Irish Daily Star - Inside Sport

Harte keepS standards extremely high in her work with Tipperary

- ■ ■Daragh SMALL

Gavin Bazunu and Caoimhin Kelleher have provided the blueprint and now Elaine Harte wants her Tipperary goalkeeper­s to follow suit. The former eight-time All-Ireland winner with Cork has swapped over to the Premier County men’s set-up where she is the new goalkeepin­g coach and is encouraged by the talent on offer — Evan Comerford, Michael O’Reilly and Kuba Beban. Harte is a student of goalkeepin­g and while she draws on some of her past experience­s under Kieran O’Dwyer with the Cork ladies, she continues to look for new and innovative ways to improve her goalkeeper­s. And the 41-year-old believes the two players battling it out for the Ireland No 1 jersey currently, are the perfect example of the way Gaelic Games goalkeeper­s should look to build their skillset. Bazunu is Ireland’s first choice goalkeeper already at just 19 and is turning in impressive displays week-in-week-out for Portsmouth, on loan from Manchester City. Kelleher, meanwhile, who also hails from Cork, has been a standout performer when given the opportunit­y for Premier League heavyweigh­ts Liverpool in recent times. But the real difference between these two prospects and what has gone before is their unwavering composure on the ball and their willingnes­s to play out from the back. It is a crucial part of today’s game cross-channel and Harte says it needs to be implemente­d here too. “At the end of the day, your goalkeeper is like a quarter-back at this stage,” said Harte.

Play

“You are part of the group as well, you have to be able to help out your defenders if needs be and you have to be able to play. “It was something that Éamonn Ryan would have always said to me and to the team when we were playing with Cork, a goalkeeper first and foremost has to be a good footballer. “You have to be able to play, solo with both feet, kick with both feet, handpass with both hands. You never know when you are going to need both sides to get out of trouble. “In this day and age, goalkeeper­s have to be good footballer­s and you can’t get away from that fact. Nowadays they are much more involved in the game. I think that’s a really important part. “The likes of Caoimhin Kelleher and Gavin Bazunu, they are showing it in England, the composure on the ball. That’s the way we have to go now here too. You can’t have a goalkeeper that can’t play football. “You can see the skill level, they are really good footballer­s here too. This is the position that they are in. Number one, you are a very good footballer but, number two, you are honing in on the skills that makes them an excellent goalkeeper.” Harte was an excellent goalkeeper in her day too, one of the best of her generation where she starred in the dominant Cork team of 2000s.

Careers

She also won nine Munster crowns, seven Lidl NFL Division 1 titles, a Division 2 medal, along with Junior and Intermedia­te club All-Irelands. It was one of the most decorated careers in the history of the LGFA and Harte was also awarded with an All-Star in 2008 and 2012. Harte is from White’s Cross in Cork but she moved to Tipperary in 2004, where she lives in Moyne with her husband, John Doyle and their six-year-old daughter Aoibheann. She is primary school teacher in Moyne and is heavily involved with the local club, while she gradually took more and more of an interest in the Tipperary LGFA too. Harte was manager when the Tipperary ladies minors were crowned AllIreland B champions in 2014 before she made the step up to the adult team as a selector. And she was she thrilled to get her chance to succeed Joe Hayes as Tipperary men’s goalkeepin­g coach. “I wouldn’t have done an awful lot of coaching at all with men’s clubs. I would always have focused on the ladies,” said Harte. “And a lot of my time would have taken up with being club secretary and coaching with the ladies here in Moyne Templetuoh­y. That’s what I was focusing on over the last few years. “This will be my first step into the men’s side of things and so far so good. They have been really welcoming. The lads are taking on board everything that I am saying. It’s a really profession­al set-up and I’m really impressed with it.”

 ?? ?? DELIGHT: Harte during his illustriou­s playing days with Cork
DELIGHT: Harte during his illustriou­s playing days with Cork

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