All posts by Peter Nugent

Donore Harriers Athletics Report – w/e July 18th 2021

HIGHLIGHTS: Abdel Laadjel 11th of 23 in European Under 20 Championships 5,000m final. Brilliant sprint double for Aoife Lynch in the Malta International Meet. Ruby Blake gold in U12 Shot Putt in Dublin Juvenile Championships, as 2 more silver and 4 more bronze are added to the club’s medal tally. Honor Lynch 1st in IMRA junior short course trial.

 

 

REPORT: Abdel Laadjel had to settle for 11th place in the 5,000m final at the EUROPEAN UNDER 20 CHAMPIONSHIPS at Tallinn, Estonia on Friday (16.07.2021). In a big field of 23 starters and in searing 29° heat, it proved to be a huge learning experience for the 17-year-old Donore Harriers athlete.

Laadjel ran the first 10 and a-half laps in a front group of 12 to 14 athletes, with the leaders holding a moderate 3-minute per km pace in the opening 3km. Just after halfway the young Donore star briefly moved up to 3rd place but was quickly relegated back into the pack by the current of opposition.

A 2.53 fourth kilometre saw a couple of athletes lose ground on the leading group. The business end of the race happened with two laps remaining. The leaders picked up the pace again and this time Laadjel was unable to respond. The race was won by Joel Lilleso (14.32.93) of Denmark, ahead of David Cantero (14.33.55) of Spain. Laadjel recorded a time of 14.50.07. There were two other Irish competitors in the race, with Dean Casey from the Ennis Track 6th in 14.40.74 and Callum Morgan (St. Malachy’s AC) 21st in 15.15.52. A pragmatic Abdel, who was competing at European level for the first time, said afterwards: “I am not going to beat myself up too much. I was there to get a medal, but I missed a lot of work. It was very competitive, another level. I will learn from the experience”.

Sprinter Aoife Lynch continued her excellent summer season with a double victory in the 100m and 200m at the EAP MALTA INTERNATIONAL MEET at Marsa, Malta on Saturday (17.07.2021). She was a convincing winner over 200m in the time of 24.66 ahead of nearest rival Sarah Busuttil (25.28) from the local Pembroke AC Malta club. Lynch then won a keenly contested 100m race in 11.74 – her 2nd fastest time – holding out the challenge of her Irish relay colleague Lauren Roy (11.83) from the City of Lisburn club. Another improving Donore Harriers athlete Eva McPartlan (12.49) came 7th in the same race recording a massive new personal best time.

The DUBLIN JUVENILE TRACK & FIELD CHAMPIONSHIPS continued with 3 more sessions. On Day 9 at Tallaght on Thursday evening (15.07.2021) Amber Lynch (11.92m) picked up a bronze medal in the Javelin.

Days 10 and 11 were held at Santry on Friday evening and Saturday (16 & 17.07.2021). On Friday, Ruby Blake won the Under 12 Girls Shot Putt, with Roisin Kirby picking up a bronze medal in the Under 15 SP contest. Five newcomers competed in the Heats of the 500 metres in the Under 10 age grade. Lola Blake came 6th in Heat 1, Ciara Jackson 9th in Heat 2, and Zara Kelligher 8th in Heat 3. In the Boys, Tony Glaholm came 10th in Heat 1 and Max Henleywillis 9th in Heat 2.

In Saturday’s action Roisin Kirby (4.60m) came 2nd in the Under 15 Girls Long Jump with a personal best of 4.60m. Bobby Amandi missed out on a gold medal by just one centimetre in the Under 18 Boys Long Jump. His best effort of 5.58m was edged out by a Clonliffe Harriers athlete who managed a jump of 5.59m.

Joyce Bakanabo in the Under 19 Girls Long Jump and Fiona Jackson in the Under 12 250m Hurdles won bronze medals. Annabela Omozee narrowly missed out on bronze in the Under 11 Girls 600m, having to settle for 4th place after qualifying 2nd from the heat.

Eimear Finn (4.47m) came 6th in the Under 17 Girls Long Jump, as Isabella Jackson was unable to complete her Under 15 Girls 250m Hurdles race.

The IRISH MOUNTAIL RUNNING ASSOCIATION Junior Trials for the forthcoming British & Irish International took place at Mount Camaderry, near Brockagh in Co. Wicklow on Saturday morning (17.07.2021). In very hot and humid conditions Oliver Hopkins, the 2020 All Ireland Schools Junior Grade Champion, was forced to stop with breathing difficulties whilst competing for a top 3 position. He eventually had to settle for 7th in 27.36.

Honor Lynch, stepping up a year, won the Under 17 Girls short course category in 30.11. This was a fine performance considering that she missed so much training in the last 2 years due to injury. Laura Nunan retired from the Junior Girls Long Course.

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EUROPEAN UNDER 20 CHAMPIONSHIPS at Kadriogh Stadium, Tallinn

(DAY 2 – 16.07.2021)

Men’s 5,000m Final: 11th Abdel Laadjel (14.50.07)

EAP MALTA INTERNATIONAL MEET at Marsa, Malta (17.07.2021)

Women’s 100m:1st Aoife Lynch (11.74), 7th Eva McPartlan (12.49 PB)

Women’s 200m: 1st Aoife Lynch (24.66)

DUBLIN JUVENILE TRACK & FIELD CHAMPIONSHIPS Day 9 at Tallaght (15.07.2021)

Under 13 Girls Javelin: 3rd Amber Lynch (11.92m)

DUBLIN JUVENILE TRACK & FIELD CHAMPIONSHIPS Day 10 at Santry (16.07.2021)

Under 10 Girls 500m Heat 1: 6th Lola Blake

Under 10 Girls 500m Heat 2: 9th Ciara Jackson

Under 10 Girls 500m Heat 3: 8th Zara Kelligher

Under 10 Boys 500m Heat 1: 10th Tony Glaholm

Under 10 Boys 500m Heat 2: 9th Max Henleywillis

Under 12 Girls Shot Putt Final: 1st Ruby Blake

Under 15 Girls Shot Putt Final: 3rd Roisin Kirby

DUBLIN JUVENILE TRACK & FIELD CHAMPIONSHIPS Day 11 at Santry (17.07.2021)

Under 11 Girls 600m Final: 4th Annabela Omozee (qualified 2nd from heat)

Under 12 Girls 250m Hurdles Final: 3rd Fiona Jackson

Under 15 Girls 250m Hurdles Final: DNF Isabella Jackson

Under 15 Girls Long Jump Final: 2nd Roisin Kirby (4.60m PB)

Under 17 Girls Long Jump Final: 6th Eimear Finn (4.47m)

Under 19 Girls Long Jump Final: 3rd Joyce Bakanabo

Under 18 Boys Shot Long Jump: 2nd Bobby Amandi (5.58m)

IRISH MOUNTAIN RUNNING ASSOCIATION British & Irish Junior Trials at Camaderry (17.07.2021)

Junior Girls Short Course: 1st Honor Lynch (30.11)

Junior Girls Long Course: DNF Laura Nunan

Junior Boys Short Course: 7th Oliver Hopkins (27.36)

 

01. Abdel Laadjel w Dean Casey Euro U20 5k 09. Bobby Amandi

 

Donore Harriers Athletics Report – w/e July 11th 2021

HIGHLIGHTS: Aoife Lynch, Jack Raftery and Louis O’Loughlin had mixed fortunes in the European Under 23 championships in Estonia. Raftery suffered injury in the 400m heats, whilst O’Loughlin came a creditable 4th in the 800m semi-final. Lynch came 5th in her 100m heat – and then helped Ireland to reach the final of the 4 x 100m as the team set a new national U23 record.

 

Lara O’Byrne set two new PBs in the 3rd Open Graded Meet, with Barbara Cleary and Daragh Keegan winning the Women’s A and Men’s B races respectively. Another gold for Zion Osawe in the 8th session of the Dublin Juvenile Championships, with 3 other club athletes making the podium.

REPORT: Jack Raftery, Aoife Lynch and Louis O’Loughlin gained invaluable experience of competing at a higher level in the EUROPEAN UNDER 23 TRACK & FIELD CHAMPIONSHIPS (8-11.07.2021) at the Kadriogh Stadium in Tallinn, Estonia.

It was perhaps an experience that Raftery will quickly want to forget. Certainly, in athletics terms. The Donore Harriers star lined up in the 2nd of 5 heats in the Men’s 400m on Thursday morning. Against strong athletes from France, Italy, Slovakia and elsewhere he required to run faster than ever to have a chance of qualification to the semi-finals. However, his challenge was short lived as a hamstring injury caused Raftery to pull up after just 30 metres. It was desperately disappointing, particularly as he was confirmed to compete in the Irish 4 x 400m team on Sunday. The heat was won by Ricky Pettrucciani of Switzerland in 45.95, who went on to win the gold medal in a championship record (45.02).

Also competing in the first morning of the championships was Aoife Lynch. Aoife had to wait a nervous extra hour to run in Heat 2 of the women’s 100 metres as heavy rain delayed the competition. Lynch was ranked 6th of 7 in the line-up. She sprinted strongly over the first 50 metres and put herself in contention for a top 4 finish and qualification to the semi-final. However, she was edged out by Marina Baboi of Romania and had to settle for 5th position in the time of 11.88. The sprint was won by Rani Rosius in 11.41. Rosius from Belgium won silver in the final in 11.43.

Louis O’Loughlin lined up in second of three 800m semi-finals on Friday morning (09.07.2021). Ranked 7th of the 8 starters and with just two athletes qualifying to the final he required a lifetime best to progress. He passed the 400m mark in equal 7th place in 54.58. An eventful 2nd lap saw the French and German athletes tangle and fall with 170 metres remaining, causing the Donore Harriers man to jump and swerve past them before he gained to place 4th with a strong finish. O’Loughlin’s time of 1.49.43 ranked him 12th of the 26 entrants as he failed to make the final as a fastest-loser. The heat was won by Simone Barontini of Italy in 1.47.52, who went on to win gold in 1.46.20.

Aoife Lynch was back in action on the 4th and final day of the championships on Sunday (11.07.2021). This time in the 4 x 100m relay. The Irish quartet comprised of Molly Scott (St. Laurence O’Toole AC) on Leg 1, Lynch on Leg 2, Lauren Roy (City of Lisburn AC) on Leg 3, and Gina Akpe-Moses (Blackrock, Co. Louth AC) on the home-strait leg. Pitted in the first of two semi-finals against big nation teams from GB, Italy, France, Ukraine and Belgium it would be a marked achievement to make the final with the first three and two fastest losers qualifying from the 16 competing teams. But brilliant running from all four achieved just that with 4th place and a fast-loser pass to the final. In the process they set a new national Under 23 record with a time of 44.64. Lynch on Leg 2 was focused with her sprint – and slick and efficient with her baton changes. She sprinted to her limits to keep the team in contention after a strong opening leg from Scott. Roy and Akpe-Moses kept it going!

The 4 x 100m final proved a dramatic race. First the contest was delayed by 30 minutes due to a power shortage in the stadium. Molly Scott gave the Irish team a good start by handing on to Aoife Lynch in 6th place. Lynch was again flawless and gained to 5th before handing off to Lauren Roy. Roy was strong in her sprint across the top bend, but the handover with anchor Akpe-Moses failed – and the team were out. Such a pity! Germany won in a championship record of 43.05 ahead of Spain and France, but only 4 teams closed. Sweden and GB also failed to finish, whilst Italy was DQed for a lane infringement.

Remember the name Zion Osawe. Leonie Newman, Juvenile Secretary, said of the new girl: “I think we may have a superstar on our hands”. Osawe picked up her 3rd medal on Day 8 of the DUBLIN JUVENILE TRACK & FIELD CHAMPIONSHIPS at Lucan on Saturday (10.07.2021). Having previously won gold in the 60m Hurdles and bronze in the 80m sprint, the Under 13 athlete coached by Ray O’Keeffe, jumped an impressive 1.50m to take the High Jump title.

Mario Omozee (1.54m) won silver in the Under 14 Boys High Jump, with bronze medals going to Melody Omozee in the Under 13 Girls Shot Putt and Dylan O’Connor (9.07) in the Under 12 Boys 60 metres. Luuk Jackson was narrowly edged out of a podium place in the Under 13 Boys 80m finishing 4th, with a photo image required to separate 2nd from 4th placings. Elliot Whelan came 5th in the same race having progressed from the heats.

Others to make finals were Aoife Jackson in the Under 14 Girls High Jump and Ruby Blake and Anna Peake in the Under 12 Girls 60m. Debutante Saoirse Jackson failed to qualify for the final in the same category. Another newcomer Kyle Martin and Conor Garvey did not progress from the heats of the Under 12 Boys 60m.

In the 3rd Meeting of the DUBLIN OPEN GRADED SERIES at Tallaght on Wednesday (07.07.2021) Lara O’Byrne achieved lifetime bests in both the Long Jump and Javelin. The multi-eventer, now coached by Gerry Ronan, placed 2nd in both events. A jump of 5.24m and a throw of 30.44m meant that the delighted 20-year-old could chalk up two new marks on her progress chart.

Outstanding masters athlete Barbara Cleary (16.58.77) had 20 seconds to spare over her nearest rival Niamh Allen (17.19.53) of Crusaders AC when she won the women’s 5,000m race. The race had a big representation of Donore athletes with Audrey Gahan (21.14.93) in 9th place, followed by Margaret O’Brien (21.47.11) in 10th, then Treasa Boylan (22.45.84) in 11th, Louis Kelly (23.00.81) 12th and Suzie Henley-Willis (23.48.38) 13th.

Kane Collins, normally more at home over 5km and 10km, ran close to target in the Men’s 1,500m ‘A’ race. Looking for a 4.10, he had to settle for 4.13.76 and 8th position behind winner David Scanlon (3.55.62) of Rathfarnham WSAF.

An improving Daragh Keegan (16.41.38) won the 5,000m ‘B’ race, whilst Matthew McCullagh (16.59.95) placed 4th in the ‘A’ race over the same distance.

Another emerging athlete Adelle Heskin (4.58.95) got a sub-5-minute time for her 1,500m when placing 7th in the ‘A’ race. Craig Scott (4.44.53) put in a fine effort to place 7th in the Men’s ‘B’ 1.500m.

In the NEVER-GIVE-UP 10KM ROAD RACE at Gorey on Sunday morning (11.07.2021) Under 18 athlete Claudia Redmond placed 39th overall and was the 5th woman to finish. Despite a hilly course and wet, windy conditions Redmond achieved a new personal best of 46.30.

Well done to Sorcha Loughnane, who has been selected to represent Ireland in the ANGLO-CELTIC 100km HOME INTERNATIONAL to take place in Mondello Park, Co. Kildare on Saturday 21st August 2021. The race will also include the Irish championship.

Best of luck to Abdel Laadjel who will be competing in the final of the Men’s 5,000m in the EUROPEAN UNDER 20 CHAMPIONSHIPS at Tallinn, Estonia on Friday afternoon (16.55 Irish time) – link https://european-athletics.com/competitions/european-athletics-u20-championships

Competing in his 2nd event at the WORLD ORIENTEERING CHAMPIONSHIPS at Doksy in the Czech Republic Josh O’Sullivan-Hourihan (51.06) came 33rd in the Middle Course qualifying group ‘A’ on Tuesday morning (06.07.2021). He failed to progress to the final.

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RESULTS IN BRIEF:

DUBLIN OPEN GRADED MEET 3 at Tallaght (07.07.2021)

Women’s Long Jump: 2nd Lara O’Byrne (5.24m)

Women’s Javelin: 2nd Lara O’Byrne (30.44m)

Women’s 1,500m A Race: 7th Adelle Heskin (4.58.95)

Men’s 1,500m A Race: 8th Kane Collins (4.13.76)

Men’s 1,500m B Race: 7th Craig Scott (4.44.53)

Women’s 5,000m A Race: 1st Barbara Cleary W45 (16.58.77), 9th Audrey Gahan W40 (21.14.93), 10th Margaret O’Brien (21.47.11), 11th Treasa Boylan (22.45.84), 12th Louise Kelly (23.00.81), 13th Suzie Henley-Willis (23.48.38)

Men’s 5,000m A Race: 4th Matthew McCullagh (16.59.95)

Men’s 5,000m B Race: 1st Daragh Keegan (16.41.38)

EUROPEAN UNDER 23 CHAMPIONSHIPS at Kadriogh Stadium, Tallinn

(DAY 1 – 08.07.2021)

Men’s 400m Qualifying Round Heat 2 of 5: DNF Jack Raftery

Women’s 100m Qualifying Round Heat 2 of 5: 5th Aoife Lynch (11.88)

(DAY 2 – 09.07.2021)

Men’s 800m Semi-Final Heat 2 of 3: 4th Louis O’Loughlin (1.49.43)

(DAY 4 – 11.07.2021)

Women’s 4 x 100m Semi-Final 1 of 2: 4th Ireland (Aoife Lynch on Leg 2) 44.64 national U23 record

Women’s 4 x 100m Final: DNF Ireland (Aoife Lynch on Leg 2)

DUBLIN JUVENILE TRACK & FIELD CHAMPIONSHIPS Day 8 at Lucan (10.07.2021)

Under 13 Girls High Jump: 1st Zion Osawe (1.50m)

Under 13 Girls Shot Putt: 3rd Melody Omozee

Under 14 Girls High Jump: finalist – Aoife Jackson

Under 14 Boys High Jump: 2nd Mario Omozee (1.54m)

Under 12 Girls 60m: finalists – Ruby Blake (9.43) & Anna Peake; Heat – Saoirse Jackson (debut)

Under 12 Boys 60m: 3rd Dylan O’Connor (9.07), Kyle Martin (debut 3rd in heat) & Conor Garvey did not progress to the final.

Under 13 Boys 80m: 4th Luuk Jackson, 5th Elliot Whelan

NEVER-GIVE-UP 10km ROAD RACE at Inch, Gorey, Co. Wexford (11.07.2021)

39th & 5th woman Claudia Redmond U18 (46.30 PB). 94 finishers inc. 38 women.

WORLD ORIENTEERING CHAMPIONSHIPS at Doksy, Czech Rep. (06.07.2021)

Middle Course Qualifying Group A: 33rd Josh O’Sullivan-Hourihan (51.06)

05. Aoife Lynch in 100m heat 03a Louis O'Loughlin end of 800m SF

Donore Harriers Athletics Report – w/e July 4th 2021

HIGHLIGHTS: Aoife Lynch, Jack Raftery and Louis O’Loughlin selected on the Irish team for the European Under 23 championships. Abdel Laadjel selected on the Under 20 team. Caoimhe Mackey bags a gold and silver, and Donal Iremonger a gold in the Leinster Championships. Wins for Emily Bolton, Liam Morris, Emma Stacey (all 800m), James Bolton (3,000m), Zion Osawe (60mH), Oisin Cummins-Weiss & Joyce Bakanabo (both Shot Putt) in the Dublin Juvenile Championships. Josh O’Sullivan-Hourihan and Kevin O’Boyle both narrowly failed to qualify to the World Orienteering Championships ‘sprint’ final.

REPORT: Four Donore Harriers athletes have been selected to compete at upcoming European Championships. Aoife Lynch, Jack Raftery and Louis O’Loughlin will compete in the European Under 23 Championships to take place in Tallinn, Estonia between the 8th and 11th of July 2021. Abdel Laadjel will compete in the European Under 20 Championships, also in Tallinn, between 15th and 18th of July 2021.

Here are the athlete profiles: –

AOIFE LYNCH: to compete in the 100m and 4 x 100m relay.

DOB 14.05.1999.

Presently studying at DCU. Attended Luttrellstown Community College.

Coached by Daniel Kilgallon. Previously coached by John Geoghegan (RIP) and Paul Clarkin. Initially coached by Ray O’Keeffe.

Recruited to club by Maurice Ahern in May 2012.

Major achievements: World Relay 4 x 200m silver medal (02.05.2021) at Silesia, Poland. Represented Ireland at EYOF (U18s) and European U20 Championships in the 200m.

National Championships 2021: National Senior 100m bronze; National U23 gold in both 100m and 200m.

Personal Best: 11.63 at Raiffeisen Austrian Open (09.06.2021) at Eisenstadt.

JACK RAFTERY: to compete in the 400m and 4 x 400m relay.

DOB: 26.04.2001

Presently studying at DCU. Attended Castleknock College.

Coached by: Paul Clarkin & Declan Raftery. Previously coached by John Geoghegan (RIP) and Gerry Naughton.

Recruited to club by his parents in 2012.

Major achievements: National Junior 400m champion in 2019, and then represented Ireland in 4 x 400m in the European U20 Championships. Jack ran 1.53.6 for 800m to win the Dublin U18 championships in 2018.

National Championships 2021: National Senior 4th in the 400m; National U23 gold in the 400m.

Personal Best: 47.68 at Santry (19.06.2021)

LOUIS O’LOUGHLIN: to compete in the 800m.

DOB: 01.09.2001

Presently studying at TUD Tallaght. Attended Moyle Park College.

Coached by: Gerry Naughton, Ciaran O’Flaherty & Lee Van Haefen. Previously coached by Gerry Naughton with Donal Iremonger.

Recruited to the club by Gerry Naughton in March 2015.

Major achievements: National Junior 800m gold in 2019 & 2020. Represented Ireland at EYOF (U18s) and European U20 championships.

National Championships 2021: National Senior 800m 5th; National U23 800m gold.

Personal Best: 1.48.66 at IMC Belfast (29.05.2021)

ABDEL LAADJEL: to compete in the 5,000m.

DOB: 09.09.2003

Due to attend Providence College, USA. Attended Kishoge Community College (Lucan).

Coached by: Gerry Naughton, Ciaran O’Flaherty & Lee Van Haeften.

Recruited to the club by Gerry Naughton in March 2017.

Major achievements: All-Ireland Schools Intermediate XC champion 2020, National Junior 3,000m silver 2020, obtained athletics scholarship to Providence College.

National Championships 2021: National Junior 5,000m gold; National Junior 3,000m bronze.

Personal Best: 14.10.36 at IMC Belfast (29.05.2021).

Timetable EUROPEAN UNDER 23 CHAMPIONSHIPS (Irish time)

Thursday 8th July 8.45am Men’s 400m Heats (Jack Raftery); 10.40am Women’s 100m Heats (Aoife Lynch); 6.15pm Women’s 100m Semi Final (Aoife Lynch).

Friday 9th July 9.55am Men’s 800m Heats (Louis O’Loughlin); 6.10pm Men’s 400m Semi Final (Jack Raftery).

Saturday 10th July 3.30pm Men’s 800m Semi Final (Louis O’Loughlin)

Sunday 11th July 9.10am Men’s 4 x 400m Relay Heats (Jack Raftery), 10.00am Women’s 4 x 100m Heats (Aoife Lynch), 3.30pm Men’s 800m Final (Louis O’Loughlin), 4.30 Women’s 4 x 100m Final (Aoife Lynch), 5.50pm Men’s 4 x 400m Final (Jack Raftery)

LINK: https://liveresults.european-athletics.com/en/results/athletics/daily-schedule.htm

Two club members, Josh O’Sullivan-Hourihan and Kevin O’Boyle, were selected on the squad representing Ireland at the WORLD ORIENTEERING CHAMPIONSHIPS (WOC) that commenced in an area near Doksy, Czechia on 3rd July. Josh and Kevin were selected to run in the sprint orienteering discipline, for which the heats were held on the morning of 3rd July, in Terezín. Terezín is a former military fortress built in the 1700s and was also the location of a Nazi concentration camp in World War 2. One hundred and two men were entered into the qualification race, divided into three groups, with the fastest fifteen from each group to qualify for the sprint final that was held that evening.

Josh completed his qualification race of 3.6km with a 36m climb in 15.03, coming 17th overall and missing out on qualification for the final by just 13 seconds.  Kevin completed a course of the same length, climb and complexity but following a slightly different route, in 15.21, missing out on qualification by a minute and 23 seconds.

The final (3.9km with 40m climb) was held on Saturday evening and for the record the winner was Isac von Krusenstierna (Sweden) in 13:46, with Kasper Harlem Fosser (Norway) with 13:53 in second place and Tim Robertson (New Zealand) third in 13:59.

Josh will be racing again on Tuesday, 6th July, in the middle-distance event.  The WOC will continue until 9th July.

(Orienteering report by Sarah Ni Ruairc)

Caoimhe Mackey impressed with a gold and silver at the LEINSTER JUNIOR, SENIOR & MASTERS TRACK & FIELD CHAMPIONSHIPS at Carlow over the weekend. Mackey won the senior women’s 100m Hurdles with a time of 16.02. As in the National Under 23 championships, the wind gauge displayed a wind advantage that prevents Caoimhe from claiming a new personal best. In her favoured 400m Hurdles event Mackey (1.05.10) came 2nd behind Karen Dunne of Bohermeen AC.

Donal Iremonger, competing in a track championship for the first time in the M50 category, took the 800m title in a time of 2.11.28 to finish well clear of runner-up Ken Archbald (2.13.29) of St. Laurence O’Toole AC.

Others on the track included Eva McPartlan (12.56) who came 4th in the senior women’s 100m final and Adelle Heskin (2.28.21) who ran close to her best time to place 6th in the senior women’s 800m. Peter Nugent (19.25.01) came 6th in the M50 final.

Oran O’Brien took an early lead in the Senior Men’s Discus with a first-round throw of 36.12 metres. However, he was unable to improve his mark and had to settle for a bronze medal after each thrower made 6 attempts. In the Senior Men’s Hammer Darren Weldon came 4th with a best of 21.06 metres.

Days 5, 6 and 7 of the DUBLIN JUVENILE TRACK & FIELD CHAMPIONSHIPS held at Tallaght and Irishtown over the weekend saw Donore Harriers athletes shine. Gold medals were won by James Bolton (9.02.0) in the Under 18 Boys 3,000m; his younger sister Emily (2.22.22) in the Under 14 Girls 800m; Liam Morris (2.14.2) in the Under 14 Boys 800m; Emma Stacey (2.21.2) in the Under 18 Girls 800m; newcomer Zion Osawe in the Under 13 Girls 60m Hurdles; and Oisin Cummins-Weiss and Joyce Bakanabo in the Under 16 Boys and Under 19 Girls – both in the Shot Putt.

Silver medals went to Eimear Finn in the Under 17 Girls High Jump; Luke Hanly in the Under 17 Boys High Jump; Mario Omozee in the Under 14 Boys 75m Hurdles; Bobby Amandi in the Under 18 Boys 110m Hurdles; Alex Leonard in the Under 15 Boys 200m; and Sara Higgins in the Under 19 Girls 200m.

The following won bronze medals – Sara Higgins in the Under 19 Girls 100m; Lorraine O’Connor in the Under 15 Girls 800m; Sean Kinsella in the Under 18 Boys 800m; Ciaran O’Farrell in the Under 15 Boys 80m Hurdles, Eve Conroy in the Under 16 Girls 80m Hurdles, Romeo Omozee in the Under 16 Boys 100m Hurdles; Isabella Kelly in the both the Under 16 100m and 200m; and Sophie O’Farrell in the Under 18 Girls 200m.

Special mention to Bobby Amandi, who twice picked himself up after falling in the 110m Hurdles, to take silver in the Under 18 Boys; and to Oisin Cummins-Weiss and Luke Hanly who won gold and silver respectively on their club debuts.

A group of juvenile and emerging club athletes made their way to the MSL GROUP PARK GARAGE on the Navan Road in Dublin 7 on Friday morning. The photo-shoot, arranged by club coach Paul Clarkin and facilitated by MSL Brands Manager Dean Fullston (a Donore Harriers member), was in recognition of the many outstanding results obtained by club athletes in recent weeks at National Junior, Under 23 and Senior Championships and at the Dublin Juvenile Track & Field Championships. Among the Donore Harriers party were Aoife Lynch, Jack Raftery and Abdel Laadjel who will compete in forthcoming European Championships. The MSL GROUP provides a sponsorship to Donore Harriers in support of development athletics.

RESULTS IN BRIEF:

LEINSTER JUNIOR, SENIOR & MASTERS CHAMPIONSHIPS at Carlow (03 + 04.07.2021)

Senior Women’s 100m Final: 4th Eva McPartlan (12.56)

Senior Women’s 800m Final: 6th Adelle Heskin (2.28.21)

Senior Women’s 100mH Final: 1st Caoimhe Mackey (16.02)

Senior Women’s 400mH Final: 2nd Caoimhe Mackey (1.05.10)

Senior Men’s Hammer Final: 4th Darren Weldon (21.06m)

Masters M50 800m Final: 1st Donal Iremonger (2.11.28)

Masters M50 5,000m Final: 6th Peter Nugent (19.25.01)

Senior Men’s Discus Final: 3rd Oran O’Brien (36.12m)

DUBLIN JUVENILE T&F CHAMPIONSHIPS DAY 5 at Tallaght (02.07.2021)

Under 16 Girls 100m Final: 3rd Isabella Kelly, Eve Conroy and Fiona Jackson did not qualify from their respective heats.

Under 16 Boys 100m Final: Romeo Omozee & Oisin Cummins-Weiss outside of medals

Under 18 Girls 100m Final: 4th Sophie O’Farrell, Sarah Tavey did not qualify from her heat.

Under 18 Boys 100m Final: Bobby Amandi outside of medals

Under 19 Girls 100m Final: 3rd Sara Higgins, 4th Joyce Bakanabo

Under 16 Boys 3,000m Final: 4th Thomas Bolton (10.02.0)

Under 18 Girls 3,000m Final: 7th Claudia Redmond (12.20.0)

Under 18 Boys 3,000m Final: 1st James Bolton (9.02.0)

Under 17 Girls High Jump Final: 2nd Eimear Finn

Under 17 Boys High Jump Final: 2nd Luke Hanly

DUBLIN JUVENILE T&F CHAMPIONSHIPS DAY 6 at Irishtown (03.07.2021)

Under 14 Girls 800m Final: 1st Emily Bolton (2.22.22), Ava Hoare did not qualify from her heat.

Under 14 Boys 800m Final: 1st Liam Morris (2.14.32 – won his Heat in 2.20); Daniel Hughes (2.40 plus) & Rian Kavanagh (2.50 plus) did not qualify for final.

Under 15 Girls 800m Final: 3rd Lorraine O’Connor (2.22.78); 5th Eva Crowe (2.23.89). Both qualified to final via Heats.

Under 16 Girls 800m Final: 7th Katie Delaney (2.48.90)

Under 16 Boys 800m Final: 6th Thomas Bolton (2.13.60); 7th Dylan McKenna (2.15.10)

Under 18 Girls 800m Final: 1st Emma Stacey (2.21.2)

Under 18 Boys 800m Final: 3rd Sean Kinsella (2.01.5); 5th James Bolton (2.05.1)

Under 13 Girls 60mH Final: 1st Zion Osawe; 4th Melody Omozee

Under 14 Boys 75mH Final: 2nd Mario Omozee

Under 15 Girls 80mH Final: 5th Roisin Kirby; Isabella Jackson did not qualify from her heat.

Under 15 Boys 80mH Final: 3rd Ciaran O’Farrell

Under 16 Girls 80mH Final: 3rd Eve Conroy

Under 16 Boys 100mH Final: 3rd Romeo Omozee (NTA)

Under 18 Boys 110mH Final: 2nd Bobby Amandi

Under 16 Boys Shot Putt Final: 1st Oisin Cummins-Weiss (11.65m)

Under 19 Girls Shot Putt Final: 1st Joyce Bakanabo

DUBLIN JUVENILE T&F CHAMPIONSHIPS DAY 7 at Tallaght (04.07.2021)

Under 15 Girls 200m Final: 4th Roisin Kirby, Sile Tavey & Isabella Jackson did not qualify from heats.

Under 15 Boys 200m Final: 2nd Alex Leonard, Ciaran O’Farrell, James Dunne & Paddy Nolan did not qualify from heats.

Under 16 Girls 200m Final: 3rd Isabella Kelly, Eve Conroy did not qualify from her heat.

Under 16 Boys 200m Final: 5th Romeo Omozee

Under 18 Girls 200m Final: 3rd Sophie O’Farrell

Under 19 Girls 200m Final: 2nd Sara Higgins

Under 12 Girls 600m Qualifying: 4th Rosie May Morris; 7th Ruby Blake

WORLD ORIENTEERING CHAMPIONSHIPS at Doksy, Czech Rep. (03-09.07.2021)

Sprint Course Qualifying Group: 17th Josh O’Sullivan-Hourihan (15.03)

Sprint Course Qualifying Group: ?? Kevin O’Boyle (15.21)

NOTE: Most times given for juvenile races are hand times. Errors and omissions in results should be reported to Gerry N, Leonie N and/or Florrie C.

Club Interview Series 55 – Brendan O’Shea

Whether Brendan O’Shea’s legacy will be best remembered as an athlete or as a coach is a matter of opinion. What is certain is that Brendan was both a very fine marathon runner and a very fine marathon coach!

 

 

 

 

He competed in over 100 marathons in an era when the 26 miles and 385 yards race was only for the teak-tough souls willing to endure the hardship of long, lonely miles. Prior to Fred Lebow’s transformation of the event in the early 80s with the mass participation New York Marathon, the distance was only for elite runners who were respected as being the ultimate sporting warriors.

O’Shea was Irish marathon champion in 1973, a year after he had won the Berchem International Marathon in Belgium in 2.16.50. He had previously won a marathon at Curtis, Nebraska and placed as runner-up in Humboldt, Kansas and Lawrence, Kansas. The Donore Harriers athlete would go on to make the podium in other national marathon championships and at international races, including victory at Nivelles, Belgium in 1975.

At World Masters Championships Brendan won a team gold and silver in cross-country, and a team gold and individual bronze in the marathon.

As a coach he is best known for coaching and mentoring Jerry Kiernan to finish in 9th place in the 1984 Los Angeles Olympic Marathon. Kiernan’s performance was overshadowed by the brilliant silver won by John Treacy, but Kiernan was a ‘home-grown’ runner and a rank outsider to make the top 10. The race was ‘stacked’ with all the best marathon runners in the world on the start line. Only Waldemar Cierpinski (East Germany) was missing due to an Eastern bloc boycott. Alberto Salazar (USA) was there! As was Geoff Smith and Hugh Jones (GB), Henrik Jorgensen (Denmark), Karel Lismont (Belgium), Gerhard Hartmann (Austria), Rod Dixon (New Zealand), and the best from Kenya, Japan, South Korea, Australia and elsewhere. This was a true Irish warrior against the very best marathon runners in the world!

<<NOTE: Here is a link to an RTE ‘Sporting Memories’ clip of the ‘84 Olympic Marathon – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lrvh-Wn4FxQ – that shows Jerry Kiernan among the leading group. In the clip Eamonn Coghlan acknowledged Brendan O’Shea’s contribution towards Jerry’s brilliant run>>

This is up there as one of the greatest ever Irish sporting achievements. Not just that John Treacy won the silver medal, but two Irishmen in the top 10 of the Olympic Marathon was an achievement very unlikely to be repeated. Brendan O’Shea played an integral role in that magical instalment of our nation’s sporting history.

STANDARD QUESTIONS

PLACE AND YEAR OF BIRTH? Listowel, Co Kerry. 6/1/1943

WHERE WERE YOU EDUCATED? Secondary Education; St Michael’s College, Listowel. University College Galway (now NUIG) for BSc and MSc in Mathematics. Two years at London University studying for PhD. Two Years at University of Nebraska studying for PhD.

WHAT WAS YOUR MAIN CAREER PATH? Academic, progressing from Lecturer to Professor.

IN WHAT YEAR DID YOU JOIN DONORE HARRIERS? 1971

WHY DID YOU CHOOSE DONORE HARRIERS? I had represented Ireland at Pre Olympics in Berlin 1971 and on the way back Eddie Spillane met me at Dublin Airport and handed me an Application Form for Donore Harriers. I just signed it!

WERE YOU A MEMBER OF ANY OTHER CLUB BEFORE JOINING DONORE HARRIERS? Yes. London Irish, Cornhuskers in Nebraska and UCG AC.

DID YOU PARTICIPATE IN ANY OTHER SPORT? Yes, handball had been my game until I was 22. I represented UCG at Intervarsity. I gave up handball then as I had started wearing glasses so it became too dangerous. No contact lenses in those days.

WHAT WAS YOUR FAVOURITE ATHLETICS EVENT? Marathon

WHAT WERE YOUR MAIN ROLE(S) AT THE CLUB? Athlete.

WHO WERE YOUR SPORTING INSPIRATIONS/INFLUENCES? Ronnie Delany, Abebe Bikila

SOCIAL QUESTIONS

WHAT ARE YOUR THREE FAVOURITE BOOKS?

  1. Aerobics by Kenneth J Cooper; this book proved to me for the first time that aerobic training was the best way to attain a high level of fitness. It influenced much of my thinking on marathon training. That was new at the time in the 1960s.
  2. Jonathan Livingstone Seagull by Richard Bach; every sports person should read this. I gave a copy to Jerry Kiernan when I started to coach him. He told me some years later that he used read this again before all important races.
  3. Bikila by Tim Judah; The glorious and tragic story of the great Abebe Bikila. He won the first of his two Olympic Marathons running barefooted in 1956. Two Donore runners, Willie Dunne and Bertie Messitt represented Ireland in the 1956 Marathon.

WHAT WAS THE LAST CONCERT YOU ATTENDED? Don’t know, I’ve attended dozens of Fleadh Cheoils and Trad sessions.

WHAT ARE YOUR 3 FAVOURITE FILMS?

1. The Quartet

2. A Beautiful Mind

3. Enigma

FAVOURITE COUNTRY VISITED? AND WHY? China. People were very friendly. China has huge respect for Ireland. I attended a concert of River Dance in Beijing. There were four parts representing the four seasons. Polite applause from packed audience after first part, a little louder applause after second part, on their feet and very loud after third part, shouting, roaring, clapping after the final part. They were totally overcome by River Dance. It was amazing. Very “unChinese”.

It was held in honour Of President McAleese who was visiting China at the time.

WHAT ARE YOUR OTHER INTERESTS AWAY FROM ATHLETICS/SPORT? Politics, Horse Racing, Academic Matters.

IF DESERT ISLAND DISCS ASKED YOU TO PLAY 3 SONGS, WHAT WOULD THEY BE? Songs and music are intrinsic in all cultures, going back thousands of years. We remember some as special or favourites because of the memories that they evoke in us. So here are three songs and the memories.

1. Cedars of Lebanon (sung by Thom Moore of Pumpkinhead). The 1970s were my happiest decade, I had returned to Ireland after five years “in exile”, had started a job that I loved at DIT, had joined Donore Harriers, made great friends there, was running good marathons, set pb 2hs 16ms 50 secs (still qualifies for 2021 Olympics) when winning 1972 Berchem International Marathon, was recently married. I attended a concert by Pumpkinhead in Dublin where this song was sung. It reminds me of happy days.

2. San Francisco (sung by Scott McKenzie)

I spent two years in Nebraska. It was an amazing two years. I could write a book on it. It was weird, wonderful, bad, memorable.

At that time USA was in turmoil, there was massive unrest and huge marches against the Vietnam War. There was also huge social unrest and a desire for a new society, especially in California, with San Francisco the epicentre. It was summed up by “Make Love Not War”, by the belief that hallucinogenic drugs (such as LSD) was the future. The “Flower People” were the heroes. The above song was Number 1 in US for months. When I hear it memories of those two crazy years in Nebraska come flowing back to me.

3.Mo Ghiolla Mear (sung by Sean Ó Sé)

This is a very old song praising “Bonnie Prince Charlie”. The first line goes” Sé Mo Laoch, mo Ghiolla Mear” which loosely translated means “He is my hero and my strength”. It reminds me of my brother Kieran who devoted his life to help the infirm and those with special needs. RIP.

ATHLETICS QUESTIONS

WHO WAS YOUR COACH? Never had one, apart from myself.

WHAT DO YOU CONSIDER TO BE YOUR BEST ATHLETICS ACHIEVEMENT? I suppose the 2.16.50 marathon, but coaching Jerry Kiernan, Gerry Curtis <<NOTE: see Club Interview No. 19>>, Emily Dowling, Eleanor Hill and others must be up there as well.

WHAT ARE YOUR BEST TIMES (PBs)?

Marathon – 2.16.50

10 miles – usually 50 minutes and a few seconds.

WHAT WAS YOUR FAVOURITE COACHED SESSION? Never had one.

DESCRIBE THE MOST DIFFICULT SESSION THAT YOU DID? Either 27 mile runs with Jerry Kiernan (25 on grass) or flat-out 13 mile runs with Jim McNamara in the Phoenix Park.

WHAT WAS A TYPICAL WEEKLY TRAINING PLAN IN YOUR HEYDAY? Most serious distance runners planned for 100 miles a week.

DO YOU HAVE A FUNNY OR UNUSUAL STORY RELATED TO ATHLETICS/THE CLUB? Not sure if this is funny but is unusual. Our host Mike Long in San Diego with whom we stayed for 6 weeks before 1984 Olympics had arranged with Jerry (Kiernan) to pick him up after the Marathon and drive him back to San Diego where we would have a small party. We arranged to pick him up at a particular time, at a particular place. While waiting there a cop on horseback approached us and asked why we were waiting there. Mike with great pride explained we were waiting for a guy who had run in the Olympic Marathon. The cop asked: “Did he win?”

Mike answered: “No, he finished 9th”.

The cop looked at us in absolute disbelief and made the memorable comment:

“And you came to collect the bum!”.

He turned his horse and rode away.

In America only the winner counts!

RUNNING IN Nebraska! It might be worth including a short description on what it was like to run in Nebraska. I could write a large book on this alone. I went to Nebraska for academic reasons, to study and research for a PhD. In that respect Nebraska was brilliant, the facilities were terrific and the scholarship that the University gave me was generous. Running was different. With hindsight I cannot understand why I continued running for the two years.

The NEBRASKA CLIMATE: The weather was rough, very rough. Winter lasted 4 months from November when the temperature was generally – 40°C. This meant one could not train outdoors. The University had a small indoor gym where we were allowed run for 2 hours. It was a cinder track, 4 lanes wide and 7 laps to the mile. So that was 70 laps for my 10 mile run, all anti-clockwise. There were always tens of runners on the track. Absolute mayhem! Summer lasted 4 months and was hot, very hot!

Most days were in the high 30°Cs with very high humidity. One could not run outdoors on most days. So I had to improvise. I ran at night when it was still in the 20°C, but bearable. I used work until 3am, go home and run for an hour through the streets of Lincoln. Needless-to-say I ignored the red man on the traffic lights one night. I was halfway across on a red man when I heard a voice say: “Hey bud, stop!”

Luckily, I noticed a cop standing on the other side of the road with his gun in his hand pointed at me. He called me over, he stood straight in front of me, holding his gun 1 foot from my chest, and warned me not to cross on the red light. He then told me to go.

It has often crossed my mind that if I had not heard him shout “Stop”, he would probably have shot me. And he would not have missed!

That was and is Trump Country.

TELL US MORE ABOUT YOUR MARATHON EXPERIENCES? OK, here’s a flavour of three marathons that I ran –

1. Denver Marathon in Colorado. Denver is known as the “mile high city” because it is a mile high, about 5000 feet. This means it is a high altitude marathon.

This was the toughest, most difficult marathon that I ever ran, after 1 mile I was breathless, with 25 breathless miles ahead of me!

2. Humboldt Marathon in Kansas. The weather was scorching. My memory of the race is that there were pools of melted tar on the roads so that our shoes were ruined as a result.

3. Iowa Marathon. The weather was very different there. It was a winter marathon with banks of snow on both sides of the road. I wore a full tracksuit with a few t-shirts, a woolly hat and gloves. Not much fun.

In summary, if you want to enjoy your running, don’t head for Nebraska!

WHO ARE YOUR TOP 3 IRISH SPORTSPERSONS OF ALL TIME?

  1. Mick O’Connell (GAA)
  2. Ronnie Delany

3. Jim McNamara. I saw what he could do at the World Veteran Games.

SPECIFIC QUESTIONS

DID YOU COMPETE AS A JUVENILE OR JUNIOR ATHLETE? No

WHERE DID YOU INTEREST IN ATHLETICS STEM FROM? When I gave up handball because of danger to my eyes I took up running because glasses were not likely to be a major problem there. I had no expectation that I would be a good runner. I just needed something to keep me active. I was as likely to take up Line Dancing as running. Just Potluck!

YOU WON THE NATIONAL MARATHON IN 1973. WHAT ARE YOUR MEMORIES OF THAT PARTICULAR DAY AND RACE? The marathon was held in Portlaoise. The favourite for the race was a friend of Ron Hill called Vince Regan from Bolton. On the way out the weather was pleasant, dry and no wind. But on the turn the weather changed drastically, it poured rain and we had a strong wind against us the whole way. The following day’s newspaper report said that the time was worth much more because of the weather. From memory I think I ran 2.22. So probably worth a sub-2.20.

DONORE HARRIERS WON THE NATIONAL MARATHON TEAM CHAMPIONSHIP THREE TIMES IN THE 1970s. WERE YOU ON THOSE TEAMS? AND WHO WERE THE OTHER LEADING MARATHON RUNNERS IN THE CLUB AT THAT TIME? During 1970s I finished 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, and 5th at least once, maybe more than once. The other top marathoners were Willie Dunne, Jim McNamara, Tony Murphy, Tony Brien, Brendan Dunne, Jim McGlynn, John Sheridan, and possibly a few more that I cannot remember by name.

YOU’VE RUN MORE THAN ONE HUNDRED MARATHONS. WHICH ONE STANDS OUT IN THE MEMORY? My win in the 1972 Berchem International Marathon. It started at 6pm which suited me as I was/am very much an evening person. I am a disaster in the morning and come alive late afternoon/evening. I cruised through the race. It felt effortless. I ran with the lead pack until 22 miles when I put my foot down and ran the last 4 miles at about 5 min pace. It was a day when I could have run even faster. Those days don’t come often.

I have other great memories from that Marathon. The organising Committee in Antwerp expected us to leave the following day but BLE had booked our return flight for 6 days later as that was cheaper. But for the fact that I had won the race and Willie Dunne and I had combined to win the Team Event they may not have paid for the six days in a Hotel but they did. Fr Paddy Coyle was the 3rd member of the team. Willie entertained us for those 6 days. He was witty, funny, clever, wonderful company. It was the best holiday that I ever had.

<<NOTE: See Club Interview No. 21 – Willie Dunne>>

APART FROM MARATHONS, WHAT WAS YOUR FAVOURITE ROAD RACE IN IRELAND AND WHY? None really. The marathon was my race.

I SEE ON THE ‘IRISH ATHLETICS HISTORY’ PAGE THAT YOU CAME 2nd TO DANNY McDAID IN THE DERRY TO STRABANE ROAD RACE IN 1966, WHAT ARE YOUR MEMORIES OF THAT EVENT? I had just one year of training under my belt at that time. This was my first race beyond 10km. I remember a bunch of us travelled to Derry by car. The race seemed very long. I lost sight of Danny by halfway. He finished well clear of me. I was a total novice at the time. When I think back on it, I reckon it was a pretty good run.

DID YOU COMPETE MUCH IN CROSS-COUNTRY RACES? AND WHAT WAS YOUR BEST RESULT IN CROSS-COUNTRY RACES? I kept away from cross-country as much as possible. I saw no fun in trying to run through muck, slipping, sliding, slithering while the rain poured down in wintertime. I remember well my final Irish cross-country race sometime at the end of the 1970s. It was the Inter-County competition held in UCD grounds in Belfield. I was running for Kerry. Six to Score. There were large pools of water all over the grounds. We had won the prize for the “most improved county” the previous year. So, I hoped we would do well this year. The day was miserable. When the results came out we did not feature. When I enquired why we did not feature I was told we had only five starters. An incomplete team. I remember going out to the field, looking at the huge pond of water and threw my spikes as far as I could into the water. Cross-Country was finished for me. Fit for animals I thought.

Or so I thought! In 1983 the World Veteran Games were held in Puerto Rico and 15 or so travelled to represent Ireland. Donore Harriers had Jim McNamara, Willie Dunne, Brendan Dunne and myself. We also had Sean Callan, who is Donore at heart.

I thought summer in Nebraska was hot, but Puerto Rico made it look cool. It literally would take your breath away. It was like being in a “full on” over. The athletics programme included a 10km cross-country race. Willie Dunne, Brendan Dunne and Brendan O’Shea from DH represented Ireland and won gold. Donore Harriers were World Veteran Champions!

There was also a marathon on the programme. Running in that heat was obviously dangerous. So, the race started at pitch darkness at 5am in the morning. It was a 2-loop course with water stations every 3 miles. But uniquely in my experience of marathon running they also handed us large cubes of ice which we carried in our hands to the next station, by which time they were melted and replaced with fresh ice. It worked because we ran well. I finished 3rd individual and we won the team event. Donore Harriers World Veteran champions again!

Nebraska prepared me well!!!

On the way home eight of us stopped off in Haiti for a week. That demands a book on its own.

HOW DID YOU GET INTO COACHING? As a scientist I was interested in finding out how one should train for the marathon. There had to be good ways, bad ways and in between ways. I experimented with my own training programs. I read what other marathoners did. I was influenced by Arthur Lydiard’s book “Run to the Top”. He believed strongly in aerobic training. His 800m Olympic Gold Medallist Peter Snell used do 20 mile steady runs. By the time I reckoned I had a definite opinion on how one should train for the marathon I was in my late 30s and clearly past my best. I could still run 2-24 but my sub 2-20 days were probably gone.

And along came Jerry Kiernan whose ambition was to run in the Olympics. He had the speed to run a 3.59 mile and the pace to run a 46.30 ten-miles, but that would not qualify him for the Olympics. He did not have the stamina for the marathon.

YOU COACHED THE LATE, GREAT JERRY KIERNAN PRIOR TO HIS PHENOMENAL RUN IN THE 1984 OLYMPIC MARATHON. HOW MUCH PLANNING AND PREPARATION DID YOU DO WITH JERRY IN THE LEAD UP TO THAT 84 OLYMPIC MARATHON? We did a lot of planning. The only hope for Jerry to get to the Olympics was in the Marathon. But he did not have the necessary stamina. Sean Meaney and I used run 20 mile runs up the Wicklow Mountains with him in 1980 but he would usually drop off in the last few miles. He could not hang on for 20.

When he asked me to coach him for the marathon in 1981 I agreed on condition the he did it my way. He would have to follow my plan which was totally different to his usual way. Jerry loved to run fast. My plan for him was no speed, no pace, only LSD. Not the drug LSD but “Long Slow Distance”.

In a marathon the top class athlete needs speed for the first 385 yds, the pace for 18 miles and the stamina to grind out the final 8 miles at race pace. Jerry did not have the latter. The plan was to develop that.

He asked me how long it would take to make a marathoner out of him. I said 4 years to complete the job but he would improve a lot in a year. I was right because he won the Dublin Marathon in 1982 and was at his best in 1985.

This was the plan: –

4 miles easy 6 mornings a week.

A 20 mile run midweek.

A 25-27 mile run on grass at weekend.

5 days of 10 – 12 miles steady

No pace running or speed sessions. He would race once every 3 weeks, usually 10k. That was to maintain his pace.

I ran the long runs at 6 min pace with him to make sure he ran steady. I was still able to run 2-24 marathons at that time.

This added up to 125 miles a week. High mileage but all steady. We were not trying to improve his speed or pace, only his stamina. It worked as he was with the leading pack in the Olympics at 22 miles. The following year he was able to gallop the full 26 miles.

He was in good shape in 1984 and won the Olympic Trail which was part of The Cork Marathon. Dick Hooper came second and both were picked for the Olympics.

We had put a lot of hard work into the preparation. I thought it would be wise to travel to California well in advance of the Games. Eamonn Coghlan gave us the contact to a friend of his in San Diego. We contacted him and he agreed to “put us up” while preparing for the Games. He was a runner also and we became good friends. I think he enjoyed the occasion also.

He did not do the high mileage while in SD but still did 90-100miles. It was all about “stamina” He did one fast 10 mile run two weeks before Olympics and it was breath-taking. He also had one low key 10k race. I knew he would run well in LA.

WHERE WERE YOU AT THE TIME OF THE MARATHON? AND WHAT WERE YOUR THOUGHTS AND MOODS BOTH DURING AND AFTER THAT RUN BY JERRY – AND ALSO THAT OF JOHN TREACY? Jerry and I went up to the Olympic Village two days before the Marathon. He stayed in the Village, I stayed in a hotel. On the day, Mike Long, Joe Walsh of Castleisland AC and I watched the marathon on TV in our hotel room. We had agreed that Jerry would relax for first 10 miles, he would then pick up the pace and get in contact with the lead pack around 17 or 18 miles. I was totally confident he could do that. It happened as I expected, he appeared on the TV screen at around 18, and looked good. I expected he would finish in top 6. Unfortunately he felt his calves twitch with cramp at 22 miles and decided to ease back so that his legs would not seize up badly with cramp. What is not generally known is that when he entered the tunnel into the stadium he stopped for more than a minute stretching his legs. Jerry was always vain, he wanted to look good when on TV in the stadium. That cost him a full minute in time. Otherwise his 2-12 would have been a 2-11!!!! A great run.

If the Olympics had taken place a year later, he would not have cramped, He would have galloped the full 26 miles 385 yds.

John Treacy was awesome, brave, courageous. He gave it everything. He did Ireland proud as did Jerry.

There was one funny end to this marathon story. The TV coverage finished with the 4th finisher. So we waited and waited to see where Jerry finished.

But there was no information. Eventually Joe Walsh phoned his brother in Castleisland to find out that Jerry had finished 9th!!!! We were in LA but did not know.

DO YOU HAVE ANY PARTICULAR COACHING PHILOSOPHIES? It is important that one should be healthy. That requires good nutrition, plenty of rest, a blood test twice a year, good running shoes, have two breaks of very easy running, 20 miles/week, lasting 2 or 3 weeks. Just enjoy your running. Train for the event for which you are aiming.

Heavy training can have some negative effects, particularly low-grade anaemia and lower the athlete’s immune system. The athlete may need to take an iron supplement.

I think the most beneficial session is a 10 mile fartlek on grass once a week. This applies to all distance runners from 10k to the marathon.

WHAT IS THE MOST VALUABLE PIECE OF ADVICE YOU CAN GIVE SOMEBODY ON RACE DAY? That depends on the personality of the athlete; I used fire up Jerry so that he would grit his teeth with determination. One tried to cool down others. The main purpose was to have the athlete determined to run hard to the line.

In the marathon one usually recommended running negative splits.

WHAT WOULD YOU CONSIDER TO BE THE MOST IMPORTANT ATTRIBUTES OF A SUCCESSFUL ATHLETE? I don’t know. Quite obviously s(he) must be willing to train hard, to follow the advice of his/her coach and be willing to give all in the race.

DO YOU HAVE ANY SPORTING REGRETS? I would have liked to have competed in the Olympic Marathon. I had finished 1975 on a high note by winning the Marathon International de Nivelles in Belgium. I was running really well at the time. It was my practise to ease back to 20 miles/week for December and party for the month, get unfit and start again on 1st January. But because the trial for Olympic Marathon was scheduled for April I decided not to in 1975. Unfortunately my body missed the December parties and I got an injured knee which prevented me running for most of 1976. No Olympics!

In general, I have had a great life professionally and running. I have made great friends in running. I have great memories. I was very lucky to join Donore Harriers.

 

01. Brendan O'Shea 03. Brendan O'Shea

 

Donore Harriers Athletics Report – w/e June 27th 2021

HIGHLIGHTS: Brilliant bronze for Aoife Lynch in National Senior 100m; bronze for both the women’s 4 x 100m and women’s 4 x 400m relay teams; Abdel Laadjel bronze in National Junior 3,000m; Emma Stacey silver in Dublin U18 1,500m; Des Tremble 1st M50 in the St. Coca’s 5km.

 

 

REPORT: The 149th edition of the NATIONAL SENIOR TRACK & FIELD CHAMPIONSHIPS (25-27.06.2021) at Santry on the weekend may not have been one of the more successful for Donore Harriers, but there were plenty of reasons to be cheerful.

The stand-out performance came from Aoife Lynch in the Women’s 100m final. Having qualified 2nd (11.81) from her Heat on Saturday morning, Lynch was fully determined for the ‘stacked’ afternoon final. She was unable to match the pre-race favourites Rhasidat Adeleke (11.29) of Tallaght AC and Molly Scott (11.46) of St. Laurance O’Toole AC, but she held off the late challenge of Ciara Neville (11.69) of Emerald AC and others to secure the bronze medal. Indeed, the race clock gave the verdict to Lynch by just one-thousandths of a second with Lynch timed at 11.685 and Neville at 11.686. Lynch’s time was inside the European Under 23 qualifying standard, but the wind reading of plus 2.6 metres per second disallows the time.

Also on Saturday, the women’s 4 x 100m relay quartet (52.6) of Eva McPartlan, Sarah Lahiff, Roisin Rynn-Cahill and Lucy Hurley came 3rd behind winners DSD AC and runners-up Crusaders AC.

Other Donore Harriers athletes contested finals on Saturday. Caoimhe Mackey (1.05.21) ran just outside her personal best time to place a highly creditable 5th in the Women’s 400m Hurdles. She qualified to the final by coming 3rd in the second qualifying heat on Friday evening in a time of 1.06.77. Louis O’Loughlin (1.50.59) came 5th in the final of the Men’s 800m. A poor start saw the Donore Harriers man in 10th place with 350m to go, but a blistering final 150m saw him progress to place 5th behind winner John Fitzsimons (1.49.48) of Kildare AC and pre-race favourite Luke McCann (1.49.51) of UCD AC. McLoughlin qualified to the final on Friday evening by placing 2nd in Heat 1 in 1.52.37.

Jack Raftery (47.52) came 4th in the Men’s 400m final, after he qualified by winning Heat 5 on the Friday evening in 47.69. Raftery was another to finish strongly after a conservative opening 200 metres. The final was won by Cillian Greene (46.78) of Galway City Harriers.

John Travers (3.54.10) made it through to the 1,500m final by crossing the line in 4th place in the 2nd Heat of the 1,500m on Friday. In Saturday’s final he was unable to stay with the pace in the later stages and finished in 11th position.

The Men’s 1,500m was won by Andrew Coscoran (3.48.89) of Star Of The Sea AC in a close finish with Cathal Doyle (3.48.96) of Clonliffe Harriers. Coscoran, thus, became the 3rd winner of the Basil Clifford Memorial Trophy – a trophy donated by Donore Harriers in memory of the former club member who was the 2nd Irishman to run a sub-4-minute mile and a competitor in the 1964 Olympic Games. Family man Clifford died in a workplace accident in the UK in 1973, aged just 35. The trophy was presented to the winner by club coach, historian, and former club-president Willie Smith.

Saturday’s women’s 3,000m was a straight final and whilst Barbara Cleary (16.34.62) was outside the medals in 6th place she deserves a special mention. The women’s Road & XC captain Florence Curley said afterwards: “Barbara is aged 48 and was amazing! The 5 women ahead of her are much younger and some are on US scholarships”. Indeed, Cleary finished just 8-seconds behind the 3rd placed athlete and knocked more than 20 seconds of her previous best time. She ran consistent laps of about 69 seconds and her time is a new national record for the W45 category, subject to ratification. The winner was Aoife Kilgallon (16.16.85) of Sligo AC.

The other club athletes to compete in the first two days of the championships were – Zak Higgins (52.81) 4th in Heat 2 of the 400m; David Campbell (DNF injured) in Heat 4 of the 400m; Eva McPartlan (12.47) 7th in Heat 1 of the 100m; Oran O’Brien (36.95m) 11th in the Men’s Discus; and the 4 x 100m team (44.89) of Sean Chan, Paul McDermott, Conor Fox and Adam Halpin who came 4th in their final behind winners Leevale AC.

Also incorporated into Saturday’s busy programme was the Junior Men’s 3,000m championship. Abdel Laadjel, who came 2nd in the 2020 race had to settle for bronze this time with a new personal best time of 8.27.93. Gavin Curtin also obtained a PB of 8.49.42 when finishing in 8th place. The race was won by Nicholas Griggs of Mid Ulster (Magherafelt) AC in 8.11.15. His time replaces that of the 8.12.79 championship record set by John Travers in 2010.

In Sunday’s action Donore Harriers picked up another bronze medal as the 4 x 400m team of heptathlete Lara O’Byrne, newcomer Adelle Heskin, and two Under 18 athletes Sara Higgins and Emma Stacey came 3rd in a time of 4.13.56 behind winners Ratoath AC (4.02.22). Team Manager Leonie Newman was full of praise for the team afterwards: “They were all brilliant out there today. Lara was delighted that we had a team – and Adelle, Sara and Emma will definitely benefit from the experience”.

Earlier in the day Aoife Lynch (23.83) came 5th in the final of the Women’s 200m having qualified 2nd from Heat 2. Both her heat and final (22.83) were won by Irish No. 1 Phil Healy.

Lara O’Byrne (14.40) ran a new personal best to come 4th in the final of the Women’s 100m Hurdles – a fine effort! In the Men’s 200m qualifying round David Campbell (24.47) came 6th in Heat 2, whilst Paul McDermott narrowly failed to progress to the final when he sprinted to 2nd place in heat 4 in a time of 22.40.

Donore Harriers had two athletes in the 10,000m final. Kane Collins is still relatively new to track racing, so can be encouraged by 10th place and a PB of 32.55.21. Ray Hynes, a more seasoned athlete, came 15th in 33.52.86.

In the Men’s Shot Putt final Oran O’Brien, another developing athlete, came 6th with a best throw of 12.48m.

To comply with the Covid-19 guidelines, the DUBLIN JUVENILE TRACK & FIELD CHAMPIONSHIPS are being held over several days. Day 4 featured the 1,500m and was held at the Tallaght Track on Thursday (24.06.2021). Thankfully, the rain stopped just before the competition started, but it was nevertheless a cool, damp evening.

Donore Harriers had just 4 competitors. In the Under 18 Girls 1,500m Final Emma Stacey ran a fine race to finish 2nd in a time of 5.05.0. A much-improved Claudia Redmond, running in her first track race, put in a super effort to record a time of 5.29.1.

The Under 18 Boys had two races with the medal decided on best times. Sean Kinsella made a strong start in Race 1 but fell back on the last lap to finish outside the medals in a time of 4.32.0. James Bolton was the comprehensive winner of Race 2, but his time of 4.17.9 was slower than the top finishers in the first race, so he did not make the podium.

The 2nd Meet of the DUBLIN OPEN GRADED TRACK & FIELD SERIES at Tallaght Track on Wednesday (23.06.2021) saw several club newcomers make very encouraging debuts. Adelle Heskin (2.27.2) won the Women’s 800m B race with a gap of more than 2-seconds back to runner-up Lea Braud (2.29.5) of Crusaders AC. This was Adelle’s first time to race on the track. It was likewise for Daragh Keegan (9.37.7) in the Men’s 3,000m. Keegan impressed when winning the B race, with another debutant Matthew McCullagh (9.42.64) making it a Donore Harriers one and two.

Zak Higgins, getting in a sharpener before the National 400m, finished in a dead-heat with Peter Murphy of Crusaders AC as both men recorded a time of 23.069 to share the win in the A 200m race. Zak’s young sister Sara (Higgins) came 2nd in the Women’s 200m B race recording a time of 28.6.

Jack Byrne (1.57.6) won the Men’s 800m A race with a new personal best ahead of Tallaght’s Eoghan Keaney (1.58.2).

Sorcha Loughnane recorded a fine personal best in the Women’s 3,000m A race with a time of 10.44.9. Debutante Deirdre McCanna placed 10th in the same race in 11.05.8.

The other Donore Harriers competitors, all masters athletes, were – Craig Scott (10.10.1) 1st in the Men’s 3,000m C race, Alan Farrell (2.22.0) 4th in the 800m C race, and Sean O’Broin (26.8) 4th in the 200m B race.

The club had several athletes compete in the ST. COCA’S 5KM ROAD RACE at Kilcock on Friday evening (25.06.2021). This was a very welcome return to the road-racing scene. The course followed the usual rural route along Courtown Park Road before returning to town at the Fair Green via Gragadder.

The notable club performance came from Des Tremble (16.24), who reached the line in 41st place and won the M50 category. First home for the team was Cathal McCarron (15.25) in 16th position. Also among the 203 finishers were David McConn (16.29 PB) in 45th, Gavin Keogh M40 (16.33) in 47th, Alasdair Brown (16.38) in 51st, Paul Cummins (16.42) in 58th, Donal Iremonger M50 (17.15) in 80th, and Sinead O’Reilly W40 (19.48) in 148th, just 7 months after giving birth. The overall race winners were Evan Fitzgerald (14.53) of Clonmel AC and Irish International Lizzie Lee (15.53) of Leevale AC.

<< NOTE: here’s a link to a clip of the St. Coca’s 5km 2021 https://www.facebook.com/215349685147954/videos/650935152530340 >>

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RESULTS IN BRIEF:

DUBLIN OPEN GRADED MEET 2 at Tallaght (23.06.2021)

Women’s 200m B: 2nd Sara Higgins (28.6)

Men’s 200m A: = 1st Zak Higgins (23.03)

Men’s 200m B: 4th Sean O’Broin M50 (26.8)

Women’s 800m B: 1st Adelle Heskin (2.27.2 PB club debut)

Men’s 800m A: 1st Jack Byrne (1.57.6 PB)

Men’s 800m C: 4th Alan Farrell M45 (2.22.0)

Women’s 3,000m A: Sorcha Loughnane W40 (10.44.9 PB), 10th Deirdre McCanna (11.05.8)

Men’s 3,000m B: 1st Daragh Keegan (9.37.7 PB club debut), 2nd Matthew McCullagh (9.42.6 PB club debut)

Men’s 3,000m C: 1st Craig Scott M40 (10.10.1)

DUBLIN JUVENILE T&F CHAMPIONSHIPS DAY 4 at Tallaght (24.06.2021)

Under 18 Girls 1,500m Final: 2nd Emma Stacey (5.05.0), also Claudia Redmond (5.29.1)

Under 18 Boys 1,500m A race Final: 5th Sean Kinsella (4.32.0)

Under 18 Boys 1,500m B race Final: 1st James Bolton (4.17.9)

ST. COCA’S 5km ROAD RACE at Kilcock, Co. Kildare (25.06.2021)

16th Cathal McCarron MS (15.25)

41st & 1st M50 Des Tremble (16.24)

45th David McConn MS (16.29 PB)

47th & 19th M40 Gavin Keogh (16.33)

51st Alasdair Brown MS (16.38)

58th Paul Cummins MS (16.42)

80th & 6th M50 Donal Iremonger (17.15)

148th & 13th W40 Sinead O’Reilly (19.48)

203 finishers

NATIONAL SENIOR TRACK & FIELD CHAMPIONSHIPS DAY ONE at Morton Stadium, Santry (25.06.2021)

Senior Women’s 400m Hurdles Qualifying Heat 2: 3rd Caoimhe Mackey (1.06.77 – qualified for final)

Senior Men’s 400m Qualifying Heat 2: 4th Zak Higgins (52.81)

Senior Men’s 400m Qualifying Heat 4: DNF David Campbell

Senior Men’s 400m Qualifying Heat 5: 1st Jack Raftery (47.69 – qualified for final)

Senior Men’s 800m Qualifying Heat 1: 2nd Louis O’Loughlin (1.52.37 – qualified for final)

Senior Men’s 1,500m Qualifying Heat 2: 4th John Travers (3.54.10 – qualified for final)

NATIONAL SENIOR TRACK & FIELD CHAMPIONSHIPS DAY TWO at Morton Stadium, Santry (26.06.2021)

Senior Women’s 100m Qualifying Heat 1: 7th Eva McPartlan (12.47)

Senior Women’s 100m Qualifying Heat 3: 2nd Aoife Lynch (11.81 – qualified for final)

Senior Women’s 5,000m Final: 6th Barbara Cleary W45 (16.34.62 PB)

Junior Men’s 3,000m Final: 3rd Abdel Laadjel (8.27.93 PB), 8th Gavin Curtin (8.49.42 PB)

Senior Women’s 400m Hurdles Final: 5th Caoimhe Mackey (1.05.21)

Senior Women’s 100m Final: 3rd Aoife Lynch (11.69 wind 2.6 m/s)

Senior Men’s 800m Final: 5th Louis O’Loughlin (1.50.59)

Senior Men’s 400m Final: 4th Jack Raftery (47.52)

Senior Men’s 1,500m Final: 11th John Travers (3.55.96)

Women’s 4 x 100m Relay Final: 3rd Donore Harriers <Eva McPartlan, Sarah Lahiff, Roisin Rynn-Cahill, Lucy Hurley> 52.60

Men’s 4 x 100m Relay Final: 4th Donore Harriers <Sean Chan, Paul McDermott, Conor Fox, Adam Halpin> (44.89)

Senior Men’s Discus Final: 11th Oran O’Brien (36.95m)

NATIONAL SENIOR TRACK & FIELD CHAMPIONSHIPS DAY THREE at Morton Stadium, Santry (27.06.2021)

Senior Women’s 200m Qualifying Heat 2: 2nd Aoife Lynch (24.36)

Senior Men’s 200m Qualifying Heat 2: 6th David Campbell (24.47)

Senior Men’s 200m Qualifying Heat 4: 2nd Paul McDermott (22.40)

Senior Women’s 100m Hurdles Final: 4th Lara O’Byrne (14.40 PB)

Senior Women’s 200m Final: 5th Aoife Lynch (23.83 wind 2.1 m/s)

Senior Men’s 10,000m Final: 10th Kane Collins (32.55.21 PB), 15th Ray Hynes (33.52.86)

Senior Women’s 4 x 400m Relay Final: 3rd Donore Harriers <Lara O’Byrne, Sara Higgins, Adelle Heskin, Emma Stacey> (4.13.56)

Senior Men’s Shot Putt Final: 6th Oran O’Brien (12.48m)

01. Aoife Lynch Nat. Senior 100m bronze 2021 02. 4 x 100m bronze quartet Top Lucy Hurley, Roisin Rynn-Cahill, Bottom - Sarah Lahiff, Eva McPartlan

Club Interview Series 54 – Tony Murphy

From a boy scout with little interest in sport to captaining the Irish senior team in the International cross-country championships. That’s just a part of the sporting journey of Tony Murphy. Tony competed in Donore Harriers club colours for almost three decades, many as the club captain. Indeed, he was integral to the club’s great success in the golden Eddie Hogan coaching era of the 1960s and early 70s.

Here is a summary of Tony’s outstanding athletics career –

In 1960 Murphy was on the Donore Harriers team that won the National Novice cross-country championships. In the following year, he was a member of the successful National Junior XC team and came 2nd in the Junior 3-mile track championship.

1962 saw the junior team retain their XC title, with Murphy being selected to represent the Irish team to compete in the International Under 20 XC championships at Sheffield. This was the 2nd time the U20 competition was held and Ireland’s first participation in the event. He also came 2nd in the IAAU 3,000m steeplechase.

He represented Ireland in track and field internationals versus Scotland in 1963 and England in 1964. Also in 64, he won the National Senior steeplechase (IAAB) for the first time.

He came 2nd in the 1965 AAUE National Senior XC behind teammate Tom O’Riordan and was on the Irish team that contested the International XC championship at Oostend in Belgium. On the track he won the IAAB National 3,000m steeplechase title.

<<NOTE: 1965 National Senior XC: 1st Donore Harriers – 1 Tom O’Riordan, 2 Tony Murphy, 3. Jim McNamara, 4. Brendan Dunne – 2nd Donore Harriers ‘B’, 3rd Crusaders AC>>

In 1966 Tony Murphy again finished 2nd to O’Riordan in the National Senior XC championship as the Donore Harriers team won its 9th consecutive title. The team went on to finish 2nd in the European Club XC championships at Arlon in Belgium behind Portsmouth AC. Tony won the AAUE steeplechase and 10-mile track titles in the same year.

<<NOTE: 1966 National Senior XC: 1st Donore Harriers – 1 Tom O’Riordan, 2 Tony Murphy, 3. Tony Hopkins, also T. Power, N. Dunne & P. Redican – 2nd Civil Service AC>>

Murphy won the 2nd BLE (formed 1967) senior steeplechase title in 1968. He also won the Eastern Region XC title and came 2nd in the BLE national 15-mile road championship.

Work relocation saw Murphy compete in the London athletics scene in the late 60s and early 70s. Competing for Ealing & Southall AC he helped his new team to team victory in the North of the Thames XC championship in 1969. In 1971 the team came 3rd in both the North of the Thames and Middlesex County XC championships.

The Donore Harriers star was Ealing & Southall AC club champion over 5,000m and 10,000m in 1972. He spearheaded the E&S AC team to win the highly competitive Middlesex County XC championship and came 3rd in the Middlesex 3,000m SC in that year.

Back home in Dublin in 1973, Tony Murphy came 2nd in the Eastern Region XC and led the Donore Harriers team to victory. He was also a key member of the team that won the Dublin XC senior team.

Tony was also on the Donore Harriers teams that won the National Road Relay and the Dublin and Eastern Region XC titles in 1974. In the same year, he came 2nd in both the Dublin 5,000m and 10,000m championships. He also represented Ireland in a track match versus Romania and Germany at Bielefeld, Germany.

In the following year he came 17th and 4th team scorer in the National Senior XC championship at Naas, as the Donore Harriers team won their 18th consecutive XC title. The team also won the National Road Relay and Eastern Region XC team titles – and came 2nd team in the Dublin XC. Tony won a silver medal in the Dublin 5,000m.

<<NOTE: 1975 National Senior XC: 1st Donore Harriers – 4 Tom O’Riordan, 9 Eddie Spillane, 13 Mick Flood, 17 Tony Murphy – 2nd Galway City Harriers, 3rd St. Finbarr’s AC>>

Tony was on the Donore Harriers team that came 3rd behind winners Clonliffe Harriers in the 1976 senior XC championship at Ballinasloe. The team also came 2nd in the ’76 National Road Relay. He won a bronze medal in the Eastern Region 5,000m race.

Murphy was also part of the Donore Harriers team that came won the Dublin XC title in 1978 and then came 2nd in 1979. Tony won his last senior medal in 1980, when the Donore Harriers team came 3rd in the National XC championship at the Phoenix Park. Clonliffe Harriers won the title and Jim McGlynn was first Donore Harriers athlete home in 14th place.

In 1982 Tony was on the Donore Harriers team that came 3rd in the Dublin 10-mile road championship. In the following year he won the National Masters XC, leading the team to victory. He also won the National Masters 5.000m title.

He also won several open road races and his best result in the Waterhouse Byrne Baird Shield was 2nd behind Eddie Spillane in 1973. Tony also won the Faugh-A-Ballagh Cup as men’s club XC champion in 1980.

A sensitive pelvic injury required Tony to retire from competitive athletics around 1987.

It should be noted that Tony Murphy was a well-respected Club Captain in a period when the club dominated senior cross-country in Ireland. He later served as the Club President between 1983 and 1985. That was a significant period in the club’s history, as the women’s section had been newly formed and plans to relocate the club away from its Hospital Lane base were in process. Tony was also the Club Coach for a time – and is an Honorary Life Vice-President based on his services rendered to the club over the years.

In this interview Tony talks about Eddie Hogan, the legendary club coach, and his experiences at international cross-country championships.

STANDARD QUESTIONS

PLACE AND YEAR OF BIRTH? Dublin 1942.

WHERE WERE YOU EDUCATED? Haddington Road National School.

WHAT WAS YOUR CAREER PATH? I left school at aged 14 and then completed a dental technician apprenticeship. After that Pat Mullaly, the club treasurer, got me a job as a clerk with the Automobile Association. I worked for several years with the AA, including a 3 and a-half year term in London. Then I got a job with PMPA Insurance, whom I stayed with until my retirement.

IN WHAT YEAR DID YOU JOIN DONORE HARRIERS? 1959

WHY DID YOU CHOOSE DONORE HARRIERS? A long story! I was in the scouts and had little interest in sports and running. The scouts had an annual camp at the Mount Juliet area in Kilkenny and one day we followed the river – but were not allowed to go swimming due to the fast waters. So, we decided to run back to the campsite, and I was the first back. After that we used to do paper chase runs with me acting as the hare.

Later in the summer I was entered to the scouts sports day at Santry and came 2nd in the one-mile race. It was 1958 and there was a lot of focus on the mile and the Morton Stadium at that time, as five men broke the 4-minute mile barrier in the 1958 Morton Mile.

Ignatius O’Brien, who organised the scouts races, put me into a couple of cross country races in the following winter and I placed in the top 3. In the following summer Ignatius invited me to join the club sessions at the old track at Irishtown. I have to admit that I knew very little about running and club athletics at that time. As I lived in Donnybrook at the time my local club was really Crusaders AC, but I later became a regular at Donore Harriers clubhouse at Hospital Lane.

It took me a while to adapt to proper training levels. In my very first championship race I was part of the Donore Harriers team that won the National Novice cross-country in 1960.

WERE YOU A MEMBER OF ANY OTHER CLUB BEFORE JOINING DONORE HARRIERS? No

DID YOU PARTICIPATE IN ANY OTHER SPORT? No.

WHAT IS YOUR FAVOURITE ATHLETICS EVENT? My favourite event was 4 and 5-mile road races. I won the Crusaders 5-mile road race in 1964 and subsequently won that event two more times. I also enjoyed the Dunboyne 4-mile, which I won in 1967. It was the first open race after the formation of BLE (Bord Luthchleas na hEireann) when the AAUE and NACA were merged. I was also the first winner of the Bowden Maguire 5-mile road race at Drogheda in 1968.

WHAT WERE YOUR ROLES AT THE CLUB? I was an athlete for the best part of 30 years. I had to give up running in 1987/88 due to a pelvic injury. I was the Club Captain for a very long time, and in the era when Eddie Hogan was the club coach. I was also the Club President between 1983 and 1985.

WHO WERE YOUR SPORTING INSPIRATIONS/INFLUENCES? Obviously, Ronnie Delany after his gold medal in the 1956 Olympic Games. There weren’t too many people out running the roads in the 1960s, so fellas used to shout out “Did you bring it with you Ronnie?” – a reference to the Olympic gold medal – to any man out on his run. As an avid Shamrock Rovers fan and a regular to their Milltown ground my heroes back then also included the likes of Paddy Coad, Tommy Hamilton, Liam Touhy, and Ronnie Nolan.

SOCIAL QUESTIONS

WHAT WAS THE LAST CONCERT YOU ATTENDED? I can’t remember which one, but either Cliff Richard at the RDS or John Denver at the Point.

WHAT ARE YOUR 3 FAVOURITE FILMS?

1. Westside Story

2. Vera Cruz (a Mexican/American cowboy film)

3. Sound of Music

FAVOURITE COUNTRY VISITED? As a rule, I don’t return to a country once visited, but I have gone back to Italy several times. In particular, I like Sorrento – a southern city that overlooks the Bay of Naples.

WHAT ARE YOUR OTHER INTERESTS AWAY FROM ATHLETICS/SPORT? Bridge, golf, and community work – particularly with my local resident’s association. To be honest, I don’t play golf anymore as my flexibility and coordination is not as good as it used to be. When my handicap went from 9 to 25, I decided it was time to quit.

IF DISERT ISLAND DISCS ASKED YOU TO PLAY 3 SONGS, WHAT WOULD THEY BE?

1. My Way by Frank Sinatra

2. That’s Amore by Dean Martin

3. You’ll Never Walk Alone by Gerry & the Pacemakers

ATHLETICS QUESTIONS

WHO WAS YOUR COACH(ES)? Eddie Hogan and myself.

YOU ARE THE CLUB CAPTAIN DURING THE EDDIE HOGAN ERA. WHAT MADE EDDIE SUCH A GREAT AND WELL-RESPECTED COACH? As far as I know he went to Germany on a coaching course. Eddie was always present for club sessions, so he built a trust with his athletes. He explained the session prior to each run. The sessions were seasonal and formed an overall plan that targeted major championships, in particular the national cross-country championships. He never told us to avoid open races, except in the lead-up to big championships. The other thing is that he varied the training sessions according to the time of the year.

WHAT DO YOU CONSIDER TO BE YOUR BEST ATHLETICS ACHIEVEMENT? I’d like to think that my overall athletics experience was the best. Probably my 6-mile run of 28.48 was my best run. It ranked me 2nd in Ireland behind Bertie Messitt and was around 20 seconds short of the qualifying time for the 1968 Olympic Games in Mexico City. I also get great satisfaction from the fact that I beat every other Irish athletes that I came up against at one time or another. The list includes the likes of John Treacy, Eamon Coghlan, Derek Graham, Niall Cusack, Gerry Deegan. I may not have won the respective races, but it was nice to finish ahead of these great athletes.

WHAT ARE YOUR BEST TIMES (PBs)? 6-miles – 28.48; 3-miles – 14.00; 2-miles – 8.59; One Mile – 4.13; 880 yards – 1.57.5; 440 yards – 53.5; 220 yards – 23.5; 10,000m – 29.59; 5,000m – 14.30; 3,000m – 8.24; 1,500m – 4.00; 3,000m Steeplechase – 9.07; 400m Hurdles – 58.5; 15-mile Road – 75.35; 10-mile Road – 49.30; Marathon – 2.27.

WHAT WAS YOUR FAVOURITE COACHED SESSION? Probably 20 x 400m on the track.

DESCRIBE THE MOST DIFFICULT SESSION THAT YOU HAVE DONE? Going up the Knockmaroon Hill 10 times and down the Anglers Rest side and over and back. If was difficult, but it was a great session for race fitness. Of course, the Hill had much less traffic back then, so it was safe enough to do a session.

WHAT WAS A TYPICAL WEEKLY TRAINING PLAN? Long run on the weekend, usually 15 to 20 miles depending on season. Club sessions on Tuesday & Thursday evenings and Saturday afternoons. Easy running in-between. I never liked running in the morning, so most of my training was done in the evenings.

DO YOU HAVE A FUNNY STORY RELATED TO ATHLETICS/THE CLUB? I competed in every event in the National Track & Field League expect the Hammer and Pole Vault. In one match I was pitted again Paddy Smee in the 400m Hurdles. Paddy had either won or placed in the National Championships, so was favourite to get maximum points. He was in one of the inside lanes, whilst I was on the outside. Anyway, I ran well and won the race. The fact that I was practicing for the steeplechase helped my hurdling technique.

WHO ARE YOUR TOP 3 IRISH SPORTSPERSONS OF ALL TIME?

1. Ronnie Delany

2. Liam Brady

3. Sonia O’Sullivan

SPECIFIC QUESTIONS

WHAT WERE YOUR BEST RESULTS AS A JUNIOR ATHLETE? I was on the first Irish team to compete in the Under 20 international cross-country championships in 1962. It was the 2nd year of the junior event, and the first time for Ireland to take part.

I was on the Donore Harriers team that won the AAU National Junior cross-country team championships in 1961 and 1962; and I was 2nd in the 3-mile junior track championship in 1961 and 2nd in the 1962 3,000m junior steeplechase.

TELL US MORE ABOUT THE UNDER 20 INTERNATIONAL RACE IN 1962. I NOTE IT WAS HELD AT GRAVES PARK IN SHEFFIELD? There is not a lot to say really about the event. There was a lack of communication and camaraderie compared to the open races back home. It was very much gun and go! The standard was obviously much higher, so it was hard racing and just trying to hang on to places.

I do remember that one of the other athletes – I think he was South African – asked me to swap singlets. I refused, as I wanted to keep my first Irish vest.

YOU WERE ON THE IRISH SENIOR TEAM AT THE INTERNATIONAL CROSS-COUNTRY AT OOSTEND IN 1965, ALONGSIDE ATHLETES LIKE DEREK GRAHAM, JIM McNAMARA AND JIM HOGAN. WHAT ARE YOUR ABIDING MEMORIES OF THAT CHAMPIONSHIP? Jim Hogan did not run. He wanted to be put on a flight from London, but his request was refused. He was there as a spectator only. The team travelled by ship from Dublin to Holyhead, then took a train and another boat to Oostend. On the way back, we were given flights from London.

It was a frantic fast start, and I made my way to the front in the early stages. One week later when I returned to compete in the Martini International in Brussels, I saw a front-page newspaper photo in a window that showed me in the front group of the race.

YOU MADE THE IRISH TEAM AGAIN IN 1966, THIS TIME AT RABAT IN MOROCCO. THERE WAS A STRONG DONORE HARRIERS REPRESENTATION ON THAT TEAM. DEREK GRAHAM OF ANNADALE STRIDERS FINISHED 2ND. TELL US ABOUT THE WHOLE MOROCCO EXPERIENCE? AND TELL US ABOUT DEREK GRAHAM? I was the captain of the Irish team that day. We were flown to Gibraltar and then took a boat and train to reach Rabat. Derek and Jim McNamara were great rivals who shared a great mutual respect.

Rabat was a nice place, and the people were friendly. We visited the kasbahs and stalls. However, one problem was that the natives did not speak English.

YOU WERE NATIONAL STEEPLECHASE CHAMPION 3 TIMES. WHY DID YOU TAKE UP THAT EVENT? I think it was Willie Dunne who suggested that I try the steeplechase. At first, I stepped onto all the barriers and would put my two feet into the water. But I went away and practiced the barriers and became more efficient at the event. Perhaps the jumping and landing impact caused the pelvic problems that ended my running experience.

WHAT ARE YOUR MEMORIES OF THE HOSPITAL LANE CLUB FACILITIES? It was small and did not allow the club to expand in terms of membership and events. The club had some great field event athletes among the membership, which we very rarely saw. People like Brendan O’Reilly, Val McGahan, Jim Fanning, Dick O’Rafferty were never seen at Hospital Lane, but trained elsewhere.

YOU WERE THE CLUB PRESIDENT BETWEEN 1983 AND 1985, AN IMPORTANT ERA FOR THE CLUB WITH THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE NEWLY FORMED WOMEN’S SECTION AND PLANS TO RELOCATE THE CLUB. WHAT CAN YOU TELL US ABOUT THE ATMOSPHERE/ACTIVITIES AT THE CLUB IN THAT PERIOD?

We purchased a portacabin to facilitate the women’s group. It was not an ideal facility, but it was the first step.

At one time, we had the idea to develop the facilities at Islandbridge (Hospital Lane), but it would have been too costly. Thus, people like Maurice Ahern, Pat Mullaly and myself were busy looking at alternative locations for the club. Maurice worked with the Youth Council and Pat with the Dublin Corporation, so they had good contacts. We all considered it necessary to obtain better club facilities in order to develop the club, in particular the juvenile and women’s sections.

HOW DO YOU CONSIDER THE PRESENT STATUS OF THE CLUB? I am probably not in touch enough to give a give a full answer. The great thing is that the club can accommodate more athletes and a wider variety events than in the old times. Athletes have better facilities and there are more coaches. The key to better success is to be able to hold on to your senior athletes. That’s an age-old problem!

Donore Harriers Athletics Report – w/e June 20th 2021

HIGHLIGHTS: Donore Harriers athletes won 5 gold (Aoife Lynch 100m & 200m, Louis O’Loughlin 800m, Lara O’Byrne 100mH, Jack Raftery 400m), a silver (Lara O’Byrne HJ), and 2 bronzes (Caoimhe Mackey 400mH & 100mH) in the National Under 23 championships, and one gold (Abdel Laadjel 5,000m) in the National Junior championships. However, blustery conditions foiled the attempts of Aoife Lynch & Louis O’Loughlin to gain European Under 23 standards.

Grace Kennedy-Clarke 2nd woman in Thoroughbred Half-Marathon at Kildare. Newcomer Aideen Burke 1st woman in IMRA Little Sugar Loaf race, with Rory Burke 2nd home overall.

REPORT: The 1st day of the NATIONAL JUNIOR & UNDER 23 TRACK & FIELD CHAMPIONSHIPS at Santry on Saturday (19.06.2021) saw athletes from Donore Harriers secure 3 gold, a silver, and a bronze medal. To cap off a fine day for the club’s best emerging talent Jack Raftery ran a brilliant leg in the 4 x 400m relay leg to secure Ireland’s qualification to the European U23 relay championships.

First into action on an overcast and blustery morning was Louis O’Loughlin in the U23 800m. Starting out from the less favourable inside lane, O’Loughlin stormed into an early lead and never looked back! He passed the 400m mark in 53.5 having built a lead of almost 10 metres. He later admitted that he struggled in the final 30 metres, but his pain may have been as much psychological as physical as the clock ticked towards the 1.49 time that he had to better in order to secure a berth on the Irish team for the upcoming European Under 23 championships in Estonia. His final time of 1.51.01 was two seconds shy of the mark, but it earned him a convincing win ahead of Kevin McGrath (1.53.86) of Bohermeen AC.

Aoife Lynch (24.37) was another chasing the European Under 23 standard. She convincingly won the women’s 200m title ahead of runner-up Sarah Leahy (25.01) of Killarney Valley AC, but her time was outside the B standard of 24.10 to ensure selection on the Irish team. Whilst the wind gauge had a favourable reading of 0.2 m/s, it did not indicate the swirling nature of the breezes that made fast running more difficult.

Donore’s other winner on Day 1 was Abdel Laadjel, who made a conservative start in the Junior Men’s 5,000m. As the race progressed Laadjel gained to form a front group of 9 athletes that also included his teammates Gavin Curtin and James Bolton. He took the lead at the 4km point, and with a 2.44 final kilometre opened a sizeable gap on his pursuers. The Donore Harriers star won in 15.10.68 ahead of fast finishing Scott Fagan (15.14.81) of Metro St. Brigid’s AC. Gavin Curtin (15.22.74) produced a fine performance to finish in 4th place, with James Bolton (15.44.59) running a personal best to cross the line in 8th position. Bolton still has two years remaining in the junior grade.

Club athletes won two more medals on Day 1, as Lara O’Byrne took silver in the Under 23 women’s High Jump with a best of 1.60m. She lost out on the gold medal on the countback rule to Louise King of St. Colman’s Mayo AC. Caoimhe Mackey (1.04.61) ran a personal best in the Under 23 Women’s 400m Hurdles to secure a bronze medal.

Day 1 of the championships was rounded off with Jack Raftery running a brilliant 3rd leg on the Ireland Under 23 4 x 400m team that secured a European Under 23 championship entry (standard 3.12) with a time of 3.11.16.

Day 2 of the NATIONAL JUNIOR & U23 CHAMPIONSHIPS on Sunday(20.06.2021), also at Santry, saw Donore Harriers athletes bring home 3 more gold medals. Aoife Lynch was a convincing winner in the women’s U23 100m final in a time of 11.76. However, the wind gauge reading of 3.1 m/s meant that her time was not permitted. Also, in the 10-woman final was Claudia Sofia Andre, who posted a time of 12.37 for 6th place.

The Athletics Ireland officials allowed the sprinters an extra race in a bid to get qualifying times and personal bests. Aoife Lynch was again victorious in a time of 12.06 with a wind reading of minus 0.8 m/s. Thus, she must now wait until next weekend’s senior championships to make another attempt at the Europe Under 23 qualifying standard. Claudia Sofia Andre came 5th in the additional 100m sprint in 12.59.

Jack Raftery ran a smart race to win the Under 23 400m national title. He allowed David Ryan of Moycarkey Coolcroo AC and Cathal Crosbie of Ennis Track AC take the pace through the first 200 metres, before he powered down the home strait to win in 47.68. The fact that swirling winds made fast racing more difficult suggests that Raftery can realistically run below 47 seconds in the near future. His coach Paul Clarkin said: “Jack was brilliant. Tactically ran and executed perfectly. So proud of him”. Raftery won his qualifying heat in 48.95. Crosbie (48.05) came 2nd, and Ryan (49.04) 3rd.

Lara O’Byrne won her 3rd national medal of 2021 with success in the 100m Hurdles. Having won silver in the National U23 Heptathlon last week and a silver in the High Jump on the previous day, she powered her way over the hurdles to win in a new personal best time of 14.51 ahead of Niamh O’Neill (15.66) of St. Colman’s Mayo AC. Caoimhe Mackey won her 2nd bronze medal of the championships in the same race. Mackey finished very strongly to gain from 4th place and came a mere one-hundredth of a second off the silver medal.

Sean Chan (12.22) came 7th in the 1st qualifying round of the Under 23 men’s 100m.

John Travers was back in action, this time competing in the 5,000m at the 11th edition of the NATIONAL EST LYONNAIS TRACK MEET at Lyon on Saturday evening (19.06.2021). John settled into 7th place in the opening laps, with the leaders churning out laps of 64 and 65 seconds. However, he faded in the latter half of the race to finish 17th in 14.54.66. The race was won by Yann Schrub (13.37.36) of France, with Yohans Kifle (13.55.27) of Eritrea next.

Grace Kennedy-Clarke came 2nd woman in the THOROUGHBRED HALF-MARATHON on Sunday morning (20.06.2021). She completed the 21.1 kilometres course that started and finished in Kildare Town in 1.29.34.

In the first of the IRISH MOUNTAIN RUNNING ASSOCIATION WEDNESDAY EVENING RACE SERIES newcomer Aideen Burke (56.04) was the first woman to complete the 8.62km course that had a total climb of 360 metres. 2nd overall out of the 130 finishers was Rory Burke, who completed the Belmont Little Sugar Loaf route in 42 minutes and 41 seconds.

Mario Omozee won the Under 14 Boys 200m gold medal on Day 3 of the DUBLIN JUVENILE TRACK & FIELD CHAMPIONSHIPS at Tallaght on Friday evening (18.06.2021). In the 3rd qualifying heat of the Under 14 Girls 200m new member Aoife Jackson gained good experience in placing 7th.

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RESULTS IN BRIEF:

DUBLIN JUVENILE T&F CHAMPIONSHIPS DAY 3 at Tallaght (18.06.2021)

Under 14 Boys 200m Final: 1st Mario Omozee (nta)

Under 14 Girls 200m Qualifying H3: 7th Aoife Jackson (nta)

NATIONAL JUNIOR & UNDER 23 TRACK & FIELD CHAMPIONSHIPS DAY ONE at Morton Stadium, Santry (19.06.2021)

Junior Men’s 5,000m Final: 1st Abdel Laadjel (15.10.68), 4th Gavin Curtin (15.22.74), 8th James Bolton (15.44.59 PB).

Under 23 Women’s 200m Final: 1st Aoife Lynch (24.37)

Under 23 Women’s 400m Hurdles Final: 3rd Caoimhe Mackey (1.04.61)

Under 23 Women’s High Jump Final: 2nd Lara O’Byrne (1.60m)

Under 23 Men’s 800m Final: 1st Louis O’Loughlin (1.51.01)

NATIONAL JUNIOR & UNDER 23 TRACK & FIELD CHAMPIONSHIPS DAY TWO at Morton Stadium, Santry (19.06.2021)

Under 23 Women’s 100m Final: 1st Aoife Lynch (11.76), 6th Claudia Sofia Andre (12.37) – wind 3.1 m/s

Under 23 Women’s 100m Hurdles Final: 1st Lara O’Byrne (14.51 PB), 3rd Caoimhe Mackey (15.67) – wind 2.4 m/s

Under 23 Men’s 100m Qualifying H1: 7th Sean Chan (12.22)

Under 23 Men’s 400m Final: Jack Raftery (4), qualified 1st in Heat 1 (48.95)

TRACK MEET NATIONAL EST LYONNAIS at Lyon, France (19.06.2021)

Men’s 5,000m: 17th John Travers (14.54.66)

THOROUGHBRED HALF-MARATHON at Kildare Town (20.06.2021)

2nd woman Grace Kennedy-Clarke (1.29.34)

IRISH MOUNTAIN RUNNING ASSOCIATION RACE SERIES at Belmont Little Sugar Loaf (16.06.2021) – Race 8.62km, Climb 360m.

2nd Rory Burke MS (42.41)

47th & 1st woman Aideen Burke W35 (56.04)

130 finishers.

Abdel Laadjel Nat Jnr gold 5,000m 2021 Aoife Lynch U23 100m champ 2021 Jack Raftery U23 400m champion 2021 Louis O'Loughlin Nat U23 gold 2021

Club Interview Series 53 – Margaret O’Halloran

Most of you will be thinking who Margaret O’Halloran is in the context of Donore Harriers! Well, she was one of the club’s leading track and field athletes in the early days of the women’s section – and was a pioneer of women’s pole vaulting in Ireland. Indeed, she was the first women’s national pole vault champion in 1998, and then went on to represent Ireland in the Europa Cup at Kaunas, Lithuania in June of that year. The team included the likes of Karen Shinkins, James Nolan, Nick Sweeney, Susan Smith and Donore’s Roman Linscheid, so she was among some great Irish athletes on that trip.

Mags won an array of medals in Leinster and National championships in sprints and hurdles – and later won two Intervarsity gold medals in the Pole Vault, including victory in the 1998 Celtic Games at the Antrim Forum.

Here is what her former coach Gerry Ronan says about Margaret: “Margaret was one of the early members of the Donore Harriers Ladies section – a multi-talented athlete and an academically gifted student. Having started out as a hurdler she later progressed to the Pole Vault, where she set the first officially recognised women’s national record in the event. A real trailblazer, in every sense of the word, she made training all the more enjoyable for her training partners by her relentless positivity. She even managed to secure for herself a summer training abroad with the coach of a German world champion. Margaret would never be told a dream was impossible. She was, and remains, one of the most resilient athletes I have ever had the honour to coach”.

STANDARD QUESTIONS

PLACE AND YEAR OF BIRTH? Dublin 1976

WHERE WERE YOU EDUCATED? UCD – undergrad degree in psychology, masters degree in psychology.

WHAT HAS BEEN YOUR CAREER PATH? Studied psychology and worked with children with autism for a few years. About 4 years ago I started coaching tennis and absolutely love it.

IN WHAT YEAR DID YOU JOIN DONORE HARRIERS? I’d say it was about 1987. I was 11 – I think!

WHY DID YOU CHOOSE DONORE HARRIERS? My coach Gerry Ronan was with the club.

WERE YOU A MEMBER OF ANY OTHER CLUB BEFORE JOINING DONORE HARRIERS? No, I just ran for my school.

DID YOU PARTICIPATE IN ANY OTHER SPORT? Swimming

WHAT IS YOUR FAVOURITE ATHLETICS EVENT? Pole Vault

WHAT WAS YOUR ROLE AT THE CLUB? Athlete

WHO WERE/ARE YOUR SPORTING INSPIRATIONS/INFLUENCES? Katrin Krabbe, the European 100m and 200m champion in 1990. I worked for her in her sports shop in Neubrandenburg, Germany for a summer in 1993. I spent that summer training in a sports boarding school there.

SOCIAL QUESTIONS

WHAT WAS THE LAST BOOK YOU READ? Open by Andre Agassi

WHAT WAS THE LAST CONCERT YOU ATTENDED? Ed Sheeran

WHAT ARE YOUR 3 FAVOURITE FILMS?

1. Dead Poet’s Society

2. Mrs. Doubtfire

3. Mama Mia

FAVOURITE COUNTRY VISITED? Australia

WHAT ARE YOUR OTHER INTERESTS AWAY FROM ATHLETICS/SPORT? Tennis, Weights, Netflix, Surfing

IF DISERT ISLAND DISCS ASKED YOU TO PLAY 3 SONGS, WHAT WOULD THEY BE?

1. Dance Monkey – Tones & I

2. If Your Over Me – Years & Years

3. Titanium – David Guetta

ATHLETICS QUESTIONS

WHO WAS YOUR COACH(ES)? Gerry Ronan for sprints and strength training between ages 10 and 25. Jim Alexander and Brendan Dunne for the Pole Vault.

WHAT DO YOU CONSIDER TO BE YOUR BEST ATHLETICS ACHIEVEMENT? Representing Ireland in the Pole Vault in the Europa Cup in Lithuania

WHAT ARE YOUR BEST TIMES/MARKS (PBs)?

3 metres – Pole Vault

I can’t remember my times for the sprints!

WHAT WAS YOUR FAVOURITE COACHED SESSION? Technique work, starts and weights with coach Gerry Ronan.

DESCRIBE THE MOST DIFFICULT SESSION THAT YOU HAVE DONE? Sand dunes at Donabate with coach Gerry. Double Dunne Killer!

WHAT WAS YOUR TYPICAL WEEKLY TRAINING PLAN? Running/technique/fitness 3 or 4 times a week.

Strength training twice per week.

WHO ARE YOUR TOP 3 IRISH SPORTSPERSONS OF ALL TIME?

1. Sonia O’Sullivan

2. Katie Taylor

3. Rachael Blackmore

SPECIFIC QUESTIONS

YOU JOINED THE CLUB WHILST IT WAS STILL BASED AT HOSPITAL LANE. TELL US ABOUT THE FACILITIES AND GENERAL MOOD AT THE ‘COTTAGE’ HEADQUARTERS? I was very young, but I can remember meeting outside the club and jogging to the Phoenix Park, where we did our training sessions.

WERE YOU DAUNTED BY THE FACT THAT YOU WERE JOINING A TRADITIONAL ‘HARRIERS’ CLUB? Not at all!

WHO WERE THE BIG CHARACTERS AT THE CLUB BACK THEN? I only knew my training group.

WHAT WAS A TYPICAL TRAINING SESSION LIKE? AND WHAT VENUES, FACILITIES DID YOU USE? In the early days I trained in the Phoenix Park and Sundrive Road track. Later on, I did most of my training in UCD, Belfield and Santry.

Sessions were usually warm-up, stretches, drills, technique, interval training and some endurance work.

DID YOU WIN ANY MEDALS AT UNDERAGE (JUVENILE, SCHOOLS, JUNIOR) LEVEL? Yes, I won several Leinster and All-Ireland medals for the 100m, 200m, 400m and 400m Hurdles.

WHAT WAS YOUR MOST MEMORABLE TRIP/OUTING ASSOCIATED WITH ATHLETICS/THE CLUB? AND WHY? Representing Ireland at the Europa Cup in Lithuania. It was so amazing to be chosen to represent Ireland. Loved every minute of the trip.

YOU STARTED OUT AS A SPRINTER, BUT LATER TOOK UP THE POLE VAULT. WHAT WAS THE CATALYST FOR TAKING UP SUCH A TECHNICAL EVENT? I was injured and bend running was aggravating my injury. I was competing in the Glasgow Indoor Meet in the 400m and saw women starting to compete in the Pole Vault. I really wanted to try the event, it looked fun!

YOU BECAME THE FIRST IRISH WOMAN POLE VAULT CHAMPION IN 1998, SO YOU WERE VERY MUCH A PIONEER OF THE EVENT IN IRELAND. TELL US ABOUT THAT EXPERIENCE IN TERMS OF EQUIPMENT, FACILITIES AND TRAINING OPPORTUNITIES? I did most of my training in the Indoor part of the stadium in Santry and sometimes in UCD. I also traned with Brendan Dunne in Monkstown School. Jim Alexander also came down from Belfast for coaching sessions.

A group of us also went warm weather training to Spain with Jim. We also sent to Poland to train the coaches there. The training facilities were amazing. They had gymnastic sessions, which we didn’t have here. The training was also incorporated into the school day for the athletes.

YOU REPRESENTED IRELAND IN THE EUROPA CUP MATCH AT KAUNAS, LITHUANIA ON 6th OF JUNE 1998. WHAT ARE YOUR ABIDING MEMORIES OF THAT TRIP/EVENT? I loved every minute. It was so fantastic to be part of an Irish team. Great team spirit.

DO YOU HAVE ANY SPORTING REGRETS? I wish I had started tennis at an earlier age.

ARE YOU PRESENTLY INVOLVED WITH SPORT IN ANY CAPACITY? Yes, I play and coach tennis at the Sunday’s Well Tennis Club in Cork on most days.

 

 

Donore Harriers Athletics Report – w/e June 13th 2021

HIGHLIGHTS: Lara O’Byrne silver in National Senior Heptathlon; Jack Raftery gold in AAI Games 400m with a PB and qualification to the European Under 23 championships. Silver medals for Louis O’Loughlin (800m) and Oran O’Brien (Shot Putt). Aoife Lynch PB & European U23 B standard in Austria; John Travers 5th in BMC Grand Prix Watford 1,500m; 4 gold, a silver, and 2 bronzes in the opening weekend of the Dublin Juvenile T&F Championships. Sorcha Loughnane wins again, this time in the Dublin Mountain 5km Championship. Excellent PB for Gavin Curtin in Belfast steeplechase.

REPORT: Aoife Lynch can add Eisenstadt, the small State capital of the Burgenland province in eastern Austria, to her list of favourites places to visit. She made the trip there to compete in the RAIFFEISEN AUSTRIAN OPEN on Wednesday last (09.06.2021) and ran a personal best of 11.63 in the 3rd race of the women’s 100m to place 2nd behind Magdalena Lindner – who set a new Austrian Under 23 record time of 11.33. Lynch ranked 4th overall of 20 competitors from 7 different countries in the 100m series. This was a significant achievement by Lynch, as she knocked .28 of a second off her previous best time, to jump to 5th in the Irish rankings for 2021. Her new PB time is a B standard in the selection process for the upcoming European Under 23 championships.

In the 200m Lynch ran another fine race to record a time of 23.96, but the wind gauge reading of 2.9 metres per second meant that she could not claim a second PB on the day. She came 3rd behind two Lithuanians and ranked 5th of 11 in the 2-race series.

The first DUBLIN ATHLETICS BOARD OPEN GRADED MEETING of the summer was held at the Tallaght Track on Wednesday evening (09.06.2021) and saw several relatively new club participants toe the start line. Eva McPartlan (13.12) won the women’s 100m ‘B’ race ahead of Dara Carr of Lambay Sports & Athletics. First season athlete Margaret O’Brien (5.41.30), competing on the track for the first time, won the women’s 1,500m ‘D’ race in a close finish with Tanja Narancic (5.41.90) of Crusaders AC. Master athlete Treasa Boylan (5.50.90) placed 5th.

In the men’s 1,500m ‘A’ race Kane Collins (4.16.20), running in club colours for only the 2nd time, came 9th. The race was won by Mitchell Byrne (3.56.8) of Rathfarnham AC. In the ‘C’ race club stalwart Donal Iremonger (4.35.28) came 5th, with debutant Evan Hurley-O’Dwyer next in 4.36.31.

On DAY 1 of the DUBLIN JUVENILE TRACK & FIELD CHAMPIONSHIPS at Tallaght on Friday evening (11.06.2021) there was double gold glory for Donore Harriers athletes in the 1,500m. Emily Bolton (4.53) romped to victory in the Under 14 Girls, and Liam Morris (4.39) won a close contest to emerge the winner in the U14 Boys. There was a fine run by new boy Jack Reilly (4.49), who was just outside the medals in the U14 Boys 1.500m. Liam Blair (5.14) and Rian Kavanagh (5.32) gaining PBs in the same category.

Lorraine O’Connor took a fall at the start of her Under 15 Girls 1,500m race, but bravely recovered to win a silver medal in 4.53. Eva Crowe (5.04) came 6th, with Julie Cleary (5.15) Eleanor Hopkins (5.39) setting personal bests.

Alex Leonard took bronze in the final of the Under 15 Boys 100m, with Ciaran O’Farrell placing 7th. The other Donore Harriers contestants were James Dunne and Paddy Nolan.

The Omozee brothers took home a gold medal each on Day 2 of the DUBLIN JUVENILE TRACK & FIELD CHAMPIONSHIPS on Sunday (13.06.2021) at Tallaght. Mario Omozee took the honours in the Under 14 Boys 100m sprint, with older brother Romeo winning the Under 16 Boys High Jump. Newcomer Zion Osawe impressed with 3rd place and a bronze medal in the Under 13 Girls 80m sprint. Melody Omozee (U13), and debutantes Lily Clarke (U13) and Aoife Jackson (U14) contested the heats and will benefit from the experience.

In the Under 16 Girls 1,500m Laura Nunan (5.31) got a season’s best time and Katie Delaney (5.54) a PB, but both were outside the medals. In the Under 16 Boys 1,500m Thomas Bolton (4.45) and Dylan McKenna (4.46) came 9th and 10th respectively.

Multi-Eventer Lara O’Byrne came away happy with her performances in the NATIONAL COMBINED EVENTS CHAMPIONSHIPS at Santry on the weekend (12&13.06.2021). She began Day 1 of the senior women’s heptathlon with an excellent personal best in the 100m Hurdles with a time of 14.60. She then high jumped 1.61m, before getting her second PB of the day in the Shot Putt with a best throw of 10.09m. Lara then ran yet another personal best time with a 26.11 sprint in the 200m to close out the day in 2nd place overall.

On Day 2, she long jumped 5.16m, threw the javelin 25.50m, and then produced another PB in the 800m with a superb 2.23.96 effort. O’Byrne amassed a personal record total of 4731 points, to finish 2nd behind the more experienced Elizabeth Morland (5178pts) of Cushinstown AC, and well ahead of 3rd placed Louise King (3738) of St. Colman’s South Mayo AC. The Trinity College student, who is now coached by Gerry Ronan, was pleased to get through the competition without a recurrence of an injury had has hampered her training in recent months.

In the ATHLETICS IRELAND GAMES (DAY 1) at Santry (12.06.2021) Louis O’Loughlin was hoping to achieve the 800m standard (1.49.00) for the European Under 23 championships. With the some of the stronger entrants opting to compete at the BMC Grand Prix Meet at Watford, the race came down to a duel between Cillian Kirwan of Raheny Shamrocks AC and the Donore Harriers man. O’Loughlin took the pace for the first 200m, before Kirwan edged in front. The two leaders passed the 400m mark in 54 seconds, with the Raheny athlete (1.48.83) holding off a late challenge from O’Loughlin (1.49.04). O’Loughlin, therefore, was just 4-hundredths of a second outside gaining the second B standard.

The other competing Donore athletes on Day 1 were: – Kane Collins, who came 9th in the 3,000m B race in a PB of 8.49.83; master athlete Barbara Cleary 8th in the women’s 3,000m A race in 9.50.05; and Claudia Sofia Andre (25.30) who came 2nd in the women’s 200m C race.

There was one field competitor, with Oran O’Brien throwing a 4th round best of 12.37m to place 2nd in the Men’s Shot Putt.

Jack Raftery was the club’s star athlete in DAY 2 of the ATHLETICS IRELAND GAMES at Santry (13.06.2021). He romped to victory in the men’s 400m A race in a new personal best time of 47.02, thus gaining the 2nd B standard that qualifies him to compete in the European Under 23 championships.

Zak Higgins (50.15) showed good early season form to place 2nd in the 400m B race, whilst Alex Clarkin (57.18) and Daragh McAuley (1.00.74) had fine performances to finish 1st and 4th in the 400m Hurdles B race.

In the women’s 100m sprint races Claudia Sofia Andre (12.52 & 12.35) and Eva McPartlan (12.83 & 12.58) placed 3rd and 4th respectively in both series 1 and 2. Caoimhe Mackey also made a welcome return to competition by winning the women’s 400m hurdles B race in 1.04.55.

John Travers came 5th in the Men’s 1,500m A race in the BRITISH MILERS CLUB GRAND PRIX at Watford on Saturday (12.06.2021). Travers made a brave move to the front with a little less than a lap to run, but he was unable to hold form in the home strait and fell back in the sprint to the line. Hoping to run 3.37/3.38 or faster the Donore Harriers star admitted: “I didn’t go out hard enough, so was way too far back at 200. I left myself with too much to do and found myself out in lane 2 for a lot of the race. I actually felt great when I put the hammer down, but my legs went to jelly with 60 to 70 metres to go. It was not my worst run, but I’m disappointed that I didn’t execute it better”.

Sorcha Loughnane was back to winning ways following her recent 50km success in the Ulster 50km championships. This time she took the winners prize in the DUBLIN MOUNTAIN R.C. 5km CHAMPIONSHIP (12.06.2021) at the Hellfire Club’s venue at Montpelier Hill. Sorcha recorded a very fine time of 22.44 for a tough course over hilly terrain.

An ever-improving Gavin Curtin took around 20 seconds of his previous best time for the 3km steeplechase in the ARMAGH A.C. STEEPLECHASE & HURDLES MEET at Belfast (13.06.2021). Curtin contested for the lead early on, before placing 3rd in 9.56.

Next weekend sees the National Junior & Under 23 championships take place at Santry. There will be strong Donore Harriers interest as Aoife Lynch and Louis O’Loughlin close in on European Under 23 standards.

RESULTS IN BRIEF:

RAIFFEISEN AUSTRIAN OPEN at Eisenstadt, Austria (09.06.2021)

Women’s 100m Race 3: 2nd Aoife Lynch (11.63 PB) rank 4/20

Women’s 200m Race 1: 3rd Aoife Lynch (23.96 wind reading 2.9) rank 5/11

DUBLIN OPEN GRADED SERIES NO. 1 at Tallaght Track (09.06.2021)

Women’s 100m B Race: 1st Eva McPartlan (13.12)

Women’s 1,500m D Race: 1st Margaret O’Brien (5.41.30); 5th Treasa Boylan (5.59.90)

Men’s 1,500m A Race: 9th Kane Collins (4.16.20)

Men’s 1,500m C Race: 5th Donal Iremonger M50 (4.35.28); 6th Evan Hurley-O’Dwyer (4.36.31)

DUBLIN JUVENILE TRACK & FIELD CHAMPIONSHIPS DAY 1 at Tallaght Track (11.06.2021)

U14 Girls 1,500m: 1st Emily Bolton (4.53), also Ellie O’Connell & Claire O’Hanlon

U15 Girls 1,500m: 2nd Lorraine O’Connor (4.53), 6th Eva Crowe (5.04), also Julie Cleary (5.15 PB) & Eleanor Hopkins (5.39 PB)

U14 Boys 1,500m: 1st Liam Morris (4.39 PB), also Jack Reilly (4.49 PB), Liam Blair (5.14 PB) & Rian Kavanagh (5.32 PB)

U15 Boys 100m: 3rd Alex Leonard, 7th Ciaran O’Farrell, also Paddy Nolan and James Dunne

BRITISH MILERS CLUB GRAND PRIX at Watford (12.06.2021)

Men’s 1,500m A race: 5th John Travers (3.40.50)

AAI GAMES DAY ONE at Morton Stadium, Santry (12.06.2021)

Men’s 800m A race: 2nd Louis O’Loughlin U23 (1.49.04)

Men’s 3,000m B race: 9th Kane Collins (8.49.83 PB)

Women’s 3,000m A race: 8th Barbara Cleary W45 (9.50.05)

Women’s 200m C race: 2nd Claudia Sofia Andre (25.30)

Men’s Shot Putt: 2nd Oran O’Brien (12.37m)

NATIONAL COMBINED EVENTS CHAMPIONSHIPS at Morton Stadium, Santry (12+13.06.2021)

Senior Women’s Heptathlon: Lara O’Byrne – DAY ONE – 2nd in 100mH (14.60 PB = 895pts), 2nd in High Jump (1.61m = 747), 2nd in Shot Putt (10.09m PB = 535), 2nd in 200m (26.11 PB = 969); DAY TWO – 2nd Long Jump (5.16m = 603), Javelin (25.50 = 392), 1st 800m (2.23.96 PB = 771)

Result: 1st Elizabeth Morland (Cushinstown AC) 5178pts, 2nd Lara O’Byrne (Donore Harriers) 4731pts PB, 3rd Louise King (St. Colman’s Mayo) 3738pts.

AAI GAMES DAY TWO at Morton Stadium, Santry (12.06.2021)

Men’s 400m A race: 1st Jack Raftery U23 (47.02 PB)

Men’s 400m B race: 2nd Zak Higgins U23 (50.15)

Men’s 400mH B race: 1st Alex Clarkin (57.18), 4th Daragh McAuley (1.00.74)

Women’s 100m B race Series 1: 3rd Claudia Sofia Andre U23 (12.52), 4th Eva McPartlan U23 (12.83)

Women’s 100m B race Series 2: 3rd Claudia Sofia Andre U23 (12.35), 4th Eva McPartlan U23 (12.58)

Women’s 400mH B Race: 1st Caoimhe Mackey U23 (1.04.55)

DUBLIN JUVENILE TRACK & FIELD CHAMPIONSHIPS DAY 2 at Tallaght Track (13.06.2021)

U13 Girls 80m Final: 3rd Zion Osawe (debutant, progressed thru heats and semi-final), also Melody Omozee 3rd in her heat and Lily Clarke (debutant) who also contested in the heats.

U14 Girls 100m: Aoife Jackson (debutant, 4th in her heat)

U14 Boys 100m: 1st Mario Omozee

U16 Girls 1,500m: Laura Nunan (5.31 SB); Kate Delaney (5.54 PB)

U16 Boys 1,500m: 9th Thomas Bolton (4.45), then Dylan McKenna (4.46?)

U16 Boys High Jump: 1st Romeo Omozee

DUBLIN MOUNTAIN RUNNING CLUB 5KM CHAMPIONSHIP at Montpelier Hill (12.06.2021)

Women’s Category: 1st Sorcha Loughnane (22.44)

ARMAGH AC STEEPLECHASE & HURDLES MEET at Mary Peters Track, Belfast (13.06.2021)

3,000m SC: 3rd Gavin Curtin JNR (9.56.0 PB)

Club Interview Series 52 – Niall Lynch

In the past decade there are few who have rallied more to the cause of Donore Harriers than Niall Lynch. Despite coming relatively late to the sport of athletics, he has made a notable contribution as a competitor, coach, event volunteer, and parent.

 

 

 

Niall has been a key scoring member on Donore Harriers teams in Dublin, Leinster and National road-race and cross-country senior and masters championships. The County Cavan native has completed 11 marathons, with a best time of 2.41.42 in the 2014 DCM – and run in each of the last 7 Waterhouse-Byrne-Baird Shield 10-mile handicap races with a best of 3rd place in 2016. He was the first winner of the Tommie Hayward Perpetual Trophy as the fastest man to complete the W-B-B course in 2016. He also won this award in 2018 and 2019.

Niall Lynch has represented Ireland 5 times in the British & Irish Masters cross-country championships – and has been a regular competitor with the Irish Mountain Running Association, participating in 49 races with 8 victories and 20 top-3 placings.

<<NOTE: Here’s a link to Niall competing in the B&I Masters XC at Santry Demesne in 2015. He is wearing No. 4008 and passes at 32 to 34 seconds into the clip – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hDHy6FgpykY >>

Much of Niall’s training has been done under the mentoring of coach Terry McConnan, whose city-based lunchtime group – known as the TT-racers – is a wonderful initiative allowing athletes from different clubs to train together. He also regularly takes the benefit of joining into Willie Smith’s innovative sessions.

Over the past few years Niall has been a coach of the younger club juveniles, and more recently as a part of the LTAD Juvenile Distance Squad coaching team with Graham Hopkins and Thomas Delaney.

Niall has been joined at the club by his daughters Honor and Amber – both of whom are enthusiastic members of the juvenile team. Amber was the 2nd winner of the Willie Dunne Shield handicap race on St. Stephen’s Day 2018.

Here is a list of some of Niall’s other achievements: –

2014: 1st in M40 category Dublin Half-Marathon championships; led the DH team to win the Dublin Novice XC; 1st M40 in Autumn Open Cross; 1st in Leinster Masters XC championships; won a team silver with the Ireland masters team at B&I championships at Nottingham; came 4th in Leinster Intermediate XC leading DH to 3rd team: 1st M40 IMRA Leinster League.

2015: 1st M40 Dublin Masters XC, 2nd scorer of DH winning team; 2nd Leinster Masters XC; 3rd scorer on DH team to win National Masters XC; 3rd M40 Frank Duffy 10 incorporating Dublin championships; 2nd Dingle Half-Marathon; 1st Breffni 3-Province Half-Marathon; 1st IMRA Leinster League.

2016: 3rd Dingle Half-Marathon; 3rd Connemara Marathon; 1st team IMRA Wicklow Way Relay.

2017: 1st team IMRA Wicklow Way Relay; 3rd scorer on Irish team 2nd in M45 category in B&I Masters XC.

2018: 1st Cavan 10km; 1st team IMRA Wicklow Way Relay.

2019: 1st team IMRA Wicklow Way Relay.

STANDARD QUESTIONS

PLACE AND YEAR OF BIRTH? Dublin 1971

WHERE WERE/ARE YOU EDUCATED? St. Feilim’s Boys School Cavan Town,

St. Patrick’s College Cavan, Dublin City University, Trinity College Dublin, Dublin Institute of Technology.

WHAT HAS BEEN YOUR CAREER PATH? I studied Electronic Engineering, started a Masters in Mobile Networks then got a job in a telecoms research company. I did a masters in distributed computing and moved into programming and started contract programming in 2000 in the Netherlands and Belgium, came back to Ireland in 2004 and continued contracting. I’m still at that game. I’ve been contracting at the Department of Agriculture on their web-based applications for the last 14 years.

IN WHAT YEAR DID YOU JOIN DONORE HARRIERS? 2011

WHY DID YOU CHOOSE DONORE HARRIERS? I was training for Dublin Marathon in 2011 and met up with a bunch of lunchtime runners in Trinity College, Graham Hopkins was one of them and he was in Donore Harriers and told me to join as it was a great club, which I did.

WERE YOU A MEMBER OF ANY OTHER CLUB BEFORE JOINING DONORE HARRIERS? I was a member of Rathfarnham for one year before joining Donore Harriers.

DID/DO YOU PARTICIPATE IN ANY OTHER SPORT? I played Gaelic Football mostly growing up and then for many years with my beloved Cavan Gaels. I experienced many years of heartache with them, but it was nice representing your hometown. When I left Ireland to go working in the Netherlands the team won their first championship in 24 years in 2001. It still hurts a little that I wasn’t part of that team. I came back in 2004 and played for a couple of years, got too many injuries to make a real go of it but it was enjoyable being back playing the game for a couple of years.

I did gymnastics for a few years when I was young, it was very popular in Cavan in the 80s thanks to local dentist Paddy King who ran the club. Myself and my brother competed as a double act in the national championships, I still remember vividly all the training we did for it.

I played on the Cavan rugby team for a few years underage, it was a lot of fun. There were no leagues at the time so we just played challenge matches all over the place.

I played hurling in school because I couldn’t get on the football team, it gave me an appreciation of how skillful those hurlers we see on tv are.

I played a lot of soccer in business leagues in Dublin in the 90s and then played in a club in Amsterdam when I lived there. I also played on the first Amsterdam Gaelic football team for the last year we were living there.

I now play a bit of tennis because there is a tennis club in front of my house. I’d like to get better at that mainly to beat my brother, but I also enjoy the game.

WHAT IS YOUR FAVOURITE ATHLETICS EVENT? I love cross country and mountain running events.

WHAT IS YOUR PRESENT ROLE(S) AT THE CLUB? I’m a coach of one of the juvenile groups and a masters athlete.

WHO WERE/ARE YOUR SPORTING INSPIRATIONS/INFLUENCES? When I was a kid, I played loads of sports so each sport had someone I wanted to be like. Playing soccer in the yard I wanted to be like Kenny Dalglish or Liam Brady. For running it was between Eamonn Coghlan and Ray Flynn. For Gaelic football I loved watching Jack O’Shea play. Locally a few coaches kept me at football, Tony Looney, Phil Finnegan, JJ Reilly, Mickey Flynn all were really encouraging and gave me a love for the sport.

SOCIAL QUESTIONS

WHAT WAS THE LAST BOOK YOU READ? The Murder of Roger Ackroyd – Agatha Christie. My daughter Honor is a big fan of Agatha Christie, and she gave me this one to read so we could chat about it. Very enjoyable, she was a trailblazer for the popular genre. Currently reading a book by a former schoolteacher of mine, The Gallant John Joe, lots of local history in it. I think I now know all the townlands in south Cavan.

WHAT WAS THE LAST CONCERT YOU ATTENDED? Jon Hopkins at the Bord Gais Energy Theatre, just before everything shut down due to pandemic. It was hard to enjoy as there was a sense of foreboding that something bad was about to happen. The gig was a little shambolic too as there were lots of technical issues.

WHAT IS YOUR FAVOURITE FILM? This is very hard, I’m a big fan of the cinema. The top film will probably change depending on my mood. For today I’ll go with one of my favourite directors of all time, David Lynch and his most accessible movie The Straight Story, very sentimental but very beautiful telling of a true story, gorgeous soundtrack and beautiful cinematography. You need to be made of stone not to shed a few tears during this film.

FAVOURITE COUNTRY VISITED? As a family we’ve been to Italy many times from north to south, great weather tonnes of history, gorgeous landscape, I have a big soft spot for Sicily.

WHAT ARE YOUR OTHER INTERESTS AWAY FROM ATHLETICS/SPORT? I love music and going to gigs whenever I can. Unfortunately, the last year hasn’t been great. The online experience is not the same, although I did enjoy the Glastonbury show last Saturday night. I can’t wait to get back to gigs later in the year.

IF DESERT ISLAND DISCS ASKED YOU TO PLAY ONE SONG, WHAT WOULD IT BE? I’m a big music fan, so this was very hard. If it’s just one tune I’ll bring Impossible Soul by Sufjan Stevens. It will remind me of the best gig I was ever at which was his in the Olympia in 2011. He finished with this tune. it’s an epic 25 minutes long and has everything in it from full on dance rave to Sufjan’s trademark quiet guitar.

ATHLETICS QUESTIONS

WHO IS/ARE YOUR COACH(ES)? Terry McConnan from TTRacers sends out a programme each week which I try to follow. Terry knows me well since 2011 and gives great advice and encouragement. I love jumping in on Willie’s sessions on the Polo Grounds whenever I can. They are really imaginative and challenging and enjoyable.

WHAT DO YOU CONSIDER TO BE YOUR BEST ATHLETICS ACHIEVEMENT? Running the Waterhouse Byrne Baird shield race for the last 7 years. I mean any of us who do that race must be a bit insane, who else would sign up to run 10 miles cross country on St. Stephen’s Day?

WHAT ARE YOUR BEST TIMES (PBs)?

5km – 15:55

10km – 33:51

10 Mile – 56:10

Half Marathon – 1:14:04

Marathon – 2:41:42

WHAT IS YOUR FAVOURITE COACHED SESSION? 8 x 800m with 2-minute interval. 800m is a nice distance for a session, you can feel like you’re moving fast.

DESCRIBE THE MOST DIFFICULT SESSION THAT YOU HAVE DONE? 20 x 400m with 45 seconds interval. I did this once training for the marathon; I think it was a minor homage to Emil Zapoteck.

WHAT IS YOUR TYPICAL WEEKLY TRAINING PLAN?

Monday – rest

Tuesday – long interval session like 6 x 800m or 5 x 1 mile or pyramid

Wednesday – 50 mins easy

Thursday – 12 x 400m

Friday – rest

Saturday – 30 min tempo

Sunday – 1:30 mins easy

YOU TRAIN WITH THE TT-RACERS LUNCHTIME GROUP UNDER COACH TERRY MCCONNON. TELL US MORE ABOUT THE GROUP, ESPECIALLY IN TERMS OF THE BENEFITS? The lunchtime sessions are magic, it’s a real shot of excellent focussed training with a group of really good, focussed people who are really encouraging. Training with a group is so beneficial, you will push yourself to places you didn’t think was possible.

The group caters for every level of runner, is really supportive and diverse, from loads of different backgrounds. Terry keeps track of us and groups us with people who he thinks will push us along.

DO YOU HAVE A FUNNY STORY RELATED TO ATHLETICS/THE CLUB?

Sorry, no funny story.

WHO IS YOUR TOP IRISH SPORTSPERSON OF ALL TIME? It’s got to be Sonia O’Sullivan, with Catherina McKiernan a close second. I followed Sonia throughout her career and loved how superhuman and human she was at the same time. She dominated and then went through bad patches and bounced back. I loved her winning the world cross country double in Morocco, amazing running. Her world championship wins were incredible too and of course her silver in Sydney was amazing. She had a brilliant career. Catherina is a legend in Cavan, everyone could see her training and the effort she put in over the years. Her marathon times were incredible, she still holds the Irish record. I would say if she was running now her career would have lasted longer. In her era there was an expectation to retire, that isn’t as prevalent now.

SPECIFIC QUESTIONS

DID YOU EVER COMPETE AS A JUVENILE OR IN SCHOOLS COMPETITIONS?

I was in an athletics club in my hometown of Cavan from age 8 til about 13, then Gaelic football took over. Athletics was big across Ireland in the 80s, there were loads of clubs in Cavan and Ulster and across the country. I remember the road leagues, cross country championships and track and field. We used to get buses all over the place for competitions. Highlights at the time were reaching the Under 13 All-Ireland 4 x 100m final as part of the Cavan team which was run on the track in UCD.

I also made national cross-country championships with the Cavan team. The race was in Thurles, and I remember coming 101st. I still vividly remember the hurt of coming so far down the running order. I thought I was handy enough, but it was a real eye opener for me, and I think I started to concentrate more on Gaelic football from then on.

WHAT DO YOU CONSIDER TO BE YOUR BEST DISTANCE/EVENT? I think a half marathon is probably my optimal distance.

YOU COMPETE IN MOUNTAIN RACES – AND THE I.M.R.A. STATS SHOW THAT YOU WON 8 OF 41 RACES WITH 22 CATEGORY WINS. HOW DID YOU GET ATTRACTED TO MOUNTAIN RUNNING? A good buddy of mine Ronan Hickey needed a pal to recce leg 2 of the Wicklow Way relay. This was about 8 years ago. So, I went out with Ronan and ran from Curtlestown Wood to Lough Tay. It was an absolutely gorgeous evening, spectacular scenery and lovely to be running off road. Ronan filled me in on all things IMRA, so I signed up and spent a few years racing out of Dublin on a Wednesday evening to race in the Wicklow mountains. The races are really challenging, the scenery is beautiful, the IMRA people are so nice. There is a great buzz at the finish line of those races, and we always head to a local hostelry for a prize giving and exchange war stories about the race. I’ve missed them over the last few years. It’s been hard to get out of work and also of course the pandemic wiped out last year and this year.

The highlight of the IMRA calendar for me is the Wicklow Way Relay. It’s like the Japanese Ekiden, a team of 8 do different legs over a large part of the Wicklow Way. It takes a lot of preparation and training and logistics on the day, but it is a fantastic event to be part of. I have run it as part of a TTRacers team about 6 times. I really recommend it to anyone in the club to give it a go. It’s another type of running challenge and really nice to be part of a big team.

YOU FIRST RAN THE DUBLIN MARATHON IN 2011. HOW MANY MARATHONS HAVE YOU RUN IN SINCE? AND WHAT HAS BEEN YOUR BEST RESULT? I have run 11 marathons. Dublin 2014 was my fastest. I put in the best amount of training for that. I haven’t been able to get in enough quality training for the rest since then. There are no shortcuts in training for a marathon, you get out what you put in. Even if you’re only a little bit off the full amount of training you’ll be found out and spat out by the end, it has no mercy.

YOU WERE ON THE DONORE HARRIERS MASTERS TEAM THAT WON NATIONAL XC GOLD IN 2015. WHAT DO YOU REMEMBER ABOUT THAT DAY?

I remember that event very well. It was a foggy day, and I was feeling really unwell and was going to say I couldn’t make it, but the team would have been down to 4 so I togged out. I went off ambitiously and then just hung on. It was a brilliant result, and I was delighted I made the effort. Amazing run by John Dunne to finish 3rd on the day, he really carried the team home that day.

YOU HAVE REPRESENTED IRELAND FIVE TIMES IN THE BRITISH & IRISH MASTERS XC CHAMPIONSHIPS. WHAT WAS YOUR FAVOURITE B&I XC EVENT? I think it was my first one in Cardiff in Wales. I didn’t know what I was getting myself into, but it was a real blast. We had a great Irish gang over there. I was sharing a room with an absolute legend Martin McEvilly who I felt unworthy to be on the same team as particularly as Martin was telling me about his 2:14 for the marathon he ran in Gothenburg. I met loads of great people that weekend and learned a lot about running. I remember the start of the race was insane. I was swept up in the wave and belted out what was probably a sub-5-minute first mile, so I was hanging on for the rest of the race.

TELL US ABOUT YOUR COACHING ROLE AT DONORE HARRIERS? AND DO YOU HAVE ANY SPECIAL COACHING PHILOSOPHY? I think as a coach you are there to just guide the runner to get them to be the best they can be. Everyone has their own reason to be out running, so you need to tap into that and try to remind them why and what they can do to get the best out of themselves.

I haven’t got as much time to spend coaching as I would like, so I’m just helping Graham Hopkins out once a week with the 12 to 16 age middle distance group. He’s doing all the heavy lifting. I’m just trying to encourage the runners around during the sessions.