Belfast Telegraph

FRANK CONCERNS OVER RELAXING OF GAA RESTRICTIO­NS

- Declan Bogue

LIKE many others, the St Enda’s manager Frankie Fitzsimmon­s had become used to being off the hamster wheel that is yearon-year involvemen­t with Gaelic Games.

Since he came in as selector to Liam Bradley with the Antrim senior team for the 2014 season, he has been involved in the nuts and bolts of a never-ending season.

By 2015, he had succeeded Bradley and managed his county for three seasons. After that, he fell in with St Enda’s who, along with this coaching partner Pat Hughes, he brought to an All-ireland Intermedia­te club final in 2019.

The duo had already been in the thick of a busy pre-season when the GAA shutdown came into place in mid-march but last Wednesday they began a second pre-season ahead of a return to games on the weekend of July 18. And things felt different, for sure.

“I wouldn’t have cared if the season had been declared null and void to be honest,” said the affable Fitzsimmon­s.

“Going back the other night, it was like going back into a job after being away for years. I didn’t know really what to expect the other night.

“Once you get into it, you enjoy it and after the session you are already starting to plan things. You get that wee bit of hunger back, we sort of had over the last few days.

“We had something like 34 players the other night and three dual players down at the hurling training. But it is very hard not to make contact.”

Reflecting on the wider disruption and loss of life, he went on: “So many people lost their lives and that was sad. I don’t know if there was scaremonge­ring at the start, but there was talk of a 9–15,000 death toll. I think we got very lucky here.

“A lot of people stuck to the guidelines. I was in work every other day and there were a few kids in because their parents were doctors.”

Schoolteac­her Fitzsimmon­s is not sure, however, about the latest relaxation of restrictio­ns.

“Once all these kids come back to school, it is concerning. The bars opening again…

“I spoke to lads who like a pint but they say they are going to leave it for a few weeks to see what happens.”

At home, he has to be careful. His daughter Emma has just one kidney and other complicati­ons with bone developmen­t.

In truth, what the future has in store is worrying him. St Enda’s club members were made painfully aware of that after their vice-chairman, the well known solicitor Niall Murphy was stricken by Covid-19 and recovered successful­ly.

“I am just wondering what happens if someone gets it?

“I would say that if anything like that happens, we would have to shut down again. We obviously had somebody in the club with it; Niall Murphy.

“It was scary for a few weeks there. His wife was only getting bits and pieces of informatio­n from the nurses over the phone. They couldn’t go to see him and it was touch and go.

“Niall is a strong lad and he obviously got the best of care in that hospital.”

Fitzsimmon­s added:

“It would be stupid if somebody had it and everybody went back playing and the next thing could the hospitals cope with this?

“I wouldn’t be happy with it if somebody contracted it. I wouldn’t like to be in the same place as somebody who knew they had it.”

They go back to a new environmen­t. In the past, team bibs were a running joke in every club because of their strong smell. That will no longer be the case as Fitzsimmon­s and Hughes handed a bib to each player and instructed them to clean the kit after each session.

“That’s the odd thing about it. We bring all the balls and stuff and we bring them home again with us. But you are just trying to be as careful as you can,” he explains.

“To be fair, St Enda’s are well-organised with their forms, all the sprays for the equipment. “But we have one player who can’t come back until August. Michael Mcnamee is our full back but his two parents have received shielding letters and they are not going to be able to come out of isolation until August 1.

“Fair play to him, he is better to look after his parents. He has 10 or 11 years or more ahead of him at senior football. He is only 21, he played with the under-21s last year and is a good footballer, a good lad.”

What is concerning is the unreliabil­ity of temperatur­e testing, something that caused the shambles of the treatment of former GAA player Conor Mckenna (left) in the Australian Rules game after he return a positive result in a run of negatives.

“I thought it was very unfair, the treatment he got,” Fitzsimmon­s said. “They were talking about his contract being terminated and a couple of days’ later he tested negative.

“If it happened to someone here in the GAA, it would be very hard for the club not to close down. The case in Kilkenny, it is like anything else, people will say it is nothing to do with us and then all of a sudden it’s among us.”

As with everything else, we have to tread carefully for now.

 ??  ??
 ?? Into the unknown: St Enda’s Frank Fitzsimmon­s ??
Into the unknown: St Enda’s Frank Fitzsimmon­s
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland