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O’Connor facing unseasonable scrutiny over backroom team overhaul

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by Adam Moynihan

Apart from the odd throwaway remark about an in-form player potentially catching his eye, Jack O’Connor really shouldn’t be on our minds right now. Within the new split season model, September should be a time of rest and relaxation for the Kerry manager, albeit with a bit of research at club matches thrown in for good measure.

Kerry haven’t played in two months and we are four months away from the start of the 2025 season. The pressure should be off, or at least a bit less intense.

That is not the case, however, as the overhaul his management team has undergone in recent weeks has left O’Connor facing unseasonable scrutiny.

Eyebrows were raised when O’Connor’s two selectors, Mike Quirke and Diarmuid Murphy, both walked away from the set-up. When confirming his decision, Quirke gave no reason for leaving after what he termed “three largely enjoyable years”. Murphy doesn’t appear to have made any statement at all. For their part, Kerry GAA and the manager have been quiet on the double departure too.

Given the lack of a proper explanation, fans are naturally wondering if all was rosy in the Kerry management team’s garden. Was there tension behind the scenes? The second-hand information doing the rounds at the moment is that all was not rosy and the outgoing selectors did not feel that their input was 100% valued. Maybe some or all of the relevant parties can come out and contradict that, but that’s the prevailing story for now.

Once it was known that Quirke and Murphy were out, the scramble to find replacements began. According to Tony Leen of the Irish Examiner, several candidates turned Kerry and O’Connor down, among them legendary former players Tomás Ó Sé, Kieran Donaghy, Eamonn Fitzmaurice (also a former Kerry manager), Declan O’Sullivan, Colm Cooper and Séamus Moynihan. If that is accurate, and Leen has suggested even more people were approached, it makes you wonder where the men who were eventually appointed as selectors, namely James Costello and Aodán Mac Gearailt, were on the longlist.

Costello managed the Kerry minors for four years between 2019 and 2022 and last year he was a selector under Mark Fitzgerald in Clare. Mac Gearailt was a regular starter for the Kerry seniors around the turn of the millennium and in recent years he is best known for his work as a co-commentator on TG4 (and a very good co-commentator, it must be said).

The pair might turn out to be shrewd appointments and their names don’t look out of place on a Kerry management ticket but when higher profile individuals were linked it is bound to affect the fans’ perspective. Perhaps more pertinently, that so many of those high-profile candidates apparently said ‘no’ can hardly be interpreted as a positive.

Hiring Cian O’Neill as a head coach is another move that does not appear to have been greeted with widespread enthusiasm by the green and gold faithful. From what I’ve seen and heard, it would be fair to say that the reaction locally has been mixed.

O’Neill has been around the block a few times having previously worked with Limerick, Tipperary, Mayo, Kerry, Kildare, Cork and, for the last three seasons, Galway. He helped Kerry to win the All-Ireland in 2014 in what was the second of his three years under Eamonn Fitzmaurice.

Revisiting the past and rehiring a previous coach is rarely going to generate massive excitement amongst a team’s fanbase. It’s a bit like sitting through an old movie you’ve seen before. (Jack O'Connor might argue that some movies are worth a second watch. And a third, for that matter.)

Whatever some supporters might think, players who have worked with O'Neill say he is excellent at what he does.

He also appears to have a sentimental attachment to Kerry GAA. As recently as last year he spoke to The Irish Times about how much he enjoyed his time here, saying he would have stayed for 10 years were he not tapped up for the manager’s role in his native Kildare. “I loved it down there,” he told Denis Walsh. “I loved the players. I loved the management, the county board. Everything they did was just class.”

Not many of those 2014 players are still around – just Paul Murphy, Paul Geaney and Stephen O’Brien from this year’s panel – but being familiar with the idiosyncrasies of Kerry football, and Kerry footballers, may work to his advantage.

The managerial shake-up also sees head coach Paddy Tally being repurposed as a performance coach (a role previously held by Tony Griffin); Brian Kelly replacing Brendan Kealy as goalkeeping coach; and Pa McCarthy coming in as an assistant coach.

All told it is a significant upheaval for the team and one that was not anticipated or necessarily desired. After the season ended in disappointing fashion with the largely unexpected defeat to Armagh in the All-Ireland semi-final, it was felt that a new voice – possibly a forwards coach – would be a welcome addition to the dressing room. But the feeling was that tweaks were needed, not major changes.

The fact that the entire management team has effectively been disbanded and reimagined, along with the manner in which it has all played out, heaps even more pressure on O’Connor to deliver an All-Ireland in 2025.

While it seems unlikely at this juncture that he will stay on beyond next season either way, coming up short again and signing off with just one All-Ireland in four years with this team will be considered a failure. Of course he will always be fondly remembered for the four All-Irelands he has won, but going out like that would put a dent in his legacy as a Kerry manager.

On the other hand, if he and his new helpers work their magic and deliver No. 39, he will go out a legend. Such is the fickle nature of sport, particularly in Kerry where that comical maxim from Talladega Nights - “if you’re not first, you’re last” – isn’t a joke at all.

After the recent spike in attention coming his way, O’Connor will be hoping that things cool down for the remainder of 2024 before he embarks on what will be one of the most challenging and most important seasons of his career.

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Home cup tie for St Paul’s could be epic

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Paudie O’Connor National Cup (Round 1)

Utility Trust St Paul’s v GCU Brunell

Saturday 7.30pm

Killarney Sports and Leisure Centre

The St Paul’s women’s team will be hoping to get their National Cup adventure off the ground on Saturday when they welcome 2024 champions Brunell to Killarney. Tip-off in the Killarney Sports and Leisure Centre is at 7.30pm.

Paul’s have displayed some fine early season form, although their unbeaten start in the Super League came to an abrupt end last weekend when they lost to the Trinity Meteors in Dublin. James Fleming’s side weren’t at their best on the day but they were well in contention heading into the final quarter with the scores at 47-45 in favour of the hosts. The Meteors pushed on in the fourth, however, eventually running out 63-53 winners.

St Paul’s scorers on the night were Maisie Burnham (13), Tara Cousins (12), Lorraine Scanlon (12), Lovisa Hevinder (9), Denise Dunlea (5) and Leah McMahon (2).

The Killarney club are now joint second in the table alongside the Meteors with both teams holding a 4-1 record. Killester are top having won each of their first five games.

Paul’s opponents on Saturday, Brunell, have won three out of five league matches so far.

LAKERS

The Utility Trust St Paul’s Lakers have now won three of their last four games in Division 1 of the Men’s National League following an impressive home victory over Moycullen in Killarney.

Eoin Carroll and Jack O’Sullivan made significant contributions of the Boys in Black; Carroll hit 17 points and collected 13 rebounds while O’Sullivan had 14 points, 12 rebounds and some spectacular blocks.

Steve Kelly posted 30 points and the durable Sam Grant played every second, adding 21 points along the way.

The Lakers started well before the visitors found their footing and the sides went in level at the half-time break after scores by home captain Carroll. There was still nothing to separate the teams entering the fourth quarter (68-65) but buckets by Carroll, Pablo Murcia and Grant opened up a nine-point lead. Moycullen fought back admirably, however, cutting the deficit to just four, but Luke O’Hea’s charges held firm to prevail by eight (88-80).

Next up is a cup tie against the Tipperary Talons, a side they defeated by 30 points just a couple of weeks ago. The cup can be very different to the league, though, and they will need another solid performance to advance to the next round. Tip-off in in Killenaule is at 6.30pm on Saturday.

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Chances of Kerry v Cork Munster final in 2026 decrease as Munster GAA delay seeding plan

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After facing a backlash from Limerick, Clare, Waterford and Tipperary players, Munster GAA have postponed their plan to keep Cork and Kerry separate in the 2026 Munster Football Championship.

The new seeding system – which gives the two highest ranked Munster teams in the National League byes to separate semi-finals – will now come into play in 2027, twelve months later than initially planned.

This will give Clare and Limerick a chance to earn promotion to Division 2 of the league, potentially overtaking Cork if the Rebels were to get relegated to Division 3.

Despite traditionally being the two main contenders for Munster football honours, Kerry and Cork haven’t met in a provincial decider since 2021. The Kingdom have won each of the finals since then (one versus Limerick and three versus Clare) by an average margin of 15.75 points.

More high-profile Kerry v Cork finals might be desirable for fans of those teams, businesses in Killarney and Cork, and neutrals alike but Munster GAA’s plans to effectively keep the great rivals on opposite sides of the draw understandably drew criticism from the other participating counties. A statement by the GPA confirmed that players from Limerick, Clare, Waterford and Tipp had met via Zoom to discuss the matter. They were said to be “deeply disappointed and concerned” by the decision.

The 12-month delay will at least give two of those disaffected teams an opportunity to benefit from the new seeding process.

The draw for the 2026 Munster Football Championship will take place on November 27 under the old rules. As 2025 finalists, Kerry and Clare will get byes to the last four (but they will not necessarily be kept apart).

Nine members of Kerry’s squad are up for All-Stars at tonight’s awards ceremony in Dublin with Joe O’Connor and David Clifford also in contention for the prestigious Footballer of the Year award.

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