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Soccer coach licensed to one of the highest levels in Ireland

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By Sean Moriarty

A Killarney soccer coach has been praised by the FAI for her contribution to soccer in the county and on the occasion of her being granted a UEFA B Licence this week.

CLASS OF 2021: Some of the coaches including Killarney's Ramona Keogh who are now licensed to UEFA B standard.

CLUB MATES: Allan Moynihan (Chairman Mastergeeha FC) and Brendan Buckley (Mastergeeha FC Management Committee) congratulate Ramona Keogh on her recent award.

Ramona Keogh of Mastergeeha FC has qualified for one of highest-ranking coach licences in Europe.
The UEFA B Licence is a coaching licence mandated by UEFA, the official governing body of European football. The licence is one level below the UEFA A Licence and allows holders to be head coaches of amateur clubs, youths up to age 16, and assistant coaches for professional clubs.

Ramona started her training in November 2019 and continued, when restrictions allowed, on several block weekends taking place in FAI Headquarters Dublin, Foto Island in Cork, and final assessments in NUIG in Galway.

“Ramona played a significant role in the course group, supporting the younger coaches and challenging those more experienced, ensuring that the group was dynamic, engaging, interactive and a real positive learning environment,” said the FAI’s Head of Coach Education FAI Niall O'Regan.

“Ramona has been a significant role model for not only female coaches but also males coaches in the Kerry region and has done phenomenal work in her previous club Killarney Celtic and more recently with Mastergeeha. It is so important to have such role models and the motivation Ramona has shown is infectious and many coaches will continue in the same vein.”

For Ramona, this week’s award was the culmination of months of hard work, seminars and study.

“It was really tough at the time, final assessments had been submitted, everything had then switched to Zoom and we were so eager to get it finished. Luckily enough I got to finish off a lot of the course content online and then had individual assessments with my tutor Richie Holland current Cork City Men's Assistant Manager,” she told the Killarney Advertiser. “Then when we returned to outdoor sports in July we got our practical assessments finished with Galway Utd in NUIG.”

ASSESSMENT

The final assessment took place at Mastergeeha FC pitch – the first time ever that a UEFA coaching assessment took place in Kerry.

“I was coaching in Mastergeeha FC in Killarney pre covid and based on logistics and other coaches' locations in Munster on my UEFA B I was delighted to coordinate a UEFA B assessment with the FAI to be held in the Mastergeeha with the help of the committee,” she added.

"Tom O'Connor FAI Coach Educator and former Interim Republic of Ireland's Head Coach was really impressed with the setup, the standard of really good footballers and the fantastic committee that ran it so smoothly.”

It was the first time UEFA B assessments were ever held in Kerry and the facilities, committee and the Mastergeeha U16 Boys team were outstanding that day.

She received mentoring and support from some of the biggest names in Irish soccer.

“I was delighted and honoured to receive my UEFA B Diploma Licence,” she said. “Throughout the diploma I've had some great tutors, mentors and some great guest speakers from Robbie Keane, Vera Pauw, Stephen Rice and Ruud Dokter FAI High Performance.

"There was a great core group of us on the course from Irish Senior International Players like Katie McCabe, Megan Campbell, Louise Quinn, Niamh Fahy and I've made some amazing friendships with all the ladies on the course. From the start it was a group of huge experience, drive and determination was something we all had in common and it's great to see us all complete it together.”

LOCAL HELP

She could not have done it without the help of her home club.

“On a personal note, I just want to thank Mastergeeha FC for all their help and support, with special mention to all the management committee, teams and coaches. Must give a mention to Allan Moynihan, Brendan Buckley, Paul Lenihan and Ulick O'Sullivan also. I'm really looking forward to getting back to Academy training in the next two weeks," she added.

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Killarney Looking Good competition celebrates community pride

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The annual Killarney Looking Good competition took place at the Great Southern Hotel on Wednesday night where Kerry GAA captain Gavin White presented the awards to the deserving recipients.

Killarney Park Hotel came out on top with the overall prize being awarded to the newly refurbished five-star hotel.

The judges were impressed by the stylish new entrance and driveway and their spectacular display of flowers and window boxes. Killarney Park won the same award back in 1992.

The best large commercial premises award went to Killarney Racecourse, and the best small commercial premises was awarded to Sheahan’s Pharmacy.

Charlie Foley’s won the best public house; best restaurant was 40 Main and Walsh Bros Shoes was named best retail.

In the residential categories, the best private residence was Tomies View, Ross Road, best large estate went to Countess Grove, and best small estate was won by Coolgreane Park.

The winner of the 2025 Fr Michael Murphy Memorial Pride of Place Award was presented to the Killarney Asylum Seekers Initiative while the Yvonne Quill Memorial Volunteer of the Year Award winner went to Margaret Curtin.

The Killarney Looking Good competition is organised by Killarney Municipal District Council and Killarney Chamber of Tourism and Commerce and sponsored by MD O’Shea’s & Sons and O’Mahony Media.

The competition aims to encourage residents and business owners to keep the town looking well through the use of flowers, hanging baskets, colour schemes.

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From Woodlawn to the world stage: How Drag, Lizzo, the Eurovision and Mom’s crafty needle-work made ‘Liam Bee’, BPerfect!

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By Marie Carroll-O’Sullivan

Not every road leads to Dublin. Some lead from Killarney to Cork, then London, and back again with a stop to perform in front of Lizzo and Harry Styles along the way. I had the pleasure of photographing Liam Bee, at a recent local event. The art of make-up struck me before anything else. So, when I heard Liam Bee was one of our own, i.e. Liam Kelleher from Woodlawn, it was a must for me to talk drag, makeup, resilience, and how a quiet kid from a Kerry town ended up living their dream with a little help from RuPaul, BPerfect Cosmetics, and one very supportive Killarney family.

Tell me about young Liam growing up in Killarney?
Shy. Very shy. Like can’t-read-aloud-in-class shy. I was introverted, anxious, and definitely not out. But looking back, that quietness taught me how to observe, reflect, and eventually express myself. Killarney is beautiful, but when you’re growing up different, it can feel isolating. Still, it gave me resilience and a thick skin, which is helpful when you’re gluing rhinestones to your face at all hours.

So how did drag come into your life?
Believe it or not through my Mam! She was watching RuPaul’s Drag Race, and I remember walking in like, “What is this?!” It was weird to me at the time but clearly it stuck! Years later, when I went to art college in Cork, I started experimenting with looks inspired by the Blitz Kids of ‘80s London and the New York Club Kids.My first drag performance was in a competition. Mam sewed the costume from scratch. She still helps with my outfits but that one was special. I was terrified… and then I won. That was it. I was in love with drag.

What does drag mean to you now?
Drag is my art, my outlet and strangely enough, my career ladder. It’s the reason I was hired as the Irish representative for BPerfect Cosmetics. Now I travel all over Ireland and England as a makeup artist and educator. Painting faces has become my day job, and I am grateful that drag opened these doors I didn’t even know were in the building.

Considering the time and effort it takes many ladies to rock up at an event looking effortless, I’m struggling to imagine the prep at such an extravagant level AND hold down a jet setting 9?
90% of what happens is before the show even starts. Booking venues, coordinating tech, styling wigs, designing posters, managing socials and hot-gluing feathers to corsets at 2am. It’s a full production.

Drag taught me everything from event planning to public speaking. I also learned that “yes” isn’t always the right answer. Burnout is real. Living in London showed me that. It also made me fall in love with Ireland all over again, especially Killarney.

Has your family always been supportive?
They’re incredible. I suppose maybe not all sparkles at first, but they’ve always shown up. Mam makes my costumes. Dad’s helped build sets. My younger brother is my biggest fan. Even my grandmother in Abbeydorney follows my gigs!Recently, a whole gang of aunts, uncles, and cousins came to see me perform at the Everyman Theatre in Cork. That support means more than I’ll ever be able to put into words.

But it hasn’t all been sequins and standing ovations, has it?
No. Drag still attracts hate sometimes. I’ve had people share photos of me in school group chats, make awful comments, even threaten my life. I’ve been spat on, kicked, beaten. All because of a costume.But I’ve never wanted to stop. If anything, it’s made me more determined. Drag taught me what real resilience looks like. Glitter is more than decoration, it’s armour.

A little bird tells me you’ve performed in front of some big names.  Do tell…
I’ve had some pinch-me moments! I opened for Bambi Thug—our Eurovision star—at The Academy in Dublin. I’ve performed at ‘Mother Pride Block Party’ in front of thousands and taken the stage in Berlin.But the moment that still feels completely surreal? Performing in front of Lizzo and Harry Styles in London. I mean, these are artists I’ve idolised. I’ve belted out Good as Hell at the top of my lungs and danced like no one was watching to Treat People With Kindness. And suddenly, they were the ones watching me. I was thinking, “Enjoy this moment, keep breathing, and pretend this is totally normal.” It wasn’t. It was unreal.

What’s your vision for the future of Irish drag?
More visibility. More platforms. Not just in Dublin. There’s so much talent in smaller towns; it just needs the right space to grow. I’d love an Irish version of Drag Race (RTE2, I’m looking at you!). And more people like Annette Roche Clifford did recently in organising the Killarney event. She claims she was tired wearing out the road to Cork to see my friends and I perform. Her energy is the kind we need in more rural communities.

Some final words for young LGBTQ+ people growing up in rural Ireland Liam?
If I can go from being too anxious to speak in school to performing in front of thousands, you can too. Your path might look different and that’s the point. Different is where the magic lives.To the parents: You don’t need to understand everything right away. That comes later. What matters most is love and acceptance. Celebrate your child. That’s what my parents did, and it changed everything.

Liam’s journey proves that greatness doesn’t need a city skyline, it just needs courage, sequins, and sometimes, a mam with a sewing machine. From Woodlawn to the world stage, Liam’s story is a reminder that your most powerful path is the one where you get to be fully yourself, glue gun, glitter, and all.

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