Cora Staunton included in 2021 AFLW Team of the Year

CORA STAUNTON HAS been included in the 2021 AFLW Team of the year after another impressive campaign with the Greater Western Sydney [GWS] Giants.

The four-time All-Ireland winner is named among the forwards who made the shortlist, averaging 10.3 disposals, and kicking 10 goals for her club this year.

Staunton, 39, who first joined the Giants in 2017, has consistently been a standout performer since her move Down Under. She capped off her debut season by picking up the Giants’ Goal of the Year award.

She then suffered a career-threatening triple-leg-break injury in 2019 but managed to make a full recovery the following season and has continued to make a vital contribution for the Giants.

The https://t.co/FJ7UMYhaFF Team of the Year has been settled 👏#AFLW

— AFL Women's (@aflwomens) April 6, 2021

Be part
of the team

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

Become a Member

Click Here: ulster rugby shirts

Ireland rugby star Hannah Tyrrell shines on return to football as Dublin hammer Waterford

Dublin 6-15
Waterford 2-12

HANNAH TYRRELL MARKED her return to inter-county football in style this afternoon as the Irish rugby international hit 1-5, as reigning All-Ireland champions Dublin convincingly defeated Waterford in Parnell Park.

In a game that was dubbed a dress rehearsal for the championship, Dublin welcomed back Olwen Carey, Siobhan Killeen, and fresh from their endeavours in Australia, Lauren Magee and Niamh McEvoy.

Waterford did get off to a quicker start and dominated early possession, Maria Delahunty hit one from play and converted a free. Early Dublin efforts skimmed wide of the post but they opened their account for 2021 with a Sinead Aherne free after Niamh Hetherton was fouled. 

As Dublin upped the intensity, Tyrrell proved her worth hitting four first-half points. The first was a beautiful effort after a long range exchange with Niamh Hetherton, and Tyrrell was again on the scoresheet twice more minutes later.

Aherne converted her second free from 30 yards before Lyndsey Davey opened up a six-point gap when she found the net after a sweeping team move involved Hetherton and Siobhan Killeen.

Hetherton’s first-half efforts were rewarded with with a point of her own, while returning Killeen and Tyrrell also pointed leaving nine points between the teams at the water break, 1-8 to 0-2. 

Michelle Davoren of Dublin in action against Laura Mulcahy, left, and Rebecca Casey of Waterford.

Making her senior debut, Abby Shiels was comfortable in goals while Orlagh Nolan and Leah Caffrey bolstered a Dublin defence that proved difficult to break. 

Dublin’s second goal began as a sweeping team move down field and with Aherne in an inch of space, the captain offloaded to Hetherton, the Clontarf player made no mistake finishing to the net to open up a 12-point lead. 

Waterford steadied their ship and Eimear Fennell (2) and Delahunty brought the Munster side back into contention. The teams traded scores before the break, with Aileen Wall finding space and Delahunty firing over from short range. However, a brace of Aherne frees ensured Dublin took a nine-point lead into half time, 2-10 to 0-7.

The third quarter was a tighter affair, although Dublin did have to cope with two separate yellow cards, Aoife Kane just before half-time and Caoimhe O’Connor before the second water break but it had little impact on the champions.

Aherne raised a green flag of her own when Hetherton found her in space and as the substitutions rolled in, the scoreboard continued to tick over. Aherne (3) and Tyrrell raised white flags while Delahunty and Kellyann Hogan converted for Waterford.

The game finished in a goal frenzy with five goals inside eight minutes. Orlagh Nolan and Tyrrell found the net for Dublin inside a minute, Aileen Wall and substitute Kate McGrath raised green flags for the visitors. Caoimhe O’Connor signed off on the win for Dublin when she converted from the penalty spot.

Scorers for Dublin: S Aherne 1-7 (0-5f), H Tyrrell 1-5, N Hetherton 1-1, O Nolan 1-0, L Davey 1-0, C O’Connor 1-0 (1-0 pen), L Collins 0-1, S Killeen 0-1.

Scorers for Waterford: M Delahunty 0-7 (0-4f), A Wall 1-1, K McGrath 1-0, E Fennell 0-2, C Fennell 0-1, K Hogan 0-1.

DUBLIN: A Shiels; O Nolan, L Caffrey, O Carey; M Byrne, A Kane, L Collins; L McGinley, H Tyrrell; C O’Connor, S McGrath, L Davey; N Hetherton, S Killeen, S Aherne (captain).

Be part
of the team

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

Become a Member

Subs: H Leahy for M Byrne (28), M Davoren for N Hetherton (42), L Magee for S McGrath (45), H O’Neill for S Killeen (45), J Egan for S Aherne (48), N McEvoy for H Tyrell (52), L Kane for O Nolan (55), C McGuigan for L McGinley (55), S Loughran for L Davey (55).

WATERFORD: M Foran; A Mullaney, L Mulcahy, R Casey; C Fennell, K McGrath, M Wall (captain); C McGrath, M Dunford; R Tobin, A Wall, K Hogan; E Fennell, M Delahunty, K Murray.

Click Here: ireland rugby shirts

Subs: K McGrath for R Tobin (39), A Murray for E Fennell (46), L Cusack for A Mullaney (49), B McMaugh for K Hogan (49), N Power for M Wall (56), C McCarthy for C Fennell (56), R Dunphy for A Wall (56). 

Referee: Kevin Phelan (Laois) 

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

‘It’s an amazing story’ – A first senior championship start for Clare hurlers at the age of 30

IN THE 50th minute of Sunday afternoon’s game, Páidí Fitzpatrick was summoned to the sideline at Semple Stadium.

The Clare defender gestured with his fist as he ran off, saluting David McInerney who was coming on as a replacement. The message was clear.

He had put in a huge shift to help establish a winning platform for his team as they were nine points clear.

Now the focus shifted to supporting the rest of the team as they attempted to finish the job.

Ultimately Clare were successful by four points. It was a victory to savour for their team to kick-start the 2021 ambitions but for Fitzpatrick it held a deeper meaning, this was an experience that he had waited some time to share in.

A first senior championship start for Clare at 30 years of age, seven weeks shy from his 31st birthday.

It was almost 13 years exactly, since he had previously started a championship game of any description for a Clare team.

On 25 June 2008 he featured in a Munster minor semi-final against Tipperary.

On 27 June 2021 he featured in a Munster senior quarter-final against Waterford.

It was a notable journey from one point to the other. His maiden competitive senior appearance for Clare arrived on Sunday 1 March last year. He acquitted himself well in a nine-point league win over Dublin in Ennis but any aspirations for channelling that momentum were soon wrecked. The country shut down 11 days later and the pandemic ripped up everyone’s plans.

Source: Bryan Keane/INPHO

Well done to Paidi Fitzpatrick who made his competitive debut for Clare in the National Hurling league versus Dublin in Ennis at the weekend. Joined by club mate Cathal Malone as the other wing back. #clareseniors #paidifitz #sixmilebridgegaa https://t.co/J9WwzPxMYT pic.twitter.com/CRAwWBSiRE

— Sixmilebridge (@SMBClare) March 2, 2020

When the 2020 inter-county programme of games resumed, Fitzpatrick made the bench for Clare’s four winter outings. He got pushed into the action in Portlaoise last November, a championship milestone arriving in the 60th minute of their triumph over Wexford.

2021 brought league starts against Wexford and Dublin before the big chance arrived on Sunday. He seized it, blotting out the threat of Waterford’s Jack Fagan to announce himself on the senior stage.

“It’s an amazing story,” admits Syl O’Connor, the Clare FM GAA commentator and Sixmilebridge club-mate of Fitzpatrick.

“Páidí would have been looked upon as one of the best man-markers in the county at club level. No question about that.

“Some of his greatest battles were marking Conor McGrath, when he was in his prime. The ‘Bridge and Cratloe were very prominent for a period, playing each other. Conor was one of the top players, Páidí always got the task of marking Conor.

“He probably has a unique style as well, he’s a real man-marker. He’d probably never run 100 yards and pop it over the bar. But the man that’s on him, won’t do that easily either.

“He’s a massive player from the ‘Bridge point of view. Very influential and very well got with the team.”

Back in 2008 he moved from club underage ranks to fill the centre-back spot for the Clare minor hurlers in a team powered by the inside attacking duo of McGrath and Darach Honan. It was a campaign where they made a rousing start by beating Cork but were then knocked out by Tipperary.

Fitzpatrick was on the fringes of the county U21 squad in 2010 and 2011 without ever managing to break into the first fifteen.

Then followed a long spell away from the inter-county game yet his hurling never declined. He focused on his work with the club and prospered.

When Sixmilebridge lifted the Canon Hamilton Cup last September, it ensured Fitzpatrick would pick up his fifth Clare senior hurling medal since 2013. He had started in all five final wins, captaining them in 2017, while covering a range of positions including full-back, wing-back, midfield and centre-forward.

Source: Lorraine O’Sullivan/INPHO

In his homeplace they appreciated his worth as a golden age for the club was enjoyed.

“I’d often think of the example of Shane Prendergast in Kilkenny,” says O’Connor.

“Came in the first year and won the All-Ireland (in 2015), he was captain the next year for the All-Ireland and was gone the following year. He was 29 when he came in.

“Look, everybody would be surprised to see you make your senior championship debut at 30 years of age. There’s no doubt about that. But you’d have to look at it and say, how did that happen?

“I think he’s come into the scene now, based on the type of player that I believe Brian Lohan looks for. Big men and trying to get power into the team. Páidí has fallen into the category then of making his championship debut at 30 years of age.

“That half-back line is a massive unit with himself, John Conlon and Diarmuid Ryan. The size of Páidí is a big plus and his man-marking ability.”

Playing club hurling at an elite level gave him a strong grounding, to the fore for a dominant side in Clare, then testing himself in Munster against heavyweights like Na Piarsaigh and Ballygunner.

His older brother Stiofan was midfield on the Clare minor team that lifted the All-Ireland crown at the expense of Clare in 1997. His father PJ has been a club coach of renown in the county, a long-serving principal in Clonlara National School where he was one of the early influences in the hurling careers of current Clare stalwarts Colm Galvin and John Conlon.

Cathal McInerney and Páidí Fitzpatrick in the 2019 Clare county senior final.

Source: Lorraine O’Sullivan/INPHO

Fitzpatrick spent some time travelling as well, switching careers around 2016 from chartered accountancy to mobile and web development.

On the day of the 2019 All-Ireland hurling final, he was lining out at Treasure Island in San Francisco to help Na Fianna win the senior hurling final against the Tipperary club. Wolfe Tones player Rory Hayes was a team-mate that day, now they are both part of the Clare defensive unit.

And this week they’ve a Munster semi-final to prepare for.

Back in 2006, Munster’s U16 inter-divisional hurling tournament culminated with East Clare pipping Mid Tipperary by a point in the final. Páidí Fitzpatrick was on the winning side, Noel McGrath on the losing team. Given their general positioning, they’re likely to renew acquaintances on the pitch next Sunday.

McGrath’s inter-county career exploded to life after that game 15 years ago, Fitzpatrick’s has taken a bit longer to take flight.

“It’s unusual nowadays to be starting so late,” admits O’Connor.

“But then again there’s nothing unusual nowadays about a fella blazing a trail of glory at 18 or 19 and then he’s gone. Maybe for a change, it’ll go the other way for a while.

“He stuck at it. The worst thing you can do is stand beside Páid Fitzpatrick, you’d only be looking up at him. He’s a massive lad.

“And if there’s a job to be done on the hurling pitch, he’ll do it.”

– First published 06.00, 29 June

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

Click Here: Gws Giants Guernsey

Mayo duo and Cavan star the latest of Irish contingent to have new AFLW deals confirmed

MORE IRISH PLAYERS have earned new Australian Football League Women’s [AFLW] contracts as the focus switches to next season.

Mayo and Cavan stars Sarah Rowe and Aishling Sheridan have committed their immediate future to Collingwood, putting pen to paper in recent days.

Yesterday, Rowe was one of six players to have a new deal announced, signing on until 2023. The 25-year-old recently completed her third AFLW campaign, playing seven goals across an injury-hampered season, while kicking one goal.

Having undergone shoulder surgery as the curtain came down on the 2021 season, Rowe stayed on in Australia to rehabilitate, missing the Green and Red’s league campaign. The Kilmoremoy forward returned to home soil in recent days, though, so the race is now on for her championship involvement.

Her immediate focus will be on Gaelic games matters, though her new two-year deal will see her head back Down Under afterwards to continue to “live the best of both worlds,” as she so often says.

Click Here: nsw blues jersey

Sheridan’s status of being on a two-year deal was also confirmed this morning, as she officially penned a contract extension until 2023.

The Mullahoran ace lit up the AFLW last season, enjoying a stunning individual campaign with goals almost every week as she established herself as one of the Pies’ main forwards in her second year at the club.

24-year-old Sheridan has been back in Ireland for some time now, returning to inter-county duty with Cavan through their Division 2 league campaign, as they now prepare for an Ulster championship meeting with Donegal.

Elsewhere, Rowe’s Mayo countywoman Aileen Gilroy has re-signed for North Melbourne.

Gilroy in action for North Melbourne.

Source: AAP/PA Images

One of 24 players retained from the Kangaroos 30-strong 2021 AFLW list, Gilroy sparkled once again in her second season and has subsequently been rewarded with a longer stay.

The 28-year-old has excelled in Australia of late and has been touted as “one of the most exciting Irish talents” over there, though has opted out of the Mayo ladies football set-up for 2021. 

A former underage soccer international with Ireland, the Killala native missed most of the 2019 ladies football season with a devastating cruciate injury, before announcing her comeback with a stellar debut season Down Under.

She returned to line out in the Green and Red’s midfield last autumn, but has decided against it this time around.

“Aileen’s not one to half-arse anything,” as manager Michael Moyles recently said. “The last year or two, she’s struggled with it so she needs to take a year to get things around her. And that’s fine, no problem.”

  • Tipp’s Premiership champion O’Dwyer among Irish stars returning to AFLW next season 

Tipperary’s Premiership champion Orla O’Dwyer, Melbourne’s Dublin duo Sinéad Goldrick and Lauren Magee, and Adelaide Crows’ Ailish Considine have all had their respective returns for the 2021/22 season confirmed in recent days, with further announcements expected.

Be part
of the team

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

Become a Member

The42 understands that several other Irish players — 14 were involved in the 2021 season — are on two-year contracts, and will return for another campaign. 

The league is set to expand over the coming seasons, with the 2022 edition — season six –  due to begin in December 2021 and the Grand Final to be held in mid-March, before the men’s season begins. The competition will increase from nine rounds to 10, plus three weeks of finals.

Over the past few years, the AFLW campaign opened in late January and ran until mid-April, allowing for the Irish contingent — much of whom play inter-county ladies football — to return to these shores for the tail end of the league and for the entire TG4 All-Ireland championship.

Covid-hit 2020 aside, they normally travelled Down Under in October/November for pre-season, so it’s expected that will be earlier this coming autumn, throwing up the potential of code clashes.

Here are the 2021 Cork senior club football and hurling championship draws

REIGNING CORK SENIOR hurling kingpins Blackrock will take on last year’s semi-finalists Erins Own after this evening’s draw for the 2021 club championships in the county.

On the day that adult club players received the green light to resume training in pods of 15 from Monday 10 May and can play games from Monday 7 June, the championship draws for the year ahead took place in Cork.

In the hurling Blackrock, who ended an 18-year wait last October for senior hurling glory, will meet Erins Own along with city rivals St Finbarr’s and last year’s senior A winners Charleville in their group.

Last year’s beaten finalists Glen Rovers will take on Douglas, Newtownshandrum, Bishopstown.

The remaining group will feature the East Cork trio of Sarsfields, Midleton and Carrigtwohill – who won five counties between them in the 2010-2014 period – and city team Na Piarsaigh.

In the football, last year’s premier senior final is still to be played but the two sides in contention, Castlehaven and Nemo Rangers, do know who they will take on in the group stages this year.

Castlehaven will meet fellow West Cork teams Carbery Rangers and Newcestown, along with the winners of the senior A final involving Éire Óg and Mallow, that is still an outstanding fixture.

Nemo Rangers will face Valley Rovers, Douglas and Carrigaline. Then it’s 2018 champions St Finbarr’s up against Ballincollig, Clonakilty and Ilen Rovers in the remaining group.

2021 Cork Championship Draws

Premier Senior Football

  • Group A – Nemo Rangers, Valley Rovers, Douglas, Carrigaline.
  • Group B – Castlehaven, Newcestown, Carbery Rangers, Mallow/Éire Óg.
  • Group C – St Finbarr’s, Ballincollig, Clonakilty, Ilen Rovers.

Premier Senior Hurling

  • Group A – Glen Rovers, Douglas, Newtownshandrum, Bishopstown.
  • Group B – Sarsfields, Na Piarsaigh, Midleton, Carrigtwohill.
  • Group C – Blackrock, Erins Own, St Finbarr’s, Charleville.
Be part
of the team

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

Become a Member

Senior A Football

  • Group A – O’Donovan Rossa, Bandon, Béal Áth An Ghaorthaidh, Dohenys.
  • Group B – Bishopstown, St Michael’s, Kiskeam, Winner Knocknagree/Kanturk. 
  • Group C – Fermoy, Loser Mallow/Éire Óg, Clyda Rovers, Bantry Blues.

Senior A Hurling

  • Group A – Kanturk, Bandon, Fermoy, Blarney. 
  • Group B – Ballyhea, Bride Rovers, Ballymartle, Mallow. 
  • Group C – Fr O’Neill’s, Newcestown, Cloyne, Killeagh. 

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

Click Here: cheap nrl merchandise

McGuinness, Joyce and Moynihan: the star-studded GAA college team that reigned in the ’90s

IN THE WEEKS building up to the 1997 All-Ireland football final, as the stream of messages John Casey was receiving turned into a deluge, one piece of correspondence stood out.

The Mayo forward was gearing up to face Kerry, where he had been located over the previous twelve months, educating himself on the football fields and in the lecture halls.
One of his colleagues from college reached out from across the Atlantic.

“We got to the All-Ireland against Kerry, and I was playing five of my Tralee team-mates. Then a postcard arrived from Chicago before the game. I told PJ I was always going to let this out.

“He wasn’t even a Galway player at the time, but he says, ‘JC, best of luck, ye deserve an All-Ireland, I hope ye win it. Ye’d better this year because you can take it, I’m going to take Ireland by storm next year.’

“That was Padraic Joyce in ’97 and we all know what happened in ’98.”

  • See sport differently with The42 Membership and get closer to the stories that matter with exclusive analysis, insight and debate. Click here to find out more>

Source: Keith Heneghan/INPHO

By then Casey knew all about Joyce’s football talent. In the autumn of 1996, he hadn’t received that advance warning.

Word reached Casey about the prospect of heading to Tralee on a football scholarship.

“I remember Val (Andrews, Tralee coach) saying, you’re going to be living in a house with footballers from Galway and he said their names.

“I would have played underage against a Galway footballer called Padraic Boyce. I was late going down to Tralee because we drew with Meath in the All-Ireland and I wasn’t going down to college for a couple of weeks and then coming back trying to prepare for the replay. 

“I remember being dropped off at this house, it was owned by a judge in Tralee. I walked in and all these fellas were waiting to see this Mayo fella. I’m looking around going, ‘Where the hell is Padraic Boyce?’

“Little did I know it was Padraic Joyce. So that was my first time ever setting eyes on PJ. We have remained firm friends since.

“I soon got to know all about him. I remember myself and (Seamus) Moynihan doing a piece for TV before the Sigerson weekend in 1997. Moynihan said to the camera, ‘I’m sure John is absolutely delighted Padraic Joyce isn’t involved with Galway.’

“I’m kind of going, ‘Shut up, in case they get any ideas!’ “

Mayo’s John Casey.

Source: Lorraine O’Sullivan/INPHO

Joyce was not the only one to use the competition as a springboard to sporting stardom.
It’s 25 years since that milestone win, the first time the Sigerson Cup had been brought back to Kerry after years being the preserve of the university ruling class. They operated as Tralee RTC in 1997, IT Tralee for the following two years and the outcome was the same. Champions. No college has done three-in-a-row since.

Tonight the current vintage, under a new label as MTU Kerry, take to the field in Rathkeale, the first time a Tralee outfit has reached the Sigerson Cup semi-finals since that golden era of the late ‘90s.

The bar was set high by their predecessors.

A group of Gaelic football galacticos from around the country and moulded together to form a dominant force.

*****

Consider the roll call of names. Tralee’s first Sigerson team in 1996 saw Joyce joined by Meath’s Mark O’Reilly and the Kerry pair of William Kirby and Gene Farrell.

In 1997 they were joined by the Kerry pair of Barry O’Shea and Seamus Moynihan, and Casey. 1998 brought Mike Frank Russell, Damien Hendy, Michael Donnellan and Jim McGuinness into the reckoning. The 1999 title was achieved without the suspended Joyce but included the Laois pair of Noel Garvan and Colm Parkinson, and Kerry’s Noel Kennelly.

Seamus Moynihan and Noel Garvan.

Source: Lorraine O’Sullivan/INPHO

A core of future senior county class was always anchoring their challenge. There was also promising local fowards – Pa O’Sullivan, Jack Ferriter, Jack Dennehy and Johnny McGlynn.

They wasted little time making their mark afterwards, becoming dominant figures in the county game. Joyce, Moynihan and Donnellan all claimed 3 All-Stars apiece and were Texaco Footballer of the Year winners between 1998 and 2001. O’Reilly, Moynihan and Joyce ensured that a Tralee alumnus picked up the All-Ireland man-of-the-match award each year between 1999 and 2001.

“It was just a great bunch of lads,” says Val Andrews, the Dubliner in charge on the sideline.

Val Andrews.

Source: Andrew Paton/INPHO

“We had our up and downs but they all enjoyed it. It was great for the college, the town, the lads and myself.

“You’d always look back with fondness. The first Sigerson game in Tralee, against Maynooth in 1996 and 3,000 people there in Austin Stack Park on a Wednesday.

“Ah Kerry is great, it was fabulous times.”

Click Here: gaa 2 stripe jersey

Life brought Andrews to Tralee in late 1993 as a lecturer. A move to North Kerry may not have been mapped out but when it did, he figured after an initial period of apprehension that it was best to immerse himself in the local sporting culture.

“A Dublin Northsider from Ballymun Kickhams hits Tralee. I’d be straight, I was sort of in awe going to Kerry. All-Ireland medals everywhere. I never envisaged that there’d be Ballymun fellas walking around with seven or eight All-Ireland medals now. It’s amazing the way things can go.

“Going down, I thought I’d learn from these boys. When I joined the college in ’93, it was Division 2 team and we didn’t have a set of jerseys. That’s where it started. It was the home of football, I was thinking we could surely do something here.”

A good trainer came on board. Pat Flanagan was taking his first steps in a GAA journey that would catapult him into an All-Ireland winning role alongside Jack O’Connor.

“John Kelleher came in as a full-time GAA Officer, that was key, Pat Flanagan then joined the Health & Leisure department. I knew him first as this fella from Waterford, who was a sprinter. I was thinking what use was that to us?

“But he was absolutely key in advancing everybody’s knowledge of how to train teams. Sure, he went on to huge things but he always laughs at that first introduction. An exceptional trainer, I learned so much from him. I think the only thing he got from me was madness.”

Andrews had been happy to take early morning training sessions with the Ballymun minors before he went to school, organising football at sunrise in Tralee was a natural step.

Flanagan introduced weight training and methods targeting improvements in speed and endurance. He showed the worth of training camps, once a year they would head off somewhere for a Friday night session, three on a Saturday and one on a Sunday morning. 

“A lot of this stuff is just about bonding really,” says Andrews.

“You know the Kung Fu Panda thing, the secret is there is no secret. You get myths, if you win one, sure all the talk is they were training 700 times a year.

“You couldn’t do the training we were doing unless you were as skilled as Flanagan.”

Different structures supported their football project. A new Health and Leisure course attracted more football players. Bill Kennedy from the local Lee Strand Co-Op was a strong sponsor, looking after some apartments to house footballers. The college provided a few football scholarships. In that maiden Sigerson voyage of 1996, they lost out to a UCD team powered by Trevor Giles, Brian Dooher and Derek Savage.

They learned and rebounded. Defeated UL in Coleraine in 1997, Jordanstown in Tralee in 1998 and Garda College in Belfast in 1999.

Three-in-a-row completed.

“Bill Kennedy was an absolute cornerstone to the whole thing,” says Andrews.

“Put faith in a fella he could barely understand his English! Everybody was saying we were breaking the rules. We didn’t. I was a Civil Servant working in the Department of Education, rules and regulations are something I’m good at.

“Some lads weren’t the greatest students but sure a lot of students are like that, it’s not just because they’re footballers.”

*****

The best talent that they possessed?

“If I was to pick, I’d probably go for Joyce,” says Jack Ferriter, the Dingle native that was Player of the Tournament in 1998.

20 years since Kerry last won a All-Ireland Minor. Jack Ferriter was captain in '94 #famine
@NuachtTG4 @gaa pic.twitter.com/fw93ctgGzJ

— Seán Mac an tSíthigh (@Buailtin) September 17, 2014

 

“He’d be in the top three I’d have played with. Just everything about him, possession of the ball, spraying kicks, kicking points. An all-round leader. Michael Donnellan then would be different, he was probably the fastest player I ever played with. We actually beat Galway in the minor final in ’94 so I would have known these boys before I came to Tralee in ’98.”

Source: Patrick Bolger/INPHO

“If you were to say one player that changed the course of history in Tralee, it was Seamus Moynihan,” reckons Andrews.

“An absolute legend of a footballer. He got us over the line.

“Joyce was a fabulously talented footballer. Would often tell you about fellas that we wouldn’t know of, he was tactically aware. The next big scholarship was Michael Donnellan. Really special talent. Have huge time for that man.”

Casey concurs in the endorsement of Moynihan’s football prowess.

“I’m leaving Mayo players out of the debate, but he was the best player I ever played with.

Advertisement

“Seamus, the Pony, is your Rolls Royce. The ball was like a magnet to him, he just seemed to know where everything was going to land. Lovely, quiet, unassuming fella but Jesus Christ above, put him in between the lines and don’t cross him. But a brilliant, brilliant fella.

“Seamus was in a car accident two weeks before that Sigerson weekend (in 1997), he wasn’t able to start the semi-final against Sligo. He had two things rammed up his nose because his nose hadn’t stopped bleeding.

“We were taking on a bit of water against Sligo and we had to bring on Moynihan to steady the ship and he did.”

Padraic Joyce and Seamus Moynihan in the 2000 All-Ireland football final.

Source: Lorraine O’Sullivan/INPHO

*****

The future impact of that Class of Tralee has not just been restricted to the playing sphere.

It is 30 years since Jim McGuinness was a teenage squad member as Donegal smashed through the barrier to lift Sam.

Source: Patrick Bolger/INPHO

It is 10 years since he replicated that feat as a manager, a more profound achievement that reverberated around the Gaelic football landscape.

He sat his Leaving Cert at the age of 24 and then the Glenties native journeyed down the west coast to enrol for a sports studies diploma, curious to discover more about the rhythms of football in Kerry.

“I lived with Jimmy in Tralee for three years and Colm Parkinson as well,” says Ferriter.

“We’d a house down around Castle Street. The thing I’d say about him football wise is he only had one leg, the left leg all the time! But he was a great warrior in fairness, high fitness levels, a great character overall.

“He used to go back up to Donegal twice a month, but he often came back down to Dingle to us as well, we used to go out on the town at the weekend. He’s progressed a lot with his sporting career, you could see the potential in him.”

“He took his football seriously, a nice lad to deal with,” recalls Andrews.

“Jimmy, God love him, had lost his two brothers. He’d plenty stuff going on. He’s done exceptionally well, they’re two big things to be dealing with.

“Would I have seen him being the manager that he has become? Probably, no. Now don’t get me wrong, he was a great student of the game. But you wouldn’t know whether fellas would go into management.

“He was certainly bright enough. With the 1999 team, he was really leading then. Joyce was sent-off that year and couldn’t play, so that three-in-a-row was a huge achievement and Jimmy was central.”

Jim McGuinness celebrates Donegal’s 2012 All-Ireland final win.

Source: Morgan Treacy/INPHO

*****

Casey only spent that single year in Tralee, studying Business Information Technology.

It was a slice of novelty at a time when his football life was consumed by Mayo’s efforts to reach the national peak. He was required him to park rivalries from county games.

“When I went down there, people were wondering how myself and Mark O’Reilly would greet each other. They were after beating us in the All-Ireland, I got the head knocked off me in that final. It was almost like a big meeting when we met each other.

“But Mark was a fine footballer, we were both in the half-forward line actually with PJ.

“We both left after ’97 and they replaced us with kind of two inferior players…Michael Donnellan and Jim McGuinness!”

Mark O’Reilly in action against Jason Sherlock in 1999.

Source: Patrick Bolger/INPHO

Casey lived with Joyce and the Cloherty brothers from Carna, Michael and Seamus. That Galway crew were his companions for road trips in a time before bypasses as they ploughed through the main streets of country towns choked with traffic.

“I found the commute brutal. I’d a little Ford Fiesta car, £20 in diesel used to get me from Charlestown to Tralee, and back home again.

“After county league games, I used to get a lift back with the Mayo crowd to Charlestown, have an hour getting my stuff together and then head for Tralee. I used to be falling asleep in the car by Newcastlewest but the only thing is Joyce would keep me awake.

“In Charlestown, our business here in town is right on the main N17 road. After I left Tralee I’d look out on any given Friday or Sunday evening, and who would I see but the long, straggy, curly hair and the smig, sitting in the bus – Jim McGuinness, doing the commute. He’d give a big wave out the window if he was passing the shop here.”

“It was tough going but I’ve great memories from it all. I remember Val saying to me after the 1997 final, ‘I’m glad we brought you down. You had a good weekend JC.’

“It meant a lot. If a fella goes on a scholarship, you’re under pressure to perform.”

*****

It was a time that shaped football identities. In Ferriter’s case, it almost nudged him to another part of the country.

“I probably was the only one in the forwards not starting inter-county games. I was on the Kerry panel for years but I found it hard to break through ahead of Maurice Fitz and all these fellas.

“Val approached me when he left Tralee to go to Cavan, he was manager there. I wasn’t getting much game time with Kerry. I was very close to moving. I ended up training for a weekend with them.

“Just last minute I pulled out, I didn’t bother with it. But that’s the influence Val had on me, he was great.”

He stayed closer to home and when he did move, it was nearby to Cork, where he played county finals for Bishopstown, and is still based on Leeside.

“I’ve great memories of Tralee. Got my sports course out of it, still doing that in the Radisson Hotel here in Cork, as a personal trainer in the gym and working in the spa.

“You build up great relationships with players. Like Cork are playing Galway now in the league in a few weeks, so I’ll meet up with Padraic Joyce after the game. I think that’s still the same. Like you’ve Sean Powter and David Clifford together with UL, they’ll be tearing skelps off each other in a few months.

“I was lucky to have my time in Tralee. Great scenes around the college, nights out, back to Dingle with the Sigerson Cup, up to Galway one weekend as well. It was a great old buzz.”

*****

By the culmination of the last Sigerson win, Andrews had returned to Dublin. He passed the managerial baton on to a trio of Vinny O’Shea from Portmagee, Alan Ringland from Belfast and Fr. Pat O’Donnell from Ballymacelligott.

One game stands out from his time. The 1998 decider against a UUJ team spearheaded by the McEntees of Armagh and Derry’s Sean Marty Lockhart.

Their forward Gene Farrell from Annascaul, who now lectures in computing in Tralee, made his mark.

Source: © Tom HonanINPHO

“The one I derived the most satisfaction from. We were innovative, we stayed in Killarney because we knew all the other teams that weekend would be staying together, so we said we’ll mirror that.

“Gene Farrell was injured in the semi-final, couldn’t play in the final. He was standing beside me for the first half, not togged out at all.

“UUJ were the better team and things were going bad. Gene said to put him on, I was thinking in my own head that I would, he was a bit of a legend, the team and the crowd would get a lift. He ran into the full-forward line and scored the point to level the game.

“Then McGuinness got the ball on the non-stand side in Tralee, I’m shouting not to shoot because I thought the angle was stupid. He kicked it anyway and it went straight over the black spot.

“Showed how much I knew about football,” laughs Andrews.

*****

The 2022 Tralee team has a more local feel to it. Aidan O’Mahony is the manager, 14 of the starting team are Kerry players, Tipperary defender Dean Carew the exception.

Their ambition is similar to land a medal that they will cherish.

“The whole team stopped in Charlestown on the way back when we won in ’97,” recalls Casey.

“There was blue peaked caps at the time with Tralee RTC, there’s a picture of my mother and Padraic Joyce in the living room from that time, she still has the cap. 

“As a person that never got their hands on that elusive Celtic Cross, it’s probably apart from a few Connacht medals, all I’d really have to show for it. I was only messaging Barry O’Shea last week, we were saying we couldn’t believe it was 25 years.

“I think the thing a lot of people would say is you now meet the likes of PJ or Barry or any of that team who have All-Irelands, there’s no mention of those medals, it’s the friendships you make from it and the memories.

“It was a very special time.”

See sport differently with The42 Membership and get closer to the stories that matter with exclusive analysis, insight and debate. Click here to find out more>

Buy The42’s new book, Behind The Lines, here:

The danger of the new skepticism

Janie Oyakawa, 43, is a mother of six who lives just outside Dallas. In her home, she keeps a binder full of important documents from her family’s life, including a heavily annotated copy of Robert Sears’s The Vaccine Book: Making the Right Decision for Your Child.

“It’s like, here’s your birth certificate, and here’s when your mom was crazy for a few years,” she says. For a few years, Oyakawa, an occupational therapist, was an anti-vaxxer.

Oyakawa vaccinated her first four children according to the routine schedule. But the birth of her fourth child was traumatic; she felt the doctors and nurses didn’t listen to her. “That kick-started me being very skeptical of the medical establishment,” she says.

With her next child, Oyakawa opted for a home birth, with the help of a midwife. In the process, she began to meet other “crunchy” parents, she says, including those who were opposed to vaccines. For a time, the Oyakawas were uninsured. Slowly, and then all at once, Oyakawa stopped going to the pediatrician and stopped vaccinating her children, including her new baby.

“I had my sixth, and I feel bad looking back: She didn’t see a doctor until she was 1 year old,” she says. But parenting groups, in real life and on Facebook, offered validation. Oyakawa found thousands of people eager to reinforce each other’s anti-vaccine views. And they brought their own experts with them. (Sears, for example, is a controversial leader in the movement.)

“I was intelligent, but I had a really hard time evaluating sources,” Oyakawa says. She says she realizes now that people promoted anecdotes over data and emotion over evidence. But at the time, it felt like they were questioning conventional wisdom — and pursuing truth. For Oyakawa, it felt responsible.

Skepticism is, generally speaking, the doubting of a certain premise, or taking a questioning stance on a given topic. It’s the engine of scientific revolution — the searching spirit that pushed Nicolaus Copernicus to advance a heliocentric model of the universe, and Charles Darwin to propose the theory of natural selection — and widely considered a “healthy” perspective on the world. But in the 21st century, a certain kind of skepticism has become a thorn in the side of science itself.

It can be well-intentioned, as people seek to understand complicated topics in real time. But it can also be a front for deniers and conspiracy theorists, who hide the certainty they feel about “alternative facts” behind a well-placed question mark. In our search for certainty, social echo chambers — some intentionally seeded with misinformation by right-wing political actors to sow mistrust — are increasingly capable of transforming doubt into hesitancy, and even denial.

As of late January, 20 percent of Americans told pollsters that they would not get the Covid-19 vaccine unless it’s required or at all, according to a Kaiser Family Foundation survey; among some populations, particularly those who identified as Republicans, the share of those willing to be vaccinated hovered at just 35 percent. This hesitancy has complicated roots, but it’s not just vaccines people are turning down. Even as coronavirus cases soared this winter, some Americans have remained skeptical of masks and social distancing.

Add it to the list: Skepticism remains about everything from the threat climate change poses to the nation to the spherical shape of the Earth. On November 9, immediately following President Joe Biden’s election victory, a Politico/Morning Consult survey of nearly 2,000 registered voters reported that 70 percent of Republicans didn’t believe the election was “free and fair.” And the ranks of election skeptics included at least 147 Republican members of Congress, who subsequently, if unsuccessfully, voted to overturn the election results in January.

“Question everything, right?” a woman at a “Stop the Steal” protest in Pennsylvania told CNN in November. “Unfortunately, people fail to think for themselves,” she added — other people.


Ours is a nation of doubters. Since its peak in 1964, public trust in government has been on the decline, exacerbated by social crises like the Vietnam War, Watergate, and the 2007-2008 financial collapse. The National Election Study found in 2019 that just 17 percent of Americans said they always or mostly trusted the government. In 2020, the number of people with “no trust at all” in American mass media — 33 percent — was at an all-time high, according to Gallup. Instead, many have turned to Facebook groups, obscure blogs and message boards, and wildly popular podcasts like the conspiracy-theory-friendly Joe Rogan Experience, whose unofficial tagline could easily be, “I’m just asking questions.”

A skeptical attitude has been a tenet of rational thought since at least ancient Greece. In some sense, the scientific method, a process by which people can develop hypotheses and carry out experiments to see if their predictions are valid, is just skepticism, rigorously applied.

“The ancient skeptics would talk about skepticism as a ‘medicine for the mind,’” says Baron Reed, a philosophy professor at Northwestern University and the co-editor of Skepticism: From Antiquity to the Present. It could offer clarity and, some argue, even happiness.

That notion of a “healthy skepticism” persists. But Americans increasingly display only a “temperamental skepticism,” says Kurt Andersen, author of Fantasyland: How America Went Haywire — A 500-Year History. It’s “skepticism as an instinct or reflex,” he says, instead of empirically based doubt. In this paradigm, asking questions is enough. The hard work of evaluating evidence — and acting when it proves sufficient — is no longer required.

“It sounds so much more fair-minded and scientific [to be a skeptic] than to be a denier,” says Lee McIntyre, a research fellow at Boston University’s Center for Philosophy and History of Science and the author of Post-Truth. “But,” he adds, “the problem is this: They’re actually not skeptics, they’re actually quite gullible.”


For most of her life, Oyakawa was a member of the Mormon Church. But when she was pregnant with her sixth child, she left, losing many friends in the process. The experience pushed Oyakawa to reevaluate all of her deeply held beliefs, including her conviction that vaccines might be harmful for children. But when she began posting friendly questions about the potential benefits of certain vaccines on Facebook, she found “these groups couldn’t handle it.” Oyakawa says she realized that these parents weren’t “questioning everything,” as they liked to claim. They were promoting their own beliefs.

People have been debating the nature of truth for millennia. But it was René Descartes, a 17th-century philosopher, who argued that all received wisdom was specious and formalized a process for evaluating the truth of any claim. Historians consider his system, known as Cartesian doubt, the forerunner of the modern scientific method. It was also the origin of the ideal of every person as an intellectual island, capable of thinking clearly and freely for themselves, without interference or support.

In reality, people aren’t great at dealing with complex systems or uncertainty. We tend to think quickly, often at the expense of accuracy. In the 1970s, psychologists Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky developed the concept of “cognitive bias” to explain these systematic errors in thinking. They include things like recency bias (leaning on the things you’ve learned most recently) and confirmation bias (highlighting evidence that proves your point).

These shortcuts lead everyone astray at times. But “cognitive biases are not the main source of error,” Kahneman said. “The main sources of error are social.” Meaning: We may think we’re independent thinkers, but we’re much more likely to be relying on those we trust — from family members to domain experts — to inform and guide us.

There’s nothing inherently wrong with that. Some cognitive scientists theorize that human reason developed not so we would be natural statisticians, but so we could cooperate with each other. Like zebra stripes, humans can’t definitively say where one herd member’s ideas start and another’s end.

The implications are stark — increasingly so, with social media. Instead of forming relationships geographically, where some diversity of opinion is likely, we spend more and more of our time in digital spaces organized around shared beliefs. In this environment, “we’re able to put together a body of evidence without even realizing,” Reed says. No one is immune.

For decades, politicians and corporations have preyed on these social and psychological vulnerabilities. Since at least the 1950s, for example, researchers have recognized the link between smoking and lung cancer. But because scientists cannot definitively say that an individual case of lung cancer is directly caused by smoking, the tobacco lobby was able to sow doubt among the public, as historians of science Naomi Oreskes and Erik M. Conway showed in their bestselling book Merchants of Doubt.

By emphasizing the unresolved questions and imperfections of science, corporations were able to “provoke in people [a kind of] doubt that tends to crowd out knowledge,” says Reed. “We’ve inflamed in them a desire for knowledge we don’t have now, and because that tends to capture their attention, they stop asking the questions they can answer.”

Politicians and corporations have since performed the same sleight of hand on countless other topics. It’s easier than ever. On social media platforms like Facebook, it’s the people we trust most — our friends and family — who become the superspreaders of this manufactured misinformation.

“Science denial was so bloody successful for decades; that’s what made people in Washington say, wait a minute, if they can doubt climate [change], if they can doubt cigarettes, we can doubt anything,” says McIntyre, the author of Post-Truth.


There is reason to think that many so-called “skeptics” aren’t experiencing doubt at all. Instead, says Robbie Sutton, a social psychologist at the University of Kent who studies belief in conspiracy theories, studies have shown that people who question scientific conclusions are often motivated by a range of religious, economic, political, and personal convictions.

Evolution skepticism, for example, is more common among people who have strong beliefs about the relationship between God and humans. Climate change skepticism, by contrast, may be camouflaging resistance to climate action: In one 2014 study, Republicans expressed less skepticism about climate change when they were presented with free market solutions like technological innovation compared to traditionally liberal solutions like emissions restrictions. This wasn’t climate skepticism, the researchers concluded, but “solution aversion.”

“This is relatively smoking gun evidence that we choose to not believe or to adopt a skeptical stance toward some things because we don’t like what they mean,” Sutton says. And not just what they mean for us as individuals, but for everyone we think is like us.

When Oyakawa began to question different claims in her parenting groups, she felt attacked. But “every time I would start one thread that would get going, my inbox would explode” with people thanking her, privately, for speaking up.

In 2013, Oyakawa, now a vaccine advocate, founded a Facebook group called Crunchy Skeptics for evidence-based parenting. It’s brought almost 3,000 members together to evaluate claims and think critically about what’s best for their families. While it’s provided a science-focused alternative to other groups, Oyakawa says conversations around what “skepticism” really means haven’t gotten any easier.

There’s no easy fix for these problems. Removing misinformation on social platforms is crucial, but many scholars argue that to end the tyranny of “skeptics,” we need to replace it with a more robust scientific skepticism.

Psychology research seems to “suggest we’re tribal animals, and we’re not interested in shared truth, that we just want to support our tribe, our side,” Sutton says. But that doesn’t mean we have to give up on our commitment to reason.

Scientists are, in some sense, just another social group, but one that is defined by its commitment to a rigorous search for the truth. Individual “scientists believe false things all the time, but through the culture of science, what you’ve done is create a community that, through the process of openness and sharing experimental data, has eliminated a little bit of confirmation bias,” says Jonathan Haber, an educational researcher and the author of Critical Thinking.

The process can be unseemly; in the pandemic, everyone has been exposed to conflicting evidence and changing guidance, from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s initial guidance that Americans should not wear masks to the debate about whether the coronavirus is airborne (it is).

Click Here: Alphatauri Racing Suit

That’s why scientists remain skeptical of their own conclusions. Over time, as data accumulates and researchers correct their assumptions, they work toward consensus. While no question can be answered with 100 percent certainty, scientists can tell people how sure they should be.

“In science, skepticism doesn’t just mean that you doubt,” McIntyre says. “It means that when there’s sufficient evidence, you believe.”

Oyakawa knows how hard it is to achieve a truly healthy skepticism. On Facebook, she holds people’s hands and walks them through their logical fallacies, skewed personal anecdotes, and biased sources. She can do it because she’s made the same mistakes — and is acutely aware it could happen again. “I know that my experience and how I take in information is going to be affected by the biases I already have,” she says. But now, Oyakawa says, when she questions something, she does it with a method.

Eleanor Cummins is a science writer and frequent contributor to the Highlight. Most recently, she’s written about the Twitter presidency and social distancing scofflaws for Vox.