HE SPENT TEN years chasing the dream but took just six minutes to deliver it.
Elation mixed with exhaustion as he crossed the line. The anthem, the tricolour being raised, there was a formality about all that. However the guard of honour the Ireland team gave as he returned to the Olympic village is a moment heโll cherish forever.
Coming home, the drive from Skiberreen to his townland, Foherlagh, the bonfires lit in his honour, the neighbours waving at him as he passed, those images will have a permanent slot in his memory bank. โI really liked that bit,โ says Fintan McCarthy, one half of Irelandโs lightweight double skulls team. โThese are the people who have seen us go down the road since we were whatever age. To show them the medal, for them to be so proud, ah it was amazing.โ
**
Six boats raced along the water at the Sea Forest Waterway in Tokyo. Back home it was 4am. In Japan it was late morning, the sticky heat of an Asian summer burning into his neck. Despite making an unexpectedly good start, the Irish boat was in third as it passed a bridge at the 750 metre mark, the Germans and Italians up ahead.
He knew not to panic. Once, two years ago, he was a nervous wreck at a regatta in the Netherlands, his first time racing with Paul OโDonovan. Afterwards he had a word with himself. โWhat did you gain being that way?โ
Heโs never been overwhelmed with nerves since. โBy nature, I wouldnโt say Iโm that calm a person but being with Paul, it helps.
โIโve learned a lot about how Paul plays it down. How it is just a race, how he doesnโt let things get to him. Then, on the other hand, heโs just the fiercest competitor Iโve ever known. There is no secret to what we do. It is just about delivering.โ
Unbeaten in two years, everyone expected them to do just that in Tokyo. But the water was choppy that morning, the Germans inspired. Going under that bridge, McCarthy said โletโs goโ but was talking to himself rather than OโDonovan. โI was thinking, โright youโre at the Olympic Games here, donโt leave anything behindโ.โ
They didnโt. As they moved past the Italians, silver medals were guaranteed, barring a complete disaster. Yet they knew they could go faster. It was just a question of deciding when to press the accelerator.
McCarthy recalls sensing the Germans struggling, remembers pulling ahead of them and thinking momentarily the race was done. But it wasnโt. With 400 metres to go, the Germans had retaken the lead.
โWhen that happened, I was like, for about a second, โoh f**kโ. Then I said, โno, thereโs 40 strokes leftโ. A kind of animalistic feeling comes over you in a way. You say to yourself โthis is not happening. We are better (than them). Just pull as hard as you canโ.โ
Thatโs what he did for the final 40 strokes.
โThose final 400 metres, I just burned a hole in Paulโs back. Forty strokes, going as hard as I could, crossing the line first, that moment specifically, to do it in an Olympic final, itโs what you dream about, what you spend years imagining. Itโs amazing for it to happen in real life.
โYou donโt think about being a part of history. But once you cross that line in first, you do think back to when you were 15, when you thought then โwouldnโt it be so cool to be a championโ?
โThat is the one thing I like about what we did, to be able to look back at my 15-year-old self and think, โyeah you did it, good manโ.โ
**
Rowers look at water differently to the rest of us. They move along it physically but it moves them emotionally.
โThere are certain places, like the water at home in Skibbereen, Iโve done a lot of training there and after Tokyo, it was nice to be back to where it all started. I loved it when I first started to row. That was what got me coming back to it as a teenager. It wasnโt about winning an Olympics. It was about โฆ..โ
He pauses. He lowers his head to avoid eye contact, to help him articulate his thoughts. Then after four or five seconds, he looks up again. โIn the water, there is nothing else you can do or think about. As a teenager, you might have had the worst day at school or college. But then, when you are out on the water, you kind of โ look, it is so clichรฉd โ but everything else goes out of your mind.
โAll you think about is how the boat is moving. It is just a bit of an escape, I guess.โ
Part of him kept going back there because part of him loved it and another part of him realised he was especially talented when he got inside a boat. His twin, Jake, is too. Last February, there were four of them, two sets of brothers, McCarthys and OโDonovans, competing for two spots in a boat.
One got there from each family.
The relief was huge. Next was dealing with the expectation.
โI knew the pressure was there but to an extent I just ignored it. If ever there was a thought, of what if it doesnโt go well, I always had a counter argument in his head.
โWeโd trained solidly. There is no more we could have done. That took the pressure off.โ
So did OโDonovan.
โHe is very matter of fact. There is no proclamation of how well we are going to go. He just mentions our training times every now and then.โ
Nothing else needed to be said.
Again, whenever nerves threatened to visit, McCarthy recalled that regatta in the Netherlands, his first race with OโDonovan. The water was rough that day but they got silver.
โI remember being at the start line thinking โyou can quit rowing after this race if you want. Just get through itโ. But it was fine in the end. That was a good wake-up call. I never vocalised my nervousness to Paul. But I do remember thinking, right donโt be like that again, donโt freak out. Just trust yourself.โ
In Tokyo, he did, securing his place in Irish Olympic history.
But thatโs gone. Already is thinking about Paris and back-to-back wins.
โIt would be stupid to leave it go when I am still healthy,โ he says. โYou donโt ever want this to stop.โ
Why is he going over now instead of at the end of the season when heโll have completed his Leaving Cert? I know heโll complete school in the UK but sounds like Manchester City have put pressure on him to go over now?
@James Clancy: Brexit? Age considerations outside eu?
@tribesman: Oh yeah, that could be the reasoning alright. Strikes me that itโd be a better move for the player himself to go over in the summer but Brexit could be an issue alright.
@James Clancy: I think for career development games at a reasonably level is a good argument to stay. But he will get the beat training money can buy at city. Also money is another valid reason. Most good 17 year olds donโt play professionally for long. But city pay huge wedge to their kids, so even if he doesnโt โmake itโ heโll have earned significantly for 3ish years which could set him up for life.
I hope he does well, man City seem to have a good education plan for their academy players.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/sport/football/football-news/man-city-st-bedes-news-11311766.amp
Best of luck to himโฆ