Soccer-focused Jim McGuinness says he’s not interested in Mayo job

JIM MCGUINNESS HAS insisted that he’s not interested in a return to GAA management at the minute, effectively ruling himself out of the running for the vacant Mayo job.

Stephen Rochford announced that he was stepping down from his role as Mayo senior football manager on Monday, ending his three-year stint at the helm.

And Donegal’s All-Ireland winning manager in 2012 McGuinness was one name immediately linked with the job.

But at tonight’s Off The Ball All-Ireland preview at Croke Park, he ruled out the possibility of a return to inter-county management, stating that his immediate future is focused on soccer,

“Not at the moment, definitely not,” he said when Joe Molloy asked if he was interested in getting back into GAA management. 

“For myself, it’s been a long journey of development in another sport. It is a massive challenge, there’s no doubt about that.

“I’m ready to take a managerial position [in soccer] […] The most important thing is not about getting a club, it’s about getting the right club.” – Jim McGuinness on his next job.#OTBCrokePark with @BoyleSports pic.twitter.com/41wJ6aZgjj

— Off The Ball (@offtheball) August 30, 2018

“I’m ready to take a managerial position (in soccer). The most important thing is not about getting a club, it’s about getting the right club.

“I’m excited. I’ve recently got a lot closer in mind how I see the game, how the game will be coached, how the game will be trained.” 

Meanwhile, former Mayo manager James Horan was speaking at the same event and he admitted that he hasn’t thought about a potential return.

Having praised Rochford’s work, Horan said: “Let the process take its course. 

“I’m manager of Westport and really enjoying that with a young bunch of guys, very keen, very ambitious and doing very well.”

James Horan.

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

He added: ”I genuinely haven’t really thought of it (the vacant Mayo job).

“I’m a Mayo man that absolutely loves Mayo football and I really love coaching guys that are ambitious for teams to do well, so that’s what I love doing.

“At some stage, of course I’d love to get involved again but is it the time right for me, for the county board, I don’t know if it is. There’s so much stuff there.”

What about right now, Molloy pushed.

“At the moment, I would say for me personally, no. I’ve so much going on at the moment.”

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Carnacon hit out at ‘impulsive, heavy handed’ ban following appeal success

CARNACON HAVE CRITICISED the Mayo Ladies County Board for an “impulsive, heavy handed approach” in attempting to ban them from the 2018 club championship.

The reigning county, provincial and All-Ireland senior club champions last night won their appeal and had the controversial ban overturned by the Connacht LGFA Council.

County delegates voted overwhelmingly last week to expel Carnacon for bringing the game into disrepute by withdrawing all eight of their players from the Mayo county panel this summer.

But the decision was struck down on appeal on Thursday night.

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“We are satisfied with this outcome and feel it reflects the impulsive, heavy handed approach initially taken by the Mayo Ladies County Board,” a statement read.

“Without a full examination of the events available for club delegates, it has been proven incorrect to make any such ruling on the situation.

“A swift and fair hearing from the Appeals Committee of the Connacht LGFA Council was greatly appreciated and we are happy that we can now continue our preparations for the remainder of the season.

“As a club and individuals, we are very thankful for all the support we have received in the last few days, in what has been a difficult time with the negative attention and speculation surrounding the players involved.

“Unfortunately, this ruling stemmed from issues raised by players representing their county. As a club we supported these players and continue to do so. We will continue to be proud of all players and teams, including those who represent Mayo at all levels. 

“We now look forward to getting back in action on the pitch and doing our best as a club to support all of our members. It has been a great honour to represent our families and communities on a provincial and national stage in recent years.

“We will strive to continue successfully and uphold the values that unite us a club.”

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Know Your Sport? Take our weekly quiz

His omission from the Ireland squad hit the headlines this week, but in which city was Declan Rice born?

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Who did Ireland international Leanne Kiernan recently score her first West Ham goal against?

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Dublin and Tyrone meet in Sunday's All-Ireland football final. How many points did Dublin defeat Mickey Harte's side by in last year's semi-final?

10 points
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Which Leinster player broke his wrist in training this week?

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Padraig Harrington missed out on winning the Czech Masters on Sunday. How many strokes did the Dubliner trail Andre Pavan by in second place?

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Carnacon will now be able to defend their All-Ireland club title, but who did the Mayo side defeat in last year's final at Parnell Park?

Foxrock-Cabinteely
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Which AFL club has Mayo forward Sarah Rowe signed for?

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Cristiano Ronaldo will return to Old Trafford in this season’s Champions League. How many Premier League titles did he win with Man United?

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Lara Gillespie won European gold in the Junior Women's Points Race in Switzerland last weekend. Which county is the 17-year-old cyclist from?

Cavan
Waterford

Wicklow
Clare

Munster have signed Alby Mathewson as cover for Conor Murray due to a neck injury. Which Top 14 side did Mathewson play with last season?

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‘Put yourself in his shoes – if your daughter had been murdered and that’s how someone in RTÉ behaved’

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

CATHAL MCCARRON’S ABIDING memory from Tyrone’s last All-Ireland winning campaign was a scene in the Croke Park dressing room after they beat Wexford in the semi-final.

McCarron, who was 19 at the time and in his first year on the senior panel, had just returned to the changing rooms under the Hogan Stand when combative midfielder Kevin ‘Hub’ Hughes burst through the doors.

With the euphoria of victory pulsing through his veins and the prospect of a third All-Ireland final in six years on the horizon, Hughes sat next to McCarron and gave him some advice.

“Fuck Cathal, these next few weeks will be the best weeks of your life,” Hughes stated.

Hughes was a grizzled veteran by that stage and fully understood what the build up to another decider would entail.

“I remember that as the stand-out moment,” McCarron tells The42.  

“I thought to myself, ‘This is the way life is here. Getting to All-Ireland finals is the way it’s going to be.’”

A decade on and Tyrone are back in their first final since, with McCarron and Colm Cavanagh the only players still around from the 2008 squad.

“Funnily enough this is the first All-Ireland final we’re back in since then. It’s hard to believe, we were beaten in semi-finals and quarter-finals. It’s really, really hard to believe that it’s been 10 years. It’s mental. I actually seen a picture of myself running out onto the pitch that year and there were no grey hairs there, it was just pure black!”

Source: Lorraine O’Sullivan/INPHO

The serious knee injury he suffered against Roscommon in the Super 8s has denied him the chance to experience the thrill of marching behind the band, meeting the president and more importantly lining out in tomorrow’s final.

While contesting a high ball with Diarmuid Murtagh in their July encounter, he landed awkwardly on his left knee. On hitting the turf, he felt the knee dislocating and popping back into place.

Subsequent scans revealed strains to his cruciate and medial ligaments, while surgery was required to stabilise the knee after the dislocation.

“I knew straight away it was dislocated because I felt it come out and it kind of went back in again,” he says.

“I knew straight up there was something seriously wrong. When you really hurt yourself badly, you have a fear that, ‘Fucking hell, I’m out here.’ I had a fear straight away that my season was over. 

“I kind of wrapped my head around it in the last three or four weeks that I’m not going to be playing. In a way I dealt with it but at the same time it is tough. Living down in Kildare I’m away from all the hype so it hasn’t affected me too much.

“But at the same time you’re not getting to play in the biggest day of the year and you’re trying to get here for the last 10 years. It is a tough one to take. After the second or third week when I realised what the damage was, I did have a few tough days.”

Source: Bryan Keane/INPHO

He underwent surgery in Belfast and recuperated back home in Athy, taking some time out before he resumed the gruelling trips to Garvaghey to be around his team-mates.

The time off was as beneficial for the mind as it was for the body.

“It’s a long enough journey to training as it is. It’s two hours 40 minutes each way to go training every night. It’s a fair spin. There was no point in me going down there when I was hardly able to walk. I took a week off and just gathered my thoughts and stuff.

“Mickey knows me a long time and he knows it would annoy me quite a bit. He did give me space and let me do my own thing. 

“It’s happened now at a really bad time but the positive I’m taking out of it is that the timing of it will leave me back hopefully in fine fettle for pre-season in the New Year.

“All you can do is try to look at it positives now, be there with the team and try come back better than you were. Use the time now to do stuff that I haven’t been doing this last number of years, extra stuff.

“I’d be a positive person anyway. I think you have to have a grieving process of some sort. There would be something seriously wrong if you weren’t down. You have to look at the positives and look at what you can do for the team or around the camp. If you can talk in the dressing room or give someone some advice.

“That’s what I’ve been doing. I’d never really had a serious injury before. I’ve been away really well. It’s an awful tough place to be because you’re kind of sitting on the outskirts and you’re on your own. It’s a difficult place to be.

Source: Bryan Keane/INPHO

“You do see boys appreciate coming back and they talk about the tough times. It is a hard enough place to be in when you’re missing the biggest sporting day of the year. It’s funny how, I started my career off. I was 19 in 08 and were in the All-Ireland final in my first year.

“I’m 30 now and coming towards the end more so than the start of my career and we’re in an All-Ireland final again and I’m probably missing it as well. It’s just the way it is I suppose, sport can be cruel. All I can do is do my part and look to get back better.”

If McCarron sounds like a man who is handling the injury well, then it shouldn’t be a major surprise. The pain of missing out probably pales in comparison to the tough times he’s endured in his life – much of it self-inflicted.

McCarron’s life spiralled out of control with his gambling addiction and he teetered close to the brink on several occasions but has ultimately managed to restore a sense of normality to his life.  

Mickey Harte played a big role in that. It was Harte who visited him in the Cuan Mhuire rehab centre in Athenry in 2009 with his Celtic Cross from the previous September and told him the door was still open for a return to the Tyrone jersey.

After McCarron completed his second rehab stint in Athy in 2014, a phone call arrived out of the blue from Harte extending an invitation to rejoin the Red Hand squad. Within 12 months, McCarron was nominated for an All-Star. 

Naturally, McCarron holds his manager in extremely high regard.

“Where I think he’s an advantage over everybody else is he’s come through so many tragedies with the team outside of sport. It’s made him to be the person that he is today. He’s almost like a sports psychologist, it’s like he actually trained in psychology. 

“Even for me talking to him, I’m studying psychotherapy, you can see the way he thinks outside the box. He doesn’t think like most people. He would think really deep. When you talk to him you’re like, ‘There’s something different about this man.’

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

“For a man that never studied any of that stuff, he’s just a special person. You see times through the year it’s no coincidence or luck that’s got him winning All-Ireland titles, it’s just the work he puts in. I couldn’t speak highly enough of him.”

McCarron says the Tyrone players were more than happy to row in behind Harte’s decision not to engage with RTÉ, following an ill-judged radio segment shortly after the 2011 murder of his daughter Micheala.

“This is the thing with this RTÉ thing,” he says. “What nearly annoys me about this thing is that people are very quick to judge Mickey, some media outlets and that. What I would say to them to do is, do the research first before they jump on the bandwagon and see why he’s boycotting RTÉ. Find out why.

“Put yourself in his shoes if your daughter had been murdered and that’s the way someone in RTÉ behaved. A lot of people are very, very quick to judge and jump on the bandwagon and say he should be talking to RTÉ but yet people don’t know why Tyrone are doing this stance.”

Following Tyrone’s semi-final win over Monaghan, McCarron posted a video on Twitter that gave a rare look into the Red Hand’s inner sanctum.

McCarron captured the euphoric scenes in the dressing rooms as the players gleefully clapped along to DJ Makar’s track ‘Opa Opa Opapa’.

It may have took us 10 years, but we are back ⚪️🔴❤️💪🏻 pic.twitter.com/8VNYTnqn3d

— Cathal McCarron (@mc_carron1) August 12, 2018

“It was all emotion after that game,” he says. “Let me tell you, if you go into any dressing room after a big win like that there’s a lot of partying.

“You probably put so much work into this thing and you train so hard and dedicated your life, so if you win something special and big you have to celebrate it. Why else would you put your life on hold and sacrifice yourself all year?

“You have to remember special times and I believe that you have to also celebrate them with your team. Because they are the guys you’ve been soldiering with on the pitch, in the gym. It’s important to create special memories that way as well.”

Perhaps his mind drifted back to the advice Hub Hughes gave him in those same dressing rooms a decade earlier. Whatever it was, he was keen to soak up everything about their long-awaited return to another All-Ireland final.

“I’d never take the phone out because I’d usually be playing. It was just one of them situations where I had the phone in my pocket and I thought, ‘This will be a special moment to capture.’

“It was nice to capture it.”

Might there be another moment like that to capture in the Tyrone dressing rooms tomorrow evening?

“Hopefully, aye. If we win keep an eye on the phone you never know what might come up,” he laughs.

“Ah no, we’ll not worry about that yet. We’ll focus on trying to beat them first.

“I believe you’ll see the real Tyrone on Sunday in Croke Park.”

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Former Longford star forward Padraic Davis proposed to take over as new senior manager

FORMER LONGFORD FORWARD Padraic Davis will be proposed for ratification to take over as the Midlanders’ new senior football manager, the county confirmed on Saturday.

Davis enjoyed a 12 year inter-county career between 1995 and 2007, winning four Longford Senior Football Championships with Fr Manning Gaels.

The 42-year-old went into management following the end of his playing career, helping St. Vincent’s to a minor football championship, while also helping the Longford U21s to the 2011 Leinster final.

“The subcommittee tasked with seeking a new Longford Senior Football Manager have today completed the process and will be proposing the name of Padraic Davis for ratification by Coiste Chontae,” the county announced. 

Davis pictured in November 2017 in charge of Mohill.

Source: Dave Farrell/INPHO

In 2015 Davis took over as manager of Mohill GAA, where he led the club to two Senior Championships, two U21 Championships, and three consecutive leagues titles.

He was also a selector with the county’s senior side under the tenure of Glenn Ryan.

Longford are looking to appoint a new manager after Denis Connerton stepped down at the end of July following three years at the helm. 

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Dubs name unchanged side for All-Ireland decider against Tyrone

DUBLIN HAVE NAMED an unchanged side for tomorrow’s All-Ireland football final against Tyrone (throw-in 3.30pm).

Jim Gavin is set to stick with the same team that beat Galway by nine points earlier this month with Cian O’Sullivan fit to start following the injury scare which forced him off in the first half of the semi-final.

Eoin Murchan and John Small, both of whom were late inclusions against Galway, retain their starting places while Ciaran Kilkenny — who has scored 2-21 from play this summer — is named at full-forward.

Tyrone named their side on Thursday night, with Mark Bradley set to start at corner-forward in place of Lee Brennan.

Dublin (v Tyrone)

1. Stephen Cluxton (Parnell’s)

2. Philly McMahon (Ballymun Kickhams)
3. Cian O’Sullivan (Kilmacud Crokes)
4. Eoin Murchan (Na Fianna)

5. John Small (Ballymun Kickhams)
6. Jonny Cooper (Na Fianna)
7. Jack McCaffrey (Clontarf)

8. Brian Fenton (Raheny)
9. James McCarthy (Ballymun Kickhams)

10. Niall Scully (Templeogue Synge Street)
11. Con O’Callaghan (Cuala)
12. Brian Howard (Raheny)

13. Paul Mannion (Kilmacud Crokes)
14. Ciaran Kilkenny (Castleknock)
15. Dean Rock (Ballymun)

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Corofin crowned Kilmacud Sevens champions

Londis Kilmacud Crokes Football Sevens

Corofin (Galway) 4-9 St Galls (Antrim) 1-8

COROFIN CLAIMED THEIR fourth Londis Kilmacud Crokes All-Ireland Senior Football Sevens title, thanks to a strong second-half display in the final at Glenalbyn on Saturday evening.

Having lost their opening game to St Mary’s Saggart, the Galway side bounced back, to take silverware against seven-time champions St Galls.

In a frantic opening half, with a score produced every 30 seconds, Corofin led by 2-4 to 1-5 at half-time, with goals from captain Jason Leonard, and midfielder Kieran Molloy.

Michael Pollock was outstanding for Galls throughout the tournament and delivered their only goal of the final in the opening half.

The sides were well matched early on the restart, but St Galls final score of the game came four minutes into the half from John McCaffrey.

Corofin dug in, scoring 2-2 unanswered, including goals from Ciaran Brady and Londis Player of the Tournament Dylan McHugh, on the way to a 10-point win.

After the game Corofin captain Jason Leonard received the Cup from Dublin GAA Chairman Sean Shanley.

Scorers for Corofin: M Farragher, B Power (1f) 0-3 each; J Leonard, K Molloy, D McHugh, C Brady 1-0 each; D Canney 0-2; D Silke 0-1.

Scorers for St Galls: M Pollock 1-3, (1f); K Niblock, M Kelly, E McCabe, C Stinton, J McCaffrey 0-1 each.

COROFIN: B Power, D McHugh, C Brady, K Molloy, J Leonard, M Farragher, D Wall. Subs R Mahon, D Silke, D Canney.

ST GALLS: E McCabe, S O’Hagan, C Brady, M Kelly, J McCaffrey, K Niblock, C Stinton. Subs: T O’Neill, C Burke, M Pollock.

REFEREE: Noel Hand (Louth)

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‘You were kind of like the black sheep by going to the gym as much as I did on my own’

ON THURSDAY AFTERNOON, Matthew Donnelly set his out-of-office email alert, turned off his computer and walked out of the Belfast offices of PwC where he works as an Associate Consultant.

As he switched off from the day job, he honed in on his other life, that of Tyrone captain facing into an All-Ireland final against Dublin.

Last year’s semi-final ended in ignominy, humiliated by a 12-point margin. Tyrone were left wondering if they could ever reach a final with this panel. And, they had lost an iconic figure in captain Sean Cavanagh.

Over Christmas, one of the calls manager Mickey Harte was made was to Donnelly. Fancy taking on the role?

A few nights later, members of his family were in a neighbour’s house in Trillick and former Tyrone captain and clubmate Sean Donnelly turned up.

“Sean Donnelly is obviously a big idol in Trillick for everyone. It’s good to be part of that tradition. Pat King was captain just previous, so Sean was the last,” beams Donnelly.

“You are following in good footsteps there and I am very aware of that.”

It was a better phonecall than the one he had with Harte back in 2010. He had won an All-Ireland minor title in 2008 and his team-mate Peter Harte was stepping up to the big leagues. When Mickey asked if Donnelly was interested in coming to senior training, he initially went. A few games in the McKenna Cup later and he told Harte he wanted out.

He explains, “Looking around the dressing room you know yourself, competing with boys in training, the likes of Stevie O’Neill and Hub Hughes and them boys were around the scene then,” he explains.

“You probably didn’t think physically you could compete with them boys. It was something I was wary of. I didn’t want to be in the county panel unless I could contribute heavily that season and it probably wasn’t the case then. I took two years out at that stage to build myself to the required level.”

It was a recurring fear. When he was 16 he played a club game and could get nothing out of his marker, pushed around the pitch.

His sounding board has always been his father, Liam. Donnelly senior put down several seasons with the county himself and Matthew and Richard had followed him around the pitches of Tyrone when he brought minor teams to All-Irelands in 2001 and 2004.

His mother is Clare, the club secretary of Trillick and a Glencull woman originally. Grew up as next-door neighbour of the Canavan family, would you believe?

Liam came back from a meeting with Paddy Tally with a programme. It seems outdated now but, he stuck to it religiously.

Such was his dedication, he came back in a different, stockier individual. It took a lot of resistance to peer pressure.

“You were kind of like the black sheep about the place then by going to the gym as much as I did on my own. It definitely wasn’t the popular thing to do back then, but I’m glad I had the foresight to do that,” he reasons.

It’s a big part of what made him, but he always put a premium on developing his skills. It might make a man look impressive in a tight-fit jersey, but it was a means to an end.

“Number one, the most important thing in football is availability, being fit to play,” he says.

“You don’t want to jeopardise that by doing something silly in the gym.

“That’s always been the goal for me: number one, be able to play and be robust enough to stand the requirements for inter-county football. If you’re fit and available for selection, that’s always the most important thing.”

This team is a band of brothers in more ways than one. There are six sets of brothers in the Tyrone panel, with the Burns, Sluddens, McGearys, McCanns, Brennans and he has his own brother Richard there too.

The pastoral side of the role comes naturally to him.

“It is something I have found easy because I genuinely do care for them. I look out for the players. Getting to know them better, finding out the different approaches you have to take with them is something I have enjoyed. It’s probably that the team in general are good at that, in looking out for each other,” Donnelly says.

So here they are, looking to avenge not only last year’s loss, but all the big games Tyrone have lost over the last number of years.

Turning his thoughts to Dublin and last August immediately melds into other games.

“It hurt a lot, but as I say, it probably hurt no more than as far back as Mayo in 2013. They’re not great places to be in when you are so close to a final and getting beaten so the same as that stage 28-odd other teams had to pick themselves up and we were no different. It was just about getting back on the training ground as quick as we were summoned and working on that stuff.”

Tyrone go in as longest-priced challengers in a final in living memory. No big deal. His thoughts turn, as they often do, back to Trillick.

In 2014, they were up against Dungannon in the Tyrone Intermediate final. They lost that. The margin? As coincidence would have it, 12 points.

The following year, the St Macartan’s collected their seventh Tyrone Championship against all odds.

“We went on to be the best team in Tyrone the year after, so I have seen how quick you can turn it around in 12 months. That day in ’14 when we were beaten by Dungannon there were probably 18 teams, on paper, ahead of you. In 12 months we turned it around to be the best.”

Above their beds, in the shared bedroom of their Trillick home are the jerseys Matthew (2008) and Richard (2010) wore in their All-Ireland minor finals.

They have been waiting a long time to replace them with senior ones.

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It’s here now.

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Michael Owen’s ‘dream’ of a Liverpool return, the Tyrone man who played for Dublin and all the week’s best sportswriting

Updated at 09.32

1. “City did not even include a trophy cabinet when they moved into the Commonwealth Games stadium in 2003. All their collectables, including a porcelain cow, were stored in a dimly lit room and nobody should be surprised that when Vincent Kompany arrived with the most fortuitous timing, 10 days before the takeover, he can remember the dressing-room toilet did not even have a door. The groundsman, Lee Jackson, will tell you City were so skint he did not have enough white paint to do the lines on the pitch.”

The Guardian’s Daniel Taylor writes about Manchester City 10 years on form the Abu Dhabi ownership takeover.

2. “This is a real story. Hand to God. When I came over from Cameroon at 16, I didn’t know any English, didn’t know a single person in America, didn’t really understand the culture except for like basic hip-hop. And I know people sort of know my story, but I don’t think they really understand how crazy it is. Because I had just started playing basketball literally — literally — three months before I got an offer to come play high school ball in Florida.”

Joel Embiid tells his story for the Players Tribune.

3. “On Wednesday morning, the start of his third day as an All-Ireland senior hurling medal holder, Nickie Quaid makes his way down from his hotel room in Adare.

“The night before has seen players and management carry the celebration trail to the town of their captain Declan Hannon. Quaid’s voice is hoarse. His mother will see him later in Effin, his homeplace, where they’ll make an unscheduled stop and she’ll adjudge him a little white in the face. The things that mothers notice. If he is not looking the usual picture of health, it’s the price you pay, when you find yourself where he is now, a place he wouldn’t swap with anyone.”

The Irish Independent’s Dermot Crowe looks at Nickie Quaid’s tribute to his father.

New York Giants Odell Beckham Jr stands on the field before a preseason game.

Source: UPI/PA Images

4. “Nelson Stewart didn’t ask why Odell Beckham Jr needed film. He knew. Stewart, Odell’s former coach at Isidore Newman School in New Orleans, was in his office this summer watching old plays. He’s a former teammate of Peyton Manning’s and a close friend of Eli’s, both Newman alums as well, and he keeps a grass-stained Beckham No. 3 Newman jersey in his office drawer as a reminder of his fortune to witness so much transcendent talent at such a small school. On this day, he filmed a few touchdowns off his computer screen and texted them to Odell, who replied: “lol coach i really need my high school highlights.”

ESPN’s Seth Wickersham on Odell Beckham Jr’s quest to recapture the magic that made him the NFL’s most eye-catching talent.

5. “He drove a hard bargain, because he knew desperate men will pay a premium when the clock is counting down on All-Ireland final day. My father handed over the necessary. It was the first of September, 1974. I was nine years old and about to see my first game of hurling: Limerick, the All-Ireland champions, versus Kilkenny.

“Outside the Cusack Stand, Dad lifted me over the turnstile – no questions asked. Back in the days before health and safety, a father and son could get into the ground on the strength of one ticket.”

Family matters most on a day sent to us from heaven, writes The Limerick Leader’s Alan English.

6. “It’s ironic that when the shock call came for Paddy Quinn to join the Dublin footballers in the autumn of 2012, it was from a fellow Tyrone native and Jim Gavin’s trusted lieutenant Michael Kennedy.

“Quinn was 31 and hadn’t played underage or senior for Tyrone – a self-proclaimed “late developer” who played with London when living there in his early 20s – it was a bolt from the blue but one he wasn’t going to pass up.”

The Irish Independent’s Michael Verney chats to The Tyrone man who played for Dublin.

7. “Late in the evening — this was a couple hours after everyone had eaten and only the adults were still sitting outside — someone brought up the manner in which the Spurs had lost to the Heat. It was just a tiny comment (something like “Man, Game 6 sucked so bad”), and it was a conversation that had already taken place among the same people several times since the end of the playoffs, but it turned into a big thing.”

The Ringer’s Shea Serrano reflects on the retirement of a legend, Manu Ginobili.

8. “Being a Tyrone fan in Dublin can be difficult, especially in weeks like this, as the glorious lure of Sam Maguire breathes down our necks. Aware of the “esteem” in which we’re held, we’re forced to develop coping mechanisms to make you all realise we’re not monsters, or paranoid. Or both.”

Growing up in Tyrone, GAA offered a way of expressing our Irishness  that allowed us to feel a part of it despite our political circumstances, writes the Irish Times’ Una McCaffrey.

9. “Michael still wanted to come back even when his time at Newcastle was over, but Liverpool had moved on. There was to be no dream move.

“Hundreds of tweets describe this story as “honest” and “revealing”, adding that there was a palpable sense of disappointment in his voice due to his love of the club. Maybe he was hard done by after all.

“Sorry Michael, but I remember things differently.

“Move back to Anfield? I’m amazed we took the phone call.”

Karl Coppack of the Anfield Wrap on the reality of Michael Owen’s Anfield departure.

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Anger over Declan Rice, making history for Ireland, Roma’s rap name and more tweets of the week

1. Kevin Kilbane

I’d rather be ranked 150th in the world and never qualify again than have someone who has played, but needs time to THINK whether they should play for us again. Well done to MON for transparency. https://t.co/6oXlwXEpaP

— Kevin Kilbane (@kdkilbane77) August 27, 2018

2. Ronnie Whelan

Hope it goes well Brian

— Ronnie Whelan (@WhelanRonnie5) August 27, 2018

3. Jenny Egan

WOW I am still pinching myself, I am a SENIOR CANOE SPRINT WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP BRONZE MEDALIST WAHOO 😃🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪
I am so happy to have gotten Ireland on the medal table for the FIRST time at a Senior Canoe Sprint World Championships ❤ 📷 Carolyn Cooper #Jantex @nelokayaks pic.twitter.com/qaB7OZscHz

— Jenny Egan (@Jenny_Egan) August 28, 2018

4. Cillian Sheridan

As an Irishman, reading about Declan Rice’s decision really annoys me. Now nobody is talking about my omission

— Cillian Sheridan (@CillianSheridan) August 28, 2018

5. Niamh McCarthy

I’m not sure if this is the last day or the first day celebrating The All Ireland with John in The Abbey! The students are yet to return!! Great cake @mariankeating! 🎂#HappyMonday #ItsGoodToBeBack 🇳🇬🇳🇬🇳🇬 pic.twitter.com/FvR6otWy2X

— Niamh McCarthy (@niamhy24) August 27, 2018

6. Cathal Callinan

If Clann na Gael think I’m going to miss going to Electric Picnic to stay at home a week before championship and train Sunday morning and miss a fucking mighty weekend. There fucking right chat ye at 8am Sunday morning

— Cathal Callinan (@CathalCallinan) August 28, 2018

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7. AC Roma English

Young Nzonzi 🎤 https://t.co/fust8pIsTg

— AS Roma English (@ASRomaEN) August 29, 2018

8. Ronan O’Gara

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Arrives to the house in France !!!#outstanding
# thanks Mary Keneally #Ballyporeen pic.twitter.com/tLMXfAoiXX

— Ronan O Gara (@RonanOGara10) August 29, 2018

9. Eamon McGee

Did a football chat in Omagh last night with Brolly, Ricey McMenamin and Paul Rouse. Handiest chat show I’ve ever done, It lasted for about 90 minutes and 80 minutes of that was Brolly telling stories.

— Eamon Mc Gee (@EamonMcGee) August 30, 2018

10. Peter Crouch

Ahhhhh the old picking apples routine . She’s going straight through my repertoire on this trip 🔥 https://t.co/IOngkrxftV

— Peter Crouch (@petercrouch) August 31, 2018

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