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Please name your team then? No disrespect but all-stars for Kerry and Dublin players were relatively easy to accumulate in the mid to late 70's given the lack of competition. These players were best around during that time but for over 40 years, I'm afraid not. Your point about Ger Power having more all-stars than any of the backs makes little sense. He's a forward so can't replace a back. Mattie Forde and Declan Browne were super players but don't have multiple all-stars or All-Irelands.
winatallcost (Meath) - Posts: 237 - 28/05/2020 17:18:02 2279398 Link 2 |
Ger Power, like his father Jackie the Limerick dual player, was very versatile. He first made his name as a wing back on the 75 All Ireland winning side.
Oldertourman (Limerick) - Posts: 162 - 28/05/2020 20:08:27 2279408 Link 0 |
I don't think it should be a surprise to anybody that the teams that have had the most success make up the bulk of the team as they are the players that have appeared in and won the biggest games. I wouldn't take the named team all that seriously tbh. As somebody else said earlier you could get 100 people to name their team from the same period and I doubt you'd get two the same. Cluxton and maybe Canavan might be the only slam dunk certainties, you could argue for or against virtually everyone else. Forde and Browne were unbelievable btw and definitely in the conversation. GeniusGerry (Kerry) - Posts: 1957 - 28/05/2020 21:55:19 2279417 Link 5 |
Take out Connolly. Doesn't deserve to be in a best ever team over the last 40 years- wasn't even Dublin's best 10 in that era (Paul Flynn only player to have won four consecutive All Stars in that position). Toss up between Flynn, Dooher and Donnellan. In my opinion McGeeney has to be in there. Best centre-back I have ever seen, and a better pure defender than Jack out of the three selected in the half-back line there. I need to include Lee Keegan somewhere too, so would omit Marc O'Se, even if I never seen his uncle Paidi play. Tohill would get in ahead of Fenton too purely on longevity. He did everything Fenton can do but in a far less successful team and well-oiled machine. So revised team would be: Cluxton Keegan Moynihan O'Se (either one) Tomas O'Se McGeeney McCaffrey Tohill O'Shea Donnellan Murphy Spillane Cooper Canavan Fitzgerald. Looks nigh on perfect in terms of balance to me. If it was just of players from my era, I would bring in Paul Flynn for Spillane (and switch the wing forwards), and Fenton in for Jacko, but I can't dispute the greatness of those Kerry lads. Hard for me to exclude Leacy, Jordan and Forde in particular. beano (Wexford) - Posts: 598 - 28/05/2020 22:11:13 2279419 Link 0 |
I think maybe our memories of the prowess of the earlier players of the era is a little rose tinted, watching the many old games on TV in recent weeks it is apparent thst while kicking the ball was much more prevalent the standard of kick passes was nothing short of brutal. Similarly the percentage of wides was way higher than nowadays even though the game was played at a slower pace.
sligo joe (Dublin) - Posts: 205 - 28/05/2020 22:59:01 2279422 Link 2 |
Players train much harder and smarter and from a younger age nowadays. The skills and conditioning of modern players are far ahead of those from forty years ago. That is true of any field sport in the world. That doesn't necessarily mean that players from that era were not great, if Jack O'Shea or Matt Connor were playing today and training alongside today's players they would surely be among the best in the game. If the multiple World Cup winning Brazil team of the 60's and 70's at their peak played today's relatively average Brazil team I doubt they would get past the half way line. That does not mean they weren't great. Sport evolves over time, albeit I think the evolution of sports science in the past decade has accelerated at a faster rate than for several decades beforehand. We are probably close enough to the peak of what can be achieved in that regard, especially in professional sports. GeniusGerry (Kerry) - Posts: 1957 - 29/05/2020 00:14:49 2279425 Link 8 |
Agree that every era must be judged in it's own context. Nevertheless considering that the players of the 70s/80s grew up in an era of less distractions and kicked football from a very young age almost daily then I do think it is notable that the senior county players of that time were such inaccurate kickers of the ball. Dermot Crowe recounts a sequence in the 81 final, considered a classic, where six kicks in a row went to opposing players only ending when Tim Kennelly scuffed the ball over the sideline. Crowe says there was a joke at the time about Dublin's Mick Holden that every time he got the ball he kicked it over the sideline but it didn't matter because most times the opposition kicked the line ball straight back to Mick.
sligo joe (Dublin) - Posts: 205 - 29/05/2020 14:35:54 2279443 Link 0 |
Not a bad 'B' team ;)
essmac (Tyrone) - Posts: 796 - 29/05/2020 15:57:43 2279446 Link 0 |
He ceratinly was exceptional at 17. Rooney was one of those lads who was man big when a kid and appeared a prodigy at youth level. Once he had to play with other adults, he was still a very good player, but he struggled to make the same impact he had as a youth player. I'm not sure that he had the brains or the character to make it as a true great, ultimately - remember 2010? True greats burn more brightly under pressure; Rooney flopped: https://www.theguardian.com/football/2010/jul/06/wayne-rooney-world-cup-expectation
essmac (Tyrone) - Posts: 796 - 29/05/2020 16:11:18 2279447 Link 0 |
Joke of a team obviously people don't remember the Galway teams that won all irelands in 98, 01 the Meath team that won all-irelands in 96, 99 and the cork teams that won all-irelands in 90 and 2010 Maroonforever (Galway) - Posts: 372 - 29/05/2020 16:21:18 2279448 Link 1 |
Good pick. Best Tyrone player I ever seen was Frank McGuigan. Achieved little compared to subsequent Tyrone players; not managed or shielded from hangers-on like he'd be nowadays; best years in the US etc; and on that basis you'll meet non-Tyrone people telling you that eg S Cavanagh was a better player etc. (And when you meet someone talking rubbish to that extent, just drink up and leave tbh. ) But if you're just rating men on raw natural talent, The Bear had it all. That aside, I like Canavan's selection in that link: 1. J. O'Leary 2. K. McKeever 3. S. Moynihan 4. S.M. Lockhart 5. T. O'Sé 6. K. McGeeney 7. P. Curran 8. D. O'Sé 9. A. Tohill 10. J. McCartan 11. J. Fallon. 12. M. FitzGerald 13. M. Linden 14. P. Joyce 15. Gooch My main comment on the RTE selection is how on earth do you leave out D O'Sé - the best proper midfielder this century. essmac (Tyrone) - Posts: 796 - 29/05/2020 16:51:49 2279452 Link 3 |
I think that anecdote might be a bit of an exaggeration but there is no doubt that today's players are better at just about everything, faster, stronger and better coached. You will find the same in every single field sport in the world I promise you. Don't forget the football itself has become lighter and easier to kick over time as designs, materials and even the boots players wear have improved. Similarly in hurling some feel the sliotar has become too light and is too easy to puck over huge distances. GeniusGerry (Kerry) - Posts: 1957 - 29/05/2020 19:39:42 2279460 Link 7 |
I think these terms like "proper" mid-fielder, "real" defender, "total" attacker are a load of BS when it comes to a team game.
sligo joe (Dublin) - Posts: 205 - 29/05/2020 20:40:37 2279462 Link 1 |
Sadly not sure of the merits of a 26 county TV programme claiming to be impartial on a 32 county sport. A lot of people in the North cannot or do not watch the Sunday game. tyroneed (Tyrone) - Posts: 700 - 30/05/2020 12:24:05 2279510 Link 1 |
Can't disagree with you there, the embarrassingly grudging acknowledgement for example of the Tyrone team winning their first three Sams was cringeworthy. I can only imagine the backslapping euphoria if this was achieved by a team from the 26 counties. I don't know if the spat with Mickey Harte is now part of the problem but the begrudgery towards Tyrone predates that. The difference in attitude to a Donegal's all Ireland victory by the Sunday game panel was notable. sligo joe (Dublin) - Posts: 205 - 30/05/2020 13:08:10 2279518 Link 2 |
Tyrone under represented in that team and hard to believe not one Meath player makes the list considering they won 4 All Irelands been 87 and 99. ballydalane (Kilkenny) - Posts: 1112 - 30/05/2020 21:51:12 2279555 Link 1 |
Very hard to compile a "best of" team over a 40 year span...we have had so many great players you could name 10 great teams and folks it's all opinion so I don't know why everyone gets so upset... yew_tree (Mayo) - Posts: 10339 - 30/05/2020 23:53:44 2279564 Link 3 |
I've analyzed the last 50 years of footballers that I've seen play, and have objectively come up with my Top 20, well 21 as 6 subs are allowed these days. There are the players who I've seen whom always performed on the day, even when the day went against their team; the guys who never seemed to have a bad day; who always stood up and were counted. These are the guys whom I'd summons to go to war with in the morning. My top 20 is not based on the number of AI medals won, nor indeed the amount of all-stars but rather on courage, awareness, class and delivery. The players are not listed according to merit, but in a general order. It's a tough ask, ain't it? (1) Matt Connor (2) Jack O'Shea (3) Frank McGuigan snr (4) Seamus Moynihan (5) Paidi O'Se (6) Pat Spillane (7) Gerry McEntee (8) Maurice Fitzgerald (9) Sean Lowry (10) Peter Canavan (11) Brian Mullins (12) Stephen Cluxton (13) Colm O'Rourke (14) Martin O' Connell (15) Michael Murphy (16) Lee Keegan (17) Brian Fenton (18) James McCarthy (19) Tomas O'Se (20) Greg Blaney (21) Colm Cooper foreveryoung (USA) - Posts: 31 - 31/05/2020 14:04:52 2279585 Link 0 |
"There are the players who I've seen whom always performed on the day, even when the day went against their team; the guys who never seemed to have a bad day" Really? Moynihan is an all time great but definitely had bad days. Lee Keegan too, particularly last year's semi final. Stephen Cluxton has had a LOT of bad days that somehow get completely ignored when his career is analysed. cavanman47 (Cavan) - Posts: 4135 - 31/05/2020 15:59:23 2279596 Link 5 |
Dublin having a kickout strategy/ kickout plays instead of just kicking the ball as far as possible. has been the most influential thing to happen Gaelic football that I can remember with most teams quickly trying to follow. Overall I don't think it has been great for the game and would love to get rid of kicking tees to make much harder to implement. But it was a very smart development which you have to give Dublin credit for. One question I would love to know the answer to is how this came about. Did Cluxton come up with this or did one of the players he was kicking to suggest this or was this the idea of the management team?. bdbuddah (Meath) - Posts: 768 - 31/05/2020 16:47:04 2279600 Link 1 |