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Clerkin's last stand: The last footballer of the '90s on his legacy, punditry and writing a book

The Monaghan legend chats to The42 about the highs and lows of a 17-year career.

Updated at 21.30

DARRAGH ร“ Sร‰ tells a good yarn about Dick Clerkin.

On a winterโ€™s night in 2008, around the time Monaghanโ€™s fortunes were beginning to rise under Seamus McEnaney, ร“ Sรฉโ€™s phone buzzed with a call from the Farney boss.

Dick Clerkin celebrates at the final whistle Donall Farmer / INPHO Donall Farmer / INPHO / INPHO

He had an unusual request for the Kerry midfielder.

Monaghan were making a big fundraising drive that year, with an upcoming white-collar boxing night their showpiece event.

Clerkin and ร“ Sรฉ had clashed during their countyโ€™s championship meetings in the previous two years, and Bantyโ€™s grand plan was for the pair to face-off for three rounds in the eveningโ€™s main event.

ร“ Sรฉ couldnโ€™t believe his ears.

โ€œDid he really think I was going to leave Dick train away for six weeks before toddling up there to Monaghan to be absolutely decorated inside in the ring?โ€ he wrote in his Irish Times column three years ago.

โ€œGive me some bit of credit. Iโ€™d be thick enough the odd time but there was no way I was putting my hand up for that one. I laughed it out of town.โ€

The idea of facing Clerkin โ€“ who recently hung up his boots after 17 years at the top โ€“ in the ring was laughable, even for a grizzled veteran like ร“ Sรฉ.

The 35-year-old Currin man was widely regarded as an aggressive, combative midfielder who characterised Monaghanโ€™s identity. As he reflects on his career, thatโ€™s not a label heโ€™s entirely comfortable with.

โ€œI probably played a lot more football in my latter years than I might have in previous years, when was all very much (focused) on work-rate and high intensity,โ€ Clerkin tells The42.

(I started) getting into scoring positions, getting a few scores, and using the ball a bit more. I enjoyed that because thatโ€™s the way I would have played my club football.

โ€œI would have been a heavy scorer with the club and playing that typical role around the middle of the field. Thatโ€™s my natural game. It was nice to be able to play more of that in the latter years.

โ€œThatโ€™s how I would have started as well. I actually took the frees in Bantyโ€™s first year, believe it or not.โ€

Seamus McEnaney celebrates with Dick Clerkin Clerkin celebrates a Monaghan victory in 2009 with Seamus McEnaney. James Crombie / INPHO James Crombie / INPHO / INPHO

McEnaneyโ€™s 2005 arrival in Monaghan brought about a rapid rise in the fortunes of the Farney Army. Clerkinโ€™s inter-county career to that point had been largely unsuccessful.

He had yet to play a championship game in Croke Park. In his first six Ulster campaigns, they managed just two wins โ€“ both quarter-final victories.

What changed when Banty came in? They made a decision as a squad to counter the notion that Monaghan were a soft touch and started to compete on the physicality stakes with the big sides up north like Tyrone and Armagh.

We probably recognised as a team around โ€™05 or โ€™06 that, โ€˜weโ€™re going to try to compete with the big boys. If we just rely on playing nice football weโ€™re only going to get so far. Weโ€™re going to have to try to level the playing field any way we could.โ€™

โ€œIt was a collective decision,โ€ continues Clerkin. โ€œBanty had his physical, intense, robust style of play with a high work-rate.

โ€œThere was a focus on, if teams had key players, you werenโ€™t afraid to man-mark them and almost sacrifice your own game to try and nullify key players. We rowed-in with that and committed to that approach. It got us success in many ways.

โ€œGames around โ€™07, โ€™08, โ€™09 when we first came on the scene. I certainly wouldnโ€™t look back and say it was my best football but Iโ€™ve no regrets. It was a decision we took, it was a decision I took.

โ€œIt wasnโ€™t something that was necessarily in my game from the start.

โ€œLooking back if we had have played a wee bit more expansive football we might have been able to get the balance a wee bit better. But thatโ€™s easy to say with hindsight.โ€

Dick Clerkin and Paul Galvin argue Clerkin had a couple of fiery encounters with Kerry players. Here he clashes with Paul Galvin in 2010. James Crombie James Crombie

In Declan Bogueโ€™s 2011 book, This Is Our Year, Clerkin spoke about his regrets over the overly robust player he became. Five years on, he now accepts that sacrificing his game for the benefit of the team was necessary for Monaghan to succeed.

โ€œI probably have to accept at this stage that people will remember me more for the physicality and that way of playing.

When Monaghan first came to the fore in the late โ€™00s thatโ€™s what people saw of me. First impressions last I suppose and, whilst Iโ€™d like to think I changed that perception over the last few years, thatโ€™s largely how I played for Monaghan and you have to accept that.

โ€œBut Iโ€™ve no regrets and I never had any problem for sacrificing my own natural game and possibly my name at times for the jersey and (did) whatever had to be done to get us to where we needed to get to. Iโ€™ve no issues with that. Iโ€™ve big enough shoulders to carry any criticism that might come with that.

โ€œMy father (Hugo) before me would have played a very similar role. (He) played midfield with Monaghan for years in the 80s (and) people probably see us similar โ€“ as a steady influence around midfield.

โ€œI had absolutely no issues styling myself on him. If thatโ€™s how Iโ€™m remembered then Iโ€™m happy enough with that.โ€

Clerkin went on to feature in a record 169 senior games for Monaghan since 1999, scoring 3-107. He would play in five Ulster finals, winning two.

Monaghanโ€™s Ulster title victory in 2013, their first provincial success in 25 years, is what many consider Clerkinโ€™s emblematic moment in the blue and white.

Relief was the overriding feeling as the then-13-year veteran finally lifted a major honour with his county.

It was sort of, โ€˜Jesus, thank God we got that job done,โ€™ he says. โ€œIt didnโ€™t really matter at that stage what the performance was. We had so many near misses and moral victories in games that we should have won and didnโ€™t.

โ€œWe didnโ€™t really care. Then there was the euphoria and the rest after that. It was just a really good day.โ€

The Monaghan team celebrate in the dressing room after the game The Monaghan team celebrate their 2013 Ulster title in the dressing room in Clones. Donall Farmer / INPHO Donall Farmer / INPHO / INPHO

But the aftermath of the win was tinged with a sense of dissatisfaction.

โ€œWhat would have annoyed me with that: that was the All-Ireland champions that we comprehensively beat in a provincial final. People never really gave us enough credit for that victory.

That was the Donegal invincible team that nobody could see a way around โ€“ and thatโ€™s everybody from Kerry, Cork, Tyrone โ€“ and we wiped the floor with them in a provincial final. They hadnโ€™t lost in the previous 10 or 12 Ulster championship games and people wiped it off as a one-off.

He continues: โ€œI thought that was a wee bit unfair because you donโ€™t beat a team who are supposed to be that good, that easy by luck. And I think we validated that by how we followed it up by getting to the final the next year.

โ€œWe sort of let ourselves down with the performance (in 2014) and Donegal played the better football, but then we came back and won it again (in 2015). I think that validated the first victory that people wrote off as a once-off. That was pleasing from a collective point of view.

โ€œWe were able to come back and sustain that level. You canโ€™t take that away from us. That was important. Sometimes you just need that validation.

โ€œThere was probably more of an element of satisfaction with the second one, in so far that the first one was just that relief elation type of thing. The second was for us almost, the other one was for everyone else who had to suffer the previous defeats.โ€

So what does the future hold for Dick Clerkin? A columnist with the Irish Examiner, he has strong views on the GAA and has spoken out in the past about championship structures, the black card and players retiring early.

Dick Clerkin James Crombie / INPHO James Crombie / INPHO / INPHO

During his playing days, Clerkin purposefully stayed away from writing about individual games. Thatโ€™s an approach thatโ€™s likely to continue.

โ€œI would just write about topics and general stuff, as opposed to commenting on games. I would probably still follow that path because thereโ€™s enough people writing match summaries and match previews. I think itโ€™s fairly saturated.

โ€œI enjoy looking at general GAA issues from a different point of view, having been involved in it. If Iโ€™m to continue writing, which I hope I do, youโ€™ll open up a column from me and itโ€™s not just a rehash of whatโ€™s said by 10 other different people.

โ€œItโ€™ll be looking at it a bit different and that then helps you stay away from commenting. I might still be still a wee bit close from the Monaghan point of view, but if youโ€™re working for Sky, youโ€™re going to have to call it straight as best as you can see.

I donโ€™t think you need to be unnecessarily critical or dramatic just for the sake of it. Thereโ€™s a lot of that starting to creep into the game. I donโ€™t like it. Itโ€™s not necessary. I think itโ€™s lazy. Itโ€™s not something I think sits well with the GAA and what the GAA is.โ€

The Healthy and Safety manager has no plans for an autobiography yet, but it wouldnโ€™t be a surprise to see Clerkinโ€™s book released in time for the 2017 Christmas market. He feels his story would be relevant to most inter-county footballers.

โ€œIn some ways itโ€™s a natural conclusion when you retire. I do think that Monaghan have a very good story. I think itโ€™s probably more relevant for inter-county players what we have done than say the Kerrys or Dublins or Tyrones, which is all about winning All-Irelands.

โ€œThe reality is the vast, vast majority of inter-county players have never reached those heights, but the vast majority of inter-county players could in theory replicate what weโ€™ve done.

โ€œWe were in the gutter or mid-tier as much as anyone. So itโ€™s probably a good story thatโ€™s a bit more relevant. Will I put pen-to-paper on it? I donโ€™t know. Iโ€™ll see.

โ€œIโ€™m certainly not thinking about it at the minute but if it is a story that somebody deems as worth writing then it might be something that could interest me.โ€

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    Mute Del Haven
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    Apr 12th 2015, 8:50 PM

    Heโ€™s a machine. Barely any mistakes

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    Mute Ronan Stokes
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    Apr 12th 2015, 8:56 PM

    Even his mistakes are not bad. This looks like its over before the back 9.

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    Mute Ronan Stokes
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    Apr 12th 2015, 10:13 PM

    After 10, Its all over now.

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    Mute John Dixon
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    Apr 12th 2015, 9:34 PM

    Back to 3 shots the gap now, should still be enough. I expect him to burn up the back 9

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    Mute paul molloy
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    Apr 12th 2015, 9:32 PM

    Ya would not want to talk too soon

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    Mute Tony Mcgrath
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    Apr 12th 2015, 11:25 PM

    Poll on sky sports over 40% thought rose would win .

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    Mute Ronan Stokes
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    Apr 12th 2015, 11:31 PM

    Dreamers, although I wouldnโ€™t begrudge another South African winner.

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    Mute David Fox
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    Apr 12th 2015, 11:42 PM

    Most overrated game on the planet

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    Mute Sat Singh
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    Apr 12th 2015, 11:54 PM

    Has shown great composure for a 21year old,deserves to win.
    Made for life now I would imagine with all that money in top golf
    tournaments,the 2nd gets over a million dollars.
    Congratulations to Justin as well for been 2nd.

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    Mute ShanoR
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    Apr 13th 2015, 2:08 AM

    Spieth was simply brilliant for 72 holes, thoroughly deserved and I can see that being the first of many green jackets he dons. If he carries on playing like that we should get some brilliant battles between himself and Rory over the next 10 years.

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