
Shane O'Donnell says Michael Murphy's Donegal return left teammates starstruck
SHANE O'DONNELL had to see the proof for himself before accepting the return of the man with an idol's reputation was more than idle speculation.
The
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Donegal footballer Shane O'Donnell poses for a portrait at the national launch of the GAA Football All-Ireland Senior Championship Series at the Croke Park
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Michael Murphy of Donegal was hailed by Shane O'Donnell as the team's idol
Having been convinced that it was too good to be true, O'Donnell, 23, was elated to encounter the three-time All-Star forward when he linked back up with the Donegal panel following the conclusion of his club commitments.
He recalled: 'There were rumours going about.
'It was a closed camp and I didn't actually believe it until I'd seen it with my own eyes when I got back there.
'It's good to have him back. He's a great man and he's a great ambassador for Donegal.'
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O'Donnell's first season with Donegal looked set to be icon Murphy's last as the Glenswilly man stepped away at the end of 2022.
Yet despite the two-year hiatus, he has picked up where he left off.
Murphy, 35, was a key figure as
He continued to play a starring role during the All-Ireland group stage and collected the man-of-the-match award after Sunday's win over Mayo.
O'Donnell said: 'When you were in the club championship and he was playing with Glenswilly, they were flying with him there and he was performing well in all those games.
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'I kind of had a fair idea that he would've settled in well whenever he came back — probably not as well as what he's doing at the minute.
'He's performing in all the big games for us and he's coming away with individual awards as well.
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'He's doing very well and I'm very happy for him. There's no better man to be getting that recognition. He deserves it.
'He's a bit of an icon in there for a lot of us because there are a lot of young boys there that wouldn't have played with him beforehand.
'Thankfully I was there for his last year under Declan Bonner and Stephen Rochford so I was able to work with him for a year.
'But there's a lot of new faces there that wouldn't have seen him there before.
'I think a lot of us now just kind of idolise him and look up to him.'
Donegal will be hoping for another Murphy masterpiece on Sunday when they host Louth in Ballybofey for their All-Ireland preliminary quarter-final.
A draw was all they
The hooter sounded just as match-winner Ciarán Moore collected a Shaun Patton kick-out.
O'Donnell was one of several members of the Donegal set-up on the sideline who urged Moore to end the game by kicking the ball out of play.
Having just been replaced by Eoin McHugh, he was 'fully aware' that a draw was worth just as much as a win in the overall standings.
But he explained: 'It was probably a different story with the boys on the pitch.
'When you're caught up in those types of games and those types of moments, you're not thinking about other things.
'There were a lot of people and it was hard to get messages on board with the noise from the supporters.
'I think we were shouting a few things as well but they didn't hear us.'
WELL DON
Nevertheless, Donegal bagged their first win over Mayo since the 2012 All-Ireland SFC final.
There was also significance in the fact that it was their first Championship victory over a Division 1 team from outside their own province since 2016.
O'Donnell added: 'We always find in the last couple of years that we do well against Ulster teams.
'And maybe when we go outside of it, it's not the same.
'I suppose for us, we haven't beaten Mayo in a long time — not that I can think of anyway.
'But it was just nice to get that victory over them in the end.'
Donegal footballer Shane O'Donnell poses for a portrait at the national launch of the GAA Football All-Ireland Senior Championship Series at the Croke Park
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The 42
3 hours ago
- The 42
'You are used to being on the road' - Shane O'Donnell makes light of Donegal controversy
BY THE TIME Shaun Patton stood over his final kickout last Sunday, there were mere seconds left on the clock and Mayo had just drawn level with Donegal through Fergal Boland's point. There's been a huge amount of talk since that all he had to do was boot the ball out and both teams would have made it through at the expense of Cavan. That discounts the possibility that the players may not have been aware of events in Brewster Park Enniskillen, where Tyrone were dishing out a beating to Cavan. Or even the suspicion that players were deliberately shielded from events elsewhere. Patton's kick was wide to his left. It went over the head of the intended target. It bounced kindly to Ciaran Moore and it's difficult to think of another Donegal player who would have had the conditioning to achieve what he did, which was to outpace Sean Morahan and step inside Jack Carney to kick the point that put Mayo out. Better to have to face Cavan down the line than Mayo, the logic would follow. On the sideline, Shane O'Donnell had been taken off. He, and others, were screaming to put the ball out of bounds 'There were a few boys shouting at him to kick it out. And there were probably a few boys shouting at Shaun then as well to drain the clock and wait for the hooter to go,' he admits at the Croke Park launch of the All-Ireland football series. 'It was just so hard to get messages on board even when I was on the pitch. You were unable to hear things from the sideline just because of the way the stand was. And the stand was on top of the bench.' A dramatic day in the Hyde. And the drama didn't end then either, as Donegal manager Jim McGuinness railed about the perceived unfairness of having to travel to Roscommon to play the game in a neutral venue. McGuinness' point that Donegal were somewhat discriminated against was a moot one, given how Kerry travelled to Tullamore to take on Meath and unavailability of other, more equidistant stadiums. The complaint about not getting a hotel within the county is also frivolous, given that Donegal routinely book into the Slieve Russell hotel in Ballyconnell, Co Cavan for their games in Clones, Co Monaghan. Advertisement Asked if the situation around Dr Hyde Park came as an annoyance to the players, O'Donnell answered, 'Not really, there wouldn't be really much chat about it. 'I suppose with big games you are used to being on the road at this stage and you get your preparation and all done the night before with travelling down to hotels et cetera. We don't get too caught up in it, it's probably more of the logistics team or whatever that are dreading the thought of it. Shane O'Donnell pictured at the All Ireland football launch. Ray McManus / SPORTSFILE Ray McManus / SPORTSFILE / SPORTSFILE 'We are just happy to be playing in the big games and being at this stage of the All-Ireland series.' Donegal, along with Meath, have now played seven games each across this championship. 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'Last year, I was nearly living out of the car at one stage. It is nice to be home. It is nice to be able to recover and rest, especially with the quick turnaround for games. 'I feel good at the minute and I am looking after the body really well which is the main thing.' One huge benefit to Donegal GAA has been the growth of the Atlantic Technological University in Letterkenny, with Michael Murphy attached to the institution. However, some do need to go further for their education and O'Donnell is not afraid to admit the commuting to and from Dublin has had a toll. 'It is very tough. I suppose after my first year in I thought maybe that I wasn't performing as much as I would have liked to be performing. I was maybe putting that down to fatigue and tiredness and what not. Driving can be hard on the body as well with hamstrings. 'When I went back in last year with Jim and all coming back it was kind of hard to turn it down last year. Now it worked out well with how my timetable was in terms of placement and in terms of DCU as well. 'But it was a busy season last year with Sigerson as well. You were having two games a week nearly during the league season. That was tough as well. It was nice now to get on the other side of that and put all my focus into one thing. 'I suppose in terms of comparing to other years I feel a lot fresher and a lot healthier now this year.' James Crombie / INPHO James Crombie / INPHO / INPHO And speaking of Murphy, O'Donnell was able to play alongside him in his first year. He will admit that for some of the younger crew like Finbarr Roarty and Ciaran Moore, there is an element of playing alongside a cast-iron icon this season. O'Donnell insists that when Murphy was taking his first steps back in with the panel, he wasn't aware of it – instead being involved in the Ulster club campaign with St Eunan's. Related Reads 'You couldn't be happy with Saturday' - Paul Geaney gets ready for charge at Sam Maguire Game-by-game guide after today's All-Ireland senior football draw GAA confirm next weekend's All-Ireland senior football and hurling fixtures 'There were rumours going about,' he explains. 'It was a closed camp and I didn't actually believe it until I'd seen it with my own eyes when I got back there. So it's good to have him back. He's a great man and he's a great ambassador for Donegal.' And there's no surprise that his form has been so critical to Donegal this year. 'I suppose when you're in the club championship and he was playing Glenswilly, they were flying with him there as well and he was performing well in all those games,' states O'Donnell. 'I kind of had a fair idea that he would have settled in well whenever he came back, probably not as well as what he's doing at the minute. 'He's performing in all the big games for us at the minute and he's coming away with individual awards as well there. He's doing very well and I'm very happy for him because there's no better man to be getting that recognition because he deserves it.' * Check out the latest episode of The42′s GAA Weekly podcast here


The Irish Sun
4 hours ago
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‘It's total disrespect' – Cork dual star vents at Camogie Association & LGFA over latest ‘avoidable' fixture clash
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RTÉ News
5 hours ago
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Shane O'Donnell on fateful final play in the Hyde and Michael Murphy's iconic status
In the frantic final seconds of the Donegal-Mayo game, there were more than just Mayo supporters appealing for their opponents to kick the ball dead after the hooter. When Shaun Patton plonked the ball down on the kicking tee with only seconds remaining, Donegal were through in second place regardless of whether they could manufacture a winner. Mayo, meanwhile, would have survived in dramatic fashion at Cavan's expense thanks to Fergal Boland's late equaliser. In certain other sporting cultures, there'd have been little doubt that both teams would have agreed to leave it at that. But Donegal made a late impetuous run for glory, Patton's kickout breaking for Ciarán Moore. The centre-back sped up the left wing past despairing Mayo defenders to secure the winning score - and possibly a complimentary Cavan GAA hoodie in the process. Jim McGuinness praised his players' ruthlessness afterwards, though wing-forward Shane O'Donnell, who'd just been subbed, admits that some on the Donegal bench took a different view to those on the pitch. "There was a few boys probably shouting at him to kick it out and all that," O'Donnell told RTÉ Sport at the launch of the All-Ireland SFC knockout series. "And there was probably a few boys shouting at Shaun then as well to drain the clock and wait for the hooter to go. "It was just so hard to get messages on board even when I was on the pitch. You were unable to hear things from the sideline just because of the way the stand was. "But there was definitely a few bucks - and probably even including myself! - shouting on to kick it out. That's just not how it panned out. But we're happy with how it came out." Were the Donegal players on the pitch actually aware of the lie of the land before the last kickout? "I was fully aware because it was just after coming off at that stage. Now the boys on the pitch were probably a different story. "I suppose when you are caught up in those type of games and those type of moments, you are not thinking about other things. "Again, there was a lot of people in Hyde Park and it was hard to get messages on board with the noise from the supporters. "I think we were shouting a few things as well but they didn't hear us... It's probably a good thing they didn't hear us in the end." Win or draw, Donegal were set for a home preliminary tie in Ballybofey this weekend, with Louth the name to come out of the pot in Monday's draw. That Donegal supporters had to travel to Roscommon for the neutral game against Mayo was a source of controversy, with Jim McGuinness laying into the CCCC for the decision to fix the match for the Hyde outside the dressing room afterwards. In his comments, McGuinness noted that Hyde Park was "38 minutes from Mayo's training ground" and asserted that Donegal supporters were being "taken advantage of". O'Donnell, however, says the players themselves weren't too concerned about the venue, even if it was asking something of travelling fans. "There wouldn't be really much chat about it. I suppose with the big games you are kind of used to being on the road at this stage and you get your preparation and all done the night before with travelling down to hotels and etc. "We don't get too caught up in it, it's probably more of the logistics team that are dreading the thought of it." O'Donnell, now 23, made his Donegal debut in 2022 before opting out of the panel for the write-off campaign of 2023, a decision which did no one's reputation any harm. After spending that summer in America, O'Donnell returned to the panel for the 2024 season, with McGuinness now back at the helm. Having spent a few years as a student in DCU, travelling back and forth to inter-county training, O'Donnell got a teaching placement in Raphoe, where he teaches Maths and PE in the same school as Peadar Mogan. "The big thing for me there was getting home," says O'Donnell. "I was in Dublin there for four years so it was very taxing on the body, Which kind of led to me taking the break as well there in between. "After my first year in I thought maybe that I wasn't performing as well as I would have liked. I was maybe putting that down to fatigue and tiredness and whatnot. Driving can be hard on the body as well with hamstrings and whatnot. "It is definitely a lot easier now being at home, it takes away the travelling. Last year, I was kind of nearly lifting out of the car at one stage. "I suppose in terms of comparing to other years I feel a lot fresher and a lot healthier now this year. " O'Donnell was 10 years old when Michael Murphy captained Donegal to the All-Ireland and his first season coincided with what was originally supposed to be Glenswilly great's swansong in the jersey. Murphy, after two years of punditry work and a stint on the Football Review Committee where he helped to re-model the game we see today, he returned to the Donegal set-up in the off-season. O'Donnell, whose St Eunan's side won the 2024 county title and were preoccupied with the Ulster club, was one of the last to find out about his return. "I actually didn't get word of it until they got back (training). We fell short in the Ulster Championship there with the club. "So there was rumours going about and whatnot. It was a closed camp and I didn't actually believe it until I'd seen it with my own eyes when I got back there." Has he been startled at Murphy's form since his comeback? "Not really, no. When you're in the club championship and he was playing for Glenswilly, they were flying with him there as well and he was performing well in all those games. "I kind of had a fair idea that he would have settled in well whenever he came back. Probably not as well as what he's doing at the minute. "He's a bit of an icon in there for a lot of us because there's a lot of young boys there that wouldn't have played with him beforehand." Follow a live blog on the All-Ireland Football Championship on Saturday and Sunday on and the RTÉ News app. Listen to updates on Saturday Sport and Sunday Sport on RTÉ Radio 1. Watch highlights on The Saturday Game at 9.15pm and The Sunday Game from 9.30pm on RTÉ2 and RTÉ Player.