
GAA
Share
Published 13:58 23 Feb 2022 GMT
Explore more on these topics:
The English side have had serious difficulties to overcome unlike any other county in the GAA, not least because they haven't been able to play as much as one competitive game in the past two years, due to to the COVID-19 pandemic.
However, that hasn't stopped them coming back from the wilderness and putting on performances that no one saw coming.
What's most curious about the Exiles however, is the huge deficits they overcame at half-time to then go out and win the game, most notably in their first match against Carlow.
Things looked to be 'same old London' as the scoreboard reminded them of the 10 points difference between themselves and their opposition, but whatever their manager, Michael Maher, said to them sparked an incredible comeback.
They have done something similar in the next two games, and it got me thinking about the great half-time speeches of all time, the ones that go down in GAA folklore.
Of course there is only one winner, and it was delivered by Crossmaglen's Joe Kernan in 2002, when his Armagh side were trailing by four points in the All-Ireland final against Kerry.
[caption id="attachment_250548" align="alignnone" width="2044"]
22 September 2002; Armagh manager Joe Kernan during the GAA Football All-Ireland Senior Championship Final match between Armagh and Kerry at Croke Park in Dublin. Photo by Brian Lawless/Sportsfile[/caption]
The Orchard county had never won an All-Ireland title before, and Kernan was a part of the team that last reached the final, only to lose out to Dublin.
With heads bowed, shoulders dropped, and the spirt in the dressing room at an all time low, their fearless leader asked his players if they wanted to end up like he did, crying on the bus home with all of his teammates crying as well.
Before he let the gravity of that question sink, he revealed in his hand the runners up medal he received on that faithful day in 1977.
For 25 years he had kept that piece of silverware, but the thought of potentially owning another one sickened him so much that he smashed it against the wall, right there in front of all of his players.
Now that's how you get a reaction! The Ulstermen left the dressing rooms with a sense of urgency and an unwavering defiance to not leave Croke Park that day with a losers medal.
Of course, Armagh went on to beat Kerry, and as they say, the rest is history.
Now that's not to say that the London manager, or any of the coaches that won last weekend are going to such extents to pull their team out of a sticky situation, but any reason to regale that tale should always be taken.Antrim GAA deny allegations from senior hurlers as row rages on
Turmoil up North! Antrim GAA have released a lengthy statement in response to a letter sent from the senior hurling team. Following the county’s Joe McDonagh Cup loss to Laois last week, the players were under the belief that manager Davy Fitzgerald was being removed from his position, only for that decision to be reversed. […]
GAA
18h
Quiz: Name every man to win the GAA Footballer of the Year award
Some amount of legends! We have a new GAA quiz for you all! Since beginning in 1995, there has been 31 winners of the GAA/GPA Footballer of the Year award, with a fine list of some of the game’s most iconic names. They have come from eight counties in total, with three multiple winners. This […]
GAA
2 days ago
GAA
GAA