Irish Daily Mirror

WE LOVE DUFFER’S PASSION & INTENSITY

Byrne: Training is so hard but the manager has us all prepared for every eventualit­y

- MARK MCCADDEN

BY

LUKE BYRNE has hailed the “intensity” and “passion” that Damien Duff has brought to his role as Shelbourne manager.

The Reds ace knew more than most what to expect when Duff accepted the role of first-team boss last winter.

He played briefly with the legendary former Ireland internatio­nal at Shamrock Rovers and then coached the Hoops’ Under-15s with Duff during a spell on the sidelines through injury.

Duff famously brought his young players in at 6am for pre-school training sessions.

And he is even more demanding of his senior Tolka Park stars.

“I knew him from coaching with him, so I knew what to expect,” said Byrne, who now has an FAI Cup semi-final against Waterford to look forward to after last weekend’s win over Bohemians.

“I’d like to think I live very profession­ally as it is. It did take some getting used to. Particular­ly for me it was the intensity of training.

“Tuesdays, it’s like a buzzword around our place, there’s nothing as hard as a Tuesday.

“We train so hard on Tuesdays. Training is very difficult and it’s intense. There is a lot of detail and video analysis, pre-match meetings, a lot of detail and you are expected to take it on.

Without giving away too much, it would be a tactical day based on the team you are playing that week, but within that you would work in your units and work at a really high intensity.

“You get to a Friday and you have seen the situations you are going to be in, but with greater intensity, more repetition and less breaks.”

Byrne struck up a rapport with Duff when they shared a dressing room at tonight’s opponents Rovers.

“We used to just talk about football all the time – the match that was on the night before, the big game that week in the Premier League,” said Byrne.

“That was how we got talking. And then when I did my ACL he asked me to coach the 15s.

“I didn’t see the intensity and the passion and emotion looking from afar, but it’s very hard to gauge anyone really on TV. He surprised me, definitely.”

Recalling those early morning training sessions with the Rovers Under-15s, Byrne said: “I used to be up at 5.15am. You’d be out there and he’d have the protein bars and croissants for the kids.

“He’d be driving around Dublin dropping the kids to school after training, all different areas.

“Sometimes we’d get up there and the floodlight­s wouldn’t be on, we’d be in one corner and as the sun would come up we’d move across.

“It was class. Some people had something to say about it and thought it was wrong. That’s because he was doing something different. He was willing to do it. I’ve never met another underage coach who’s willing to do it. He was all about contact hours.

“The kids needed to be playing more football because the kids were being left behind by other European countries.

“That was his way of making a difference. He didn’t just go on RTE talking about it, he was in a position to impact it.”

Byrne added: “It impacted me as a player and who I think I’ll be as a coach one day.

“I would listen to him say stuff to the kids and say that’s relevant to me and I’ll take that into my game. I can apply that to my life.”

 ?? ?? GOOD GAME Luke Byrne launches FIFA 23 Airtricity League cover yesterday. See www.ea.com
GOOD GAME Luke Byrne launches FIFA 23 Airtricity League cover yesterday. See www.ea.com

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