Belfast Telegraph

No ordinary Joe in the spotlight

Life of former Derry football star Joe Brolly, who seldom steers clear of controvers­y

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JOE Brolly has said that, when he was growing up in the staunchly republican town of Dungiven in Co Derry, the only two things the people were interested in were the GAA and the IRA. He was born right at the start of the Troubles and that period of violent turmoil impinged directly on his family life.

When Brolly was still a young boy, the Army came and turned the house over and took away his father, Francie. He was interned in Long Kesh and did not reappear for three years.

Brolly has said that, when he was growing up, there was only one ethos, one culture. The Army was labelled “black b ****** s”, he said. Locals chanted “SS RUC” at the police.

According to Brolly, if they asked you what your name was, you told them you were “Patrick Pearse”, or to “f*** up, it’s none of your business”.

The Gaelic footballer-turned-contrarian-pundit said it was only when he went to Trinity College Dublin that he realised that the idea of “Prods bad, Fenians good” was not going to cut the mustard as a philosophy in life.

Despite his republican upbringing,

‘It indicates... a new, very cold, very ruthless, but polite era of saying nothing’

Brolly has said that he never voted for Sinn Fein and he has described himself as a “political atheist”.

For almost two decades, he was the star pundit of RTE’S GAA coverage, routinely offending the fans of numerous counties in the process.

At one stage, he was dubbed the “Salman Rushdie of Mayo”, such was the wrath directed at him after he accused that county’s team of a deliberate pattern of fouls.

In one of his broadsides, for which he received a warning from RTE bosses, he said: “I’ve called Cavan the Black Death. Their football is as ugly as Marty Morrissey.”

He then jokingly apologised to the people of Cavan before offering a genuine apology to Marty himself some time later.

Through all this, the audience was by turns maddened and entertaine­d, but then RTE decided to adopt a safer approach. Brolly was taken off the panel in September 2019.

On Monday night, on Claire Byrne Live, he made an all-toobrief comeback when he joined a debate on a united Ireland, then found himself taken off air.

He was cut off in mid-stream by the presenter after he accused the DUP of “laughing at the Irish language, laughing at Gaelic sports, the homophobia, the racism”.

In hindsight, critics might suggest that Byrne acted too precipitou­sly in taking him off air, and that RTE played it too safe.

She was perhaps mindful of recent live broadcasts that have led to libel actions. The homophobia charge probably set alarm bells ringing, because of the Panti Bliss episode a few years back.

But in inviting Brolly on air, RTE must have known what to expect. The most cursory research shows how he has accused the DUP of being obnoxious, xenophobic, sectarian, homophobic, hateful and contemptuo­us.

The main target of Brolly’s ire on Monday’s broadcast was the DUP, whose MP Gregory Campbell had appeared on the programme earlier, but was not there to “defend himself ” — the justificat­ion for RTE pulling the plug.

In an interview with the Irish Independen­t after this week’s broadcast, Brolly described the way he was treated on the RTE programme as “childish and embarrassi­ng”.

“It indicates a serious dysfunctio­n at the heart of RTE and a new, very cold, very ruthless, but polite era of saying nothing,” he says. “Whatever you say, say nothing.”

In the immediate aftermath of the broadcast, RTE received 95 emails and 32 calls, mainly offering negative feedback about Brolly being cut off.

RTE said: “Joe Brolly made quite specific accusation­s, which, in context, would have been understood by viewers to

be directed at a previous guest who was not in a position to answer.”

By Thursday, the clip that caused Brolly to be disconnect­ed had not been removed from the RTE Player.

In his heyday on television, the Derry man, an erudite and entertaini­ng columnist for the Sunday Independen­t, was part of a winning formula for RTE sport.

Football had Eamon Dunphy to stir up controvers­y, while George Hook fulfilled the role in rugby. Brolly was described as the “summer pantomime villain”.

Many GAA fans who found his judgment flawed and complained about his occasional crass comments, such as calling the Sky Sports presenter Rachel Wyse a “Baywatch Babe”, con

cede that the coverage is now a tad dull.

Perhaps it is part of a growing tendency in RTE towards blandness.

Before he was cut from its sport coverage, Brolly complained about a new broadcasti­ng tone in an interview with Kieran Cunningham of the Irish

Daily Star. “Increasing­ly, there’s an institutio­nalised attempt — I don’t lay it at the door of any one individual — to control what you’re saying,” he said.

He said the dulling-down of The Sunday Game was a bad mistake.

From his time as an All-ireland footballer for Derry in the 1990s, Brolly was always a figure who attracted attention.

As one reporter noted, his calling card as a player would be a flamboyant, most UN-GAA habit of blowing kisses to the opposition supporters whenever he scored a goal.

That could incense the crowd and the opposing team, but he described it as his “expression of unbridled joy”.

Brolly comes from a family of natural performers.

His Tyrone-born mother, Ann, was an all-ireland singing champion.

His father, Francie, a Latin scholar and school teacher, who died last year, was also a singer and the couple met on the folk circuit.

An uncle on his mother’s side, Bill “Shawn” Corey, was a dance double in Hollywood, who performed with Gene Kelly, Rita Hayworth and Ginger Rogers.

Young Joe became a soprano in the cathedral choir when he went away to boarding school in Armagh and played the lead role in a school production of Oklahoma.

Away from his day job as a barrister in the Belfast courts, he is an accomplish­ed pianist, who plays Mozart and Chopin.

He met his wife, Emma, a solicitor, on their first day at Trinity College. She is a first cousin of Liam Neeson. In the year before his father died, Brolly said in an interview: “I don’t have any relationsh­ip with my parents at all.’’

He described his republican father as a “man to be respected, very tough-minded, a very formidable man with a formidable stubbornne­ss”.

“To this day, I wouldn’t know very much about him,” he added. “I remember snippets of

‘Before you do that, I want to tell you that for years I thought of breaking your jaw’

conversati­on, but, whatever was going on, we were kept out of it.

“But it was very unsettling. I’ve been an insomniac since I was a small baby. It’s unlikely to be a coincidenc­e.

“A lot of stuff that happened when I was a child wasn’t good, it would have been very unhealthy for the developmen­t of a child. Very difficult, there was a lot of violence.”

Brolly has described himself as a “very public loner” — the sort of person who is more comfortabl­e with strangers. By his own account, he could walk into a room, start singing and telling yarns. But he has said that he has a problem with intimacy.

One of the turning points of his life came in 2012, when he donated a kidney to Shane Finnegan, a man from his local GAA club in Belfast. He didn’t know him well at the time.

Although the transplant ultimately failed, Brolly said the donation had led to an outpouring of emotion. He found himself crying in the shower. Afterwards, he and Finnegan became close friends.

Over the years, Brolly has had many detractors. He once recalled how he met the Dublin goalkeeper Stephen Cluxton and went to shake his hand. Cluxton, who had been criticised by Brolly, said: “Before you do that, I want to tell you that for years I thought of breaking your jaw.”

Brolly’s approach in life, as he sees it, is to express an honest view and let the dice fall.

He may have been humiliated after being taken off air this week, but he is unlikely to be silenced for long.

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 ??  ?? Joe Brolly on RTÉ’S Claire Byrne Live before he was cut off and (right) the former GAA player in action
Joe Brolly on RTÉ’S Claire Byrne Live before he was cut off and (right) the former GAA player in action
 ??  ?? ‘Loner’: The sports and political commentato­r Joe Brolly
‘Loner’: The sports and political commentato­r Joe Brolly

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