Irish Daily Mail

A CORKER OF A WEEK FOR ÁINE

- By DECLAN ROONEY

IN the next six days, Cork senior star Áine Terry O’Sullivan will play three club championsh­ip football games for two different teams. A native of Allihies on the west coast, O’Sullivan played her early football with Garnish GAA club, before graduating to tog out with Beara as an adult player. Their relegation from the Cork Senior Championsh­ip in 2016 meant O’Sullivan was eligible to represent the West Cork divisional side, and after tomorrow’s intermedia­te outing for Beara, she’ll play against All-Ireland club champions Mourneabbe­y for West Cork in the Senior Championsh­ip on Tuesday. Adding further spice to the mix, tomorrow’s intermedia­te opener has pitted Beara against another West Cork club, Rosscarber­y, while their second game next Friday is an away trip to another neighbour, Bantry Blues. Local rivalries will be rekindled in the space of a few days, but for O’Sullivan, the chance to play senior football has been a huge benefit and honour. ‘It was kind of funny starting off. When you are playing against each other you don’t really get to know each other. It’s hard to know what they’re like away from the field, but we gelled really well though,’ said O’Sullivan. ‘There is always a bit of craic and there will be a bit of chat after Saturday, but it’s a great environmen­t to be involved in.’ And amidst the pandemic, there has been a silver lining for O’Sullivan and her Beara team — as she has been able to dedicate more time to training having made the family home her base again to continue her career in IT remotely. ‘I’ve loved being back home, and being able to commit to club training with Beara is brilliant. We are about two hours from the city, so it has been great to go back to that training lately,’ she said. ‘Football will be fairly busy in the next while, going from nothing to a crazy week, but it’s great to be back.’ But she is hopeful the young guns of West Cork can deliver. ‘We are all intermedia­te and junior players but the talent out here is only getting better. There are nine or ten of us from the West Cork panel that are on the Cork panel as well,’ O’Sullivan said. ‘After we were relegated, I never thought I’d get to play in the senior championsh­ip. The way things are going with Beara, a lot of the girls my age don’t play anymore. We are a very young team and I know we won’t compete at senior, so to play with West Cork is huge. It has been a very positive experience for us.’ While Mourneabbe­y have won the last two All-Ireland Senior Club titles, their biggest tests have arguably come at home. Two years ago West Cork forced a replay in the final, but Mourneabbe­y edged the second game, while last year, the champions needed a powerful surge in the second half to take the honours. ‘Getting the chance to play against the likes of Mourneabbe­y is great. They are the team to beat in Cork the last few years but we have pushed them really close,’ she added. ‘The first day in 2018 is still a disappoint­ment. We should have won on the day and we didn’t get across the line in the replay either. Last year was a bit of a disaster, we had it won in the first half. ‘We’ll both be a bit rusty, and it’s up in their home pitch so it will be a bit of a journey for us, but we are looking forward to it.’ With Cork, O’Sullivan has already won three TG4

All-Ireland Senior titles but the county’s drought now stretches back to that 2016 final victory over Dublin. From those three wins, she says her greatest memory was bringing the Brendan Martin Cup back to the village, where the county’s and parish’s 2015 victory was soundly celebrated. ‘It was mad enough. A good gang of the panel came down and there were bonfires all the way from Glengariff to Allihies. I don’t think they’d seen anything like that before,’ she recalled. ‘Football in Beara is huge; they went all out. It’s a bit of a tradition here that any time the club wins anything we all pack into the back of a lorry to be paraded up through the village. We did that with the All-Ireland, there were flares and everything. We had a music session in the community centre. ‘I was delighted to be able to bring the cup down. It’s not very often, when you come from a small club to be able to be able to bring an All-Ireland home. It was a great time, but it feels like ages ago now.’

 ??  ?? Busy time: Áine Terry O’Sullivan
Busy time: Áine Terry O’Sullivan

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