As I stood pitch side in Croke Park last week for the photo call it was hard to get my head around the fact that another year had gone by and that we were back where we were 12 months previous.
I was delighted to be asked back again, primarily as a judge in the Bord Gáis Energy Breaking Through Player of the Year competition, but also as guest blogger and match predictor on breakingthrough.ie. The opportunity my role gives me to attend so many top class games is one that was hard to leave behind.
However I wasn’t the only one making a return.
Once again this year, Ger Cunningham (former Cork great but also the Bord Gáis Energy Sports Sponsorship Manager) is my nemesis in the online Head 2 Head competition and as Joanne Cantwell put us through our paces at the launch it was great to see that Ger was full of his old tricks – trying to prise valuable Galway hurling insights from me, but I am wise to his ways now and all he got this year was a “Yerrah”!
He’ll have to get up earlier next year to catch me out!
Ken McGrath was one of the new faces however. It will be a strange Summer of hurling as Waterford go in to battle without him patrolling the Déise rearguard. Apart from the cast on his broken thumb, he is still looking so fit and it is hard to believe that he is no longer hurling at the top level. He is one of the best players I have ever seen.
While another year would have been on his mind given that he togged out during the National League, Ken has given more than plenty over the years to the Waterford cause and nobody can begrudge him his retirement.
His new challenge though is how he adapts to the role of Breaking Through Player of the Year judge – no blue tinted specs allowed Ken!
Outside of the judging panel, there were players aplenty in HQ in their role as Bord Gáis Energy U-21 Ambassadors. In some ways it was the same old faces, or maybe I should say new faces in the same old jerseys, as I looked at the latest young guns lining up ahead of the campaign with their respective U-21 county teams.
The beauty of this competition as we all know is that this is the last true knock out competition in hurling – so unfortunately many of the players that togged out in Croke Park last week, won’t see July, never mind August.
All that training. All that heart break. All that effort. Gone in 60 minutes. The last true bastion of knock out hurling but that is what makes it so special.
There is certainly an argument in favour of knock out when you see the extra bite or the extra edge that it gives a game – but I won’t be calling for that if Westmeath beat us this Saturday night in Mullingar!
They were given no chance of beating an up and coming Carlow team in their first match and after coming through that they will have lots of confidence. Brian Hanley is also their manager (an Athenry man) and he will know us all inside out. He will have them well prepared and I should know. Brian was coach to me and a few more of the guys on the Galway U-21’s over the past few seasons.
Our own preparations are going well. We had a good win over Limerick last weekend in a challenge match. Great to see Skehill and Monty (Alan Kerins) back in a maroon jersey it has to be said.
My preparations ain’t going well though as I have had a few problems with injury for much of the season so far and it’s touch and go to see if I will be available for selection. Fingers crossed I will be fit.
Anyway, knock out or not – we’ll be ready for Westmeath.
The first knock out blow in the Bord Gáis Energy U-21 Championship will be to Tipperary or Waterford as they take centre stage tonight on the very sod where the Premier County put on probably the performance of last years U-21 championship when they beat Galway in the All-Ireland Final.
It is a huge task for Waterford and for Noel Connors, one of this year’s Bord Gáis Energy U-21 Ambassadors, to go there and win. But they are a coming force and you could easily see the winner of this game going on to win Munster – and for that very reason the heart break for whoever loses will be all the greater.
I remember my first year at U-21 level with Galway. I was only 17 years of age and was selected on the bench for the game against Kilkenny. Admittedly we didn’t have the threat of knock out in June or even July, we had a long wait until August for our first taste but that All-Ireland Semi-Final date would loom large on the horizon and as it drew nearer the nerves just got bigger and bigger.
So I can appreciate exactly the nerves that the Tipp and Déise lads will be feeling as they head to Thurles this evening. U-21 is slightly more open than its senior counterpart but that makes it all the better as a player to play in and in some ways, as a spectator to watch.
You can really express yourself – but only if your man lets you! And not many will do that!
Best of luck to the lads tonight and indeed to all the players and managers and fans over the course of the Championship.
Talk to ye all soon
Joe

















