10 pictures that sum up the GAA weekend

Brian Cody and his players arrive in Abbotstown

Source: Tommy Grealy/INPHO

Where Walter Walsh signed a few autographs

Source: Tommy Grealy/INPHO

Fans arrive in Enniscorthy for Dublin’s game with Wexford

Limerick’s Barry Nash can’t shake Stephen McDonnell of Cork

Bryan Menton and goalkeeper Joe Sheridan of Meath go for the same ball on the latter’s debut in goal

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

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Meath’s Adam Flanagan and Brian Daly of Laois try to field a high ball in the same game

Dublin’s Ross Hazley with John Turbit of Wexford compete for possession

Source: Donall Farmer/INPHO

Nobody told the Galway and Leitrim lads you need to keep your eyes open to make the catch

Ronan O’Toole of Cork under pressure from Brendan O’Sullivan

Source: Cathal Noonan/INPHO

Tyrone and UUJ fans buy their tickets before their game at Healy Park, Omagh

Source: Presseye/Andrew Paton/INPHO

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We’ll Leave it There So: Dundalk sign ex-Chelsea starlet, legendary wrestler dies and all today’s sport

Jonathan Sexton pictured at Leinster training today.

Source: Donall Farmer/INPHO

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Home

  • Dundalk have confirmed the signing of former Chelsea midfielder Conor Clifford.
  • Sean Cronin will miss the Six Nations after Leinster confirmed he has suffered a ‘significant’ hamstring injury.
  • Ulster have confirmed the signings of Springbok Arno Botha and scrum-half John Cooney.
  • Ex-Ireland international Robbie Keane is being linked with a move to Preston.
  • Jonathan Sexton has been cleared to face Castres after Leinster clarified Friday’s HIA procedure.

Away

Alexis Sanchez, Arsenal.

Source: PA Archive/PA Images

  • Arsenal star Alexis Sanchez has admitted to tax fraud totalling nearly €1 million.
  • Tributes have been paid after the death of legendary wrestler Jimmy Snuka.
  • Former football coach Barry Bennell has denied child abuse charges.
  • A fresh featherweight contender emerged last night at the expense of a UFC legend.
  • Andy Murray and Serena Williams survived the Melbourne heat on day one of the Australian Open.

The Best Thing We Shared

Check out 10 pictures that sum up the GAA weekend.

On The Record

I am angry and disappointed, because I have always said that he is one of the best players I have ever played with. I had — and I say had because I haven’t really spoken to him for the last two or three weeks — a great relationship with him, but I don’t know his reasons. I am not going to comment on why he wanted to leave but I do know that if someone doesn’t want to play for the team then they are better off not even playing.”

Mark Noble gives his thoughts on the Dimitri Payet transfer saga.

The Fixture List

  • There are a number of FA Cup third round replays taking place, including Burnley v Sunderland and Crystal Palace v Bolton.
  • The Africa Cup of Nations continues, with Ghana v Uganda and Mali v Egypt.
  • The Australia Open continues tomorrow.

Showbiz, Baby!

Juan Sebastian Veron returned to football at the age of 41 last night.

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Mickey Harte: Playing inter-county football is not ‘a chore’

AS THE LONGEST serving inter-county manager in Gaelic football, Mickey Harte has witnessed plenty of change since he took charge of Tyrone in the winter of 2002.

One thing that hasn’t altered, Harte says, is the enjoyment players take from competing at the top.

Source: Presseye/Andrew Paton/INPHO

Harte delivered three All-Irelands in his first six years in charge of the Red Hand, as they brought the game to new heights both tactically and physically.

Almost 14 years on from leading his native county to the holy grail for the first time in their history, Harte is well placed to assess where the game finds itself.

Jim Gavin’s all-conquering Dublin are football’s current standard-bearers, in an era where being an inter-county player has never been more time-consuming. But Harte rejects the notion that the demands are too high.

“There is a huge demand but also the modern day Gaelic football athlete want to do what they are doing,” he says. “I want to set the record straight on that.

“Some people would have us believe that they don’t enjoy what they are doing, or that it is a chore for them. I have not yet met anyone who does not enjoy playing for Tyrone and I think there are very few county footballers who do not enjoy what they are doing.

“In fact, they set the standards for themselves. They are the most demanding people on their own time, their own commitment and they have to be admired for it. They enjoy what they are doing.

Mickey Harte was at the GAA Healthy Clubs launch at Craobh Chiarain GAA Club, Parnell Park

Source: Cody Glenn/SPORTSFILE

“Why would anyone partake in what they are doing, to the level of it, if they didn’t enjoy it? We don’t want the soundbite going out there that they don’t enjoy what they are doing.

“They do enjoy it and they work hard at it. People don’t enjoy putting in the hard grind to get themselves into the peak condition they want to be in, but they know that is the price they pay to enjoy something later.”

Harte even says he has had to hold his players back to avoid them over-training.

“In fact, in recent times, I have had to tell people to stop training, I never had to do that before in my life. People are doing too much, they don’t understand the value of recovery and you have to hold them back.

“That is where they are at, these young men, and I can’t think that men that do that aren’t enjoying it. They love that they have this opportunity to be an athlete at the top-level.”

Harte was also keen to downplay the furore over the St Brigid’s contract that was leaked last week. It raised plenty of eyebrows, but he doesn’t believe it’s a widespread issue within the game.

“How does that tell us what the standard is across the country? This could be an exception to the rule, perhaps. And it might not be happening to everybody. That is the not standard issue that is happening in club and county teams.

“People expect to commit to each other, they are in this together and they must set certain standards. If they don’t want to live by those standards, they move off and do something else.

Harte celebrates as the final whistle crowns Tyrone 2016 Ulster champions

Source: Presseye/Andrew Paton/INPHO

“This is a very extreme example and we can’t hold that up as a typical example of what goes on in the GAA world. Keep it in context, that is overboard and extreme in one fashion, accept it as such, don’t believe that this is the way of the world now. It is not like that at all.

“I wouldn’t lay out rules because it’s not for me to dictate how the rules should be. What it is for me is to facilitate the group to decide what they need to do. I have to talk to all of those players and ask them ‘what do you think we need to be about here to deliver the best of ourselves?’ so we come to a consensus of what needs to be done.

“So they will come up with something that is sensible and right for them and I think that will still prevail in many places, club and county.”

Despite a successful campaign where Tyrone sealed promotion back to Division 1 and lifted a first Ulster crown since 2010, the county board turned down his request for a one-year extension.

Harte and Peter Canavan arrive in Tyrone with the Sam Maguire in 2003

Source: INPHO

Is he feeling under pressure to deliver this year?

“Anyone who is in the business of being as good as you can be, the pressure comes from within. It’s your own pressure to deliver the best of yourself, to help your players deliver the best of themselves, that’s the only pressure I entertain. I don’t entertain pressure from anywhere else.

“If someone decides in their wisdom they no longer want me managing Tyrone I have to accept that and move along. That’s not where I am at the moment.

“I’m in the business of doing the best for this Tyrone team, I don’t intend to leave that just now. If someone else decides I should leave then that’s their prerogative to do so and I have to live with that. But the pressure is to deliver the best of ourselves.”

Harte added that Sean Cavanagh “tweaked something behind his knee” two weeks ago, but he expects Tyrone’s elder statesman to be fit for the start of the league.

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Gaelic Players Association appoints its new chief exec to take over from Dessie Farrell

Updated 12.25

DERMOT EARLEY HAS been appointed as the new chief executive of the Gaelic Players Association (GPA).

The former Kildare footballer, who has served as president of the players’ body since 2013, takes over from Dessie Farrell who stepped down last month after 13 years at the helm.

“I am fully committed to that challenge [of succeeding Farrell] and to leading the GPA to the next stage of its development,” he said.

“And I’m delighted to be taking up the role of CEO at a time when the GPA has just negotiated two strong deals for the players; with the GAA and with Government.”

Earley, 38, will step down from his army position as Officer Commanding the 2nd Brigade Military Police Company to take up his new GPA role from 6 February.

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Big news! Dermot Earley has been appointed as the new Chief Executive of GPA. https://t.co/L4n1eZK9AL pic.twitter.com/XH67oaQLsm

— GPA (@gaelicplayers) January 17, 2017

Source: GPA/Twitter

“My initial priority is to assess where we are as an organisation and to listen to the views of all of our members and stakeholders,” he added.

“I want to hear at first hand feedback on how we are doing our job, what we could do better and how we can improve our overall performance. We have to challenge ourselves as an organisation and as individuals.

Our inter-county players deserve the very best support in recognition of the unique contribution they make to our games and to the very fabric of our society. That’s what the GPA is about and that will be the focus of the GPA team over the next few years.

A two-time All-Star, Earley retired from inter-county football in 2013 after 16 seasons with Kildare during which he won two Leinster senior titles and reached the All-Ireland final in 1998.

GPA chairman Seamus Hickey said: “With Dermot’s support, we achieved a great deal in 2016 and today’s announcement gives everybody in the GPA a renewed confidence for the future of our players and our games.”

– Additional reporting by Steve O’Rourke

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We’ll Leave It There So: Earley rising, Triggs cited and all today’s sport

Home

A Glenstal Abbey supporter shows off his acrobatic skills during the half-time break in their Munster Schools Senior Cup game against St Clement’s College.

Source: Donall Farmer/INPHO

  • Former Kildare footballer Dermot Earley has been appointed as the new chief executive of the Gaelic Players Association having served as the president of the organisation since 2013.
  • Three people — Sarah Keane, William O’Brien and Bernard O’Byrne — have been nominated to succeed Pat Hickey as president of the Olympic Council of Ireland.
  • Leinster second row Hayden Triggs has been cited for alleged contact with the eye area of Montpellier scrum-half Nic White during Friday’s Champions Cup fixture between the sides.
  • Cabinteely FC have announced that legendary League of Ireland striker Jason Byrne has joined the club for the 2017 season.
  • Munster captain Peter O’Mahony is following return-to-play protocols this week after suffering a concussion during Munster’s Champions Cup win against Glasgow.
  • Carl Frampton has been named as THE RING Magazine Fighter of the Year for 2016, recognising the Belfast boxer’s stunning 12 months.
  • Cork senior hurling boss Kieran Kingston has made seven changes for tomorrow night’s Munster Hurling League clash against Waterford in Mallow.
  • Ireland have secured a nail-biting five-wicket victory against Namibia in the Desert T20 tournament in Abu Dhabi.
  • John O’Sullivan‘s eight-year association with Blackburn Rovers has come to an end after the winger and the Championship club mutually agreed to terminate his contract.
  • The inclusion of Cian Dillon at full-back is one of eight changes made by Clare managers Donal Moloney and Gerry O’Connor for tomorrow’s game against Limerick.
  • Two-time Olympian Michael Conlan will face American Tim Ibarra [4-4] in his debut as a professional boxer at Madison Square Garden on St Patrick’s Day.
  • Cork City manager John Caulfield has expressed his delight after the club confirmed that Stephen Dooley has signed a contract to remain on Leeside for the 2017 season.
  • Glenstal Abbey booked their place in the Munster Schools Senior Cup quarter-finals with a 27-10 win over St Clement’s College.

Away

Serbia’s Novak Djokovic makes a backhand return to Spain’s Fernando Verdasco during his straight-sets victory at the Australian Open.

Source: Andy Brownbill

  • Wales fans have expressed their “outrage” over the ticket allocation of 3,300, or just 6.4%, for their clash with Ireland at the Aviva Stadium on 24 March.
  • Diego Costa returned to training with Chelsea’s first team today, fuelling speculation that he has made up with manager Antonio Conte after their reported bust-up.
  • Lock Alun Wyn Jones will captain the Welsh rugby team for the upcoming Six Nations campaign while interim coach Rob Howley has also named seven debutants in his 36-man squad.
  • Tim Kennedy [18-6] , a US army veteran of Irish descent, has announced his retirement from mixed martial arts after competing for more than 15 years as a professional.
  • Ex-Connacht captain Craig Clarke has told a New Zealand court how thieves held him at gunpoint while he drove a car chased by police.
  • Zebre have parted ways with head coach Gianluca Guidi on the back of heavy defeats against Leinster and Connacht.
  • Napoli president Aurelio De Laurentiis says a global ambassador’s role will be offered to Diego Maradona if the club legend settles his score with the Italian tax man.

The Best Thing We Shared

Is there anything more Robbie Keane can do to endear himself to the Irish public at this stage?

On The Record

There is a huge demand but also the modern day Gaelic football athletes want to do what they are doing. I want to set the record straight on that. Some people would have us believe that they don’t enjoy what they are doing, or that it is a chore for them. I have not yet met anyone who does not enjoy playing for Tyrone and I think there are very few county footballers who do not enjoy what they are doing.

Tyrone football manager Mickey Harte wanted to stress that inter-county players are the ones who drive the standards on and they play at that level because they love it.

The Fixture List

  • There are three FA Cup third-round ties to be decided via replays — Newcastle United v Birmingham City, Plymouth Argyle v Liverpool (live, BT Sport 2) and Southampton v Norwich City — which all kick off at 19.45.
  • It’s back to Group B in the Africa Cup of Nations with tomorrow’s ties pitting Algeria v Tunisia (16.00) and Senegal v Zimbabwe (19.00) against each other.
  • In the Munster Hurling League Clare host Limerick in Sixmilebridge (19.30) and Cork entertain Waterford in Mallow at the same time. Elsewhere, there are three games in the Walsh Cup — Meath v Carlow (Dunganny, 19.30), DIT v NUI Galway (Abbotstown, 19.15) and Carlow v UCD (Netwatch Cullen Park, 19.45). There are also six fixtures in the Dr McKenna Cup — Derry v QUB, Armagh v Down, Fermanagh v Antrim, Monaghan v St Mary’s, Cavan v Ulster University and Tyrone v Donegal.
  • In rugby, there are three fixtures in the Munster Schools Senior Cup with Christian Brothers Cork taking on Crescent College Comprehensive at Irish Independent Park and Rockwell doing battle with St Munchin’s at Clanwilliam Park (14.30). In the afternoon’s later game (15.30), it’s Ard Scoil Rís v Presentation Brothers Cork in Garryowen.
  • The Australian Open, the first tennis Grand Slam of the year, continues in Melbourne.

Showbiz, Baby!

Golden State Warriors star Steph Curry paid tribute to outgoing US President Barack Obama in a 126-91 NBA win against Cleveland Cavaliers.

Honoring our President Barack Obama today on court! He embodies the inspiration, faith & hope Dr. King stood for! We R Forever Grateful! #44 pic.twitter.com/TYc24JaWEu

— Stephen Curry (@StephenCurry30) January 16, 2017

Source: Stephen Curry/Twitter

 

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Kevin McManamon: I wouldn’t be playing for Dublin if I didn’t use sports psychology

ALMOST A YEAR ago to the day, Kevin McManamon sat in front of the media in Croke Park and outlined his very simple goal – to be in the parade on All-Ireland final day.

“It’s a big bullseye for me,” he said last year. ”I like a challenge.”

Source: Gary Carr/INPHO

Up to that point McManamon had earned the reputation as Dublin’s super-sub. But his bold declaration worked, and the St Jude’s attacker started every one of Dublin’s championship games last summer, including both finals.

It’s an old trick of sports psychology, put your goals out there and then go after them. McManamon would know- it’s his profession.

“It is important that you put things out there,” he says at the launch of Dublin’s sponsorship deal with Subaru. “And it’s something I’ve actually learnt since, how important it is to put things out there.”

The 30-year-old graduated with a Masters in Applied Sports and Exercise Psychology from UUJ in 2014, and he’s put his studies to good use, both on and off the field.

McManamon set up his own business in the industry last year and works with a number of individuals and teams, including reigning national basketball champions Templeogue.

“I work with anyone who is trying to do something different in their lives, and I do a lot of work with schools speaking about mental health. And you’d have fellas saying ‘this is not for me’, then you’d have a five-minute conversation with them and you’d realise they’re naturally working on the tools that you’d give them.”

He has no doubt making it to the elite level of any sport is as much mental as it is physical. In his younger days he struggled with nerves before games with Dublin, but in time has witnessed the positive impact working on the mental aspect has had on his game.

Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO

“I wouldn’t be still playing for Dublin if I didn’t do it. I wouldn’t have had the success I’ve had if I didn’t do it. So working on your mental skills is a no-brainer for me.

“Early in my career, I got very stressed before big games. There was always that bit of performance anxiety that I didn’t understand, I didn’t know anything about it. I understand it a lot more now and I’m a lot more relaxed going into games, a lot more confident so that was one of the big steps for me.

“When I started playing with Dublin I thought I knew it all, and I didn’t. It caught me a few times early in my career, in a few big games in Croke Park. So I just started working on it and over the last three years it’s come into fruition, all the work that I’ve done, the different things that I’ve tried.

“When you talk about the difference between winning and losing, no one says it’s the team that was stronger or fitter. They always talk about how they performed under pressure. They always talk about confidence, the intangible stuff. So why wouldn’t you train for that?”

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Source: Donall Farmer/INPHO

Joe Brolly has been among the most vocal critics of psychology and its benefits, particularly when it comes to sport. Without naming names, McManamon feels most of the doubters don’t understand fully what it entails.

“It (the criticism) is absolute nonsense, it’s the people who don’t really deeply understand what they’re talking about,” he continues

“I think some people are critical because it’s difficult to measure. People know if you get a strength and conditioning coach they can make the team 10 per cent stronger, or 10 per cent faster. And they can show that with testing.

“Whereas it’s very hard to measure improvements on the mental side of sport. It’s hard, but you know yourself. It’s subjective really. So I think that’s why people are slow to embrace it. But again it’s a no-brainer for me.

“But I don’t think it’s simple as bashing sports psychology. It’s bashing positive thinking, which is another area altogether. There’s that part of sports psychology, where there are probably people who wouldn’t be as well trained as they should be working in the area, which is where some of the issues lie.

“So I think there’s a lack of understanding of the work that people actually do in performance coaching. It’s not sitting around chanting, or anything like that. It’s about putting a bit of tangibility, a bit of structure, on the things you find it hard to measure.”

Source: Donall Farmer/INPHO

These days, McManamon has a couple of techniques he uses to benefit his own performance. First of all he takes a positive approach to evaluating his performances.

“I was traditionally very hard on myself. I thought it would be a source of motivation, if I was hard on myself, that I’d try harder in training. Without realising that I was basically just chiselling away at my confidence. I give myself a lot more love now when I review my games.

“You speak to players that score a hat-trick in a soccer match, then they miss one, and it’s all they can think about. It’s a very natural thing to do. But I’d be spending more time thinking about the hat-trick if I was giving the advice.”

He also likes to completely switch-off when he’s away from the team environment.

“I’ve a lot of interests outside sport, I’m getting better at not being a 24-hour athlete. When I’m training I am intense, and putting all into it, but I’m getting better at taking time off, time-tabling to look at videos, prepare for the opposition.

“That was one of the things I did last year, and it’s something was given to us by the manager, that when you’re here you’re here, when you’re somewhere else you’re somewhere else. It’s not in your brain the whole time.”

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Mark Bergin anointed Kilkenny hurling captain for the year ahead

KILKENNY HURLING CHAMPIONS O’Loughlin Gaels have nominated Mark Bergin to captain the county in 2017.

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

As reigning champions, Gaels have the honour of providing the county captain for the forthcoming year and so the 27-year-old forward will follow in the footsteps of clubmates Brian Hogan, Andy and Martin Comerford in leading the Cats.

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‘Evolution happens in every team’: Criticism from ex-Dubs doesn’t concern Ger Cunningham

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DUBLIN BOSS GER Cunningham isn’t paying much attention to the flak he’s taken from several former squad members as he prepares his squad for the upcoming campaign.

Michael Carton, Conal Keaney and Peter Kelly are among the exiles who’ve been scathing in their criticism of the operation run by the Cork native, but Cunningham is unperturbed.

“I’m just looking forward to the guys that I have now,” he says defiantly. ”We’re just looking forward now and trying to build a culture with these guys that will bring success to the county.

“Evolution happens in every team. All these guys that have come in have done really, really well. Obviously the fact that they’re so young means they’ll hopefully be there for the next generation of Dublin hurlers.

“But we’re looking at the here and now, we’re not looking so much to the future.”

The current Dublin squad is almost unrecognisable from the 2013 Leinster SHC winning team as Cunningham places his faith in youth with the addition of several 2016 minors to the panel.

Darragh Grey, Ciaran Dowling, Conor Burke, Donal Burke and Cian O’Sullivan all join having played at the U18 grade last year, while Fergal Whitely is a year older and has also been added to the squad.

Cuala’s extended run to the All-Ireland club hurling semi-finals has resulted in the fast-tracking of those youngsters to the senior team for the Walsh Cup, but Cunningham has been suitably impressed with how they’ve adjusted to senior ranks.

“I watched them a few times during the year with the minors, they all performed very well. Six is a huge number, but I suppose the Cuala scenario has forced our hand to push them forward that bit sooner than we had planned.

Ger Cunningham was at Dublin GAA’s new commercial partnership announcement with Subaru

Source: Gary Carr/INPHO

“They have all been excellent, their attitude is really, really good. It takes time for young guys to settle in a senior set-up, it is a big step up to come from minor into a senior set-up, but I couldn’t be happier with their attitude and the way they’ve bought into what we are trying to do.

“Again we have to be careful because it is a busy time for them. These guys are in college, some of them are doing Leaving Cert, so we have to balance it. We have to make sure they aren’t overdoing it.”

Between the Cuala contingent and players playing with their colleges, Cunningham estimates the Metropolitans are down “about 20 players” for the pre-season competition.

In the first two games of the Walsh Cup, Dublin have pulled off wins over Carlow and UCD. Despite the recent negative press surrounding the county’s hurlers, he believes there are reasons to be optimistic.

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“We still feel they’re still the best hurlers that we’ve seen in Dublin,” he continues.

“(Last) year the U21s got to the All Ireland semi-final and the minors have been to Croke Park for the past two years. On the back of those teams you’d be hoping that you’d get a batch of guys coming through putting their hand up for selection.

“We still have a core group of guys in their mid 20s that are good enough to play at this level. Between those two we have a good crop of players coming through.

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Dublin’s Cian O’Sullivan celebrates scoring the first goal of the game against UCD

Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO

“It is a young team, we have a tough league campaign. We won’t get any tougher than playing Tipp in the first league match, we don’t have eight (Cuala) players as part of the squad that day so it forces us to go outside and to show confidence in other lads that are there.

“And then if we can survive Division 1, it will be a really great test because of the five matches that we have. Hopefully then we will get the bonus of the Cuala lads coming in at the start of April.”

For the moment the four-time All-Star expects Con O’Callaghan’s focus to remain with Jim Gavin’s football squad, but he didn’t rule anything out.

“It goes without saying I’d love to have a player like Con available to us. The time he was in with us around 15 months ago, he had just come out of minor. He always said to us that football was his first love.

“You’d love to have him there. We wish him the best, but at the same time he knows the door is always open to us if he wants to play hurling. I think his focus is going to be on football for the next while.”

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New GPA chief talks championship restructures, pay-for-play and Super 11s

FIXING THE CHAMPIONSHIP structures will be top priority for Dermot Earley in his new role as chief executive of the Gaelic Players Association.

Source: Seb Daly/SPORTSFILE

Next month the 38-year-old replaces Dessie Farrell, who was at the helm of the GPA for 13 years. Farrell was among the founding members of the players’ body, before serving as the CEO since 2003.

Earley, who has been president of the GPA since 2013, says sorting out the fixtures calendar is his “most pressing” concern.

“There is an appetite for change and we have been hearing that for a long time, certainly on the football side,” he said at the announcement in GPA headquarters yesterday.

“(Y)ou have a structure that’s unfair, different starting dates and different provinces. A team can play a certain number of games and be All-Ireland champions while another team has to pay a different number of games. That’s unfair, and that’s not good at the moment.”

GAA Director General Pauric Duffy’s proposals will go in front of the GAA Congress next month, a restructuring of the football championship that includes replacing the quarter-finals with group stages.

Earley continued: “We did present a proposal (to the GAA) but it did not make it to the floor of Congress last year because it did not have a B tier and the number of games were increased in the proposal. The irony is that the GAA’s proposal has an increased number of games as well. We will have to watch that space very clearly.”

Earley was a selector with Ireland’s International Rules side in 2015

Source: Cathal Noonan/INPHO

Earley will canvas the players before the GPA takes a stance on Duffy’s plan, but as part of their agreement with the GAA last year, the players’ body may be able to bring their own motion to Congress in 2018.

“I would have hoped that we could bring a motion to Congress in 2017 but to be allowed to bring that motion it has to go to the floor of Congress, so we won’t be able to bring a motion ourselves until 2018.”

Earley welcomed the formation of the Club Players’ Association, who have adopted the mantra, ‘fix the fixtures.’

“Club players are very entitled to go out and form their association and they’ve been banging on the door,” he said. “There is a fixture mess that needs to be addressed and this is another voice at that table.

“In any sport, you have to strive to be the best you can be and there has to be an elite level in that sport. That’s who we represent, we represent our county players who play in order to be the best they can be and we support them.

“Obviously not everybody can be in that bracket and the other point on that is at the end of a long season, our players have to go back and play with their clubs as well. So any improvements in the club structure is an improvement to the GPA, to the county player, but also to the overall structure of the GAA as well.”

Earley in action against Darragh Ó Sé in 1998

Source: Billy Stickland/INPHO

An All-Star winner in 1998 and 2009, Earley has been involved with the GPA on some level or other since its inception in 1999. In those boisterous early days, the GPA were suspected in some quarters of seeking a pay-for-play regime, but Earley says a move towards professionalism is not on their radar at the moment.

“I suppose that caused a lot of conflict during the naughties but I think the recognition that we would maintain the amateur status is in the first initial agreement with the GAA. (It’s) also enshrined in our constitution. I think that area has gone away. It’s not on the agenda at the moment.

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“When I go out to talk to (the players) after taking over, if I come away from those discussions and I reflect that that is one of the pressing issues, then it does become something that is on the agenda. But at the moment, it’s not. And I’m pretty close to the players to know that it’s not top of the agenda at all.”

The incoming CEO indicated that the GPA’s fundraising efforts in the United States will “absolutely” continue.

“Fundraising in the US is very important. Our funding at the moment doesn’t allow us to provide for all our members so that fundraising is very important.

“It’s for us to provide for our players. We have to fundraise. There’s a huge body of work involved in it but it’s important we keep going with it.”

Galway’s Aidan Harte races forward during the Fenway Hurling Classic in 2015

Source: Emily Harney/INPHO

In November 2015, the ‘Super 11′ hurling match between Galway and Dublin in Boston’s Fenway Park drew some criticism after a large number of players were involved in a brawl during the second quarter.

But Earley hopes the exhibition match will return in 2017.

“We will resurrect the Super 11s and we hope to get a game back in the States later this year. I think the passion shown by the Dublin and Galway teams was appreciated by the crowd out there.

“Obviously no one wants to see a shemozzle but it just goes to show you that they wanted to go out there and put on the best possible show to showcase the skills of hurling. If passion spills over in that case, then so be it.

“It’s about showcasing the skills of hurling. A warrior sport, unique to Ireland.”

What about the rumours the Super 11s will be increased to four teams this year?

“Possibly not this year but maybe in the future.”

Earley will take a leave of absence from the Defence Forces to assume his new role and admitted there’s a “strong possibility” his days in the Army are over.

“It is a great opportunity for me. I would like to think that I would be committed to the association for a long number of years.”

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‘He’s an exceptional leader, a leader of men’: Hickey praises the appointment of Earley

GAELIC PLAYERS ASSOCIATION (GPA) chairman Seamus Hickey has hailed the appointment of Dermot Earley as the body’s new chief executive.

The former Kildare footballer will assume control from Dessie Farrell in February, and Hickey believes Earley’s leadership qualities will be a massive asset to the organisation in his new role.

“It’s a terrific result and he’s a guy that stood out,” Hickey said at the announcement in GPA headquarters yesterday.

“He has a habit of doing that. Even his time as president, his time as a player. He’s an exceptional leader, a leader of men in a load of different capacities.

“The dynamic for me was great sadness that that figurehead was moving on. But today is an opportunity in a real sense that we have a new chapter, building on something different and exciting and we have a great platform.”

Source: Seb Daly/SPORTSFILE

Sean Murphy, a member of the GPA National Executive Committee, added: “We believe we have got the guy to lead the GPA, ideally he is around for quite some time. We hope he is. It would be a success for us if he was the CEO for many years. He’s committed to the GPA, he’s not in this for the short term, he’s in this for the long term.”

Earley served as the GPA president since 2013 and was their representative on Central Council for the last three years. Hickey confirmed that Earley would no longer fill that role, because “that was a volunteer position, so a volunteer will take it.”

The GAA had no involvement in the hiring of Earley, although Hickey says they were kept “informed” throughout the process.

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