DOES ANYONE ELSE out there watch Rugbai Gold on TG4? Five Nations games from the mid-1980s with Nigel Starmer Smith behind the microphone, what’s not to love, right.
I think it’s an incredibly instructive bit of television though, because it illustrates what professionalism has done to the sport. The fundamentals are the same, but now the level of application, the speed, and the skill are at a different level entirely.
Rugby turned professional in 1995 and that changed everything, of course. The GAA hasn’t had a similar moment when you can say everything changed – it’s been more gradual than that. But there’s no doubt the sport we watched this weekend is a different game to that which was played 20 or 30 years ago.
The sport now rewards ferocious hard work, defensive application, and managerial brilliance, as well as the more traditional virtues of forward play and individual flair. This should be something we celebrate, particularly in a sport where there is no transfer market – the only option open to a county not blessed with tradition is to work harder than everyone else, to be more organized, to be the best team you can be.
This weekend was a celebration of that. Newstalk had the Tyrone-Roscommon game on Saturday and the Kerry-Limerick game on Sunday so I was in Croker on both days, and the drama at times was just sensational, with Mayo’s win over Cork taking the biscuit of course.
Having the Rossies in town is always good of course, and they were actually in very early on Saturday for their minors, who won an absolute belter of a game against Armagh in extra-time. As the game lurched from side to the next, I’m reasonably sure the legend that is Willie Hegarty of Shannonside FM urged his listeners not to get too worked up and have a heart attack, because the A and E is gone! That’s some informed, compassionate broadcasting right there.
He’s been here before
Their seniors tore into Tyrone from the start too and gave them a real good rattle, which was the sort of spirit we were hoping to see from Limerick too on Sunday but it never materialized for whatever reason. In the end the Rossies lost by 11 and Limerick lost by 13, but the difference in the games was cavernous.
The Donegal-Kildare game which followed Tyrone’s win was obviously slow to start but once it got going, it was exceptional. I stuck around after the final whistle to get some post-match reaction and the scene in the tunnel underneath the Hogan Stand was something else. Karl Lacey (who gave the performance of the year thus far for me) was so tired that he was actually incapable of walking unaided; he had to be helped into the dressingroom.
There was no joy or relief on his face, he had just emptied the tank completely. He and Neil Magee will have to do something quite spectacularly bad to lose the full-back and centre-back slots on this year’s All-Star team.
And of course on the other hand there is the devastation felt by Kildare – another year, another dodgy square-ball decision, another heart-breaking defeat. Newstalk sports editor and proud Kildare man Ger Gilroy left a message on my phone afterwards and he likened the heartache he was feeling to something from Sophocles, “ya know, that lad who slept with his mother, you know who I’m talking about.” It was tough alright.
We in the press box could only really come up with Ciaran McDonald’s last-minute point against Dublin in the 2006 semi-final as an equal for Kevin Cassidy’s wonder score that won it for Donegal – little did we know that Mac’s county men were about to stun us again. That’s the brilliant thing about Mayo – they are capable of these days.
Half-time in extra time during the Kildare-Donegal clash
When Galway are good enough, they win. When they’re not, they don’t. But Mayo are so much more unpredictable; they win when they shouldn’t, and lose when it seems they can’t. It can be horrible for their fans, but then again it can be glorious. And yesterday was glorious.
I watched a Connacht final in Pearse Stadium once, standing behind a man who said nothing else – not another word – for the entire game except “COME AAAAAAAHHHHHNNNN MAAAAYOOOOOOO” in an almost impenetrable North Mayo accent, and I make no apologies for channeling some of that during the game on Sunday.
You are a wonderfully batty race of people, and I congratulate you.
- This week Murph was – left floundering for a precedent by Darran O’Sullivan’s magnificent back-heeled goal against Limerick. The best I could come up with on-air was Martin Daly’s back-heeled point against Tipperary in the Munster championship in the mid-90s. Irish Examiner journalist Fintan O’Toole reminded me that Fionan Murray scored an over-head for Cork in the early part of the new millennium also… but either way, it was a really brilliant piece of skill.
Barkley was always a tramp
Barkley was right. LeBron already has the highest paid team in the league. If he wants to complain about not having a backup point guard he should go to the boardroom, not the media.
Bringing Barkley’s past into it is a cheapshot aimed at deflecting from Barkley’s argument. I respect LeBron as a player but going public was a dumb move, just as ‘the decision’ was.
The decision worked out pretty well for him in fairness
The decision itself was a good one. The live broadcast announcing the decision was a mistake, and judging by how he announced his return to Cleveland I think LeBron knows it.
One only has to look at the warriors to understand why lebron is freaking out. Cavs sneak by in a finals series that could easily have gone the other way, and then the warriors go and add Durant! Can’t see the cavs competing with this years warriors team.
Lebron as usual will give it a 110%, be the best player in the series, and then get criticized for been overrun by a superior team.
Another know all pundit. If he knew all he thinks he knew he’d be a coach.
Lebron has Kyrie Irving and Kevin Love, The highest paid roster in the league and they just brought in a great shooter in Kyle Korver. Shut the “f” up and play the game. Stop being a whiney little bytch.