Skip to main content

An All-Ireland Final for the Ages

     

 An All-Ireland Final for the Ages      Gerry O'Shea

The All-Ireland finals in 1955 and 1975 are remembered with great pride by aficionados of Kerry football. In both years Dublin - better known now as the Dubs - were strongly fancied to win, but the men in green and gold emerged victorious and thus were assured of a special place in the Kerry pantheon of football heroes.

There is a great story told about the 55 final. The Kerry team travelled up by train and settled in at Barry's Hotel, owned by cousins of the young IRA hero who was executed by the British during the War of Independence. A big steak dinner was consumed, the rosary was recited and on the stroke of 9.00pm the manager, the legendary Dr. Eamonn O'Sullivan, ordered his team to bed, stressing the importance of a good night's sleep before performing in the momentous event in Croke Park the following day.

Early to bed was not the custom of a few of the team, and four players, full-back Ned Roche, corner-back Micksie Palmer, center-half back John Cronin and wing half-forward, Tadghie Lyne, made their way out of hotel windows and back doors to a waiting taxicab whose driver was instructed to get them away from the excitement of the city to a room where they wouldn't be recognized and they could enjoy a few pints.

The driver brought them to a lounge bar in the Curragh area of County Kildare. The owner was apprised of his important guests and he found a private room for them. He was not a big football supporter, mainly concentrating his energy on horse-racing in the Curragh Racecourse nearby. He did, however, have a "book" which included some bets on the All-Ireland with the Dubs listed as close to 2 to 1 favorites.

His distinguished Kerry guests lauded the quality of his pints of guinness and it was close to two in the morning before the same taxi man dropped them back to Barry's.

The two stars of that Dublin team in those years were Ollie Freaney  playing at center-forward and Kevin Heffernan at full-forward. Two of the nocturnal wanderers were pitted against the Dublin heroes. Ned Roche had the better of Heffo and the elegant Freaney scored a late goal but was successfully marked by the robust John Cronin. Tadghie Lyne kicked six wonderful points  from long distance, a massive contribution for his team. And, based on his outstanding display, Micksie Palmer  was partnered with the other corner back, the abstemious Jerome O'Shea, as joint recipients of the prestigious sport-stars of-the-week award by the Irish Independent. Kerry won that All-Ireland sixty four years ago by 12 points to 1-6.   

The last part of the story concerns the Kildare bar owner who when he witnessed the late-night carousing by the Kerry stalwarts reckoned he could not go wrong offering odds of nearly 3 to 1 against a Kerry victory. There were plenty takers. He explained later that he limited his "book" to horse-racing bets after that costly learning experience!

Skip forward twenty years. Dublin won the 1974 final, showing a new exuberant style anchored on an impressive level of fitness and tactical combination play. Their approach was widely described as scientific - the same adjective that was used about the 1955 team to distinguish them from the traditional catch-and-kick style associated especially with Kerry.

 Micko Dwyer had taken over as the Kerry manager and he focused all his attention on building a young team that aimed to surpass the Dubs in fitness and skills.

When the teams met in the final in September 1975 the main talking point centered on an incident after seventeen minutes where the Kerry captain, Mickey "Ned" O'Sullivan, while driving through the Dubs defense, was heavily tackled and ended up unconscious in the Mater Hospital, oblivious of the result until he woke up the following day. His marker, Alan Larkin, assured me over a couple of pints a few years later that the  real culprit was the ground where Mickey bounced his head when he fell  heavily!

Again Dublin, the stylish 1974 champions, were strong favorites in that game, but Kerry players, seemingly enraged by their captain's harsh treatment, won the match easily - 2-12 to 11 points.

The intense rivalry between the two sides dominated Irish sport for the next ten years. Despite the hard knocks and intense competitiveness of their matches, the players developed friendships that blossomed every year at the Listowel Races and in pubs in Raheny and Drumcondra at various football gatherings.

This year's final is another major sporting event because winning it will elevate this Dublin team to a special status as the first senior team to win five championships in a row. During what Kerry people call "the golden years" Micko Dwyer's charges almost reached these heights but Seamus Darby intervened and ended the dream with a memorable late goal for Offaly in September of 1982. Incidentally, British Open champion, Shane Lowry's father, Brendan, and two uncles, Michael and Sean, played for the winning team in that historic game.

 It is ironic that now only Kerry can prevent the Dubs - who are firm favorites to win - from taking the Sam Maguire Cup for the fifth sequential year.

After defeating Mayo easily in the semi-final the three commentators on RTE, the Irish television station, Colm O'Rourke, Tomas OShea and the indefatigable Joe Brolly outdid each other with superlatives describing the sublime footballing performance by the Dubs in the second half. Shock and awe! No team could come close to matching the tour de force of the first twenty minutes after half-time. It was an enthralling spectacle akin to a beautiful dream where an art lover luxuriates in a roomful of Vermeer paintings.

One journalist wrote that it was like Mayo opened the door to see if it was raining outside and they were hit by a tsunami.

Are Kerry without hope then against such a dominant team? Certainly not. No Kerry team comes to Croke Park thinking they will be beaten.

 The Kerry forwards will at least match the Dubs in that attacking feature of the match. David Clifford, Paul Geaney, Stephen O'Brien and Seanie Shea are excellent, top-class players.

Midfield is problematic because Kerry have not found a partner for David Moran. The man who dominated the minor championship in 2014 and 2015, Kerry midfielder Mark O'Connor, standing at 6ft 3 inches, is unavailable because he is now a regular for Geelong who are top of the senior league in Australian football. He hails from Dingle where his fielding ability was often compared favorably to Paddy Kennedy from nearby Annascaul, reputed to be the best high-catching midfielder in the country in the 1940's.

 Mark has promised that he will come back to play for his county. Geelong is all about making a good living; playing with Kerry in Croke Park remains his boyhood dream.

The Kerry backs have improved and are well-organized but it remains to be seen if they can deal with the wave attacking movements of the powerful Dublin players going forward.

Character matters on all big sporting days and the All-Ireland Football Final is arguably the premier day of Irish sport. Peter Keane, the Kerry manager, has been coaching most of the team since their minor days, and he knows the men who can take the big pressure and who have the potential to deliver before a crowd of 80,000.

The Kerry jersey and all the proud history that goes with it bring out the best in young men honored to represent the county. The players will be reminded of past glories when teams from the county were underdogs but defied the odds on the big day. This will be an All-Ireland Final for the ages between a great Dublin lineout and a Kerry team with outstanding potential that will seek to emulate the heroes of 55 and 75.

 

 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Child Rearing in Ireland in the 20th Century

 Child Rearing in 20th Century Ireland       Gerry OShea  It is a truism accepted in most cultures that children thrive in a supportive family and in a community where they feel valued and encouraged. The old Irish adage “mol an oige agus tiocfaidh se” (praise young people and they will blossom) contains  important wisdom from the ancient Celts. However, for most of the 20th century in Ireland, this advice in Shakespeare’s words  was “more honored in the breach than in the observance.” There were two important considerations that underpinned Irish child-rearing practices throughout most of the last century. First, contraceptives were not available until late in the 1980’s mainly because of opposition by the Catholic Church, so big families were an important feature of Irish life. Think of parents in a crowded house rearing eight or ten kids and obliged to maintain order in the family. Anyone who stepped out of line would likely be slapped or otherwise physically reprimanded. According

Reflections of an Immigrant

  Reflections of an Immigrant             Gerry OShea I came to America on a student visa in the summer of 1968. I travelled with a college friend, Ignatius Coffey, who hails from Labasheeda in County Clare. We were attending University College Dublin (UCD) after completing a second year studying the Arts curriculum. As evening students we were making our way by working in various jobs because our parents could not afford to cover our living expenses. So, we arrived in New York on the last day of May with very few dollars in the back pocket wondering if this new country would give us a break. I had uncles and aunts in New York who were a big help in providing meals and subsistence. A first cousin’s husband, who worked in Woolworth’s warehouse in Harlem and who was one of about six shop stewards in the Teamsters Union there, found us a job in his place, despite the line of American students knocking at the door. The pay was good and we worked every hour of overtime that we could

A Changing Ireland

  A Changing Ireland         Gerry OShea “ You talk to me of nationality, language, religion ,” Stephen Dedalus declared in Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man. “I shall try to fly by those nets.” In response, one of his nationalist friends asked Stephen the bottom-line question “ Are you Irish at all?” According to the most recent Irish census that question is answered in the affirmative by no less than 23% of citizens who identify as non-white Irish. The number of Irish citizens born abroad, increased in 2022 and now accounts for 12% of the population. The biggest non-native groups come from Poland and the UK followed by India, Romania, Lithuania, and Brazil. In 2021, the year preceding the census, over 89,000 people moved to live in Ireland, with India and Brazil leading the way. How do the people feel about the big infusion of foreigners into the country? A 2020 Economic and Social Research Institute study revealed a gap between the public and private perceptions and a