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No sneering just stating a fact, I'd take an AI if Billy Bingham managed us.
lilypad (Kildare) - Posts: 1357 - 05/06/2020 17:14:46 2279945 Link 1 |
Thanks Greengrass, its good to have an open minded debate on the actual game and not such a tribal polarised rants, but such is social media these days. Dublin lucked out in a way in the 2017 game with Tyrone, the early goal really enabled Jims game plan and it became obvious the Tyrone game plan was sprung, what surprised me and i think everyone really was the lack of flexibility or plan B at the time and go at Dublin, because Dublin will always cough up chances if you go at them. I often wonder would the game have been different if the early goal hadn't gone in, really there was no pressure on Dublin after it. What i have noticed about polls and best teams over time frames of eras during these restrictions is the distance time makes to judgement, the further out you get from "your era" the greater you become. I remember some of the mud being thrown at Tyrone during the 00's, puke football and thuggery and the like - but its only after the era has passed are they recognized as the great team they were with magnificent players and rightly so. So distance, nostalgia and what happens next all enable future judgement. Dublin and Jim are still fresh, in fact they are very much live and still an active threat and likely the team to beat, they are in all the "greatest" polls already and the story hasnt been finished yet. People are fatigued of us and crave variance and competition - understandably. In many ways i think if Dessie fails, then Jims legend just grows, weird as that sounds. Sometimes the greatness is only evidenced by what comes after. Would Paudi O Se be a great manager if Jack O Connor hadn't followed, would Jack O' Connor been a great manager if Paudi hadn't gone before, interesting neither has been mentioned just to illustrate the point i'm making. TheUsername (Dublin) - Posts: 3671 - 05/06/2020 17:32:37 2279946 Link 4 |
That for me is where Sean gets the nod, he took over players like cassels, orurke, mcentee, Lyons, harnan, etc etc. All players who had underachieving before him.
royaldunne (Meath) - Posts: 17035 - 06/06/2020 09:29:49 2279988 Link 1 |
He may have ticked boxes! - He indeed was a great manager there is no doubt about that and one of the greatest, Why did he resign his job? and why did he leave it so late when the league was about to start. Was any of his achievements about himself?. When he took over Dublin had exceptional players and he did take them to new heights. Can you explain his stewardship at the end of the AI against Mayo with the incident when 9/10 Mayo players were rugby tackled to the ground- was that spontaneous reaction/planned in advance?. or was it herd immunity reaction? -it was certainly a new twist which our RTE analysts failed to comment on (spec savers come to mind).Some of great managers continue until the lose , or indeed continue until they are released of their position. Would Sean Boylan, or Mickey Harte resign after a win, or would they continue as most great managers would do. Now aforementioned observations / queries/questions are tongue in cheek.
browncows (Meath) - Posts: 2189 - 06/06/2020 11:03:06 2279994 Link 8 |
Was any of his achievements about himself? Dont think so really, he wouldn't even describe himself as a manager, more a facilitator. In a way much of his approach was psychological and cultural, it was about bringing out the best qualities and fitting that into the collective and getting people as good as they could individually, to contribute to a shared collective and goal. He then tapped into the meso and macro systems of the community and county not just as footballers, this Dublin team always represented and contributed to the community, but there was humility and service about it compared to any other Dublin team certainly in my memory, he unified team, community and county as one living breathing powerful force existing to mutually serve each other, its something other counties cant replicate on our scale. The greater good was always Dublin GAA. He knew the threats and land mines in Dublin for the GAA team, media, hype, pride, profile and dealt with them all accordingly. Its what become known as the Dublin way. Dublin had exceptional players when he took over? We had good players, who had gotten to the promised land in 2011, 2012 saw us return to form and could easily have gone on from there and players could have relaxed on their 1 All Ireland for the rest of their careers. Gavins management changed that in 2013. The 2013 team was distinctly different and better then 2011 and 2012, we had moved on from scraping results with a bit of luck to blowing teams away with a brand of swashbuckling football. The players from 2011 improved 30% in my opinion under Gavins coaching. Going on from there Gavin built 3 teams in my opinion, 2013 -2014, 2014 - 21016. 2017 -2019. I think his philosophy was that a team had a life cycle of 2-3 years before a refresh was needed. No other manger i dont think has ever been so successful and transitioned his team so much, developed players, been so ruthless and gave youth its fling. The culture from 2011 -2019 - has changed hugely. Pull downs Vs Mayo? A little of both i would suspect, the team would be coached to give no quarter, be clever and fight for every % of an aspect of a win. I do think a bit of a collective mind approach came in to it from the players as well. Im not sure its particularly new and im particularly surprised as a Meath man you havnt seen it before. I can remember games from the 80's/90s' Dublin Vs Meath, were both teams were at it, pull downs, blocks, off the ball etc - its a long time in the game. I dont condone it, but we are as a tough as anyone when we need to be and as cynical as you need to be as well to be champions when the game takes that turn, you have to stand up to every type of challenge. To do what we did you have to have every string to your bow. I didnt like it either, but look the atmosphere and GPS throwing thing meant - there was a feeling in the ground, that all bets were off and this was a primal slog out of hunger. Great day though and super atmosphere, still dont know how we won that game. Continuing on until you loose? Its a very personal thing isnt it, many, then and now thought Sean had stayed to long, many say Micky is there to long - is it better to burn out or fade away - certainly Meath, Kerry and maybe Tyrone will to regress after loosing such long standing managers,so is that really the right way - im not sure. Im not sure there is a right or wrong. People make personal decisions around their pass times and Jim made his. Ive heard much on his departure and i would say there was more then one reason, career progression that meant he would have to spend more time in Europe then in Ireland, i think is the key reason, he has a young family to heading into important years, he was at the end of the latest two/three year cycle and i think he felt it needed freshening up again over a couple of years. He would have been conscious of others getting an opportunity like Dessie to and he had been involved with Dublin underage - senior for 20 years. Then what was left to achieve? he had done what hadn't been done before and beaten every county in Ireland - there wasnt any one left to beat. Many, many reasons, im sure. Jim always did things his way and he wouldn't be troubled by what others did and why would he? They never achieved what he did. The timing right before the league had to do with personal circumstances and a career opportunity is my understanding, of course only Jim knows himself. I'm not sure he is retired really hes just left the position, i wont be surprised to see him return at some point, hes still doing a bit up in Ballyboden and Towers with the kids. Dublin Gaa is always going to be a massive passion for him and hes a very young man in managerial terms still. TheUsername (Dublin) - Posts: 3671 - 06/06/2020 16:15:06 2280017 Link 6 |
Billy Morgan is up there with the greatest and has got no where near the recognition he deserves. Four All-Ireland Finals in a row, Cork were robbed by Tommy Sugrue in '88, that should have been a three in a row team. He rebuilt a team for an All-Ireland in 1993 and took Cork from been beaten by Limerick in 2003 under Tompkins back to an All-Ireland Final in 2007. The 2010 All-Ireland winning team was constructed by Morgan and put the foundations firmly in place for that win. The_Bull (Cork) - Posts: 243 - 07/06/2020 14:12:45 2280064 Link 3 |
From a Limerick hurling point of view your point is interesting. Where Cork managed to get everybody behind the hurling in the early Century, we could never do it and when playing Cork in 2004 we had six players unavailable- Stephen Lucey, Mike O'Brien, Connor Fitzgerald, Mark Keane, Mark O'Riordan and the last mans identity escapes me. Whatever about pulling a Munster win, and they went very close, we never had a serious chance of winning a football All Ireland and the dual player situation was very badly handled, unlike what was done in Cork.
Oldertourman (Limerick) - Posts: 162 - 09/06/2020 17:48:52 2280202 Link 0 |
icehonesty (Wexford) - Posts: 2475 - 09/06/2020 21:01:25 2280220 Link 4 |
Limerick lost by 1 point to Cork in the 2009 Munster Football Final. Cork got to the All-Ireland Final beating Tyrone. Limerick lost to Kerry by a point in 2010 and took Cork to extra time. Limerick were unquestionably a very good team during that period and could complete with all the top teams.
The_Bull (Cork) - Posts: 243 - 09/06/2020 23:20:53 2280232 Link 0 |
Question to a Cork man. Why historically do Cork underperform so much in football?. Over 500k in Cork. Historically Cork have a huge no. football players (when growing up in the 1980's I heard Cork had more football players than any other counties by a good bit at that time). Even allowing for the successful tradition of hurling in the county meaning players like JBM often pick hurling over football, the playing numbers down the years mean Cork should be, in terms of All Ireland's won, near the top counties totals. bdbuddah (Meath) - Posts: 768 - 10/06/2020 15:44:51 2280305 Link 0 |
Billy Morgan ;) pkboher (Cork) - Posts: 33 - 12/06/2020 13:23:13 2280505 Link 3 |
The state of Meath football since Boylan stepped down shows the significant impact he made to his county. In terms of other great managers the benefits Kerry have of playing in Munster allowed success to continue era after era. The benefits of the resources Dublin have is likely to allow the Dubs to continue being successful post Gavin. I'd still just side with Gavin because even with resources to coach a team to 5 in-a-row is unlikely to ever be repeated. However sometimes it's only after the horse has bolted you realise how great someone was and the rapid decline of Meath football over the past 20 years; showing no signs of getting better highlights the impact Boylan made right across Meath GAA; they were a feared county but now there is little fear of Meath football across the country. sam1884 (UK) - Posts: 707 - 22/06/2020 16:21:51 2281542 Link 3 |
"the benefits Kerry have of playing in Munster allowed success to continue era after era." I don't understand this. Could you elaborate? Cockney_Cat (UK) - Posts: 1115 - 22/06/2020 16:54:18 2281548 Link 1 |
link GreenandRed (Mayo) - Posts: 5955 - 26/06/2020 18:17:49 2281910 Link 6 |