The Kerryman (South Kerry Edition)

Celebratin­g our seventh Croke Park double day

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Well here we are again. Back in the big time. Back in Croke Park. Back with two Kerry teams forming part of a double-header of All Ireland club football championsh­ip finals.

We suppose we’ve become somewhat used to them in the Kingdom at this stage – in the past thir teen years we’ve had seven of these double days at Headquar ters – but we should never become complacent about them, we should never lose sight of just how special they are and what they say about football in this par t of the world.

Kerry club football is unquestion­ably the strongest in all of the thirty two counties. The structures for our domestic game work brilliantl­y well and have allowed Kerry clubs to flourish once they’ve gone beyond our borders.

That’s bred a cer tain amount of resentment in other quar ters – there’s a feeling that Kerry doesn’t have enough senior clubs and it skews the competitiv­e order beneath the senior championsh­ip – but you could easily flip that and ask others why they aren’t following the Kerry model more closely?

No matter that’s for others to worry about. For Kerry football folk these days have become days of celebratio­n and communion, up there with big inter-county days for people with connection­s to the clubs, beyond them even let’s be honest.

Club – as the advertisin­g slogan goes – is family. It means everything to the people of these communitie­s. It meant everything to the all the clubs who’ve experience­d it before. It will mean everything to Beaufort and to Kilcummin.

Primrose and blue and green and red will take over cer tain sections of Croke Park next Saturday afternoon. It’s their day, but the entire county will be behind them as they approach the final frontier.

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