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Dublin: 10 °C Monday 20 May, 2013

Conor Deegan: ‘Here is a young player who is passionate about the GAA’

TheScore.ie’s Gaelic football columnist believes the talented Ciarán Kilkenny cannot be heaped with unrealistic expectations upon his return to Dublin.

Image: INPHO/Cathal Noonan.

READING THROUGH THE refreshing and mature statement that Ciarán Kilkenny released yesterday, one thing stood out.

Here is a young player who is passionate about the GAA.

Clearly it was a very well thought through decision for the player to leave his AFL career and move back home to play for his club and county.

His reasons for that were spelt out clearly and came across very well.

Sometimes there is an inclination to knock the GAA. But if it wants to promote itself as the great institution that it is, here’s a perfect example of a young talented guy who is endorsing that view.

It’s hard to double-guess Kilkenny but certainly there was plenty to entice him home if he was not happy with his lot in Australia. I’ve spoken to Jim Gavin since he took the Dublin job. He mentioned the youth and energy that currently exists in his panel.

A lot of those guys have been teammates of Kilkenny’s at minor and U21 level, so he must have wanted to be a part of something exciting like that.

There’s also the fact that his club Castleknock are in the All-Ireland junior semi-final at the end of the month. That is a huge thing for any club, particularly one as recently-formed as they are.

It’s natural if the potential prize of playing in Croke Park with childhood friends, if they win their semi-final, helped tip the scales towards coming home.

For Dublin it is a huge boost to get this early in the season. For supporters the news of the return of a player who it appeared had been lost to their team, is something to rejoice in.

In my native Down, I would have familiar with those emotions with the case of Marty Clarke. Down does not win as much silverware at minor and U21 level so when a wonderfully gifted player from those teams like Clarke left for Australia, the GAA community in the county was in collective mourning.

Then when the news broke of his impending return home, the inclination was almost to get everyone out on the street in celebration and to welcome him home.

He was a massive addition to Down football, as evidenced by his contribution in 2010 when he nearly helped the county claim Sam Maguire. His departure back to Collingwood at the end of 2011 was then a massive setback.

Martin Clarke 23/7/2011

Down’s Martin Clarke. Pic: INPHO/Ryan Byrne.

Dublin will look forward to having Kilkenny at their disposal. He’s a very talented player as his underage displays in recent years proved.

And then last year for the All-Ireland semi-final when Dublin were robbed of a player of the calibre of Alan Brogan through injury, Pat Gilroy trusted Kilkenny enough to put him in from the start.

That was a big and bold call for a player who was just a year out of minor. But he rewarded that faith by playing very well in a game of such magnitude. I think his best position is close to goal where he can be a serious threat. He’s good on the ball, has good feet, is strong and can take a score off both feet.

But we have to be realistic here. Ciarán is still very young and is eligible for U21 football this year and next year. His talent and potential are unquestioned but there are higher levels to reach and he has not yet been exposed to senior inter-county football for a prolonged period of time.

Jim Gavin is a clever operator and he’s not going to be lumping too much expectations on Kilkenny. For one thing the player has been absent from Gaelic football for a couple of months and exposed to a different type of training.

He’ll need time to adjust and as it is early in the season, there is no urgent need to rush him back into action. With commitments to Castleknock and the Dublin U21′s, there needs to be a balance struck with Kilkenny and Jim is the type of manager to do that.

It’s a positive development for the GAA as well. We want the best young players to be lining out and Kilkenny falls neatly into that bracket. It’s interesting that despite all the anxiety about Australian Rules, the number of players that the GAA have lost is exceptionally low. Particularly when you consider the amount that have returned to Ireland as well.

It’s proof that the GAA can hold it’s own as a sport. Perhaps that’s something we should be singing from the rooftops rather than hiding under a bush. Ciarán Kilkenny’s statement demonstrates that.

Kilkenny back where he is happiest

Returning Stars: GAA players who came back from Oz

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Comments (14 Comments)

  • i think this is a young lad who has determined that the chance to be a top player in the GAA far outweighs the prospects that are offered in a different professional sport. he has already won All-Irelands at underage level and id say he doesnt want to miss out on future success at Senior level, if any, with his native county. i also think that the Dublin supporters are right to get excited about his return, hes a talented player who was given a professional contract in Australia, only our best and brightest youths get offered these positions. i know if he was from my county id be delighted, as he would improve any squad of players.

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  • There’s an awful lot of barstool pundits on this . Idiots

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  • End of the day he went abroad and after a few months decided he missed his friends, family and way of life back home in Dublin. This is called home sickness. Nothing wrong with it. Happens to alot of people. You got to do what makes you happy. He is still young enough to give it another go in a couple of years if wants to try again.

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  • Get to see a positive story about the GAA in the national media. As Conor eluded to in the article, it usually comes in for an unwarranted amount of criticism.

    That said, as a Meath man, I hope young Kilkenny concentrates on the small ball game

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  • His statement would have been a lot shorter if he just said he misses his Mammy!

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  • If a Dublin player farts then it seems to make the news.

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    • Gaa Nut 11/01/13 #

      At the end of the day its not just about another Dublin player in the news for something. Look at the bigger picture every month scores of young Irish men and women leave our shores to head down under. I think this is a perfect example of the grass not always being greener on the other side. The lad decided to come home from a massive opportunity because he missed Ireland his home, his family and his friends. Why do we have to begrudge him for deciding that life over there wasnt for him. Should we not be happy that some of our own are coming home? That maybe some people still dont see Ireland as a barren waste land with no hope and haven’t given up? In his statement he talks about the sense of community in the gaa being a pull factor for coming back, talk to anyone from an older generation and they’ll tell its that same sense of community that got them through tougher times and brought them back towards the good. So why are we so quick to judge him for coming bavk and to see him as failure? Why cant we just welcome home one of most promising natural talents to come through the gaa but more importantly a yound Irish man who had left home to go abroad and decided to come home ?

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    • Excellent post

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  • nonsense Conor all you have is a teenager not grown up enough to stay away from home for six weeks. hope Dublin don’t have to travel to far on this years championship as he may he may not travel.

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    • If that’s what you take from ciaráns Statement then you are indeed a dope. And I’m pretty sure as part of the underage all Ireland winning Dublin teams he has traveled the length and breadth of the country

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    • Trevor,

      Not grown up enough, but or a lad that realised he would prefer his life to be in Ireland. Maybe he didn’t like being away from friends and family, maybe he didn’t like the thought of not being able to get into teaching Irish, maybe he realised that what he wanted from sport was to win championship in the games that he loves along with his friends?

      How does wanting these thing warrant critism?

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  • oops Chris, name calling very adult behaviour!!

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  • Rarely togs out for own club must consider county teams his club

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