recovery follows in terms of returning to play.

Click Here: tipperary gaa jerseys

Rowe is believed to be targeting a return in three, though it may take a player as long as eight to get back playing and fully fit. She has opted to stay in Australia for now to rehab full-time, something the Green and Red — under new manager Michael Moyles — encouraged.

It’s understood Rowe dislocated her shoulder three times this season, so was forced to manage it and play with limits through the pain barrier. Having had no choice but to undergo surgery, there’s now a 0.5% chance of dislocating it again. 

Sarah Rowe has just completed her third season at Collingwood.

Source: AAP/PA Images

The race is now on to see if — or rather, when — the 25-year-old will be involved with the Westerners later this summer. Rowe’s AFLW colleagues Niamh and Grace Kelly [West Coast Eagles] and Aileen Gilroy [North Melbourne] are also expected back in the set-up, while Cora Staunton [GWS Giants] has firmly ruled out any return, though some Carnacon clubmates are involved.

Under new boss Moyles, the Westerners have been grouped in Division 1A of the Lidl Ladies National Football League with Galway, Donegal and Westmeath.

The campaign gets underway on 23 May — Donegal come as Mayo’s first opposition that weekend — and runs until the final on 27 June.

The TG4 All-Ireland senior championship will follow, running from July to September, with the LGFA announcing the layout of the 2021 season this afternoon.

Be part
of the team

Access exclusive podcasts, interviews and analysis with a monthly or annual membership.

Become a Member

It’s believed that, likewise, Tipperary are sweating on the fitness of Aisling McCarthy — the Kellys’ team-mate at West Coast — who sustained a knee injury in the latter stages of the AFLW season, while uncertainty also surrounds the potential involvement Dublin star Sinéad Goldrick after hamstring surgery.

Rowe in action in April with a heavily-strapped shoulder.

Source: AAP/PA Images

The Instagram Rowe posted.

Source: Sarah Rowe/Instagram.

Full squads can attend inter-county games as challenge matches return next week

NON-PLAYING MEMBERS of inter-county panels will be allowed attend games, the government have confirmed. 

Click Here: malaysia rugby shirts

Minister of State for Sport Jack Chambers announced the news on Twitter as the start of the 2021 season looms.

It means players who are not included in the matchday 26-man squads for inter-county league and championship games can enter the grounds and watch their team-mates in action. 

“Happy to confirm that non-playing members of inter-county panels may attend games when the league season starts,” posted Chambers. 

“All members of panels make a significant contribution to the performance of their counties. Important this is recognised.” 

In addition, it has emerged that inter-county challenge games can resume from next week.

Be part
of the team

Access exclusive podcasts, interviews and analysis with a monthly or annual membership.

Become a Member

The easing of government restrictions will see inter-county travel permitted from Monday, 10 May and challenge games can resume on the same date. 

The42 is on Instagram! Tap the button below on your phone to follow us!

Micheál Martin says supporters could be back at games in July

Click:Heavy Duty Equipment accessories

TAOISEACH MICHEAL MARTIN says Irish supporters could be back in stadiums by mid-summer.

Speaking on Off The Ball tonight, the Fianna Fail leader said the government are planning to trial having crowds at a number of sporting events in July.

“We would hope to do it this summer,” he said. “We’re going to trial certainly a number of events. 

“I know Jack Chambers pulled together a group from the IRFU, the FAI and GAA, a working group chaired by Martin Murphy of the Aviva Stadium.

“They drew up an extensive protocols back in October and then the third wave came,” said Martin.

“So they’re going to update that now. We’ve had the Professor Mark Ferguson’s report on Antigen testing, we have the vaccinations.

“So we will be trialling some events. I think you’re probably looking at July and government is working up plans now and over the next number of weeks towards that end and also learning lessons from what’s happened in the UK and what’s happening in other jurisdictions to see how we can get fans back in in a safe way.”

He said the government will “look at different options” around whether only vaccinated people will be allowed attend the early trials or also non-vaccinated supporters.

“Well I noticed in the UK they’ve done both vaxxed and non-vaccinated people coming in segregating them.

“There are issues around that too in terms of people’s entitlement and allowances and so on. But initially we’d have to trial it, get that right and then hopefully be in a position to evolve in terms of fans being able to turn up and spectators turning up at different fixtures and sporting events.” 

On Leinster Rugby’s failed plan to hold an antigen testing event to allow 2,000 fans into  the RDS for a game against Ulster, Martin commented:

“The public health advice has been [that in] May and June, let’s keep the control on the numbers, which we have [done so far]. There’s real concern about the B117 variant in terms of it’s transmissability and how the numbers could go wrong again as we’ve seen in other countries.

“Get the vaccination to certain key levels and then we’re much more confident about doing these things. That’s basically the thinking. Also working with sporting organisations.

“There are draft guidelines there. All the major associations have put a lot of work into it.” 

He also explained that other facilities like swimming pools can expect to open in June.

“The indoor area’s going to have to be next – but the NPHET and public health has been very clear – the summer will be outdoors.

Be part
of the team

Access exclusive podcasts, interviews and analysis with a monthly or annual membership.

Become a Member

“We’ve got to keep control of this, we don’t want to ever again to go back to Christmas.

“We are making great progress on this because of the vaccination, combined with the restrictions we’ve brought in.

“So I think the next stage, logically, once we have the outdoor situation more or less sorted, we move then on concentrating how we bring indoor sports back”.

You can watch the interview in full below

Source: Off The Ball/YouTube

The42 is on Instagram! Tap the button below on your phone to follow us!

Click Here: newcastle knights team jersey

‘I was a climber’ – young Mayo star on parking promising cycling career

ALL-STAR NOMINEE Eoghan McLaughlin plays football like he was born to attack from a Mayo half-back line, but he could easily have been lost to the game forever.

A former All-Ireland Junior cyclist, the polkadot jersey of the king of the mountains was on his back before the green and red, but buoyed on by the success of his local Westport club, McLaughlin parked his bike.

You might imagine that his years of cycling success had prepared McLaughlin for the rigours of football, but making the switch nearly broke the 21-year-old.

“My first year in the International Junior Tour of Ireland in Ennis, I won the mountains jersey. I was delighted. I got full mountain points on the Corkscrew Hill, but I think there is a climb that’s ten times worse, Castle Hill, just outside Doolin,” said McLaughlin.

“I did the junior tour the following year as well. I put my eggs all in one basket and tried to get the yellow jersey, but I didn’t get it. I had the polkadot jersey for four days of the tour, but I lost it on the fifth day.

“Starting to play football, I don’t know if cycling has or it hasn’t helped me. I was a climber so my main objective was to have a big power output, but to be as light as I could to get up the hills as fast as possible.

“When I started playing football I was standing on the scales I was putting on muscle. I was thinking ‘Oh gosh. What’s happening. I need to lose this’.

“It took me a while to understand that you need to put on a bit more weight for football. I wasn’t even going to get round a Junior B game at 65 kilos. I’d be nearly 84 kilos now, that’s since August 2017.”

The Sports and Exercise student at UL quickly realised that turning professional wasn’t an option for him, but his decision to go back to playing club football was inspired by an outing to see Mayo play at Croke Park with his friends.

Eoghan McLoughlin pictured in the new 2021 Mayo jersey.

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

“I remember I went to see Mayo versus Roscommon in Croke Park in 2017. I just went up on the train with the lads on the way to a match. The lads were on to me to go training [with Westport], and I said I’d said I’d go along for the craic.

“Oh my God, I was in an epsom salt bath for an hour after it. It was different muscles being used. I couldn’t walk after it. When I started going regularly, it took me a year to get used to it. I was crippled after every training session.

“A massive part for me was the club in Westport won the Intermediate All-Ireland [in 2017]. My brother (Oisín) was playing and was starting for the team, he is a year older than me, so that’s sparked me into giving it a go as well. Seeing the local lads that I grew up with, doing so well with the club encouraged me.”

McLaughlin’s debut county season ended with an All Star nomination and a defeat to Dublin in the All-Ireland final. It was a heartbreaking blow for the Westport defender, but he says they are bursting to get back to competitive action against Down on 15 May at MacHale Park.

Be part
of the team

Access exclusive podcasts, interviews and analysis with a monthly or annual membership.

Become a Member

“We’re dying to get back to it,” he said.

“Last year was a great experience. I’m just looking to build from that and take a few things away from it. Hopefully it will stand to me.

“The All Star nomination was grand. I didn’t really take much notice of it. It was sound. They are only bonuses. I think we all know what the main objective is with the county.”

****

Intersport Elverys, together with O’Neills, Mayo GAA, and Mayo LGFA, have unveiled the new home jersey which will be worn by all Mayo inter-county footballers and hurlers for the 2021 season. The new jersey will incorporate the Intersport Elverys brand for the 24th year and will be available from this Wednesday (5th May) exclusively through www.Elverys.ie and www.ONeills.com until stores across the country re-open.

The42 is on Instagram! Tap the button below on your phone to follow us!

Click Here: cheap vans slip on shoes

‘Running on the roads around Wexford town, I was genuinely broke up’ – From lockdown to hurling

IF DIARMUID O’KEEFFE has learned anything from being an intercounty hurler during the rolling lockdowns of the past year, it is an increased admiration for athletes in individual sports.

The Wexford player will finally get going with his team next Sunday afternoon with their league opener against Laois.

Over the past twelve months, the 2019 All-Star has got too accustomed for his liking to training on his own instead of in a collective environment.

“There’s only so many 4-5km runs you can do. Last March and April when the first lockdown came, I was running on the roads around Wexford town. I was genuinely broke up. I just couldn’t do it any more. I had to try and find a grass area to go running.

“It’s you and your own thoughts, just pushing yourself the whole time. It’s far from easy. It’s a great skill for people in a single sport like boxing or rowing or running or whatever it may be, that they’re just able to motivate themselves consistently on their own.

“I think the ratio of training to matches as it is, is nearly too much. We were doing enough training on ourselves, (now) just eager to get going and playing matches.”

Wexford had planned to return to training on New Year’s Day, aiming to start with a boxing programme. The layoff ended up being longer than they had could have imagined with the firm focus now placed on bouncing back from a limp showing in 2020.

A 13-point loss to Galway in their province, a seven-point reversal against Clare in the qualifiers and that was their year done.

“It was as tame an effort to retain a Leinster title as probably anyone has come out with,” admits O’Keeffe.

“We just didn’t perform at all. It was flat, they were stale performances. On a personal level you just want to forget your performances, they were so below par. I expect so much more from myself and I know the lads do as well.

“The standout thing was we probably anticipated games to be coming back sooner than what they did. So we were trying to keep our fitness levels up during the lockdown and probably pushed a bit too hard at the beginning.

Diarmuid O’Keeffe in action for his club St Anne’s last year.

Source: Bryan Keane/INPHO

“As a result when games did come back, we were greeted with club championship first. Some of the lads probably reckon they had a better campaign with their clubs than they did in their county campaign, and hit form earlier in the season. 

“The year had dragged on so much, and for a long period of time you couldn’t really see the light at the end of the tunnel with games coming up. So the immediate thing was you just wanted to get a break from everything, completely remove yourself and just freshen up totally.

“Davy, he played his cards well in that sense that he only lasted a couple of hours and he said ‘I’m 100% committed to 2021′. And that gave the players a little bit of… We don’t have to worry, because in previous years it was ‘Will Davy/Won’t Davy come back?’ That was it. We knew where we stood.”

Dejected Wexford players after their loss to Clare last year.

Source: Lorraine O’Sullivan/INPHO

Off the pitch, O’Keeffe works as a secondary school teacher, a role that has been challenging in itself this year after teaching remotely before the return to classrooms.

“For the first couple of weeks it worked fine, but the more it dragged on, it became very challenging to keep the kids motivated.  From my point of view, it provided structure to my day and was still okay that I was doing my training in the evening. It was far from straightforward to be honest, while the kids did well at the beginning, it didn’t take too long where they lost motivation. 

“I’ve seen a change in the kids since we’ve come back to school. I have found they have become a lot quieter, they have taken longer to come out of themselves. Before Christmas even, I would have thought they were interacting a bit better. It will come back eventually, the more time they spend in school.

“I know in my own club there is a big push on to actually try and make sure that all the kids that were there pre-lockdown come back and participate again. That’s really important, it’s inevitable that people lose interest and they are finding entertainment in other ways, gaming online, whatever it may be.

“You will lose numbers in underage setups, that’s inevitable. All you can do is keep plugging away and trying your best to keep the kids going.”

Click Here: cheap nsw blues jersey

Diarmuid O’Keeffe at the 2021 Allianz hurling league launch.

Source: David Fitzgerald/SPORTSFILE

At the end of October 2019, O’Keeffe went travelling after his GAA commitments had ceased for the year. He visited Florida, Abu Dhabi, Australia and New Zealand before returning home in February 2020.

The world went into lockdown a few weeks later as the pandemic took hold and he appreciates that he got the chance to take that break abroad.

“We were only chatting about it with friends over the last couple of weeks, we were blessed to get away when we did. Looking back on it now, there’s an argument to say that we actually could have stayed away for a little bit longer than we did.

“I have a brother living in Australia and him and his wife had a child due at the end of February but it actually arrived the first week of February and we had only left there about a week or 10 days beforehan. Hindsight is great. We could have stayed an extra couple of months.

“Thinking back, I think the first game I was back for was Clare in Wexford Park. I wasn’t togged out at all. I got about 10/15 minutes against Kilkenny the next day and then Dublin in Croke Park and then everything just shut down after that. At the time we were probably saying ‘Jesus we could have stayed away for a little bit longer than we did.’

“Delighted to get away when we did and loved every minute of it. Wouldn’t change a thing. We were one of the lucky ones I suppose.

“He (his brother) FaceTimes me every Sunday morning when he’s on the golf course at 7 o’clock and the sun is beaming down. You don’t get long before you’re jealous of that!

“But he’s hoping to get home this Christmas, all going to plan. We have a wedding or two so he’s hoping to get home for that. He’s been over there 10 years now, so he’s happy out.”

The42 is on Instagram! Tap the button below on your phone to follow us!

Sin bin challenge, hurling v rugby in Limerick and All-Ireland glory with a difference

LIMERICK’S ALL-STAR winning defender Sean Finn believes hurling referees face a tough challenge in enforcing the new sin-bule rule as the league is set to commence this weekend.

The new rule is aiming to tackle specific cynical fouls when goal scoring opportunities are stopped within the 20-metre line or the arc. A penalty is awarded along with the offending player being shown a yellow card and spending time in the sin bin.

Finn’s manager John Kiely has expressed his concerns about the complexity of the rule.

“From what I understand, it’s going to be quite hard to manage from a referee’s perspective,” says Finn.

“A lot of forwards can actually play for a free and drop the head and in one sense could be coached to win frees. That can be difficult as a defender to avoid that because you can be sucked into it unintentionally. 

“It’ll be a difficult one but I must actually bring it up and discuss it.

“It might be worth having a discussion with the couple of defenders we have at the moment just to see their approach around it and to be cognisant of it and just to know the rules. 

“We’ll have to see how it goes in the league. It’ll certainly be a hot topic of conversation over the next couple of months.”

Finn has been central to a hugely successful time in Limerick hurling, the rise of the sport coinciding with a slide in the fortunes of Munster rugby.

The Limerick staff and players celebrate with the Liam MacCarthy Cup as All-Ireland champions.

Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO

He feels the two sports can co-exist successfully.

“That (debate) would never really have happened if Limerick weren’t successful over the last couple of years. When teams are successful, of course young people will want to be involved in that and look it’s great for Gaelic games in Limerick. They are great under-age academy structures in Limerick at county and club level.

“Limerick is still a great sporting county and there are still a lot of people looking to play rugby in the city and soccer as well with Treaty United starting up again. 

“I follow the rugby and I enjoy watching the rugby. I can see both being successful alongside each other. It’s just a matter of putting the structures in place. Like, that was 10 years in the making from when we were U14 so it does take time and it takes the right people being involved.”

Click Here: Aston Martin Racing Suit

His second All-Ireland winning experience was vastly different from his first. Last December in an empty Croke Park and the strange aftermath was in sharp contrast to the joyous mayhem that ensued after their 2018 breakthrough.

“You hardly even heard or spoke about the All-Ireland final three weeks later because you weren’t meeting anyone, only your family,” says Finn.

“They were sick of talking about it. In one sense it was good because it doesn’t even feel like you had won it, so you were coming in this year now and you are kind of fresh.

Gearoid Hegarty and Sean Finn celebrate winning the All-Ireland hurling final.

Source: Morgan Treacy/INPHO

“In 2018 there was three or four months of kind of going to schools, going to clubs, going to different occasions with the cup, or even just going as a guest.

“That can be tiring as well. That can take its toll on players as well when they are being pulled and dragged. There was none of that this year.

“I was lucky now, in the last two weeks, one night I got the cup down to my house. So we had a nice night there with the three or four cups and my family. So that was nice.

“That was a real highlight and one that was really low-key in comparison to 2018.

Be part
of the team

Access exclusive podcasts, interviews and analysis with a monthly or annual membership.

Become a Member

“It was chalk and cheese in terms of celebrations, 2018 and 2020.”

He feels refreshed ahead of the new season, having relocated to the west coast of Clare for a few months during lockdown. 

“I spent a bit of time back in Doonbeg. My girlfriend has a house back there so spent three or four months back there, spent a lot of time in the sea swimming well away from a hurley and a sliotar. It was a nice break.

“I’m working with PwC, doing exams, studying at the moment. I was kept quite busy with work.

“I didn’t pick up a hurley for quite a long time, even until the beginning of April. I did very little exercise. I just found a break from the whole training regime was as beneficial as actually going out training myself

“I’m looking forward to going back rather than having laboured the last couple of months.”

**********

The long-awaited return of inter-county hurling takes place on May 8th with the commencement of the Allianz Hurling Leagues. Over 70 games will take place across the four divisions in an action packed seven-week festival of hurling. This campaign also marks the 29th year of Allianz’ partnership with the GAA as sponsor of the Allianz Leagues, making it one of the longest-running sponsorships in Irish sport. 

The42 is on Instagram! Tap the button below on your phone to follow us!