Irish Daily Star

GAA PADDY SET TO LEAD TITLE CHARGE

DONEGAL v ARMAGH Revived Donegal want to take down Orchard

- ■■Orla BANNON CLONES, SUNDAY 4PM LIVE TG4 ■■John O’DOWD

PADDY McBREARTY remembers the tears after too many Donegal defeats by Armagh in the noughties.

Living in Dublin until the age of 10, it’s the losses in Croke Park which still resonate with the Donegal captain, who leads the county into another Ulster final battle with Armagh at Clones this Sunday.

The All-Ireland semi-final defeat by the then reigning champions Armagh in 2003 followed by a heavy Ulster final loss also at HQ the following year, are the ones that hurt most.

“We were living in Dublin at the time and supporting Donegal, obviously,” says McBrearty.

“I left Croke Park a lot of days with tears in my eyes with Donegal losing, but that was a great Armagh team, they obviously went on to dominate Ulster until 2008.

“I remember those games a lot.

“Mickey Hegarty from my own club would have been playing and Armagh would have had the upper hand on Donegal back then.”

Once the family made the move back to the north west, the young McBrearty was focused on just one thing.

“I always wanted to play for Donegal,” he admits.

“I was thrown straight into Kilcar when we moved back and it was all about wanting to play for Kilcar and hoping one day to play for Donegal.

“Luckily, Jim (McGuinness) gave me the call when he did and there was no real negotiatio­n about it.

“I jumped opportunit­y.

“Donegal hadn’t won an Ulster title in 20 years at that point and thankfully we’ve gone on to win a few now.

“Donegal is a different place now to when I started playing.”

McBrearty was just 17 when McGuinness gave him the call in 2011 and they won three Ulster titles in a four-spell including the

All-Ireland in

2012.

Pleas

He describes McGuinness’ second coming, returning to intercount­y management for the first time since 2014, as a “seamless transition” and is just glad the Glenties man at the answered the desperate pleas of the players to come back. “We have left a lot of big days behind us as players and we always thought if we had Jim in, we could win those big games. “Thankfully, he did come back.

“There were a lot of conversati­ons and we had to convince him this group was good enough and that we would do whatever he said if he did come back. “Standards and expectatio­ns in terms of what he demands of you as a player is the same.

“It doesn’t matter whether it’s 2011 or 2024, it’s the same messages that he is trying to drill

across. “Me being captain, it’s just a title, really — Jim is the main voice in the dressing room and he covers everything and makes everyone else’s job easy.”

In recent years, there were signs that Armagh were beginning to change the narrative of their meetings with Donegal, culminatin­g in a 10-point win for Kieran McGeeney’s side in the 2022 All-Ireland qualifiers.

Close

McBrearty knows the gap between the sides is not a lot these days, given they’ve already contested two very close games with them under McGuinness this year.

They drew in a Division Two league match in the Athletic Grounds and then beat them by a point in the league final in Croke Park a few weeks later.

“We had a bit of a run on them but Armagh would probably see themselves as a different team now — as are we.

“They’ve been close to getting to an All-Ireland semi-final and All-Ireland finals, so I think they’ve more experience under their belts in terms of big games.

“Armagh have been a top team for the last 14 years, really. Every time you play them, they are tough opposition.

“They’ve yet to get over the line in terms of the Ulster Championsh­ip, but I’m sure there’s big motivation there now.”

Donegal have been a regular feature of Ulster final days for a long time.

Sunday’s game will be their 11th time in the final in the last 14 years since the start of McGuinness’ first stint in charge in 2011.

The perception might be that they’ve won a lot — but McBrearty remembers the losses just as much.

“Listen, this might be our 11th final but we’ve won five of them and lost five of them and haven’t won an Ulster Championsh­ip since 2019,” said the 30 year old, who is chasing a sixth provincial medal and kicked the insurance point in the extra-time semi-final win over Tyrone.

“We’ve had great days in Clones and a lot of bad days in Clones.

“There’s a lot of lads there that are going for their third (Ulster medal), a lot of boys going for their fourth and then there’s a lot of lads going for their first.

“There are different motivation­s, but I think within the group there’s massive motivation to win another one.”

PAUL Murphy strongly believes that Kerry are in a better place heading into the All-Ireland SFC group stages in a fortnight’s time than they were at the same juncture last year.

Following a pretty non-competitiv­e provincial campaign in 2023, including a facile five-goal victory over Clare in the Munster final, the Kingdom came a cropper at home to Mayo.

On this occasion, following the three-point win over Cork, and a much stronger test from the Banner last Sunday, the experience­d defender feels Kerry are more battle-hardened.

“I suppose, you’d say we probably weren’t tested last year (in Munster) and we were flat on the day (against Mayo). Maybe it was that reason, maybe it was a number of reasons,” he said.

“Look, we definitely didn’t perform. I think we are probably better tested this year going into our first round (of the All-Ireland), so I suppose we can’t use that as an excuse this time!

Similar

“Sunday took on a similar trend to the previous times we’ve faced Clare up here in the last few years.

“They’re a difficult beast to face up in their own patch.

“It’s a great ground, the crowd on top of you, and they gave great support to their team. All of that feeds into it.

“We did a lot of things right. But things like the goal would be something we’ll be looking back on, I’m sure, on video. That was a bit frustratin­g. Other than that, job done and we’ll keep moving forward.”

The 32-year-old stalwart admitted that having the draw for the round-robin stages five days before the Munster and Connacht deciders was a potential distractio­n for squads.

“Ah, it can be, but you just have to keep the tunnel vision and focus on the challenge that’s ahead. The draw’s the draw, you can’t control that at all.”

 ?? ?? JIM DISCIPLE: Paddy McBrearty is so glad that Jim McGuinness has answered the call to lead Donegal again
JIM DISCIPLE: Paddy McBrearty is so glad that Jim McGuinness has answered the call to lead Donegal again
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