Irish Daily Mirror

RIAN MIG ARMAGH HTY

No Enda the talents of Crossmagle­n’s great believes his brilliance late on in to a whole other level where he could

- BY GARRY DOYLE

RIAN O’neill glanced towards the Kerry posts. Enda Mcnulty looked back in time.

Mcnulty has had two lives. The first saw him win an All-ireland with Joe Kernan’s 2002 team. Then, when that curtain fell, he emerged as Ireland’s leading sports psychologi­st, on the staff when Longford Town won soccer’s FAI Cup; there when Leinster started gathering Heineken Cups.

And then in 2016, he was standing on the Soldier Field sideline, having spent a week conducting one on one debriefing­s with 20 of Joe Schmidt’s 23-man squad.

They were in Chicago, the All

Blacks chasing a fistful of dollars, the Irish rugby team chasing history. Mcnulty was the players’ go-to guy if they had a mental hang-up about their form or status. But one guy in particular didn’t have any baggage at all.

Joey Carbery turned 21 two days before Ireland’s win over New Zealand, celebratin­g his birthday by eating out in a Chicago steakhouse. Mcnulty was there too. His steak was well cooked, Carbery’s medium rare.

Forty eight hours they were standing next to one another when Johnny

Sexton went down with an injury; Ireland’s lead hanging in the balance. Mcnulty was close enough to hear Mick Kearney, the team manager, tell Carbery to strip off his tracksuit, that he was about to make his debut.

But it was what happened next that stuck in Mcnulty’s memory.

“It reminded me of a calf in spring time being let out of the shed and onto a field for the first time,” says Mcnulty, “because Joey didn’t run onto that pitch, he bounced. He had 100 per cent confidence. He oozed it. It’s rare you see something like that.”

Then two weeks ago he saw it again.

This time it was a player from his county, his sport.

Mcnulty spent a decade on the same team as O’neill’s uncle, Oisin Mcconville, and his manager, Kieran Mcgeeney. So he knows he’s cut from good cloth and knows that when a game is in the melting pot, a Mcconville doesn’t hide.

So, with 66 minutes on the clock, with the scores level, Rian O’neill became that calf in springtime, able to run at a stage of the game when others were flagging, able to blank out the shots he missed and focus instead on the one he was about to take.

“That day in Chicago, Carbery was like that; Johnny Sexton is like that, too,” Mcnulty quietly said, informatio­n gleaned from a decade working with Ireland’s greatest rugby players.

It was Sexton who dropped the 45yard goal that sealed a last minute win for Ireland in Paris six years ago; O’neill who popped a 50-yard point over the bar to give Armagh the lead for the first time in this month’s All-ireland semi-final. The parallel, to Mcnulty, was obvious. Mcnulty says: “I have worked with guys who have climbed Everest, have worked with rugby players, athletes from all sports.

“In everyone’s journey, there is always a tipping point, when you realise you can go further, when you draw confidence from an achievemen­t.

“For example, the Armagh team I played on, that tipping point came in 1999, when we won an Ulster title. Finally we had a trophy, the county’s first in 17 years. Three years later we had an All-ireland.

“In 2011, Dublin found their tipping point against Kerry. Eight more All-irelands followed. So, let’s fast forward to what Armagh did two weeks ago.

“They could have been forgiven for throwing in the towel that day. Instead they showed such mental resilience.

“In certain games you catapult yourself onto the next level. That was one of those games, that semi final. It required emotional toughness, resilience, years of conditioni­ng, being a well coached team, all those contributi­ng factors led to their win.”

And it required having a player who was unafraid to go up Everest’s north face, who was willing to take responsibi­lity when his team needed him. “You had the two Cliffords on the field,” Mcnulty says, “incredible players, two of the best in the country.

“And Rian O’neill looked around and said to himself, ‘I belong in this company. Give me that ball. Let me do my thing.’ That mentality, that comes from so many things, years of hard work and conditioni­ng, the guidance of a suing preme coaching team, the masterful advice

of

in: Crossmagle­n. Think of what that club has achieved, 47 county titles, six All-irelands, 11 Ulsters. Winning is all they know. Being a Mcconville. I know Oisin. There was one tough boy, resilient, determined. Kieran Mcgeeney, a leader. It all adds to it.”

Diarmuid Connolly watched the game from the opposite stand to Mcnulty.

He remembers the 66th minute point alright but also something else, a hit on 58 minutes on Paul Murphy, when Kerry were a point clear and thinking of launching a counter attack.

That notion soon ceased as soon as O’neill’s shoulder connected with the Kerry cornerback.

“Rian reminds me of Michael Murphy,” Connolly said. “Over the last couple of years he has not found his perfect position but what Mcgeeney is doing with him is to give him licence to play off the cuff.

“You see him everywhere. His passing range is phenomenal so he can be a playmaker; he is 6 ‘3 so he can field balls in midfield; his athleticis­m is second to none so he can track back and then when he is close to goal, he has that ruthlessne­ss that you need.”

The stats back that up, seven goals and 87 points coming from his feet in the 26 games he has played for Armagh since making his Championsh­ip debut way back in 2019. Now 26 he is nearing his peak.

“Special is the word that I would use to describe him,” says Aaron Kernan of his Crossmagle­n team mate.

“He has everything that it takes to be a top player. Yet even though he was talented as a kid, he has stayed quiet and unassuming.”

 ?? ?? LEADER O’neill takes responsibi­lity and puts Armagh ahead in semi-final from 50m out
Hugh
Campbell (Armagh’s sports psychologi­st).
“And also, the environmen­t he grew up
LEADER O’neill takes responsibi­lity and puts Armagh ahead in semi-final from 50m out Hugh Campbell (Armagh’s sports psychologi­st). “And also, the environmen­t he grew up
 ?? ?? column that ‘Kieran hangs over them like a tonne of weight.
“Fifteen years (Kildare then Armagh) without a trophy. Maybe management is not his forte?”
What has changed is that Mcgeeney has changed.
He’s learned … about himself firstly, his players secondly.
All bar two of his panel have been brought in since he took over.
Everyone else was taught the value of defending and attacking as a team. Sometimes the long game is the only one to play.
HE CAN DO IT ALL Rian O’neill has become a leader of men for Armagh’s All-ireland contenders
column that ‘Kieran hangs over them like a tonne of weight. “Fifteen years (Kildare then Armagh) without a trophy. Maybe management is not his forte?” What has changed is that Mcgeeney has changed. He’s learned … about himself firstly, his players secondly. All bar two of his panel have been brought in since he took over. Everyone else was taught the value of defending and attacking as a team. Sometimes the long game is the only one to play. HE CAN DO IT ALL Rian O’neill has become a leader of men for Armagh’s All-ireland contenders

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