| Sideline Views By Cathal Dervan
GAA: Eamonn Barry’s long-running feud with the Meath County
Board could yet cost him his job as Sean Boylan’s successor. Barry was a
constant critic of the board officials as he tried to oust Boylan for
two years before succeeding this autumn, but now his determination to
appoint his brother Martin and Dessie Rogers to his backroom team looks
set to unveil new controversy after they were both banned by the same
board after a row over the Meath junior team they ran in 2003. For years
now Barry has been telling anyone who’ll listen that he wants to manage
Meath, but now his very own petulance may cost him the shot at the title
he has craved. It’s bizarre to say the least.
GAA: John Bannon, the Longford man who refereed this year’s
All-Ireland final, wants all managers and officials banished to the
stands in championship games, and he has a point. Bannon is clearly fed
up with the abuse that comes his way from the sidelines. “It must happen
sooner or later. There is far too much intimidation of referees and
umpires by officials, especially those who are unable to accept
referees’ decisions and let everyone know about it,” he says. “If we
hadn’t got these people on the sidelines I can guarantee a lot of the
problems in Gaelic Games would be cut out.” It’s an interesting theory,
but somehow I don’t see John getting his way.
GAA: The GAA will be urged to scrap the Compromise Rules
series against the Aussies on a couple of fronts in the coming months.
The Offaly County Board are to submit a motion to Central Council
proposing that the series be done away with, while Sunday’s Galway
convention is to consider a similar proposal in wake of the violence
that marred the second and final test in Melbourne last month. Clearly
the rank and file of the GAA are unhappy at events on the field in the
Mickey Mouse game, so maybe the GAA should listen to their members and
save their players another beating next summer – this time on home turf.
SOCCER: Sometimes you just can’t win. Alex McLeish is living
on borrowed time as Rangers manager after another defeat on Sunday, this
time to Hibs, as Celtic and Hearts gain ground at the top of the
Scottish League. His chairman David Murray has even given McLeish until
the end of the month to save his job. So what happened when Portsmouth
approached Rangers on Monday looking for permission to speak to McLeish
about the managerial vacancy at Fratton Park? Murray refused. Seems like
Rangers don’t want McLeish, but don’t want to lose him either.
SOCCER: Few people in Ireland can be happy that Shamrock
Rovers were relegated from the Premier Division of the Eircom League on
Friday night but all their problems, bad as they may seem at the moment,
go back to 1987 and the brutal sale of Milltown. Until such time as the
club finds a permanent home back on the South Side of Dublin the sorry
mess is going to continue. Hopefully it will happen soon.
GOLF: A recent golfing trip to Portugal resulted in the
discovery of some new catch phrases for those awkward putts on the
greens. From now on in our group on a nasty five footer is known as
Denis Wise, an impossible read is known as a Salman Rushdie and then
there’s the Rock Hudson – the one you thought was straight but it
wasn’t!
HERO OF THE WEEK: John O’Shea hasn’t had much to shout about
recently, what with the exit from the World Cup finals and the attack on
his character by Roy Keane, but the Waterford man proved he can still
play football with the headed winner as Manchester United won at West
Ham on Sunday. Better again, it was entirely fitting that an Irishman
should score the decisive goal for United on the weekend they remembered
the great Belfast boy George Best, surely the best player ever to emerge
from the island of Ireland.
IDIOTS OF THE WEEK: Those who booed the minute’s silence for
George Best before the Manchester City-Liverpool and Millwall-Leeds
games on Saturday deserve to be banned from football for the rest of
their lives. The blame has been apportioned at the feet of a minority of
City, Liverpool and Leeds fans but that doesn’t matter. What matters is
that the clubs involved identify the vandals and ban them for life. They
deserve nothing better for marring the tributes to a great footballer.
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