The Kerryman (North Kerry)

Clifford excited about

- BY PAUL BRENNAN

DESPITE the likelihood of missing out on playing most of this year’s National League campaign David Clifford is nonetheles­s very excited about what the year ahead holds for him and the Kerry team.

Clifford has been rehabbing a shoulder injury right through the winter and the indication­s are that it will be early to mid-March before he is ready for a return to the Kerry jersey.

At best, it would seem, the Fossa man will get game time against Mayo and Roscommon in the last two rounds of the League but he is already fully immersed in the Kerry set-up under the new management and it very enthusiast­ic about what lies ahead.

“I think there’s going to be a lot of change. It’s unbelievab­le to have the amount of young players we have mixed with the experience­d players so I think it should be a very exciting year ahead for Kerry,” he said.

“The regime Eamonn (Fitzmauric­e) had was unbelievab­le. Every little last detail was thought of. Carrying through onto Peter Keane and the new lads that have come in, it’s going to be unbelievab­le as well. From what we’ve seen so far, the work we’re putting in is of a very high standard and we’re just hoping that we can go a few steps further this year.”

Looking back on his debut season with the senior team in 2018 - which saw him win Kerry’s only All Star award - Clifford admitted the transition from the minor grade had its challenges but was something he embraced.

“It was a big change for me physicalit­y wise, going from minor to senior level. Fellows were bigger and the hits you were getting were a lot tougher. The pace was a big step up. Even the atmosphere and things around match day was totally different so nerves and things like that set in a lot more last year than it did in previous years.

“I was very thankful to Eamonn and the lads for sticking with me through the league and the start of the championsh­ip and my team mates around me helped me greatly.”

One lesson Clifford did learn last year was in relation to workload, particular­ly around a hamstring injury picked up earlier in the year.

“I probably should have listened to my body a bit more. The injury I picked up against Mayo in the league game (last year) was probably as a result of maybe the three games that I played in that week or so.

“It was my first year with Kerry and I wanted to play and playing the Sigerson with Tralee was massive. So down the line it is something I really have to have to look at and be careful with because it’s the last thing players want to do is be injured.”

Clifford was at the launch of the third year of the partnershi­p between Kerry GAA and Alliance Medical, which guarantees quick access to MRI’s and CT scans to its inter-county teams, and was fulsome in his praise for the partnershi­p, which he saw in action first hand last year.

“This partnershi­p with Alliance Medical works so well because it’s essential for a player here that picks up any bit of an injury in training, that we’re able to get into this unit in the Bons in Tralee. From my personal experience it’s been unbelievab­le. You could pick up an injury on a Tuesday night and you’re in here for a scan Wednesday morning and you could have

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