THE MAN-CHILD
Pivoting out of an attempted tackle, Jimmy Barry-Murphy
started swaggering towards goal. As is always the case with the very best
players, those around him seemed frozen as he soloed on the spot before
nonchalantly firing home his second goal of the 1973 All-Ireland final and
finishing off Galway. The audacious shot was a tribute to manager Diarmuid
O’Donovan’s bold decision to blood a teenager that summer. The tall, thin youth
with the crew-cut raised his arms in triumph, once after the ball hit the net
and again as he trotted back to his position. Each time, the crowd noise in
Croke Park grew progressively louder and louder and somewhere in the cacophony
of a September afternoon, a star was born.
“He used to arrive into the dressing-room with a
skinhead haircut and wore all the gear – the short denims above the ankles, the
denim jacket and wide braces, the Doc Martens, the lot,” wrote Billy Morgan.
“Some of the older county board men couldn’t make head nor tail out of it all
and that gave the players no end of pleasure.”
THE MAN
There is a popular, old photograph of JBM and
Christy Ring deep in conversation at a training session in Pairc Ui Chaoimh. It
isn’t quite the Ring-Mackey shot, yet for a generation, it is a picture that
draws a line between the different eras, one sepia, one technicolour. Nine minutes before half-time in the 1976
Munster hurling semi-final at the Gaelic Grounds, Barry-Murphy was sprung from
the bench. It’s difficult to imagine now but that’s where he was. With their
defence dominating, Tipperary had controlled proceedings to that point and the
Cork selectors, among them Ring, felt his introduction might liven up the
forwards. Which it did.
A couple of months later, now a starter,
Barry-Murphy was struggling in the All-Ireland final against Wexford. It was
decided to move him from wing-forward to centre-forward where Mick Jacob had
been imperious to that point. Barry-Murphy rattled over three points in 15
minutes to put Cork clear, Pat Moylan added another and the first step had been
taken towards three in a row. At the final whistle, Ring ran onto the field,
sought out Barry-Murphy and embraced him. A Glenman hugging a Barrsman in the
middle of Croke Park, the icon of all icons giving his stamp of approval to the
newcomer.
THE GOAL
When John Fenton gathered a handpass from Dermot
McCurtain in the second half of the 1983 All-Ireland hurling semi-final against
Galway, there didn’t seem a whole lot on. Looking up, he drove the ball towards
the 14 yard line where Conor Hayes was marking Barry-Murphy. The forward always
thrived on the low, intelligent ball usually delivered by the centre-fielder
but this time Fenton sent the ball in head high. Already a couple of steps
behind the full-back, Barry-Murphy muttered, “Feck yeah, Fenton” as he noted
the trajectory. Better-placed than his man, Hayes went up to block, at which
point his opponent’s stick came across him in a flash and somehow directed the
ball to the back of the net. It moved too fast for any television camera of that
time to pick it up properly but RTE’s viewers voted it goal of the year anyway.
A cameo of brilliance for the ages.
“In the following weeks – and years – there was
no scarcity of sciolists to maintain that it was all ‘luck’ or ‘chance’,” wrote
Kevin Cashman. “It is pointless to explain to such people about the patience
and practice and concentration and the unique natural gift of co-ordination of
limb and eye which went to make that stroke.”
THE MANAGER
After the final whistle of the 1999 All-Ireland
hurling final, after Mark Landers had welcomed back Liam McCarthy, Barry-Murphy
walked over to Hill 16 with his players. He clambered up the railings and, with
one hand clinging to the fence, the other was raising the trophy in front of a
sea of red and white that ebbed and flowed up and down the terrace. Minutes
earlier, in the culmination of four difficult
years, he’d managed the youngest Cork team ever to win an All-Ireland,
something that had seemed such a distant prospect just months earlier. The
identity of the architect of the triumph, of course, just served to burnish the
legend.
“If Landers made it clear just how much Jimmy
meant to us, Jimmy then made it clear to us just how much we meant to him,”
wrote Brian Corcoran of the pre-match ritual before that final. “He came over
to us one by one and presented us with our jersey with a shake of the hand
first then a hug. It was simple, spontaneous, special.”
THE SECOND COMING
Never go back. One of the old truisms of
management appeared to be borne out by much of what has happened during
Barry-Murphy’s second stint in charge of Cork. Controversy, something he
studiously avoided throughout his playing and managerial career, has been a
regular visitor. The county has hummed with rumours and whispers. There has
been too much talk of falling-outs and acrimony. Forty summers ago, there was no
Twitter to fuel intrigue and spread rancour.
Forty summers ago, there was a lot less hype. It’s a long way from impromptu
choruses of “Six foot two, eyes of
blue…” washing across the field to radio stations blaring a song called
“Do the Jimmy Barry-Murphy.”
Yet, as he takes charge against Clare this
Sunday, not everything has changed. In the style of hurling played, in the way
that new stars have come in, announced themselves and taken ownership of the
jersey, we can see the handiwork of JBM and the imprints of those he worked
with in times past. This is obvious too in the way he has conducted himself. Never
reacting to the criticisms made in the media, his conduct after every game (win
or lose) has been exemplary. No excuses. No buck-passing. And, on the good
days, no desire to gloat at the critics. Some call that classy. Others might
describe it as doing the Jimmy Barry-Murphy.
No comments:
Post a Comment