James Crombie / INPHO
James Crombie / INPHO / INPHO
CIAN BOLAND HAS traveled a long road over the past two years or so.
He fell victim to ongoing patellar tendonitis (in other words, inflammation of the tendon that joins your kneecap to your shinbone, or a painful knee injury) which has left him watching from the sidelines in his tracksuit more often than not.
Having impressed through the Dublin underage ranks and truly coming to the fore when he hit U21 level, a call-up to the seniors was inevitable.
He was summoned by Ger Cunningham and featured in the championship throughout the summer of 2015. He was where he wanted to be, playing at the top level possible.
Destined for great things the following year, he couldnโt wait to get going again. It was his last year of U21s too, so he was determined to leave his mark and help his side to glory.
But he was struck down. Hard and fast. The unbearable pain in his knee left Boland with a cloud of uncertainty over the year ahead.
Matt Browne / SPORTSFILE
Matt Browne / SPORTSFILE / SPORTSFILE
He was ruled out for the senior league campaign, with the viewpoint that rest and recovery may have him back in action for the summer. That wasnโt to be. Well, not with the seniors.
Nothing would stop him from trying his hardest with the U21 side though. There was endless amounts of physio and individual training, watching from the sidelines as his team-mates went about their business evening after evening.
31 May 2016 โ the starting team dropped for their Leinster U21 quarter-final against Wexford. And there the St Oliver Plunkettโs/Eoghan Ruadh forward was, starting in the number 12 jersey. โBolandโs back,โ read the headlines. He was, but probably shouldnโt have been.
โThe first year I got it, I struggled through the U21 campaign,โ he tells The42. โI couldnโt do much training or anything.โ
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He struggled through indeed, but taped his knee and featured as Dublin claimed their first Leinster title since 2011 and proceeded to the All-Ireland semi-final. A huge feat on an individual level too considering the pain he was withstanding.
That day in Thurles, it took extra-time to separate the Sky Blues and Galway but it ended in heartbreak for the former. Dejected, he knew that was that. The year was over, without a huge amount of hurling under his belt.
โI actually havenโt played much since then,โ he continues. โNot as much as Iโd like to anyway.โ
He went under the knife last October. And then it was back to the drawing board at the start of this year, back to trying to get right but to no real avail.
He returned to the Dublin fold, which was one step in the right direction and featured in this yearโs league campaign โ which the Dubs ended relegated to 1B after defeat to Clare in April.
May rolled around, and disaster struck again โ leaving him in limbo, and out of action for Dublinโs championship run.
โI got injured again in a club game at the start of May so itโs been on and off. I havenโt been playing as consistently as Iโd like.โ
Heโs hoping that will change however.
Of course, Dublinโs new hurling manager has been a huge talking point over the past week or so. Pat Gilroy โ the 2011 All-Ireland-winning football boss โ has taken the reins on a three-year term.
James Crombie / INPHO
James Crombie / INPHO / INPHO
At a media event this week, the Dubliner revealed that he yet has to formalise his playing panel and management team.
And Boland matched his words, saying he was unsure of what lay ahead just yet, and that he had no idea about how the panel would shape up.
โIโm not really too sure what the story is at the moment,โ he continued. โJust with the appointment only made last week.
โFrom my own point of view, Iโm just looking to get myself right again, to get back playing after the injuries Iโve had. Thatโs my main objective at the moment.โ
Itโs an exciting prospect though, he says:
โItโs an interesting appointment. Itโs good. I hear heโs very organised so itโs good from that point of view.
โThe main thing is heโs a Dublin man, itโs always good to have that passion from a manager from your county. Itโs a positive from that point of view.โ
Matt Browne / SPORTSFILE
Matt Browne / SPORTSFILE / SPORTSFILE
Off the field, Boland is still a DCU student. He did his undergraduate in Business, specialising in Marketing in his final year and is set to graduate next week. This year, heโs undertaking a Masters in Digital Marketing, โthe right fit for me,โ he smiles.
He missed quite a chunk of his hurling exploits with the Glasnevin-based college through injury over the past few years, so heโs hoping to make amends in the months ahead.
โHopefully Iโll get back playing, and get back playing with DCU. Itโs good craic, the Fitzgibbon, so just hopefully Iโm back eligible to play.
โThis yearโs a different story with this Masters. Itโs quite intense even though I only have 12 hours of lectures, thereโs a lot of independent study.
โThereโs been a lot of late nights so far and I can imagine itโs only going to get worse. Hopefully Iโll pass with flying colours though!โ
Cian Boland was one of six inter-county GAA players to receive Masters scholarships at DCU Business School, announced on Thursday.
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New era looms but Boland focusing on himself after taking the long road back
CIAN BOLAND HAS traveled a long road over the past two years or so.
He fell victim to ongoing patellar tendonitis (in other words, inflammation of the tendon that joins your kneecap to your shinbone, or a painful knee injury) which has left him watching from the sidelines in his tracksuit more often than not.
Having impressed through the Dublin underage ranks and truly coming to the fore when he hit U21 level, a call-up to the seniors was inevitable.
He was summoned by Ger Cunningham and featured in the championship throughout the summer of 2015. He was where he wanted to be, playing at the top level possible.
Destined for great things the following year, he couldnโt wait to get going again. It was his last year of U21s too, so he was determined to leave his mark and help his side to glory.
But he was struck down. Hard and fast. The unbearable pain in his knee left Boland with a cloud of uncertainty over the year ahead.
He was ruled out for the senior league campaign, with the viewpoint that rest and recovery may have him back in action for the summer. That wasnโt to be. Well, not with the seniors.
Nothing would stop him from trying his hardest with the U21 side though. There was endless amounts of physio and individual training, watching from the sidelines as his team-mates went about their business evening after evening.
31 May 2016 โ the starting team dropped for their Leinster U21 quarter-final against Wexford. And there the St Oliver Plunkettโs/Eoghan Ruadh forward was, starting in the number 12 jersey. โBolandโs back,โ read the headlines. He was, but probably shouldnโt have been.
โThe first year I got it, I struggled through the U21 campaign,โ he tells The42. โI couldnโt do much training or anything.โ
He struggled through indeed, but taped his knee and featured as Dublin claimed their first Leinster title since 2011 and proceeded to the All-Ireland semi-final. A huge feat on an individual level too considering the pain he was withstanding.
That day in Thurles, it took extra-time to separate the Sky Blues and Galway but it ended in heartbreak for the former. Dejected, he knew that was that. The year was over, without a huge amount of hurling under his belt.
โI actually havenโt played much since then,โ he continues. โNot as much as Iโd like to anyway.โ
He went under the knife last October. And then it was back to the drawing board at the start of this year, back to trying to get right but to no real avail.
He returned to the Dublin fold, which was one step in the right direction and featured in this yearโs league campaign โ which the Dubs ended relegated to 1B after defeat to Clare in April.
May rolled around, and disaster struck again โ leaving him in limbo, and out of action for Dublinโs championship run.
โI got injured again in a club game at the start of May so itโs been on and off. I havenโt been playing as consistently as Iโd like.โ
Heโs hoping that will change however.
Of course, Dublinโs new hurling manager has been a huge talking point over the past week or so. Pat Gilroy โ the 2011 All-Ireland-winning football boss โ has taken the reins on a three-year term.
At a media event this week, the Dubliner revealed that he yet has to formalise his playing panel and management team.
And Boland matched his words, saying he was unsure of what lay ahead just yet, and that he had no idea about how the panel would shape up.
โIโm not really too sure what the story is at the moment,โ he continued. โJust with the appointment only made last week.
Itโs an exciting prospect though, he says:
โItโs an interesting appointment. Itโs good. I hear heโs very organised so itโs good from that point of view.
Off the field, Boland is still a DCU student. He did his undergraduate in Business, specialising in Marketing in his final year and is set to graduate next week. This year, heโs undertaking a Masters in Digital Marketing, โthe right fit for me,โ he smiles.
He missed quite a chunk of his hurling exploits with the Glasnevin-based college through injury over the past few years, so heโs hoping to make amends in the months ahead.
โHopefully Iโll get back playing, and get back playing with DCU. Itโs good craic, the Fitzgibbon, so just hopefully Iโm back eligible to play.
โThis yearโs a different story with this Masters. Itโs quite intense even though I only have 12 hours of lectures, thereโs a lot of independent study.
โThereโs been a lot of late nights so far and I can imagine itโs only going to get worse. Hopefully Iโll pass with flying colours though!โ
Cian Boland was one of six inter-county GAA players to receive Masters scholarships at DCU Business School, announced on Thursday.
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