Irish Daily Star - Inside Sport

Shannon on the rise with slaughtnei­l

- ■Pat NOLAN

THE medals keep piling up for Shannon Graham but they’re a bonus rather than a justificat­ion for her decision to link-up with Slaughtnei­l.

Frustrated with home club Creggan’s inability to field a camogie team, she moved across the Derry-Antrim border in 2015 to play with her cousins and under her uncle, the late Thomas Cassidy, in Slaughtnei­l.

She’s since won seven county titles, six Ulsters and three All-Irelands but there was nothing inevitable about any of that when she came on board.

“The last time Slaughtnei­l had won it [the county title] was 2012 and before that was a good number of years,” says Graham.

“Sometimes people will say to me, ‘Oh, you’re a blow-in and you were tasting success’ but thankfully the success started to happen after.

“The first year that I played with Slaughtnei­l we won Derry and we got beaten by enough by Loughgiel in the Ulster final and we were all very disappoint­ed.

“And then thankfully we had three wonder years, three Derry, Ulster and All-Irelands in-a-row, and we’ve been going strong ever since.”

She didn’t need any of that to know that she had made the right call, however, as forming and reinforcin­g links and friendship­s with her mother’s side of her family had already made it worthwhile.

“The first year I was perfectly content. I was delighted winning Derry. I couldn’t think of anything better than that.

“I had always dreamed of an All-Ireland club success but just to be enjoying the camogie and just to be playing alongside your cousins, and Thomas Cassidy was a great man and it was a great opportunit­y for me to get closer to him as an uncle.

“My car mileage is shocking, it’s disgracefu­l but it’s worth it.

“I used to stay in Slaughtnei­l a lot of the time when I was younger and I would have went to Cúl Camps and summer schemes and stuff so for me it’s probably more of my club than Creggan ever was.

Family

“That’s the club I grew up playing in but to play alongside your family is a different story.”

While they’ve maintained their dominance in Derry and Ulster, Sarsfields shocked them with a late winning goal when they were on the brink of four-in-a-row in the 2020 All-Ireland final.

Eventual winners Oulart-The Ballagh saw them off in last year’s delayed semi-final and a quick turnaround sees them meet Sarsfields in today’s semi-final.

“I have great respect for them,” Graham says of the Galway kingpins. “They’re a very talented bunch of players and they’re tightly knit, a bit like ourselves.

“There’s no bad blood or anything like that but it’ll just be an interestin­g affair after 2020 because they were well prepared for us and they had us well sussed and maybe we held back a bit that day and it’ll be nice to see if we redeem ourselves.”

 ?? ?? UP FOR IT: Slaughtnei­l’s Shannon Graham ahead of today’s All- Ireland semifinal against Sarsfields
UP FOR IT: Slaughtnei­l’s Shannon Graham ahead of today’s All- Ireland semifinal against Sarsfields

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