Updated at 08:00
WEXFORD FOLK ARE a rebellious sort of people. Itโs in their nature.
Itโs also in their history.
The Irish Rebellion of 1798 was an uprising against British rule across Ireland. Inspired by republican revolutionary group the United Irishman, it lasted from May to September and the death toll reached as many as 50,000.
The Wexford Rebellion was by far the most successful and destructive of uprisings that took place throughout the country that year. The rebels claimed significant victories in Oulart, Enniscorthy, and Wexford town, before over 15,000 British troops launched an attack on Vinegar Hill outside Enniscorthy.
The rebel leadership issued a call to all its fighters to meet the British army for the final, decisive battle of the rebellion. Lacking firearms, Wexford blacksmiths forged metal pikes for the Irish combatants to use as their main weapons and bring down the British riders from their cavalry.
Despite a gallant defence, the British eventually took Enniscorthy but the Wexford Rebellion was a milestone on Irelandโs long journey to independence.
Over two centuries later, a hurling rebellion of sorts is emerging from Wexford, led by their firebrand manager Davy Fitzgerald.
Itโs a match made in hurling heaven.
โWeโre a good match,โ he agrees. โThe way theyโve made me feel makes me want to work even harder for them, to do it more.
โYou can tell Iโm in good form and the reason Iโm in good form is the way weโre being treated. Even though we lost to Tipperary they were still great.
โThe test will be when we lose a few games, will they be the same? I really hope they are because Iโm really enjoying it. And we will lose games, we might lose them well at some stage.
โI just hope they stay the same because itโs a lot easier come down here and take that long drive when youโve massive support. Where weโve come from in six to eight months has been incredible.โ
Wexford had become accustomed to life in the doldrums, a long way removed from the glory days of the โ90s.
Fitzgerald arrived over the winter and quickly turned Wexford back into a competitive force. On Sunday, theyโre bidding for a first Leinster title in 13 years.
โIf you said to me at the start of the year that youโd win promotion and be in a Leinster final, I think if you asked anyone that theyโd say youโre off your head.โ
You get the sense Fitzgeraldโs recent 12-week suspension only served to endear him more to the Wexford public. His presence at the epic win over Kilkenny was almost mythical. He was there tucked away behind his customised box with its tinted windows. Out of sight but never far from the mind.
When the final whistle confirmed Kilkennyโs departure from the Leinster championship, the โWexicansโ emptied from the stands onto the field to celebrate. Within minutes, amid all the mayhem, their attention turned to the press box.
There stood Fitzgerald, their rebel leader, who emerged from his bunker with his fists clenched and raised high in the air.
โYou get very few of them days in hurling,โ he smiles. โWhatever happens Iโll cherish that one. Some people were saying we were 3/1 or 4/1 outsiders. That means we havenโt really got a hope.
โWhen you go into a game like that and playing the likes of Kilkenny who I know worked so hard for it because they wanted to prove a point for the quarter-final.
โIโll tell you the truth, itโs right up there. I was above in the box, but when I looked out onto the field afterwards, man!โ
Part of the fascination around the former Sixmilebridge goalkeeper is the style of play he employs. On the face of it, Wexford use seven defenders with Shaun Murphy acting as a sweeper in front of the full-back line.
But itโs far more complex than that. This is no blanket defence. When they win possession, Wexford work it out of the back line with a short game before hitting diagonal passes to ball winners on the wings.
Their forwards make clever use of space, drawing defenders out of position with dummy runs, leaving space for others to exploit.
โIโve been working on this for fecking years,โ explains Fitzgerald. โWith LIT, we have played the same way for the last number of years and we havenโt been negative. Itโs just a different way of playing.
โI think weโve played a decent brand of hurling. I think weโve been really positive with how weโve played actually, although some people would perceive it as negative โ itโs not.
โThere is more to it than a straight seven backs thatโs all Iโll say to you. Even with Clare there was a lot more to it than seven backs. People had this perception they wanted to see a certain thing.
โIf you look at our shots ratio in every game, if you really look at our shots ratio, a lot of pundits havenโt really looked at it, weโre getting off a lot of shots. Will we score five goals a game? Probably not, but weโll put in a goal or two and hit 18 to 22 or 23 points. Weโre averaging 22 or 23 scores a game. Thatโs not bad.
โIโll put it to you this way. People that know their hurling, go back and look at some of the top teams over the last 10 or 15 years. See how many people they have behind the ball at different times. Iโm very certain they have a lot more than six back there, Iโm very certain of that. Yet because you leave one man back there you get absolutely criticised.โ
Criticism has been a regular bedfellow of the 45-year-oldโs during his managerial career. In 2008, he brought Waterford to their first All-Ireland final in 45 years.
Five years later, he delivered just the fourth Liam MacCarthy in Clareโs history. Both incredible achievements, nothing spared him from vitriol both inside and outside the counties.
The perception of his style of play and his animated nature of the sideline drew more critics than most. Not that it bothered him too much.
โListen, I think over the last number of years whether it was Clare or Waterford, this stuff has worked. But itโs not always going to work.
โI remember Waterford people were saying when I took over there that they were finished, they were gone, they were over the hill after they were hammered by Clare. But they werenโt.
โWhen I took over Clare they hadnโt one U21 (All-Ireland). We changed their whole style of play. You get a kick out of that, coming back. The same with Wexford.
โI enjoy that, so I do. I donโt know whatโs ahead, but you love that bit of a challenge, you know?โ
A battle-hardened Galway outfit represent the latest challenge facing Fitzgerald. Theyโve taken plenty of stick in recent times too but the manner of their performances and victories this year have placed them as favourites to win the All-Ireland.
Itโs another step up from Kilkenny.
โWe do know that we are underdogs. And youโre not saying that to build it up, that is the truth.
โWe know Galway are very hungry. When youโve got a bit of stick as they have over the years, and I was actually delighted to see them winning the league. That shut a lot of people up. They deservedly did so.
โTheyโve been very close and I think the league win was a good thing for them. They are one of the top one or two teams in the country, but isnโt that good from a Wexford point of view that we get a chance to pit ourselves against the likes of them.
โThe most important thing is that I want us to be able to go out and compete. Iโm not thinking of winning a Leinster here. I want us to be able to hold our heads up and be able to go and compete.
โWeโve competed this year so far. Galway are going to try and blow us away. Iโm sure Galway are saying to themselves, โWeโve a lot more experience than Wexford do, weโve a lot better players than Wexford do, weโre going to teach them a lesson.โ
โWe have got to meet that challenge. And if we can hang in there for 20 or 25 minutes, then youโre going to have a chance. But thatโs going to be the thing, the key. Tipperary tried to do it to us and got on top of us early but we managed to hang in there.
โWeโve got to do the same here. Galway are one of the favourites for the All-Ireland. They have massive physicality, theyโre able to hurl, theyโre able to run, they can play short and long. They can do everything. Itโs a big challenge for us, very big, on a big occasion which is another challenge we have to meet.
โBut letโs look forward to it. Letโs go out there and see what happens and give it everything. And hopefully weโll get to show that Wexford bite and heart, thatโs what I want to see out there.โ
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After watching what we had to watch last week with Dublin and Westmeath, if there are any pikes left in Wexford they should be stuck through every football that can be found. Davy is a breath of fresh air to the GAA, so he is, and it will be a while before he is put back in his box, so it will.
I give him one year until he falls out with half the team and board
@Doni Kehoe: I give him two years and ye will be dancing at the crossroads again, so ye will
So Davyโs a rebel now,plagarism
@billy Dorney: Davy is as much a rebel as Enda Kenny is
@John McNamara: tongue in cheek,from me,,,,,cork,rebel,rebels cork,get it?