Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

I CAN’T LEAF STAGE NOW..

Derry skipper feels sky is limit in Oak camp but gets emotional seeing some of his peers call time on careers at top level

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CHRISSY

MCKAIGUE got

“a wee bit emotional” seeing Michael Murphy walk away from intercount­y football last week.

It struck a chord with the 33-year-old Ulster Championsh­ip winning skipper who candidly says he thinks about retirement every day.

Murphy debuted in 2007 for Donegal, while Mckaigue made his Derry bow the following season.

One of the main reasons Mckaigue is ploughing on next year is his belief that “the sky’s the limit” for Derry after this season’s Anglo-celt Cup triumph – their first since 1998.

“It does get a wee bit motional at the minute when I see Michael Murphy retire,” said Mckaigue. “He is actually a month younger than me.

“I see Lee Keegan, who is the same age as me, talk about potentiall­y retiring and I see different people stepping away. It is not as if I a m oblivious to that.”

Mckaigue – who changed jobs last

July from teaching to become his native Slaughneil’s first full-time Games Promotion Officer – says walking away from inter-county football is something that crosses his mind “every day.”

“Of course it does. Are you good enough any more? Do you have what it takes any more?

“Do you have the motivation to go through another pre-season? Another League campaign?

“Things like that and the day where I think to myself that that question is leaning towards, ‘I can’t,’ that’s the day I will just pack it in.

“But at the minute I feel physically quite good. Mentally I feel reenergise­d.

“Largely because of the Derry management team and the structure within the county.

“And I suppose my own club is still knocking about and still has the potential to be very successful. “I think that makes my decision a lot easier. So I’m grateful for them and long may it continue.”

Mckaigue is one of the longestser­ving footballer­s left at the top level.

Laois’s Ross Munnelly debuted in 2003, Antrim’s Michael Mccann made his bow in 2005, while Cavan goalkeeper Raymond Galligan and Offaly forward Niall Mcnamee both started out at senior inter-county level in 2006.

“I must say that my appetite and hunger at the minute to keep playing for Derry for as long as I can has never been as strong as it is,” said Mckaigue.

“Naturally that’s coming off the end of a very good season, personally and collective­ly.

“I just think I’m so motivated currently because of the way Derry are going as a county.

“The county is on a real high and I would be very optimistic about that. Naturally that enthuses me to keep going as long as I can because I do think it’s worth hanging on for.”

Mckaigue pulls no punches about Derry GAA’S long-term goal, which is to win an All-ireland and stand alongside the men of 1993. “The reality is with the nature of the new structures in place, and Rory (Gallagher) has no reservatio­ns in saying it – we’re no different to others in a block of probably five or six teams perhaps.

“We want to achieve the ultimate. That’s why we play the game. We want to be playing against the best teams.

“We beat Tyrone this year, the reigning All-ireland champions, so we know we’re capable of knocking at the top table but we have to develop and we have to get better.

“We probably need to tweak a few things, but our aspiration as a county is to try to replicate the men of 1993 – to be one of those teams.

“That’s not to say we’re not aware of how much improving we have to do.

“But why would we not have those kinds of aspiration­s to try to be the best team, and to try to beat the best teams, like Dublin, Kerry, Tyrone, etc?

“Ultimately, that’s the sort of legacy that we want to leave behind.”

 ?? BY ?? KARL O’KANE
BY KARL O’KANE

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