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INTERVIEW: Injury-free Jordan Lee is learning to love sport again via the shot put

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Killarney Paralympian Jordan Lee speaks to Adam Moynihan about injuries, taking up shot put, and loving sport again

Hi Jordan. You have announced that you’re making the transition from high jump to shot put. What has led you to this decision?

I know it might come as a surprise to people – it’s a big switch up, going from high jump straight to shot put. There are different factors at play. The last two years have been extremely tough both on and off the track, and I think it’s important to be honest and transparent about that. Some of the injuries that I’ve suffered have been really, really hard. On the lead-up to Paris qualification in 2024 I ruptured ligaments in my take-off ankle. They came completely off the bone. I managed to recover and hit the qualification standard in my first competition, but then in my second competition I completely tore my patellar tendon. I didn’t realise at the time because I have tendonitis, so I kept jumping. When the pressure is on to keep performing, especially in the year that it was, I didn’t take much notice. We got it looked at, got professional advice, managed to get a cortisone shot, and there was a full recovery process. Things were looking exciting.

But then the week before Paris I tore it again. I had to give up my slot. Thankfully another athlete was able to take my spot, which was good. It wasn’t for nothing. But there was a lot of big-time injuries, all in one leg, happening pretty quickly. I could still be competitive in the sport to a degree but ultimately it’s not where I wanted to be. I’m probably past my best in the high jump, which is okay to say.

But I do know I have a lot of physical ability and, in a modest way, I do have a track record with basketball, high jump and long jump. So my goal over the next year is to develop as a shot putter and become one of the first officially recorded athletes in history to be ranked in the top 20 in three different sports.

Why shot put?

I investigated other options but I knew with me having the one arm, it’s naturally going to be quite strong. Then from playing basketball, there’s good coordination and good control anyway. And I had been pretty decent at it just messing around with the lads. I entered myself for a competition about three months prior to making this decision and I finished second in the Kerry Championships out of 16 big, strong lads. That was an indicator that it wasn’t just an airy-fairy decision. I don’t want to just do a sport for the fun of it. I want to try and really be good at it.

A lot of changes need to be made. I’m only 87kg at the moment. I’ve definitely got to get that up to 100kg, if not 105kg, which is going to be a mad change but it will benefit me. In high jump you’re so restricted with calory intake and food consumption. When I jumped my PB I was 77kg. I’m 6’2”. That’s very hard to maintain. So gaining a bit of size, and building on my strength, which I feel is my best attribute, will be a positive.

I’m also attempting to be the first athlete to be carded and government funded across two different sports. Logistically that was a bit of hassle initially because I have been government funded the past six years, which I’m very grateful for, but now it’s going to be gone. I’ve been a full-time athlete all this time, just dedicating everything to it, so my goal is to get back on to the carding scheme. I’m very much focussed on Europeans next year too. There are qualification standards that need to be hit for that but I feel very confident now that I’m gathering a team around me with structured training.

The past couple of months I’ve just been training based on my own knowledge of shot put while trying to have a bit of fun and trying to love sport again.

Had it reached a stage where high jump just wasn’t enjoyable anymore?

Yeah, I think so. I actually haven’t said it publicly but there’s a lot of thinking with high jump and it’s just you. There is a team around you but, I mean, you might clear the bar 30% of the time. That’s about it. So there are a lot of knocks. When you jump the bar, you either clear it or you don’t. It’s very cutthroat. It’s either positive or it’s negative. You can’t just have a decent performance. Sometimes I’d like to just have a decent performance.

And don’t get me wrong, I think my high jump career… Looking back on it, I would like to have achieved a lot more because I was very vocal about wanting to achieve a lot of big stuff. But I don’t regret saying those things either because you’ve got to be ambitious and try to over-achieve on your goals. To be fair, I also believed that I could achieve it. And I’ll continue to do so in the shot put.

We had a very good run the high jump. My coaching team of Tomás Griffin, Shane O’Rourke and Alan Delaney have been extremely helpful and I want to thank them for that.

How is the knee now?

My knee has recovered and it’s feeling really good right now. I want to keep it that way. The pounding on my tendons and joints is still going to be there to a degree with shot put but nowhere near the same the level.

How does your training routine for shot put compare to what you were doing previously?

The training is very different. It’s crazy. It’s extremely taxing but it’s easier mentally and physically. I’m just in the door, though; my opinion might change in two or three months!

What’s next on the agenda for you?

I’m currently four centimetres away from breaking into the top 20 in shot put unofficially. I still need to get classified, which means they have to take measurements of my arm just to make sure I’m in the right category moving forward. That’s going to be another two months or so. Then all my results will be officially on the rankings.

I’ve only thrown in two competitions in my life so to be ranked just outside the top 20 already is a pretty decent start. I’m looking forward to really pushing on. Ultimately I’m in shot put to be one of the best in the world. I do genuinely believe that I can make an impact in the sport.

You’ve been an ambassador and an advocate for people with disabilities in sport since you were a teenager. Do you feel society is more accepting of people with disabilities now than they were when you started your sporting journey?

Because I’m a little bit more known, I will get some positive recognition now. I would notice that for myself. But that’s only on my end. One of my biggest goals in competing in the first place is to inspire people of all abilities, not just people with disabilities, and to be a leader about it. I know there are a lot of people with disabilities looking up to me and I do feel like it’s my responsibility to keep pushing it. Even last week I met a kid who has the same arm as me and his family asked me to help him tie his shoelaces. My family couldn’t do that when I was a kid because there wasn’t someone like me in the public eye to look up to.

Now that I have a bit of a platform, I want to inspire and give confidence to people that they can do whatever they want to do as long as they work hard and set their mind to it. That’s something I’m extremely passionate about. I will always be passionate about that.

Well said, Jordan. Best of luck as you begin this new chapter.

Thanks Adam.

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Marie Meets: Marie Murphy

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Pedalling kindness and serving smiles

For more than twenty-two years, Marie has been the warm heart of the canteen at Killarney Community College. Every weekday from 9am until 2pm she prepared fresh food from scratch, served generations of students and staff and somehow managed to nourish far more than empty bellies.

“There was never a day that I hated getting up out of bed to go to school,” Marie told me.

Now there’s a sentence you don’t hear every day. I couldn’t help thinking there were probably quite a few students over the years who might not have shared that same enthusiasm for early mornings.

When the school’s Breakfast Club became part of her day, it meant an earlier start, but she never saw it as another job to do. She saw it as another opportunity to be there for the young people walking through the school gates.

Schools are remarkable places because every child arrives carrying a story that nobody else can see. Some bounce through the gates full of excitement while others quietly carry worries far bigger than their school bags. You never truly know what kind of morning a child has had before they arrive. Sometimes all it takes is one familiar smile, one cheerful greeting or one person noticing they’re a little quieter than usual to make the day feel just that little bit lighter.

Marie was that person.

She had an ear to the ground without ever making a fuss about it. She knew when to chat, when to encourage and, just as importantly, when to quietly step back.

By lunchtime, however, there was no mistaking who was in charge.

“I’m sure you could hear me over in the Sem telling the children I’d close the canteen if I didn’t see two clear lines,” she laughed.

Among the many treasured retirement cards she received were messages that read, “Marie, you never did close the canteen,” and another that admitted, “Marie, I think I owe you about €30.”

“There was no backchat from the students,” she said. “I find a ‘Hello, how are you?’ costs a person nothing.”

As a testament to just how much Marie meant to school life, a group of students approached members of the teaching staff looking for photographs of her. They carefully put together a scrapbook filled with memories and presented it to her before she left. It was a gift made not because they had to, but because they wanted to.

Outside school, Marie is almost as well known around Killarney for her bicycle as she is for her sandwiches. She has never driven and happily pedals her way around town in every season. Her trusty basket even sports a homemade rain cover fashioned from a plastic tablecloth because, as any seasoned cyclist knows, you have to be prepared for every forecast.

When she is not cycling, she is creating.

Crochet, knitting, sewing, cooking, Marie simply cannot sit still.

“I always need a project,” she smiled.

During the years she worked evening classes in the school canteen, she longed to join the sewing class herself but could never leave the canteen unattended. Instead, she listened while she worked, picked up what she could, bought herself a sewing machine in Lidl and went home and made herself a skirt. That one skirt was only the beginning.

Family, of course, will now take centre stage.

Marie and her husband Donie have three children, Colm, Alan and Aoife, along with five adored grandchildren. Little Gracie is just six weeks old, while Theo, Noah, Ori and Ailbhe ensure there is never a shortage of fun.

This August promises to be one big family celebration. Aoife will be home from the United States with her family, Alan will travel from Alicante, where he teaches, to celebrate his fortieth birthday, and Colm and his family will make the journey from Cork. Add in Donie’s seventieth birthday and there will be plenty to celebrate.

“We’ll do something small as a family,” Marie smiled, “but I’d love us all to go away together for a night or two.”

Marie may have parked her apron, but don’t expect her to put the brakes on.

Deirdre, one of her colleagues, smiled as she remembered that Marie’s favourite word was “Nowso.”

Karen said the echo of Marie’s infectious laugh will be missed throughout the school.

Marie Keane wished her “a retirement as wonderful as you are.”

Friend and colleague Brian O’Reilly perhaps summed it up best when he said, “Retirement is not the end of the road for Marie. It’s the beginning of a new adventure.”

Retirement may mean the end of Marie’s daily cycle to Killarney Community College, but the kindness she quietly pedalled into the lives of generations of young people over the past twenty two years will continue long after the school bell rings. Every morning she offered far more than breakfast. She offered familiarity, encouragement and the reassuring feeling that someone had noticed them. In a busy school, and in an even busier world, that is a gift beyond measure.

Knowing Marie, retirement won’t slow her down. There will be sewing projects to finish, grandchildren to spoil, bicycles to pedal and plenty of new adventures to enjoy. The bicycle will still be rolling through the streets of Killarney. It will just have a little more time to enjoy the journey.

Photo & Story by Marie Carroll O’Sullivan

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West End House presents ‘By the Bog of Cats’

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The West End House School of Arts will present an upcoming adaptation of Marina Carr’s acclaimed play, By the Bog of Cats, later this month.


The production is directed by Charlie Hughes and will run on July 29 and July 30 at the Great Southern Hotel.

Set in the landscape of the rural Irish bogs, Carr’s play follows the story of Hester Swane, a woman with a deep connection to her land.

Tormented by the memory of her mother who abandoned her, Hester faces further betrayal by the father of her child, leading her on a path of vengeance as her history is revealed.


Tickets for the performances are priced at €20. Bookings can be made online via Eventbrite or by calling 087 13 77 196.

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