logo
Hannah Tyrrell: ‘I just wanted to prove people wrong. I'm very competitive. I don't let anybody win'

Hannah Tyrrell: ‘I just wanted to prove people wrong. I'm very competitive. I don't let anybody win'

Irish Timesa day ago
This is the end. For real this time. A week short of her 35th birthday, Hannah Tyrrell heads for
Croke Park
this weekend like a kid who keeps finding a way to put off bedtime but now, finally, is ready to relent. As long as
Dublin
and
Meath
don't finish level and go to a replay, this will be her final game of
intercounty football
.
She thought – she knew – that her final game was last year, when Galway beat them in extra-time in the All-Ireland quarter-final. In Parnell Park that afternoon, her family and friends gathered around her afterwards and everybody accepted that was that. Her second coming with Dublin had been a beautiful coda to a rugby career whose success had surprised her as much as anyone. Now it was time to go and live and be.
'I knew – well, I thought I knew – going into last year that it would be my last year,' Tyrrell says. 'And so when we lost to Galway in the quarter-final, it was obviously devastating and not where we wanted to end up. But, yeah, I was done. I definitely was ready to walk away and move on and do other things in my life.'
So she did. She and her wife Sorcha have two-year-old Aoife at home and, as any parents of a toddler will attest, that pretty much dictates what 'doing other things in your life' means. Aoife was born just a few weeks before Dublin's All-Ireland victory in 2023 and is just getting to the stage now where she understands what it means when she sees Tyrrell grabbing her gear and heading for the door. As far as everyone was concerned, there was going to be a lot less of that.
READ MORE
But a trip to Australia around Christmas changed things. She went over to see family but while she was there, she met up with Sinead Goldrick, one of the dwindling number of AFLW players who has managed to keep up an intercounty career to go along with her Aussie Rules one. Goldrick was coming back for one last year and popped the question to Tyrrell. Why not do the same?
Hannah Tyrrell with her daughter Aoife, then seven weeks old, after Dublin defeated Kerry in the 2023 All-Ireland ladies final. Photograph: Laszlo Geczo/Inpho
Well Sinead, the why-nots were plentiful. Hannah Tyrrell had been playing top-level sport in one code or another since 2008. She was 18 years old when she played in her first FAI Cup final, losing to St Francis in the 2009 decider before winning it in 2011.
She flitted between Shamrock Rovers and the Dublin Gaelic football team for a few years before taking up rugby on a whim and being fast-tracked to a full-time Ireland contract in 2014. For most of the past decade and a half, her time was never entirely her own.
'I have a young family at home and I wanted to be able to spend time with them and not be restricted by all the training and everything else,' Tyrrell says. 'Even just summer holidays – as a teacher, you're confined to certain days you can go away and stuff, and obviously that's in the middle of the football season.
[
Meath v Dublin All-Ireland final: Throw-in time, team news, where to watch
Opens in new window
]
'That stuff can be incredibly frustrating, if you're not involved in football, for the people around me. But no, coming back, obviously there were lots of conversations with team-mates, with the two lads Derek and Paul and obviously with my wife Sorcha about how we would make it work.
'There are obviously sacrifices people have to make in order to make training and a couple of accommodations here and there with management. But I suppose I felt things didn't go to plan last year and I wasn't entirely comfortable with how I played last year. It was hard to walk away on an ending like that. So we made things work to go again.'
Hannah Tyrrell breaks away to score a try for Ireland in a Women's Six Nations game against Wales at Cardiff Arms Park in 2021. Ireland won 45-0. Photograph: Robbie Stephenson/Inpho
Even then, it probably should have ended before now. Dublin were having a reasonably drama-free championship right up until the point at which they weren't. A fortnight ago in Tullamore, as the clock ticked down to 43 seconds left with Galway a point ahead, it looked for all the world like the curtain was definitely falling on Tyrrell's career this time around.
[
Dublin putting 2021 hurt behind them to set the record straight against Meath
Opens in new window
]
But a free conceded by Galway for over-carrying got moved up to the 40m arc because of time-wasting. Had the Galway players just dropped the ball and let Dublin get on with it, it would just have been a matter of seeing out the 43 seconds with 15 players behind the ball. But it got moved up and Tyrell was able to kill the rest of the clock and send the equaliser over the black spot to bring the game to extra-time.
'It was tense, it was frantic and all the rest. But you want to be in a very calm head space when you're playing football and particularly when you're on the ball as a forward. So for us, we were kind of just thinking about the next play, trying to keep tipping over a couple of scores.
'Because I think, for both teams in the second-half there was a period of 15-20 minutes where nobody scored. Just because of the nature of it and the intensity, the tackling from defenders, etc. So for us, we were just trying to stay as calm and level headed as possible and keep our work rate up. We knew that if we played the way we know we can, the scores were there for us. We needed every last second to to get them.'
So here she is. One last game. One last big stage. For all her achievements, Tyrrell never actually played in Croke Park until 2021. It was only a month after lining out for her last rugby game in the Six Nations and she slotted in with Dublin as they took on Cork in the league final. She has always loved it there and revelled in the space – her Player of the Match display against Kerry in 2023 was an adornment to the old place.
Ireland's Tyrrell is tackled by Maria Magatti of Italy in a 2021 Women's Six Nations Championship match at Energia Park. Photograph: Ryan Byrne/Inpho
Back in real life, Tyrrell teaches history in St Patrick's Cathedral Grammar School in the city. She leans on that sense of history every time she sets foot in the stadium, all the players that went before, all the drama that unfolded. She isn't the kind of high-profile player who brushes off what these things mean to the women coming behind her. Embraces it, in fact.
'That's why I'm such a passionate advocate for giving women's sport a chance and for trying to give it coverage and everything else. People wonder why it's not seen as being at the same level as men's sport and all the rest. And I'm like, 'We're still in our infancy.'
'Women's Gaelic Football has only existed since the mid-1970s. Even if you take rugby, men's professional rugby only came in in the mid-1990s – and no fault to the players themselves but when it came in, it wasn't exactly pretty rugby to watch. But give it time and rugby's such a huge sport in Ireland right now.
'Give it time, give it a bit of backing, give it some funding and support and you can see how well it flourishes. And I think we're starting to see that we've a long way to go in women's Gaelic football. But we're definitely moving in the right direction and we've made leaps and bounds.
'We talk about legacies and everything else. That's what our team's about. It's about families, our culture, who we are as people, how privileged and lucky we are to represent our city and this amazing, amazing county. And we want to leave a legacy that younger girls, my daughter included, can look up to and hopefully emulate when they're in our position.'
Tyrrell in St Patrick's CYFC strip during the 2023 FAI Women's Amateur Shield final against Wilton United at Newhill Park in Co Tipperary. Photograph: Tom Beary/Sportsfile
Tyrrell being Tyrrell, she's not going to be leaving team sport entirely behind her. There's club football with Na Fianna still on the horizon and she is looking forward to getting into playing flag American football, the non-contact version of the NFL she so loves. All the stuff that's in her, all the drive and go that made her such a multi-sport phenomenon, she can't just turn it off at the mains.
[
Meath captain Aoibhín Cleary's full focus on All-Ireland glory before trip Down Under
Opens in new window
]
'I'm fairly competitive,' she says. 'When I started playing rugby, I never planned to go on and play for Ireland. I just really enjoyed the sport and then I just wanted to be better each time. And that kind of drove things for me. Gaelic football is the same. When I started, I was a goalkeeper but wanted to play outfield and kind of was told, not outright, but like … you're not good enough, basically.
'And so that there for me was that competitive edge to show that I was. Same with the soccer, being the only girl against boys, I was seen as the weak link. And again, I just wanted to prove people wrong. I'm very competitive. I don't let anybody win, really. That's just been my whole life.
'With the flag football, I joined the South Dublin Panthers last October and played a little bit with them. So I'll go back and play that socially for a bit, it's really good crack. But I'm not the type of person that will be sitting on the couch. It's just not who I am. I have to stay active. I'll look forward to being just somebody, which is nice. Not being in elite sports.'
That's Monday's business though. The astonishing, unique sporting career of Hannah Tyrrell has one more Sunday in it yet.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'I'm just gutted for the girls. The game was nearly over at half time'
'I'm just gutted for the girls. The game was nearly over at half time'

The 42

time2 hours ago

  • The 42

'I'm just gutted for the girls. The game was nearly over at half time'

MEATH MANAGER SHANE McCormack holds his head in his hands before facing the press. The 12-point All-Ireland final defeat to Dublin is hitting home. 'I'm just gutted for the girls, to be honest,' he begins after the 2-16 to 0-10 loss. 'We were always doubted, even at the start of the year before a ball was thrown in, to even get to a quarter-final stage. But we did believe within our circle that we would achieve it. Advertisement 'We (previously) played Dublin three times this year. A 16-point trimming in the league wasn't good so we sat down that week and had a chat among ourselves and we kind of worked on different tactics. And in fairness to the girls with the Leinster campaign, obviously we lost to Dublin in the Leinster final but we were gutted because Dublin got the last eight points without a reply from us. 'So coming into today's game, we knew what was going to happen but the game was nearly over at half time. In fairness to our girls, they battled to the end. I think we were 11 down at half time. In the second half, pretty pleased that we came out of the blocks quick enough. I think we lost the second half by a point. But I'm just gutted for the girls because they're a fantastic bunch.' It's Meath's first All-Ireland senior final defeat in their history. The Royals won their first in 2021, ending Dublin's Drive for Five, and backed it up in 2022. Two consecutive quarter-final defeats to Kerry followed, before they turned the tables and dethroned the 2024 champions in this year's semi-final. That was a huge performance — a stark contrast to today as they trailed by 13 points at one stage in the first half, and failed to score from play until after the restart. Vikki Wall dejected as Dublin celebrate. Leah Scholes / INPHO Leah Scholes / INPHO / INPHO 'Dublin were a little bit hungrier, to be honest,' McCormack continues, rueing 'small margins' like Vikki Wall's spurned goal opportunity when they trailed by one point early doors. 'In the first five or 10 minutes, they hit the blocks running. But there were a few passes that went astray with our girls. Obviously if the goal chances went in, I'm not saying it would have changed the result but we would have been in a different position at half time. It's very hard going in at half time in an All-Ireland final when you're 11 points down. The positive would be for our girls that they came out quick enough there in the second half.' 'When any Dublin team get ahead, they're very hard to claw back,' the former Kildare goalkeeper adds. 'But credit to Dublin today, they're a super team with multiple All-Stars and All-Ireland medal winners. 'We had 16 new girls onto the panel from last year and this year. I think nine girls got their first-ever senior start in an All-Ireland final today, so there are a lot of positives. It is healthy, even with the Under-20s winning the Leinster the other night as well. So it's very positive for Meath ladies football.' ***** Check out the latest episode of The42′s GAA Weekly podcast here

Ireland AM star Eric Roberts shares sweet snaps with son Rían on sun-soaked holiday and fans say he's ‘so like his dad'
Ireland AM star Eric Roberts shares sweet snaps with son Rían on sun-soaked holiday and fans say he's ‘so like his dad'

The Irish Sun

time5 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

Ireland AM star Eric Roberts shares sweet snaps with son Rían on sun-soaked holiday and fans say he's ‘so like his dad'

TOP TRIP Ireland AM star Eric Roberts shares sweet snaps with son Rían on sun-soaked holiday and fans say he's 'so like his dad' IRELAND AM star Eric Roberts has left fans gushing after he shared a series of sweet snaps from his family holiday. The Donegal native and his wife Niamh jetted off to Spain with their little one and extended family for a sun-soaked break. Advertisement 3 Eric jetted off to Spain with his family Credit: Instagram 3 The doting dad shared a glimpse inside his holiday Credit: Instagram 3 Fans shared their love for his post Credit: Instagram The happy couple, who welcomed their first child Rían into the world in January, have been sharing glimpses into their life on social media ever since. The TV star took to his Instagram today to share some of the sweet moments from their fun-filled getaway. Eric posted adorable snaps of his eight-month-old son enjoying the trip, along with loved-up photos of himself and Niamh. In one snap, the host looked happy as ever as he held little Rían in his arms while posing alongside his own dad. Advertisement The doting dad also posted a cute mirror selfie with Rían, as well as a heartwarming snap of Niamh and their baby smiling at each other during the flight. Lastly, the dad-of-one shared plenty of the fun family moments they shared while enjoying their holiday. The presenter captioned his post: "A lovely few days away with the family." Fans and friends flocked to the comment section to share their love for his post. Advertisement Carol said: "Gorgeous family." Tina wrote: "So like his dad baby Rían." Eric Roberts reflects on Donegal defeat Farah gushed: "The baby is so cute." Another added: "Happy family picture." Advertisement Before heading off on his holidays last week, Eric reflected on Donegal's defeat at the All-Ireland final and claimed, "we will be back". The Donegal man was working pitchside with BBC Sport for the big game and gave fans a glimpse behind the scenes of his day at Croke Park. Unfortunately for Eric, he had to watch his home county fall short on the biggest day of the GAA calendar, as Kerry secured yet another All-Ireland title. GAME OVER The presenter was on the edge of his seat throughout the game, watching Donegal play catch-up after such a high-octane start by Kerry. Advertisement After the full-time hooter sounded, Eric took to Instagram to reflect on the big day. The TV star shared a series of snaps from his time working at Croke Park. He posted pictures of himself on the pitch before the game and even posed for a snap beside the Sam Maguire cup. But in a subtle nod to the disappointing result for Eric, he ended the post with a short clip of himself looking deflated as the final whistle blew. Advertisement While staying neutral for his presenting duties, the dad-of-one still brought his usual style to the day. He sported a white tee, black trousers and a bright orange jacket paired with white trainers.

'They were awesome' - Cora Staunton and Bríd Stack on Dubs glory
'They were awesome' - Cora Staunton and Bríd Stack on Dubs glory

RTÉ News​

time6 hours ago

  • RTÉ News​

'They were awesome' - Cora Staunton and Bríd Stack on Dubs glory

Dublin produced a ferociously hungry performance to ease past Meath in Sunday's TG4 All-Ireland SFC final. The departure of manager Mick Bohan last November led some to speculate whether this might be a year of transition for the Dubs. Instead, joint-managers Paul Casey and Derek Murray led them to glory, the side peaking when it mattered most to lift the Brendan Martin Cup. Reflecting on the decider, former Mayo star Cora Staunton and seven-time Cork All Star Bríd Stack said Meath could have no complaints. "I don't think (Dublin) ever went away," said Staunton. "Maybe the hurt from 2021, when Meath stopped them from winning five in a row... obviously they won again in 2023, but today they were just awesome. "Meath couldn't match their intensity, their athleticism. Their first-half performance in particular was brilliant. The game was over at half-time. While we wanted it to be a good spectacle, it was over. Dublin were just immense. "Their big players - the likes of Carla Rowe, Orlagh Nolan, Kate Sullivan - dominated up front and their defence were very dominant. Deserving winners. And it was great to see Hannah Tyrrell go out on a high after a wonderful career." Stack concurred. She was particularly impressed with Dublin's energy, the constant running with and without the ball that had Meath all at sea. "You just couldn't fault the fluidity of their movement - the link play, the level of fitness was absolutely just on show from start to finish," said Stack. "I suppose the intent was the biggest thing. "It was the team that felt a bit of hurt I suppose last year, bowing out to Galway. They came back with a massive will and a massive intent. They did that from start to finish. "All their big players stepped up."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store