Dear Most Holy Chairman
of the County Board,
I know you are probably
inundated with letters from so-called fans now that we have reached the
All-Ireland final. Obviously, you don’t know me unless you remember that time I
roared “you useless bollix” at you after our ignominious departure from the
provincial championship last year. Or unless you’ve traced my IP address in
order to discover who’s been posting that stuff about you on message boards.
But, look, that’s all in the past now. I need to be in Croke Park and I deserve
to be too. Why? Well, let me count the ways.
I deserve a ticket
because I was the only fella in the pub in February talking up our chances of
going to the final. It was shortly after I mocked two die-hards who were
heading up the country to some god awful place for some match at a pitch
opening. I remember distinctly that just after making fun of their interest at
seeing how the new young fellas might fare in their first outing at senior
level, I turned around and said: “Those boys are only wasting their time, you
lads are only wasting your time and that team is wasting its time.” But that
was only having the crack.
I deserve a ticket
because I told everybody before the first round we’d see the sky over Croke
Park come September. Now, there are some close to me who might tell you I said,
“We’ll be watching Sky Sports instead of games in Croke Park this September.”
Those fellas are liars. I like a bit of Sky as much as the next man and, made
no mistake about it, I will be stopping off in the pub on the way to Croker to
watch the United game on the big screen. But to suggest I sneered that we’d be
watching the garrison game instead of the county team is just plain wrong.
I deserve a ticket
because I’ve been going to the matches for years. Well, I’ve been going at
least since the corporate market opened up and I started getting the freebies
off my buddy who’s high up in Guinness. And then that guy who worked in the
dodgy bank that dare not speak its name got that corporate box in Croker. I
never tasted canapes like that before or since. That’s got to be ten years or
more I’m going to these matches. And I haven’t missed one apart from the days
when it was raining, when the pundits reckoned we didn’t have a chance or when
the fixtures clashed with the Irish Open golf.
I deserve a ticket
because I’ve always supported the games in the county. My track record at club
level speaks for itself. I bought a raffle ticket that time the club were
running the draw for the Mitsubishi Pajero. I went to several end of year
dances back when I was going out with your wan whose father was on the
committee. I bought an ad in the programme for the pitch opening and that was
at a time when the club needed the money. That was 2002 or 2003 and fifty quid
wasn’t easy to come by then I can tell you. And did I ask for anything in
return? No, I did not. Until now.
I deserve a ticket
because I went to school with several lads who played for the county. Sure I
used to take the mickey out of them all when they were heading out training
after school in the driving rain and the biting wind. I used to knock great fun
out of their inability to come out on the lash with the rest of us because they
were always either training or preparing for some game or other. That was
character-building stuff. Do you think they’d have made it where they are today
without the likes of me helping them find inner reserves of strength? I don’t
think so.
I deserve a ticket
because I go to all the big events. I never miss a rugby match as long as the
media convince me it’s an important one or if it’s on somewhere good like Paris
or the south of France. I used to go to all the soccer internationals back when
that was the done thing. Oh yeah, I was part of Jackie’s Army and all that.
There are some around here who’d tell you that it’s not a sporting bandwagon
unless I’m on it so the county board would want to think of that when they
consider my application. It’s not a serious to-do unless I’m there tweeting
pictures of myself.
I deserve a ticket
because I’ve invested at least 150 euros in replica shirts over the past two
decades. I’ve bought at least one every time we’ve reached an All-Ireland
final. If nobody believes me they can come around to the house and look at the
back of the wardrobe where all of them have remained in a heap gathering dust
since I returned in a drunken state those Sunday nights. Not to mention I’ll
buy another one this year if I get a ticket because, well, the years haven’t
been kind, and the old shirts will never stretch down over the swelling belly
at this point.
I deserve a ticket
because I know a lot about the game. I know that “an effing Brolly” is not a
golf umbrella you left behind in a pub but a reference to some fella from up
north who is sort of the Gaelic football version of George Hook and Alan
Hansen. I know that the Clare roar is not the delighted sound every tourist
makes when leaving that godforsaken county, it’s a shriek their fans emit when
they make their twice in a lifetime trip to Croker.
I know you’ll be
hearing from a lot of bluffers and spoofers in the coming weeks and I don’t
envy you trying to sort out the worthy causes from the chancers but two upper
Hogan will do the job.
Yours in Sport,
The county’s biggest
fan.
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