HENRY SHEFFLIN PROBABLY won’t be in the Kilkenny starting line-up for this Sunday’s All-Ireland final but he is still one of the major talking points as he attempts to pick up his tenth All-Ireland winners medal.
Many are predicting that King Henry might retire after the game, win or lose, so to mark Shefflin possibly winning a decade of All-Ireland medals, here are 10 reasons we will miss the man if he steps away after this Sunday.
1. Longevity
Can Shefflin win his tenth title 14 years after his first one? James Crombie / INPHO
James Crombie / INPHO / INPHO
Henry Shefflin played in All-Ireland finals in the year of my first communion, my confirmation, my junior cert, my leaving cert and when I graduated from college. So, he has been around a long time. That sort of staying power in a county where many players can only stay on the team for two or three years, is insane.
2. He was the best player on the best team of all-time
Shefflin scored 2-26 across the four All-Ireland finals won by the great Kilkenny team from 06-09 (including 1-2 in the 2007 final when he injured his knee early on). Those Kilkenny teams probably had about 20 legendary players but nobody did more to win those titles than Henry Shefflin.
3. Nobody who has ever played the game has scored more championship points
Shefflin has had this record for so long that it is easy to forget how special an accolade it is. The first hurling championship was played in 1887 and in its 127 years, no man has ever scored more points (27-484) in the championship. Not Christy Ring. Not Eddie Keher. No-one.
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And he is only two points off Keher’s All-Ireland final record too. Can he break it this weekend?
4. He makes big plays in big games
Any player who averages eight points per All-Ireland final can obviously deliver on the grandest stage but the manner in which Shefflin played on the big day is what sets him apart. He was at the heart of the shellacking given to Offaly in 2000 and twelve years later he was going toe-to-toe with Joe Canning in a titanic tussle.
Shefflin has an insatiable appetite for dominating the biggest days in hurling. Even this season, he rolled back the years to remind Canning to respect his elders.
History beckoned and Shefflin didn’t blink. It even gave us this awkward interview when Brian Cody looked liked he wanted to loaf Marty Morrissey (2.20 in).
Shefflin returned from two serious knee injuries. Morgan Treacy / INPHO
Morgan Treacy / INPHO / INPHO
His All-Ireland final performances were exceptional even though two of them (2007 and 2010) were cut short with crippling knee injuries. But what added to Shefflin’s legend was how he dealt with those setbacks: an All-Ireland title in 2008 and an All-Ireland title in 2011.
7. He flies the flag for redheads everywhere
As a fully fledged member of the red hair club, all I can say is: you are welcome in our clubhouse any time, Henry.
10 reasons we will miss Henry Shefflin when he's gone
HENRY SHEFFLIN PROBABLY won’t be in the Kilkenny starting line-up for this Sunday’s All-Ireland final but he is still one of the major talking points as he attempts to pick up his tenth All-Ireland winners medal.
Many are predicting that King Henry might retire after the game, win or lose, so to mark Shefflin possibly winning a decade of All-Ireland medals, here are 10 reasons we will miss the man if he steps away after this Sunday.
1. Longevity
Can Shefflin win his tenth title 14 years after his first one? James Crombie / INPHO James Crombie / INPHO / INPHO
Henry Shefflin played in All-Ireland finals in the year of my first communion, my confirmation, my junior cert, my leaving cert and when I graduated from college. So, he has been around a long time. That sort of staying power in a county where many players can only stay on the team for two or three years, is insane.
2. He was the best player on the best team of all-time
Shefflin scored 2-26 across the four All-Ireland finals won by the great Kilkenny team from 06-09 (including 1-2 in the 2007 final when he injured his knee early on). Those Kilkenny teams probably had about 20 legendary players but nobody did more to win those titles than Henry Shefflin.
3. Nobody who has ever played the game has scored more championship points
Shefflin has had this record for so long that it is easy to forget how special an accolade it is. The first hurling championship was played in 1887 and in its 127 years, no man has ever scored more points (27-484) in the championship. Not Christy Ring. Not Eddie Keher. No-one.
And he is only two points off Keher’s All-Ireland final record too. Can he break it this weekend?
4. He makes big plays in big games
Any player who averages eight points per All-Ireland final can obviously deliver on the grandest stage but the manner in which Shefflin played on the big day is what sets him apart. He was at the heart of the shellacking given to Offaly in 2000 and twelve years later he was going toe-to-toe with Joe Canning in a titanic tussle.
Shefflin has an insatiable appetite for dominating the biggest days in hurling. Even this season, he rolled back the years to remind Canning to respect his elders.
5. The 2009 final goal
History beckoned and Shefflin didn’t blink. It even gave us this awkward interview when Brian Cody looked liked he wanted to loaf Marty Morrissey (2.20 in).
6. His resolve to return from crippling injuries
Shefflin returned from two serious knee injuries. Morgan Treacy / INPHO Morgan Treacy / INPHO / INPHO
His All-Ireland final performances were exceptional even though two of them (2007 and 2010) were cut short with crippling knee injuries. But what added to Shefflin’s legend was how he dealt with those setbacks: an All-Ireland title in 2008 and an All-Ireland title in 2011.
7. He flies the flag for redheads everywhere
As a fully fledged member of the red hair club, all I can say is: you are welcome in our clubhouse any time, Henry.
8. He dances like a normal person
When you almost have an All-Ireland medal for every finger, you can afford to burst into a hearty jig now and again.
9. He combined skill and power in an exceptional way
As the best player on the pitch, Shefflin was always marked closely but he had the strength to take challenges and the skill to evade them.
10. He did it all with the game’s greatest manager
Hurling's greatest ever player with the greatest ever manager. Cathal Noonan / INPHO Cathal Noonan / INPHO / INPHO
Brian Cody and Henry Shefflin have been together since the start. Can they make even more history this Sunday?
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