logo
Darragh Ó Sé: Good decision-makers are gold dust – Armagh had Rory Grugan, Dublin missed Con O'Callaghan

Darragh Ó Sé: Good decision-makers are gold dust – Armagh had Rory Grugan, Dublin missed Con O'Callaghan

Irish Times04-06-2025

There's no hiding place above in
Croke Park
. That's what we always used to say.
You'd be half-messing, throwing it out there – you'd be off doing laps or something, some bit of grunt work that nobody liked doing. And to break the silence or kill the monotony, some fellah would take off the manager: 'Remember now lads, there's no hiding place above in Croke Park.'
And for all our sneering and blackguarding, it's true. Croke Park on a big day is a merciless place. Nobody is going through the motions. Everybody is bringing it their full attention. You have two choices: either be the one who does his job or be the one who has a job done on you.
Dessie Farrell
could tell you all about it after Sunday. The Dublin manager was standing on the sideline seeing his players make mistake after mistake and you were looking at him as he was thinking, 'Christ, there really is no hiding place out there.' He must have been watching some of what was going on and nearly wondering who was in charge of this fiasco.
READ MORE
Dublin broke the three-players-up rule three times and you could see that Dessie and Darren Daly were tearing their hair out on the sideline trying to get the players to be more mindful of it.
But you could also see that the
Armagh
players were policing it themselves. If you want to know the difference between a team that's in a good spot and one that's not where it wants to be then that's it.
For the reality is that Dessie – or
Kieran McGeeney
or Pádraic Joyce or
Jack O'Connor
– can only do so much. Players have to take control of the thing on the pitch.
There's little enough between the top teams in terms of skills, ability or conditioning – that definitely seems to be the case this season anyway. So in vital moments, it comes down to decision-making.
That's why there are certain players whom managers want on the pitch.
Jim McGuinness
wants Michael Murphy there. Dessie wants Con O'Callaghan. Jack wants David Clifford. It became more obvious as the game on Sunday went along that Rory Grugan is that player for McGeeney.
Obviously, you want all you players to be good decision-makers. But when it comes down to it, certain fellahs carry that bit more credibility.
You have plenty of players who will go and kick a point then run back to their position happy that their job is done. Yet watch the likes of Grugan, Murphy and Con the next time there is a break in play. They never switch off. They're the ones pointing to a fellah taking a sideline ball, telling him where the free player is. They're the ones slowing the thing down or speeding it up, depending on what the game needs. They're worth their weight in gold to their managers.
Donegal's Michael Murphy tackles Niall Carolan of Cavan at Kingspan Breffni Park on Sunday. Photograph: Leah Scholes/INPHO
Donegal
were 10 points up when Murphy came off against
Cavan
on Sunday and seven clear when he come off against
Down
in the Ulster semi-final. But he was on the pitch for every minute of the Tyrone match and stayed on well into extra-time against Armagh. Watch how long he's on the pitch against
Mayo
– that will tell you how long McGuinness needs him to be orchestrating things.
Dublin are short on those players now. This happens in all sport when a great team falls away. The first to go are the most experienced guys, yet you're usually okay for a season or two when that happens because the fellahs that fill in were champing at the bit for years to get their chance.
But the problem is that the wave that comes behind that isn't as good. Also, because so many people have moved on, there's a different culture now. Standards slip, no matter how hard everyone tries.
When you watched Dublin's shooting the other day, that's what jumped out most of all. They had 18 wides, they dropped a few short and hit the post as well.
What struck me about it was that they were making two mistakes that you never associate with Dublin teams.
The first was they weren't steadying themselves to take their kick. Not everyone is a Bernard Brogan or a Diarmuid Connolly who could just stroke over a lovely score on the run without thinking about it.
But go back to when Dublin were in their pomp and watch the likes of Paddy Andrews, Dean Rock and these lads – they always took a split-second to get their technique right and to make sure they were balanced when they were kicking.
Some of those wides on Sunday from Dublin were from shots that were rushed or shots that didn't have enough care taken over them.
Dublin's Cormac Costello reacts to a missed chance in Sunday's game against Armagh. Photograph: James Crombie/INPHO
These are good players kicking – the likes of Seán Bugler, Cormac Costello, Colm Basquel. But if they're not making sure of straightforward chances like the ones they missed, it tells you they probably aren't under huge pressure to keep their place in the team.
The other mistake they were making was rushing to try to kick two-pointers. In fairness, the Dubs aren't the only team suffering from the two-point trap. Time and again, you see teams going for shots that probably aren't there because they've fooled themselves into thinking that's the only way back into the game now.
So many teams and players are rushing this stuff. Who is going to stop them? Not Dessie Farrell or Pádraic Joyce going mad 60 yards away on the sideline, that's for sure. It needs to be someone on the pitch, someone with a clear sense of where they are on the pitch, what sort of time is left on the clock, who is flagging on the opposition side and who is the best choice for the shot on your own side.
That game sense has to come from the players who are deep in the middle of it all. It's like the scene in Skyfall when James Bond is meeting the new Q in an art gallery. 'Every now and then the trigger has to be pulled,' Q says. 'Or not pulled,' Bond replies.
When it came right down to it on Sunday, Dublin weren't that far off Armagh in general play. But the All-Ireland champions had Grugan making them tick, whereas Dublin were without Con O'Callaghan's leadership and his feel for how to manage a game. And it showed.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

TV guide: The Bear returns, and the other best new shows to watch on RTÉ, Disney+, and Netflix this week
TV guide: The Bear returns, and the other best new shows to watch on RTÉ, Disney+, and Netflix this week

Irish Times

time32 minutes ago

  • Irish Times

TV guide: The Bear returns, and the other best new shows to watch on RTÉ, Disney+, and Netflix this week

Pick of the week Natasha Wednesday, RTÉ One, 9.35pm In 2022 Natasha O'Brien was violently assaulted on a street in Limerick, in a random attack that left her bleeding and unconscious. The attacker, Cathal Crotty , was a serving soldier in the Defence Forces, and there was a public outcry when he received a suspended sentence for his cowardly and brutal act. This documentary follows O'Brien's subsequent refusal to stay silent about her treatment at the hands of a deeply flawed Irish legal system, and her subsequent battle to get justice for the trauma which was inflicted upon her. Thanks to her relentless campaigning, the DPP appealed Crotty's sentence and he was sentenced to two years in prison. With help from other women who shared their stories of facing their attackers in court, and from politicians including Labour leader Ivana Bacik and expert criminologist Dr Ian Marder, O'Brien looks at ways the system can be reformed to take ensure that victims' voices are heard. Highlights From that Small Island: The Story of the Irish Sunday, RTÉ One, 6.30pm From that Small Island: Marion Casey in New York Nigel Farage can't seem to understand why Ireland would not want to join with the UK and leave the European Union; perhaps he should watch this third episode of this landmark historical series, as it might explain why his Irexit idea went down like a lead balloon. The 17th century saw mass migration of Irish to continental Europe, displaced by the brutal conquest by Oliver Cromwell, and this episode tracks the first diaspora as they set up new lives in various European countries. The programme also follows the Irish who signed up to French, Spanish and Austrian armies in the wake of the Williamite wars at the end of the 17th century, and became known as the Wild Geese. It marked the beginning of centuries-long ties between Ireland and Europe that will take more than a few bellowing Brexiteers to break. The programme, narrated by Colin Farrell, also looks at the life of anti-slavery campaigner Daniel O'Connell, known as the Liberator, and how he influenced black abolitionist and former slave Frederick Douglass. Aistear an Amhráin Monday, RTÉ One, 7pm This series looking at the stories behind well-known songs ends with one of Ireland's most beloved bangers, An Poc ar Buile. The song was recorded in 1962 by Seán Ó Sé, and became an instant classic, but there's a tale to the tune that dates from the 17th century. The song about a mad billy goat was written in the 1940s by Donal Ó Mulláin and became associated with Puck Fair in Killorglin, Co Kerry, but the original poem it was based on has a darker meaning. An Boc ar Buile, written in the 1600s, was about a local landlord trying to exercise his right to have sexual relations with a tenant's bride on her wedding night. Given recent stories about landlords demanding sex from tenants as payment for rent, maybe the original version is due a revisit. The Gilded Age Monday, Sky Atlantic & Now, 9pm The Gilded Age Long before Sex and the City, New York was ruled by an elite coterie of well-got women, all vying for power and position in the upper echelons of high society in Upper East Side Manhattan of the 1880s. The Gilded Age is set during a period of huge transformation, when old money is under attack from a new generation of upwardly mobile industrialists and entrepreneurs, all hoping to buy their way into privilege. Louisa Jacobson stars as Marian Brook, a newcomer in New York society who arrives in the midst of a social war between the old-money Van Rhijn-Brooks and the new-money Russell family. Marian must quickly learn the rules of the game – and make up a few of her own – if she is to survive in this cut-throat world. Cynthia Nixon from SATC and Christine Baranski costar, and series three takes up the story in the aftermath of the so-called Opera War, which has given the Russells the social advantage. How will the old-money crowd hit back? This could turn into an epic confrontation. READ MORE Death in the Desert: The Nurse Helen Mystery Monday, Channel 4, 9pm Helen Smith was a young nurse working in Saudi Arabia in 1979, enjoying her adventure and making new friends in a culture very different from her own. At just 23 years old, however, Helen died in mysterious circumstances. The official story was that she fell from a balcony at a party, and her death was ruled an accident, but questions lingered over the lack of a thorough police investigation and whether her death really was accidental. This documentary looks back on Helen's life in Saudi Arabia and the political and cultural climate of the time, and tries to uncover what really happened on that balcony more than 45 years ago. Amol Rajan Goes to the Ganges Wednesday, BBC One, 9pm Amol Goes to the Ganges The Maha Kumbh Mela Festival in northern India is the world's largest religious festival, and the biggest gathering of human beings on the planet, attended by almost 500 million people from around the globe – more than the combined populations of the US and UK converging on an area the size of Manhattan. Joining them for this special documentary is journalist and presenter Amol Rajan, and he's visiting for personal reasons – to help him come to terms with the death of his father three years ago, and to reconnect with the land of his birth. The Kumbh festival happens only every dozen years, and this year's festival coincides with a rare alignment of the planets, making it extra special for pilgrims. Amol meets many of these pilgrims, all here to purify themselves in the polluted waters of the Ganges, but he also comes close to tragedy as a huge crowd surge results in the deaths of 30 people. Murder on the Doorstep: The Killer Clown Wednesday, Sky Crime & Now, 9pm Dan Reimer, who features in Murder On The Doorstep: The Killer Clown In the 1990s, a young woman, Marlene Warren, was shot dead on the doorstep of her own house in Florida by a mystery assailant. The killer had dressed as a clown to disguise their identity, but police immediately suspected Marlene's husband, Michael Warren, of his wife's murder. Their marriage was in trouble, and there were rumours of extramarital affairs, but Michael had a rock-solid alibi and the police had no proof, so he was eliminated as a suspect. Nearly 30 years later, though, police make an apparent breakthrough, charging Michael's alleged mistress Sheila Keen with Marlene's murder. But is there more to this murder than meets the eye? This three-part docuseries looks back at the investigation, interviewing investigators, witnesses, friends and family members in an attempt to unravel a very tangled web of lies and betrayal. Glastonbury 2025 Live Thursday, BBC One, 10pm The BBC's live coverage of this year's Glasto in Pilton, Sussex, kicks off on Thursday, but all this week the Beeb will be airing programmes in anticipation of the big weekend, beginning with three half-hour specials featuring Glastonbury legends from the 1970s (Monday, BBC Two, 10pm), 1980s (Tuesday, BBC Two, 10pm) and 1990s (Wednesday, BBC Two, 10pm). Clara Amfo and Lauren Laverne will be on hand at Worthy Farm to look forward to the fun in store for the weekend, which will see headline performances on the Pyramid stage by The 1975, Neil Young & the Chrome Hearts and Olivia Rodrigo. If you haven't got tickets for the festival, the BBC's coverage of the onstage action will be almost as good as the real thing – and a lot less mucky. Streaming Countdown From Wednesday, June 25th, Prime Video Countdown: Amber Oliveras and Mark Meachum A dead Homeland Security agent, a secret taskforce and a terror plot that could end in millions of deaths: maybe I won't have another consonant after all, Rachel, thank you very much. Jensen Ackles from The Boys heads the cast of this action-thriller series created by Derek Haas, the mind behind the FBI series and all its variants. Ackles is the LAPD cop Mark Meachum, who is recruited into the taskforce after the Homeland Security guy is murdered in broad daylight. The murder is just the tip of the iceberg, and soon Ackles and the team are racing to stop the bad guys from turning the citizens of LA into DOA. The Bear From Thursday, June 26th, Disney+ The Bear Chef-patron Carmy Berzatto is back in kitchen hell in the fourth series of the foodie dramedy, and he's still in pursuit of excellence in the former sandwich shop in Chicago that he inherited after the suicide of his brother, Michael. Carmy, a Michelin-star chef, has turned the dive into a fine-dining restaurant, but success is far from a done deal. Money is running out, and the kitchen is still in chaos and turmoil. Can Carmy create a calmer atmosphere in this culinary crucible? Jeremy Allen White stars as Carmy, with Ayo Edebiri, Oliver Platt and Jamie Lee Curtis among the cast. Squid Game From Friday, June 27th, Netflix How much of a gaming junkie do you have to be to go back into a game that could end in your death? In series two of the hit Korean series – Netflix's most successful non-English-language series – Gi-hun (Lee Jung-jae) went back into the game with a clear mission to take down the faceless organisation behind this murderous, macabre theme park, but in this third and final series he finds himself back in the Squid Game dorm after the failure of his attempted rebellion – and this time the games have been taken to even deadlier levels. Gi-hun must survive this last round and also outwit his treacherous adversary the Frontman as the tournament reaches its bloody, adrenaline-pumping climax. Smoke From Friday, June 27th, Apple TV+ The Rocket Man star Taron Egerton heads a strong cast in this new crime series about an arson investigator in pursuit of two serial pyromaniacs. Joining Egerton in the series – based on a true story – are Rafe Spall, Jurnee Smollett, Anna Chlumsky, Greg Kinnear and John Leguizamo. Egerton plays the investigator, with Smollett as the detective who becomes his reluctant partner; they'll have to find common ground if they are going to stop the firestarting spree before it gets completely out of control.

Transforming and personalising old furniture: ‘If things go wrong, it can be easily rectified'
Transforming and personalising old furniture: ‘If things go wrong, it can be easily rectified'

Irish Times

timean hour ago

  • Irish Times

Transforming and personalising old furniture: ‘If things go wrong, it can be easily rectified'

In homes across Ireland in 2025, there is an appetite for more personalised eclectic styles where comfort and character mingle with sleek modern design. There's a growing appreciation for vintage and restored furniture – including old counters and cabinets from closed shops used in domestic settings – either bought second hand or revamped after years of neglect. Waterford-based artist and interior designer Marianne Heaphy, aka the Revamp Tramp , is one of the leaders of this band of upcycling enthusiasts. In her workshops she gives people the know-how and confidence to bring new life to tables, chests of drawers, chairs, lampshades and bookcases. At a Saturday workshop in Waterford city, she is explaining her techniques and sharing a range of materials – from paints and primers to wood stains, stencils, gold leaf and wallpaper – with the six participants who have each brought along one piece of furniture to revamp. Mary Kennedy and Olive Hanlon at the workshop Olive Hanlon from Kilmacthomas in Co Waterford has a glossy pine bedside locker, which she wants to spruce up for use in her 16-year-old son Syd's bedroom. She has painted skirting boards, airing cupboards and tables in the past. READ MORE 'I see now how I did things wrong by putting on too much primer, followed by an undercoat and paint. I would have saved myself hours of work if I had come to this workshop first,' she says. Edel Kiely Edel Kiely from Pilltown, Co Kilkenny, is also upcycling a bedside locker for her son, Finn (13). Originally a light pink colour, she repaints it a subtle dark blue. 'I'm very happy with it. It looks expensive,' says Kiely. Kathleen O'Hanlon, from Kilmacow, Co Kilkenny, is here to bring some new life into a green table she bought second hand, which has been sitting on her upstairs landing for years. Although not an expensive piece, it has attractive splayed legs and after a bit of work, it looks much smarter. She has also brought along a plant stand she bought at auction for €5. 'I enjoy painting and seeing how the pieces transform. I did a rocking chair in one of these courses before,' she says. An oval table and a television stand are other pieces she has worked on. [ The rise of repair cafes: 'It's not sustainable to keep buying new stuff' Opens in new window ] Deirdre Clooney has been renovating her 1920s home in Waterford for the last seven years. She's here with a small green chest of drawers which she paints an aubergine colour, in-setting small strips of patterned wallpaper into the front panels of the drawers and on the top of the piece, using a technique called decoupage. 'I've always been interested in upcycling. I've done a mosaic with broken pieces of glass on my garden wall and another mosaic with tiles on the base of my courtyard,' she says, showing pictures of her work. Mary Kennedy Mary Kennedy from Joanstown, Co Waterford, has brought along two vintage foot stools with woven cord seats. The stools, which came from her deceased mother-in-law's home, have sentimental value. 'My husband used to sit on one of these stools for his dinner as a child, so he's very attached to them,' she says. She repaints one to put in her 10-year-old daughter Beatrice's playhouse. The second, which she meticulously sands and rubs beeswax into, will be used as a plant stand in her kitchen. Many of her friends go to antique fairs, seeking out older pieces for their homes. 'People don't appreciate the full modern look any more. We pick out one or two individual statement pieces to mix in with modern furniture,' she says. Noreen Taberlin from Mullinavat in Co Kilkenny has a flat-pack matt grey small table which she transforms with gold paint. She creates a point of interest by pasting on colourful patterned paper to the top surface of the table, using the same material for the front panel of the table's drawer. At the workshop, the mood is jovial and lighthearted – a few women joke about how it gets them away from their husbands for the day. But while there is plenty of banter, there are also moments of quiet industriousness. The restoration workshop Most of Heaphy's workshop participants are women – although when she runs them at the Rediscovery Centre in Ballymun, some couples come along together. (Her next Furniture Revamping workshops at the Rediscovery Centre are on June 28th, August 23rd and September 27th and cost €120. See .) The Rediscover Furniture social enterprise at the Rediscovery Centre also runs long-term training programmes in furniture restoration and repair, wood working and contemporary and traditional upholstery. 'The aim of the course is that people will go into full-time employment or set up their own businesses afterwards,' says Nessa Doran O'Reilly, the programme manager. A cabinet maker, Doran O'Reilly studied conservation and restoration of furniture and decorative arts at High Wycombe in Buckinghamshire in England. She also runs public workshops in furniture reupholstery at the Rediscovery Centre (the next one is on August 30th). The Rediscovery Centre also sells second hand furniture in their Second Life shop on Ballymun's Main Street, which is a great place to pick up an old piece to upcycle. But if you're not interested in doing the work yourself, the Ecostore on the first floor of the Rediscovery Centre has some stylish pieces that have already been upcycled. Taoiseach Micheal Martin and Nessa Doran O'Reilly, the furniture programme manager at the Rediscovery Centre in Ballymun, at Bloom festival in May. Photograph: Liam McBurney/PA Wire Alongside the one-off workshops that she runs around the country, Heaphy is project manager for the Loved Back to Life social enterprise in Waterford city. There, she runs back-to-work courses for men and women recovering from addiction at the Aiséirí residential centres. One of her partners in this work is Finline Furniture, a high-end sofa factory that started a take-back scheme for old sofas last year. 'We've always offered a re-covering service but in 2024, we decided to work with a social enterprise to get these returned pieces stripped back to their foam,' says Vanessa O'Rourke. Customers who return a Finline furniture sofa are given a €100 voucher to spend in store. The company, which has retail outlets in Emo in Co Laois, Dublin, Galway and Cork, then takes back the sofas from Aiséirí and reupholsters them in their own factory for sale in their Revive range. 'We use sample or end-of-life rolls of fabric to cut out wastage and keep the costs down, so we can sell these pieces for 20-50 per cent of the equivalent new sofa,' says O'Rourke. 'It's about extending the life of something well made, reducing environmental waste and supporting individuals as they rebuild their lives through skilled work,' says Ciarán Finane, director of Finline Furniture. [ 'My husband's attempts were a disaster': The women DIYing it for themselves Opens in new window ] Back at the Waterford workshop, Heaphy is on hand with advice on everything from spreading a thin coat of primer before painting the surface to looking after paintbrushes (top tip: leave brushes in a jar of water rather than wrapped up in a plastic bag after using water-based paint). 'Stay away from the pound shops and buy decent brands of brushes at your local hardware shop,' she says. Relaxed yet attentive, she has an unflappable manner that accommodates everyone. 'In all my years doing these workshops, I've never had a fail yet,' she says. If things go wrong, it can be easily rectified. 'The main thing to remember is that we're not surgeons here. It's about not taking it too seriously, and enjoying yourself.' Many of the participants talk about the meditative quality of working on their pieces of furniture. 'It's very mindful, says Taberlin. 'You don't think of anything else when you're doing this,' adds Kennedy.

Does Ireland's hospitality sector really need a VAT cut?
Does Ireland's hospitality sector really need a VAT cut?

Irish Times

timean hour ago

  • Irish Times

Does Ireland's hospitality sector really need a VAT cut?

Tánaiste Simon Harris may yet come to regret the elevation of a manifesto commitment to cut the rate of VAT charged on hospitality to the level of 'solemn promise' as he did this week at the National Economic Dialogue. Manifesto commitments can be discarded quite easily, especially when part of a coalition. Solemn promises not so much. The already tenuous argument for promoting the needs of the hospitality sector over all the other Budget Day supplicants can only get weaker as the summer unfolds and the twin threats to the global economy of Donald Trump's tariffs and the conflict between Israel and Iran unfold. The idea is strenuously opposed by the Department of Finance which came out against it in the run-up to last year's budget. Officials noted that it represented an 'enormous fiscal transfer of taxpayers' money to the sector which the evidence available at present does not support'. READ MORE Their opposition is unlikely to waver this time around. The central plank of their argument – that employment and prices in the sector are growing strongly despite a number of high-profile restaurant closures – remains robust. The Labour Force Survey for the first quarter of the year was published last month. It showed that the numbers working in accommodation and food services activity – which is seen as the relevant category for hospitality – reached 186,000, up almost 7 per cent on the first quarter of 2024. The most recent inflation figures – for last May – show that restaurant and hotel prices are rising faster than prices in the economy as a whole. They rose by 2.8 per cent over the past 12 months compared with 1.7 per cent for the consumer price index overall. The department will no doubt point to the continuation of the trend of rising employment levels and falling prices in the sector despite the levying of the standard VAT rate when the issue comes up for discussion over the summer But the indications are that their entreaties will fall on deaf ears and the Government will be swayed by industry lobbying rather than hard facts at a cost of €790 million to taxpayers.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store