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Wednesday, November 20, 2013

What's the big deal about Conor McGregor?


Like a lot of people, I watched Conor McGregor’s performance on the Late Late Show last Friday night week and I smiled. He’s quite the character the way he tells his story, talking up his sport and his place in it. After a lifetime dealing with monotone soccer players and inter-county stars who’ve been muzzled by paranoid managers, it was refreshing to watch a sportsman put on a bit of a performance during an interview. It was so obvious he was embracing the opportunity to promote himself rather than shying away from it. Of course, there was just one major problem.

At this point in his career, McGregor is the most overhyped athlete in the history of modern Irish sport. Never has one man garnered so much publicity out of so little.  That was his second appearance on the country’s flagship talk show. What are RTE going to do if he ever achieves anything? Give him his own show. The cynicism might sound harsh but it’s worth pointing out that to this juncture McGregor has achieved much less than a whole lot of hurlers, footballers, soccer and rugby players. And a lot of them are never likely to be invited to sit across from Ryan Tubridy any time soon.

Yes, we know the first Irishman to make any waves in UFC (the fastest growing sport in the world etc) deserves some kudos. However, it’s also ridiculous for the media (RTE are not alone in this) to be swallowing every line McGregor feeds them. Just because he’s got the “Ain’t I pretty” Muhammad Ali-type schtick down pat doesn’t mean journalists and presenters need to avoid asking him serious questions. Entertaining as it is to listen to his overconfident spiel, it wouldn’t go amiss if people put what he’s done so far into some context. Because it really is very little.

After making his name in Cage Warriors, a minor league of the sport where he won ten and lost two bouts, McGregor moved to UFC last year. In his first outing in the big leagues, he defeated Marcus Brimage. It was an impressive knock-out even if Brimage isn’t in the top 50 in the featherweight division. Then, in his second bout, McGregor scored a unanimous decision over Max Holloway, another journeyman, currently languishing 100th in the rankings. Great to get the wins and all but that one independent set of rankings still doesn’t have McGregor in the top 20 in the world shows exactly how far he has left to climb. Not to mention it points up the question as to why the Irish media give him so much uncritical coverage.

It’s obvious here that the UFC, a body that has taken the promotion and selling of their product to a level envied by most sports, recognises this is a charismatic character. The accent works a charm, especially in America, and his love of the microphone ensures that there is a constant queue of journalists waiting to interview him. That Ireland is one of the few countries yet to have produced a genuine superstar in the sport hasn’t harmed McGregor’s chances of getting a shot at that big time either.

But, and it’s a big but, shouldn’t we just wait until he does something before we treat him like the second coming of Ali? It takes more than a sharp suit and an even sharper line in patter to make a champion. And, whisper it, but there are aficionados of the sport who believe McGregor is not all that he’s cracked up to be.

In the official account of his second UFC bout we were told how amazing it was that he hung on to win despite suffering a torn ACL in the contest. Quite an injury to overcome alright but seasoned watchers of the sport saw more in that bout than the rest of us. They saw Holloway (a rather green 21 year old) take McGregor’s best strikes and not even flinch. For a guy whose boxing prowess is meant to give him an advantage over opponents, it wasn’t a good sign that he couldn’t finish off the Hawaiian.

“There’s no doubting that McGregor has a front row seat on the UFC’s hype train thanks to his ultra-marketable heritage and personality,” wrote Mike Drahota on lowkickmma.com recently. “However, he’s called out virtually everyone in the stacked division while turning in a rather pedestrian performance against Holloway, at least compared to the hype he was carrying. That hype may have been impossible to live up to in some ways, but a finish would have at least kept it rolling quite substantially. Perhaps McGregor should own a victory over a Top-10 opponent before he anoints himself the next big thing in MMA. There’s nothing wrong with being confident, just like there’s nothing wrong with being pushed by the UFC. But when you fail to live up to the massive hype, a letdown can be imminent.”

 
On the one hand, you’ve got to admire McGregor for using social media and marketing to such great effect in such a short space of time. He’s turned himself into a celebrity off the back of very little. But, it behooves us to wonder what sort of a country is so giddy about a guy who has so much left to prove? And, the more McGregor talks and touts himself, the more he needs to be ready to back it up because a lot of others in UFC are growing tired of his act. Several fighters have spoken out about the exaggeration and hype surrounding him.

“So I am just trying to jump in there and say to the guy look, you might be all that but you gotta prove it,” said Cole Miller, another featherweight rival, recently. “I’m right here, come and prove it to me. The UFC is trying to buy a country, to get all these fans in Ireland and they’ve got a good fighter in Conor McGregor, everybody is behind him so they’ve turned him into a show-pony.”

Difficult to argue with that.

 

 

What's the big deal about Conor McGregor?


Like a lot of people, I watched Conor McGregor’s performance on the Late Late Show last Friday night week and I smiled. He’s quite the character the way he tells his story, talking up his sport and his place in it. After a lifetime dealing with monotone soccer players and inter-county stars who’ve been muzzled by paranoid managers, it was refreshing to watch a sportsman put on a bit of a performance during an interview. It was so obvious he was embracing the opportunity to promote himself rather than shying away from it. Of course, there was just one major problem.

At this point in his career, McGregor is the most overhyped athlete in the history of modern Irish sport. Never has one man garnered so much publicity out of so little.  That was his second appearance on the country’s flagship talk show. What are RTE going to do if he ever achieves anything? Give him his own show. The cynicism might sound harsh but it’s worth pointing out that to this juncture McGregor has achieved much less than a whole lot of hurlers, footballers, soccer and rugby players. And a lot of them are never likely to be invited to sit across from Ryan Tubridy any time soon.

Yes, we know the first Irishman to make any waves in UFC (the fastest growing sport in the world etc) deserves some kudos. However, it’s also ridiculous for the media (RTE are not alone in this) to be swallowing every line McGregor feeds them. Just because he’s got the “Ain’t I pretty” Muhammad Ali-type schtick down pat doesn’t mean journalists and presenters need to avoid asking him serious questions. Entertaining as it is to listen to his overconfident spiel, it wouldn’t go amiss if people put what he’s done so far into some context. Because it really is very little.

After making his name in Cage Warriors, a minor league of the sport where he won ten and lost two bouts, McGregor moved to UFC last year. In his first outing in the big leagues, he defeated Marcus Brimage. It was an impressive knock-out even if Brimage isn’t in the top 50 in the featherweight division. Then, in his second bout, McGregor scored a unanimous decision over Max Holloway, another journeyman, currently languishing 100th in the rankings. Great to get the wins and all but that one independent set of rankings still doesn’t have McGregor in the top 20 in the world shows exactly how far he has left to climb. Not to mention it points up the question as to why the Irish media give him so much uncritical coverage.

It’s obvious here that the UFC, a body that has taken the promotion and selling of their product to a level envied by most sports, recognises this is a charismatic character. The accent works a charm, especially in America, and his love of the microphone ensures that there is a constant queue of journalists waiting to interview him. That Ireland is one of the few countries yet to have produced a genuine superstar in the sport hasn’t harmed McGregor’s chances of getting a shot at that big time either.

But, and it’s a big but, shouldn’t we just wait until he does something before we treat him like the second coming of Ali? It takes more than a sharp suit and an even sharper line in patter to make a champion. And, whisper it, but there are aficionados of the sport who believe McGregor is not all that he’s cracked up to be.

In the official account of his second UFC bout we were told how amazing it was that he hung on to win despite suffering a torn ACL in the contest. Quite an injury to overcome alright but seasoned watchers of the sport saw more in that bout than the rest of us. They saw Holloway (a rather green 21 year old) take McGregor’s best strikes and not even flinch. For a guy whose boxing prowess is meant to give him an advantage over opponents, it wasn’t a good sign that he couldn’t finish off the Hawaiian.

“There’s no doubting that McGregor has a front row seat on the UFC’s hype train thanks to his ultra-marketable heritage and personality,” wrote Mike Drahota on lowkickmma.com recently. “However, he’s called out virtually everyone in the stacked division while turning in a rather pedestrian performance against Holloway, at least compared to the hype he was carrying. That hype may have been impossible to live up to in some ways, but a finish would have at least kept it rolling quite substantially. Perhaps McGregor should own a victory over a Top-10 opponent before he anoints himself the next big thing in MMA. There’s nothing wrong with being confident, just like there’s nothing wrong with being pushed by the UFC. But when you fail to live up to the massive hype, a letdown can be imminent.”

 
On the one hand, you’ve got to admire McGregor for using social media and marketing to such great effect in such a short space of time. He’s turned himself into a celebrity off the back of very little. But, it behooves us to wonder what sort of a country is so giddy about a guy who has so much left to prove? And, the more McGregor talks and touts himself, the more he needs to be ready to back it up because a lot of others in UFC are growing tired of his act. Several fighters have spoken out about the exaggeration and hype surrounding him.

“So I am just trying to jump in there and say to the guy look, you might be all that but you gotta prove it,” said Cole Miller, another featherweight rival, recently. “I’m right here, come and prove it to me. The UFC is trying to buy a country, to get all these fans in Ireland and they’ve got a good fighter in Conor McGregor, everybody is behind him so they’ve turned him into a show-pony.”

Difficult to argue with that.

 

 

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

The Boy Roy


Very few people remember where they were on Tuesday, 28 August, 1990. It's just another date at the end of a joyous summer during which a nation had giddily followed its soccer team on an unlikely and thrilling journey to the quarter-finals of the World Cup. At Anfield that night, the first steps were taken in a professional career that would obsess the country for most of the next decade and a half. As Liverpool cruised to a handy 2-0 win over Nottingham Forest, the visitors' 19 year old debutant should have been booked for a wild challenge on David Burrows in the 20th minute. Despite most of his team-mates not knowing his name by that point in the match, Roy Keane did enough to catch the eye of one man sitting in the stands.

Manchester United's chief scout Les Kershaw took a note of the newcomer and reported back to Alex Ferguson the next day that Forest had given a start to a young midfielder who might be worth watching for future reference. That his first performance on Broadway merited just a footnote in the Irish papers was ironic because, very soon, everything he did on and off the field would be magnified and occasionally distorted by the constant media glare. He would grow into a bigger and more enduring story than every one of the heroes of Italia'90. He would win more medals, garner more headlines, and divide the loyalties of Irish fans like no player ever before.

His transformation from one more promising young midfielder to once-in-a-generation icon happened relatively quickly, and coincided with such a change in the prevailing media culture of his homeland that he truly became the first superstar of Ireland's tabloid age. It was perhaps the only title he never wanted and the one that presented him with most difficulty. A boyhood preparing for on-field glory never included any courses about how to negotiate the off-field perils of fame. In the summer of 1996, Keane had paparazzi stalking his trail and taking intrusive photographs of himself and his kids outside his parents' house in Mayfield. This was back when David Beckham hadn't even yet been introduced to Posh Spice.

Unlike his erstwhile United colleague, Keane never courted that sort of publicity, rather he openly bristled at it. Moreover, his evolution into one of those outsized characters who transcend the game they play was never a consequence of slick marketing or canny advertising. It was merely an unfortunate by-product of the magnificent displays he produced almost every time he togged out and crossed the white line. Nobody ever warned him that aspiring to be the best would yield so much baggage. Some are not fazed by celebrity, others embrace it. Keane detested it.

A fellow Irish international once confessed that the sight of the Manchester United captain walking into the team hotel on the week of games instantly lifted him. His thinking was that, no matter the quality of the opposition, the presence of this one player immediately gave Ireland a chance of winning the match. Over time, other countries singularly associated him with the nation the way we ourselves used to associate Romania with Gheorghe Hagi, or Bulgaria with Hristo Stoichkov. He was the national symbol. Accordingly, opponents respected the Irish team when Keane was in the line-up and reckoned it extremely vulnerable if he was absent.

Of course, Hagi and Stoichkov never won any popularity contests in their own dressing-rooms, and from what we know of Keane's standing among his Irish, and indeed his United peers, he too embodied the age-old belief that the most important player on any team is rarely the most beloved and often the most controversial. Co-existing with contemporaries unable to reach the same heights on the field is never easy. When that tension boiled over in Saipan in May, 2002, the very fact many people described the fall-out as "a civil war" was itself indicative of the ridiculous hyperbole that had begun to infect modern Irish discourse.

Such exaggeration was less common in the Ireland in which Keane came of age, and the country he left in the summer of 1990 was markedly different from the place he divided 12 years later. Apart from the economic boom, interest in the game had – not least because of his own rise – exploded in the interim. Robbie Keane's goalscoring debut for Wolverhampton Wanderers in August 1997 immediately garnered double-page spreads in tabloid newspapers. Earlier that year, a David Connolly hat-trick against Liechtenstein had caused some Irish journalists to seriously compare him to Ronaldo. Very few people even noticed back when a Corkman, a couple of weeks past his 19th birthday, became Brian Clough's last great hunch.

The timing of Keane's arrival into Clough's orbit was fortunate. At that juncture, the belief among many people working at the City Ground was that Steve Hodge had more interest in preserving himself for England international duty than playing week in, week out. When the first team travelled to Liverpool for their second match of the season, Hodge announced he had another of his famous niggles so Clough decided to call his bluff. The coaching staff told him the most suitable candidates to replace Hodge in midfield were the new kid Keane and Phil Starbuck. As it turned out, both of them travelled late and both started the match.

Famously, Keane was trying to look busy in the dressing-room, helping to put the jerseys out when Clough turned to him and said: 'Irishman, put the number seven shirt on. You're playing.' That the game here owes Clough a debt for that bold decision is without question. Although the teenager seized his opportunity like few others before or since, the role the then Forest manager played in his rise can never be underestimated. Even if the boss may have been half in the tank when he picked him to play that evening, would any other manager in England have thrown a callow novice into the fray against Liverpool the way he did? Considering the Liverpool team sheet read: Grobbelaar; Hysen, Burrows, Venison, Whelan, Gillespie, Beardsley, Houghton, Rush, Barnes, and McMahon, it's probably safe to say no. Might Keane's entire professional career have turned out very differently if he hadn't found a manager crazy enough to gamble he could cope with the atmosphere at Anfield? Almost certainly.

"People said I'd flipped my lid", said Clough of his punt on Keane, "but he did well and after that even Enid Blyton couldn't have written a better script".

The background to the debut is classic Clough too. Playing for the club's Under-21s in a pre-season tournament in Holland, Keane had excelled at right-back, right-wing, centre-half and midfield, confounding the coaches with his performances in every new position they tried him in. Intrigued by the dispatches, Clough sidled along to a couple of reserve games to see what all the fuss was about. Frustrated to see Keane on the bench at one of those, he waited until half-time before informing the reserves' manager Archie Gemmill to replace his son Scott with "the Irishman". Gemmill ignored that request until, with 20 minutes remaining, Clough vaulted the hoardings and issued an order: "Get your son off, and put the Irishman on."

What did Keane do in the time available? What did Clough see that impressed him?

"Brian was such a genius at spotting youngsters," said Alan Hill, then the club's chief scout. "He could always spot something that the rest of us couldn't. I think he saw Roy make a couple of forward runs and then stick somebody on their backside and that was enough. Afterwards, he told me: 'The kid has everything, you just have to encourage him'."

Keane's adolescence had been spent on a Rockmount team that was one of the most gifted schoolboy outfits the city had ever seen. So gifted indeed that he was not even the brightest star in the firmament. Alan O'Sullivan, the sort of mercurial winger who catches the eye of scouts, was snapped up by Luton Town years before Keane arrived at Forest. Paul McCarthy, a burly centre-half with an eye for goal from set-pieces, turned professional at Brighton and Hove Albion and even tried to persuade his new club that his former colleague was worth pursuing.

Brighton looked into it and were told by an Irish scout that the kid in question was too small, had a dodgy temperament and wasn't worth looking at. The same month in 1997 that Keane won the third of his seven Premiership titles, Brighton lost the Goldstone Ground and narrowly avoided relegation to the non-leagues. In failing to recognise the gift horse being placed before their mouths, Brighton weren't alone. A legion of scouts tracked that Rockmount team for season after season and none ever saw fit to take a chance on Keane. The letters he wrote to every English club begging for a trial never elicited a single plane ticket.

Later, many around the game in Ireland would claim they were on the verge of making just such a recommendation when Noel McCabe spotted him excelling in a losing effort for Cobh Ramblers' youth team in a FAI Cup match at Fairview Park. Keane was a few months into a FAI/FAS soccer apprenticeship course in Dublin, and just starting to evince the physical benefits of full-time training. Others on that scheme would testify later that, from the first day there, he was working harder than the rest, running farther and faster. The picture of a guy striving to get on is appropriate because Keane had no real fall-back by that point in his life.

School had never been his milieu so further education wasn't an option. With Cork still recovering from a decade of factory closures and economic depression, jobs were scarce. Like every other house in Cork, his family knew the spectre of the dole, though the later tabloid attempts to portray his life as some rags to riches yarn were insulting and misguided. Until McCabe sauntered into view however, the best Keane might have hoped for was combining the part-time earnings of a League of Ireland player with some menial job. Little wonder then that when the scout mentioned the possibility of a trial at Forest, he thought the teenager was "so eager and enthusiastic that I felt here was a boy who would swim to England if I asked him to".

The preface to Keane's professional career is important because it's obvious how much it shaped everything that happened after. There has always been about him the sense of somebody manically afraid of failure. The incredible determination and sheer force of will that dragged Manchester United to the 1999 Champions League final and (almost single-handedly) qualified Ireland for the 2002 World Cup finals can be equally interpreted as the desperate brilliance of somebody unwilling to contemplate or accept losing. What is most impressive about this is the zealousness never once waned, even as his salary mushroomed to a reported £100,000 per week and his personal fortune soared into the tens of millions. It is worth remembering that he chose United over Blackburn Rovers, even though Ferguson was then offering a smaller wage packet than the one being dangled by Kenny Dalglish.

The "driven bastard" he once described himself as can also be glimpsed in the way he outstripped so many of his contemporaries at different stages. At Forest, Gemmill was thought to be his equal once, and even when he moved to United in the summer of 1993, he wasn't reckoned the brightest young thing on view. Back then, Ryan Giggs threatened to replicate all the good stuff from George Best's repertoire and serious pundits fancied Lee Sharpe's chances of winning 100 caps for England. If Sharpe is a tell-all book waiting to happen, Giggs didn't exactly live up to his advance billing either. As defined by the old soccer truism, great players come good in big games, and the bigger the game the better they play. Has Giggs done that often enough? How often of late? Not half as often as Keane.

"Keane is a great soccer player," said the legendary Juventus and Holland midfielder Edgar Davids. "He is one of the best midfielders in the world. Keane is what a great player really is. I don't look up to him, because I don't look up to anybody, but he's fantastic.'

Although he was, by some distance, Ireland's best player at USA'94, it was Gary Kelly, Jason McAteer and Phil Babb who arrived home to an exaggerated fanfare, their charismatic personalities off the field almost obscuring Keane's achievement on it. While they immersed themselves in the demimonde of pop biographies and celebrity lifestyles, he simply became the best combative midfielder in the world. The way that players like Babb and Sharpe, McAteer and, to a lesser extent, Kelly squandered so much of the promise they once engendered is anathema to Keane.

He cannot cope with people ostensibly showing less commitment than he does. This is what makes him such an indefatigable force on the field and such a troubled figure off it. The very stuff that makes him great has also proved his undoing on the many occasions he overstepped the mark, those cameos when the red mist descended and fervour gave way to foul play. It appears impossible to have one without the other.

A less intense individual might have looked at the FAI's slipshod attitude to preparation, decided it was hardly fair to compare their approach to that of Manchester United, one of the leading sports franchises in the world, and got on with the job in hand. A less intense individual wouldn't have been half the player he is. Alex Ferguson accepted that he had to take the good with the bad and never once complained about the deal. He knew the positives far outweighed the negatives, something emphasised by Keane's colossal role in bringing seven Premierships, four FA Cups and, of course, the Champions League to Old Trafford.

Even that night in Barcelona when suspension forced him to wear a suit rather than a jersey, the way in which Keane celebrated afterwards gave an important clue to his character. In contrast to the animated antics of non-playing substitute David May, there was no real joy on the captain's face when he perfunctorily lifted the trophy at the Camp Nou. For somebody who has always measured himself by his contribution once the whistle blows, watching his own team snatch victory right at the death must have been scant consolation. The competitor only ever wants to be in the arena competing. That is, after all, what he does.

In a similar vein, the saddest element of Keane's departure from Saipan was that it cost him his last chance of playing in a World Cup at somewhere close to his peak. He was right about the laxity of Ireland's approach but wrong to speak out then and ultimately deprive himself of his own day on the biggest stage. Subsequent revelations about the extent of his hip problem at the time lent credence to a conspiracy theory that maybe his unhappiness had its root in his own fear of failure. When a man has spent his entire career living up to the incredibly lofty standards he set himself, it's reasonable to speculate he knew that this time round his body would not hold up as he would have wanted.

His eventual return to the Irish fold was equally significant. Throughout his career, Keane has shown the capacity to develop and evolve. The slight figure with ample space in the red jersey of Forest grew to fill out every one of United's myriad strips. His physical enhancement was matched by his growth as a player. Within 12 months of his arriving at Old Trafford, Ferguson knew that he, rather than Paul Ince, would become the heartbeat of the side. The Guvnor only lasted one more campaign. Over time too, the nightclub-hopping, jowly young pro flitting over and back to Cork turned into the wise old owl, who preached the virtues of rest and yoga and became a contented family man.

Like anybody who leaves a city at 18 and then spends his entire adult life elsewhere, Keane's relationship with his home town has been a complex and fluctuating entity. This is, after all, the city where Seán Ó Faoláin counselled that to succeed, "you have to have the skin of a rhinoceros, the dissimulation of a crocodile, the quality of a hare, the speed of a hawk". When a native departs and covers himself in so much glory, for all those that applaud his achievement – witness UCC conferring him with a degree and his freedom of the city – there will be always some available to begrudge it. Such has been the way with Keane, at least until, in the bitterest moments after Saipan, there appeared to be a groundswell of support that started in Mayfield and washed down over the city.

"Like most Cork people, I am inordinately proud of my roots", wrote Keane in his autobiography. "When asked about their origins Cork people invariably reply with a mischievous grin, 'Irish by birth; Cork by the grace of God'. A superiority complex is the mark of a sound Corkman."

At the start of the 2004 season, Keane was the only one of the 13 players who had seen active service in Giants Stadium the day Ireland humbled Italy in 1994 to still be playing in the top-flight of English football. By then, he was also one of just two of the 13 used by Alex Ferguson when clinching the 1994 double at Wembley to be plying their trade in the Premiership. For a footballer whose job has always necessitated a blood-and-guts element to his play, who has battled the sort of personal demons that curtailed so many other sporting lives, that longevity is one more arbiter of his greatness.

"He's an incredible man, he really is", said Ferguson after another gargantuan Keane performance at the age of 33 in February, 2005. "When you are talking about Manchester United in 50 or 500 years from now, Roy Keane will still be regarded as one of the greatest players ever at this club."

Nothing more to be said.

 

(first published in Giants of Cork Sport, 2005)

 

The Boy Roy


Very few people remember where they were on Tuesday, 28 August, 1990. It's just another date at the end of a joyous summer during which a nation had giddily followed its soccer team on an unlikely and thrilling journey to the quarter-finals of the World Cup. At Anfield that night, the first steps were taken in a professional career that would obsess the country for most of the next decade and a half. As Liverpool cruised to a handy 2-0 win over Nottingham Forest, the visitors' 19 year old debutant should have been booked for a wild challenge on David Burrows in the 20th minute. Despite most of his team-mates not knowing his name by that point in the match, Roy Keane did enough to catch the eye of one man sitting in the stands.

Manchester United's chief scout Les Kershaw took a note of the newcomer and reported back to Alex Ferguson the next day that Forest had given a start to a young midfielder who might be worth watching for future reference. That his first performance on Broadway merited just a footnote in the Irish papers was ironic because, very soon, everything he did on and off the field would be magnified and occasionally distorted by the constant media glare. He would grow into a bigger and more enduring story than every one of the heroes of Italia'90. He would win more medals, garner more headlines, and divide the loyalties of Irish fans like no player ever before.

His transformation from one more promising young midfielder to once-in-a-generation icon happened relatively quickly, and coincided with such a change in the prevailing media culture of his homeland that he truly became the first superstar of Ireland's tabloid age. It was perhaps the only title he never wanted and the one that presented him with most difficulty. A boyhood preparing for on-field glory never included any courses about how to negotiate the off-field perils of fame. In the summer of 1996, Keane had paparazzi stalking his trail and taking intrusive photographs of himself and his kids outside his parents' house in Mayfield. This was back when David Beckham hadn't even yet been introduced to Posh Spice.

Unlike his erstwhile United colleague, Keane never courted that sort of publicity, rather he openly bristled at it. Moreover, his evolution into one of those outsized characters who transcend the game they play was never a consequence of slick marketing or canny advertising. It was merely an unfortunate by-product of the magnificent displays he produced almost every time he togged out and crossed the white line. Nobody ever warned him that aspiring to be the best would yield so much baggage. Some are not fazed by celebrity, others embrace it. Keane detested it.

A fellow Irish international once confessed that the sight of the Manchester United captain walking into the team hotel on the week of games instantly lifted him. His thinking was that, no matter the quality of the opposition, the presence of this one player immediately gave Ireland a chance of winning the match. Over time, other countries singularly associated him with the nation the way we ourselves used to associate Romania with Gheorghe Hagi, or Bulgaria with Hristo Stoichkov. He was the national symbol. Accordingly, opponents respected the Irish team when Keane was in the line-up and reckoned it extremely vulnerable if he was absent.

Of course, Hagi and Stoichkov never won any popularity contests in their own dressing-rooms, and from what we know of Keane's standing among his Irish, and indeed his United peers, he too embodied the age-old belief that the most important player on any team is rarely the most beloved and often the most controversial. Co-existing with contemporaries unable to reach the same heights on the field is never easy. When that tension boiled over in Saipan in May, 2002, the very fact many people described the fall-out as "a civil war" was itself indicative of the ridiculous hyperbole that had begun to infect modern Irish discourse.

Such exaggeration was less common in the Ireland in which Keane came of age, and the country he left in the summer of 1990 was markedly different from the place he divided 12 years later. Apart from the economic boom, interest in the game had – not least because of his own rise – exploded in the interim. Robbie Keane's goalscoring debut for Wolverhampton Wanderers in August 1997 immediately garnered double-page spreads in tabloid newspapers. Earlier that year, a David Connolly hat-trick against Liechtenstein had caused some Irish journalists to seriously compare him to Ronaldo. Very few people even noticed back when a Corkman, a couple of weeks past his 19th birthday, became Brian Clough's last great hunch.

The timing of Keane's arrival into Clough's orbit was fortunate. At that juncture, the belief among many people working at the City Ground was that Steve Hodge had more interest in preserving himself for England international duty than playing week in, week out. When the first team travelled to Liverpool for their second match of the season, Hodge announced he had another of his famous niggles so Clough decided to call his bluff. The coaching staff told him the most suitable candidates to replace Hodge in midfield were the new kid Keane and Phil Starbuck. As it turned out, both of them travelled late and both started the match.

Famously, Keane was trying to look busy in the dressing-room, helping to put the jerseys out when Clough turned to him and said: 'Irishman, put the number seven shirt on. You're playing.' That the game here owes Clough a debt for that bold decision is without question. Although the teenager seized his opportunity like few others before or since, the role the then Forest manager played in his rise can never be underestimated. Even if the boss may have been half in the tank when he picked him to play that evening, would any other manager in England have thrown a callow novice into the fray against Liverpool the way he did? Considering the Liverpool team sheet read: Grobbelaar; Hysen, Burrows, Venison, Whelan, Gillespie, Beardsley, Houghton, Rush, Barnes, and McMahon, it's probably safe to say no. Might Keane's entire professional career have turned out very differently if he hadn't found a manager crazy enough to gamble he could cope with the atmosphere at Anfield? Almost certainly.

"People said I'd flipped my lid", said Clough of his punt on Keane, "but he did well and after that even Enid Blyton couldn't have written a better script".

The background to the debut is classic Clough too. Playing for the club's Under-21s in a pre-season tournament in Holland, Keane had excelled at right-back, right-wing, centre-half and midfield, confounding the coaches with his performances in every new position they tried him in. Intrigued by the dispatches, Clough sidled along to a couple of reserve games to see what all the fuss was about. Frustrated to see Keane on the bench at one of those, he waited until half-time before informing the reserves' manager Archie Gemmill to replace his son Scott with "the Irishman". Gemmill ignored that request until, with 20 minutes remaining, Clough vaulted the hoardings and issued an order: "Get your son off, and put the Irishman on."

What did Keane do in the time available? What did Clough see that impressed him?

"Brian was such a genius at spotting youngsters," said Alan Hill, then the club's chief scout. "He could always spot something that the rest of us couldn't. I think he saw Roy make a couple of forward runs and then stick somebody on their backside and that was enough. Afterwards, he told me: 'The kid has everything, you just have to encourage him'."

Keane's adolescence had been spent on a Rockmount team that was one of the most gifted schoolboy outfits the city had ever seen. So gifted indeed that he was not even the brightest star in the firmament. Alan O'Sullivan, the sort of mercurial winger who catches the eye of scouts, was snapped up by Luton Town years before Keane arrived at Forest. Paul McCarthy, a burly centre-half with an eye for goal from set-pieces, turned professional at Brighton and Hove Albion and even tried to persuade his new club that his former colleague was worth pursuing.

Brighton looked into it and were told by an Irish scout that the kid in question was too small, had a dodgy temperament and wasn't worth looking at. The same month in 1997 that Keane won the third of his seven Premiership titles, Brighton lost the Goldstone Ground and narrowly avoided relegation to the non-leagues. In failing to recognise the gift horse being placed before their mouths, Brighton weren't alone. A legion of scouts tracked that Rockmount team for season after season and none ever saw fit to take a chance on Keane. The letters he wrote to every English club begging for a trial never elicited a single plane ticket.

Later, many around the game in Ireland would claim they were on the verge of making just such a recommendation when Noel McCabe spotted him excelling in a losing effort for Cobh Ramblers' youth team in a FAI Cup match at Fairview Park. Keane was a few months into a FAI/FAS soccer apprenticeship course in Dublin, and just starting to evince the physical benefits of full-time training. Others on that scheme would testify later that, from the first day there, he was working harder than the rest, running farther and faster. The picture of a guy striving to get on is appropriate because Keane had no real fall-back by that point in his life.

School had never been his milieu so further education wasn't an option. With Cork still recovering from a decade of factory closures and economic depression, jobs were scarce. Like every other house in Cork, his family knew the spectre of the dole, though the later tabloid attempts to portray his life as some rags to riches yarn were insulting and misguided. Until McCabe sauntered into view however, the best Keane might have hoped for was combining the part-time earnings of a League of Ireland player with some menial job. Little wonder then that when the scout mentioned the possibility of a trial at Forest, he thought the teenager was "so eager and enthusiastic that I felt here was a boy who would swim to England if I asked him to".

The preface to Keane's professional career is important because it's obvious how much it shaped everything that happened after. There has always been about him the sense of somebody manically afraid of failure. The incredible determination and sheer force of will that dragged Manchester United to the 1999 Champions League final and (almost single-handedly) qualified Ireland for the 2002 World Cup finals can be equally interpreted as the desperate brilliance of somebody unwilling to contemplate or accept losing. What is most impressive about this is the zealousness never once waned, even as his salary mushroomed to a reported £100,000 per week and his personal fortune soared into the tens of millions. It is worth remembering that he chose United over Blackburn Rovers, even though Ferguson was then offering a smaller wage packet than the one being dangled by Kenny Dalglish.

The "driven bastard" he once described himself as can also be glimpsed in the way he outstripped so many of his contemporaries at different stages. At Forest, Gemmill was thought to be his equal once, and even when he moved to United in the summer of 1993, he wasn't reckoned the brightest young thing on view. Back then, Ryan Giggs threatened to replicate all the good stuff from George Best's repertoire and serious pundits fancied Lee Sharpe's chances of winning 100 caps for England. If Sharpe is a tell-all book waiting to happen, Giggs didn't exactly live up to his advance billing either. As defined by the old soccer truism, great players come good in big games, and the bigger the game the better they play. Has Giggs done that often enough? How often of late? Not half as often as Keane.

"Keane is a great soccer player," said the legendary Juventus and Holland midfielder Edgar Davids. "He is one of the best midfielders in the world. Keane is what a great player really is. I don't look up to him, because I don't look up to anybody, but he's fantastic.'

Although he was, by some distance, Ireland's best player at USA'94, it was Gary Kelly, Jason McAteer and Phil Babb who arrived home to an exaggerated fanfare, their charismatic personalities off the field almost obscuring Keane's achievement on it. While they immersed themselves in the demimonde of pop biographies and celebrity lifestyles, he simply became the best combative midfielder in the world. The way that players like Babb and Sharpe, McAteer and, to a lesser extent, Kelly squandered so much of the promise they once engendered is anathema to Keane.

He cannot cope with people ostensibly showing less commitment than he does. This is what makes him such an indefatigable force on the field and such a troubled figure off it. The very stuff that makes him great has also proved his undoing on the many occasions he overstepped the mark, those cameos when the red mist descended and fervour gave way to foul play. It appears impossible to have one without the other.

A less intense individual might have looked at the FAI's slipshod attitude to preparation, decided it was hardly fair to compare their approach to that of Manchester United, one of the leading sports franchises in the world, and got on with the job in hand. A less intense individual wouldn't have been half the player he is. Alex Ferguson accepted that he had to take the good with the bad and never once complained about the deal. He knew the positives far outweighed the negatives, something emphasised by Keane's colossal role in bringing seven Premierships, four FA Cups and, of course, the Champions League to Old Trafford.

Even that night in Barcelona when suspension forced him to wear a suit rather than a jersey, the way in which Keane celebrated afterwards gave an important clue to his character. In contrast to the animated antics of non-playing substitute David May, there was no real joy on the captain's face when he perfunctorily lifted the trophy at the Camp Nou. For somebody who has always measured himself by his contribution once the whistle blows, watching his own team snatch victory right at the death must have been scant consolation. The competitor only ever wants to be in the arena competing. That is, after all, what he does.

In a similar vein, the saddest element of Keane's departure from Saipan was that it cost him his last chance of playing in a World Cup at somewhere close to his peak. He was right about the laxity of Ireland's approach but wrong to speak out then and ultimately deprive himself of his own day on the biggest stage. Subsequent revelations about the extent of his hip problem at the time lent credence to a conspiracy theory that maybe his unhappiness had its root in his own fear of failure. When a man has spent his entire career living up to the incredibly lofty standards he set himself, it's reasonable to speculate he knew that this time round his body would not hold up as he would have wanted.

His eventual return to the Irish fold was equally significant. Throughout his career, Keane has shown the capacity to develop and evolve. The slight figure with ample space in the red jersey of Forest grew to fill out every one of United's myriad strips. His physical enhancement was matched by his growth as a player. Within 12 months of his arriving at Old Trafford, Ferguson knew that he, rather than Paul Ince, would become the heartbeat of the side. The Guvnor only lasted one more campaign. Over time too, the nightclub-hopping, jowly young pro flitting over and back to Cork turned into the wise old owl, who preached the virtues of rest and yoga and became a contented family man.

Like anybody who leaves a city at 18 and then spends his entire adult life elsewhere, Keane's relationship with his home town has been a complex and fluctuating entity. This is, after all, the city where Seán Ó Faoláin counselled that to succeed, "you have to have the skin of a rhinoceros, the dissimulation of a crocodile, the quality of a hare, the speed of a hawk". When a native departs and covers himself in so much glory, for all those that applaud his achievement – witness UCC conferring him with a degree and his freedom of the city – there will be always some available to begrudge it. Such has been the way with Keane, at least until, in the bitterest moments after Saipan, there appeared to be a groundswell of support that started in Mayfield and washed down over the city.

"Like most Cork people, I am inordinately proud of my roots", wrote Keane in his autobiography. "When asked about their origins Cork people invariably reply with a mischievous grin, 'Irish by birth; Cork by the grace of God'. A superiority complex is the mark of a sound Corkman."

At the start of the 2004 season, Keane was the only one of the 13 players who had seen active service in Giants Stadium the day Ireland humbled Italy in 1994 to still be playing in the top-flight of English football. By then, he was also one of just two of the 13 used by Alex Ferguson when clinching the 1994 double at Wembley to be plying their trade in the Premiership. For a footballer whose job has always necessitated a blood-and-guts element to his play, who has battled the sort of personal demons that curtailed so many other sporting lives, that longevity is one more arbiter of his greatness.

"He's an incredible man, he really is", said Ferguson after another gargantuan Keane performance at the age of 33 in February, 2005. "When you are talking about Manchester United in 50 or 500 years from now, Roy Keane will still be regarded as one of the greatest players ever at this club."

Nothing more to be said.

 

(first published in Giants of Cork Sport, 2005)

 

Monday, November 11, 2013

The Secret Footballer who exposed the punditry of Dunphy and Giles


A couple of years back, The Guardian newspaper began publishing a weekly column called “The Secret Footballer.” The diary of an anonymous professional, it quickly became a must-read. In a sports world where ghosted columns by star players are so often dull and turgid, this was always a gossipy, salacious and entertaining diversion. With his identity protected, the individual wasn’t shy about expressing opinions about the game and revealing the secret foibles of his fellow pros. At a time when it’s nearly impossible to gain access to dressing-rooms, this guy took us behind the door and allowed us to stay and look around.

As the column became more and more popular, it inevitably spawned a book. However, “I Am The Secret Footballer – Lifting the lid on the professional game” proved much more than just a bitchy trip through the sport. It also offered genuine and instructive insights into how the game is coached in the 21st century. Readers were afforded an opportunity to read about the levels of preparation involved and, most importantly, the tactical approaches. In a Sky Sports-world, we all think we know how teams are set up and what they are trying to do. This book made me realise the truth is very different. We know much less than we think.

“The level of detail that goes into games still amazes me,” wrote The Secret Footballer. “Every player has his own script: what to do, when to do it, information on the player he’s up against, including weight, height, age, strengths, weaknesses, even what the opponent is likely to do when the ball comes to him in certain situations. We memorise every single set-piece – where we have to stand, run and end up. We even memorise this for the other players, so we know where everyone else will be at any given time.

“You know that pass when you say to yourself: ‘How did he spot that?’ Often, he didn’t need to: he knew the player would be there because the night before in the hotel, he read about the runs he would be making. It’s exactly the same with the pass that leaves you saying: ‘Who was that to?’ The receiving player either forgot to be there or was taken out of the game by a tactical maneouvre by his opposite number. Football at this level is very chess-like, certainly to those inside the game.”

The last line is the most important to consider when observing the often ridiculous fall-out from Ireland’s 3-0 defeat by Germany the other week. It amused and amazed me that so many people were concerned about what Eamon Dunphy, Johnny Giles and Liam Brady made of the result and the performance. In my own personal experience, Dunphy, Giles and Brady are wonderfully generous individuals and two of them are among the greatest players Ireland ever produced. However, they are far, far removed from the reality of the modern game. They are not “inside the game.” And they haven’t been for decades. Not years, decades.

Now, they are tremendously entertaining to watch and Dunphy’s cabaret is always hilarious and provocative. But, anybody who treats their analysis as the definitive word on any match and any team is being utterly ridiculous. It’s nearly 20 years since Brady managed a team, more than 30 since Giles and Dunphy were involved in running one. Anybody who has started working in kids’ soccer in the past decade will tell you how sophisticated the coaching and training is now compared to when they played the schoolboys’ game themselves. Imagine the difference then at the professional level.

We don’t have to imagine though because our friend, the mystery author, has laid it out for us.

“What particularly riles me is when you hear a pundit or co-commentator say something like: ‘Can’t understand, Martin, why Drogba is not on the post here. That header would have fallen to him and if I’m Petr Cech, I’m saying: ‘Go on son – clear that off the line for me!’” wrote The Secret Footballer. “The fact is that corners are routinely cleared by a man stationed on the six-yard line, exactly where Chelsea would position Didier Drogba. If somebody scores inside that post, it is for no other reason than a player having lost his man.

“The point I’m trying to make is that if there is a player on the post, he will clear possibly one or two shots or headers off the line a season. If that same player stands on the six yard line, he will probably clear 100 corners away over the course of the season. The worst thing, though, is when this dross gets into popular culture and my friends start saying stupid things to me like, ‘We should have had a man on the post – our manager doesn’t know what he’s doing,’ just because it sounds like the right thing to say.”

All of the above is why the whole Dunphy-Giles- Brady show is outdated and outmoded. The fact people in Ireland still place so much store in their opinions is frankly bonkers. The game has moved on several eons from their time. Their pomp was an era when players ate steak and chips before matches and sipped tea at half-time. That was a time when Celtic could become champions of Europe with a squad all but one of whom was born within 10 miles of their ground. Dunphy et al may have noticed the football world has changed a lot since then.

Their claims that our illustrious past players were done a disservice by Noel King sending out a damage limitation selection against the mighty Germans showed exactly why the joke of their analysis just isn’t very funny anymore.  We can watch their pre and post-game shows and enjoy the monologues and exaggerations and ersatz drama but we can’t take it seriously. It’s all bombast, far removed from a sport now predicated on forensic tactical preparation, increasingly exact science and the statistical tendencies of players in possession.

 

 

 

 

The Secret Footballer who exposed the punditry of Dunphy and Giles


A couple of years back, The Guardian newspaper began publishing a weekly column called “The Secret Footballer.” The diary of an anonymous professional, it quickly became a must-read. In a sports world where ghosted columns by star players are so often dull and turgid, this was always a gossipy, salacious and entertaining diversion. With his identity protected, the individual wasn’t shy about expressing opinions about the game and revealing the secret foibles of his fellow pros. At a time when it’s nearly impossible to gain access to dressing-rooms, this guy took us behind the door and allowed us to stay and look around.

As the column became more and more popular, it inevitably spawned a book. However, “I Am The Secret Footballer – Lifting the lid on the professional game” proved much more than just a bitchy trip through the sport. It also offered genuine and instructive insights into how the game is coached in the 21st century. Readers were afforded an opportunity to read about the levels of preparation involved and, most importantly, the tactical approaches. In a Sky Sports-world, we all think we know how teams are set up and what they are trying to do. This book made me realise the truth is very different. We know much less than we think.

“The level of detail that goes into games still amazes me,” wrote The Secret Footballer. “Every player has his own script: what to do, when to do it, information on the player he’s up against, including weight, height, age, strengths, weaknesses, even what the opponent is likely to do when the ball comes to him in certain situations. We memorise every single set-piece – where we have to stand, run and end up. We even memorise this for the other players, so we know where everyone else will be at any given time.

“You know that pass when you say to yourself: ‘How did he spot that?’ Often, he didn’t need to: he knew the player would be there because the night before in the hotel, he read about the runs he would be making. It’s exactly the same with the pass that leaves you saying: ‘Who was that to?’ The receiving player either forgot to be there or was taken out of the game by a tactical maneouvre by his opposite number. Football at this level is very chess-like, certainly to those inside the game.”

The last line is the most important to consider when observing the often ridiculous fall-out from Ireland’s 3-0 defeat by Germany the other week. It amused and amazed me that so many people were concerned about what Eamon Dunphy, Johnny Giles and Liam Brady made of the result and the performance. In my own personal experience, Dunphy, Giles and Brady are wonderfully generous individuals and two of them are among the greatest players Ireland ever produced. However, they are far, far removed from the reality of the modern game. They are not “inside the game.” And they haven’t been for decades. Not years, decades.

Now, they are tremendously entertaining to watch and Dunphy’s cabaret is always hilarious and provocative. But, anybody who treats their analysis as the definitive word on any match and any team is being utterly ridiculous. It’s nearly 20 years since Brady managed a team, more than 30 since Giles and Dunphy were involved in running one. Anybody who has started working in kids’ soccer in the past decade will tell you how sophisticated the coaching and training is now compared to when they played the schoolboys’ game themselves. Imagine the difference then at the professional level.

We don’t have to imagine though because our friend, the mystery author, has laid it out for us.

“What particularly riles me is when you hear a pundit or co-commentator say something like: ‘Can’t understand, Martin, why Drogba is not on the post here. That header would have fallen to him and if I’m Petr Cech, I’m saying: ‘Go on son – clear that off the line for me!’” wrote The Secret Footballer. “The fact is that corners are routinely cleared by a man stationed on the six-yard line, exactly where Chelsea would position Didier Drogba. If somebody scores inside that post, it is for no other reason than a player having lost his man.

“The point I’m trying to make is that if there is a player on the post, he will clear possibly one or two shots or headers off the line a season. If that same player stands on the six yard line, he will probably clear 100 corners away over the course of the season. The worst thing, though, is when this dross gets into popular culture and my friends start saying stupid things to me like, ‘We should have had a man on the post – our manager doesn’t know what he’s doing,’ just because it sounds like the right thing to say.”

All of the above is why the whole Dunphy-Giles- Brady show is outdated and outmoded. The fact people in Ireland still place so much store in their opinions is frankly bonkers. The game has moved on several eons from their time. Their pomp was an era when players ate steak and chips before matches and sipped tea at half-time. That was a time when Celtic could become champions of Europe with a squad all but one of whom was born within 10 miles of their ground. Dunphy et al may have noticed the football world has changed a lot since then.

Their claims that our illustrious past players were done a disservice by Noel King sending out a damage limitation selection against the mighty Germans showed exactly why the joke of their analysis just isn’t very funny anymore.  We can watch their pre and post-game shows and enjoy the monologues and exaggerations and ersatz drama but we can’t take it seriously. It’s all bombast, far removed from a sport now predicated on forensic tactical preparation, increasingly exact science and the statistical tendencies of players in possession.

 

 

 

 

Saturday, October 19, 2013

From Farranlea Road to the New York Cosmos


I was driving my son Abe and his pal to a soccer match the other week when conversation turned to jerseys. This pair of 13 year old budding Messis were unhappy with the kits they have to wear on their school teams. Apparently, the fact the shirts and shorts aren’t even “Nike or Adidas” is a cause of great embarrassment to these chancers. To hear them whine about this stuff is to understand how spoilt this generation of children really are.

Having listened to their caterwauling (“even Under Armour would be an improvement”), I did what I always do in these circumstances. I broke out some stories from the Cork of my childhood, about shirts that soaked up the water when it rained, and jerseys made of wonderfully itchy material that gave us rashes. They sat there stunned to hear there was once a deprived, obviously underprivileged world where aspiring young athletes didn’t have Nike swooshes or Adidas stripes on their shirts.

Unlike some tall tales from my childhood I usually bore them with, I wasn’t lying either. Indeed, to hammer home my point, I told them about the single, most glamorous kit worn by any Cork schoolboys team in the early 1980s. That honour went to Wilton United. I recall walking into Farranlea Park as part of a crack Summerstown United squad and being shocked to see our opponents wearing a proper kit. I don’t mean that they were all wearing roughly the same shirts and shorts, this was an actual kit.

On closer inspection, I discovered that the logo on the front was that of the New York Cosmos. As the type of trainspotter soccer fan who used to devour Shoot! magazine every Thursday, I recognised it immediately. Back then Shoot! used to devote a page to the North American Soccer League (NASL) and I would pour over photographs of games played in strange stadia on blue astroturf. Against Wilton that day, we were beaten before we ever kicked a ball. We looked like Raggyball Rovers, unfit to share the same space as players looking resplendent in their freshly-imported shirts. They may also have been better at soccer than us.

Over the years I’ve heard various stories about how Wilton United managed to get their hands on that beautiful kit. My favourite version revolved around Brother Alfie, one of the dynamos behind the club in those days, writing to the Cosmos (then owned by the impossibly rich Warner Bros Corporation), telling them how he was using sport to keep children off the streets, and subsequently receiving boxes and boxes of gear. 

If it’s a fair distance from Farranlea Road to James M. Shuart Stadium on Long Island, the two are forever linked in my imagination. See, this past two months, I’ve been a regular at the home matches of the resurgent New York Cosmos. Twenty-nine years after going out of existence, the club has been reborn and started playing in the NASL, a professional division that’s now a level below Major League Soccer (MLS). In perhaps the neatest thing about the revival, they are wearing the exact same shirts they used back in the day. Hence, every time I see them walk onto the field, I think of Wilton United.

There are some differences. Wilton had some good players but nobody to match Marcos Senna, the former Spanish international who is bulwarking the Cosmos midfield. Now 37 and obviously way past his prime, I was worried Senna’s arrival might be all about taking easy money from gullible Americans. It hasn’t been. Watching the way he works in the final minutes of games, especially if the team are chasing an equalizer or a winner, you can see that here’s somebody who’s serious about giving value for money to his new employers.

There are other surprising things about this experiment too. It’s amazing how quickly you get absorbed into the routine of supporting a club. For home games, we park in the same spot, arrive at the same time, and myself and Abe now nod heads at fellow fans who sit near our seats. In the space of a few matches over a few weeks, we’ve become something of a community. There were 12,000 there the first night and half of them probably came just to see Pele walking on the field in the pre-game ceremony. The average since then has been around 7000 but it’s a good sign that it’s the same people coming back every fortnight or so.

For me, what started out as a curio has become a passion.  I’d never seen the Cosmos play a game before this August yet even that first night, I was on my feet with my arms in the air after Alessandro Noselli’s injury time goal clinched a win over the Fort Lauderdale Strikers (another name that brought back memories of Shoot!’s coverage of the NASL). I suppose seeing professional football in the flesh is such a novelty and the fact they’ve made Long Island their home has suckered me in. Myself and Abe now follow away games on the computer.  Truly a sign we’ve bought into the club.

In many ways, the mood and atmosphere around the whole enterprise reminds me of what things were like at Flower Lodge when Cork City first opened for business back in 1984. Nobody was quite sure how things were going to go or where things were going to end up for the team with the Guinness logo emblazoned across their chest. But, everybody was so happy to have a League of Ireland club back in town that they just wanted to be there.

It’s definitely a bit like that with the Cosmos. With a lot of money behind the club, they are the richest outfit in the NASL, apparently destined to win the title, yet are unlikely to be brought into MLS any time soon because New York City FC (owned by the New York Yankees and Manchester City) will be joining that league in 2015. Much like down the Lodge in the 80s, we aren’t going to worry too much about the long term. Right now, we just want to enjoy the ride.