
Inside Kerry star David Clifford's life with girlfriend Shauna and son Óigí
These accolades and his on-field achievements, including one All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, five Munster titles and three National Leagues, mean everything to the 26 year old – yet he stays humble and down-to-earth. He also claimed Young Footballer of the Year in 2018 and Footballer of the Year in 2022 and 2023.
Earlier this year, Clifford spoke to our colleagues at RSVP Magazine to discuss his life off the field with his partner and son.
A viral photograph captured you with Kerry performance coach Tony Griffin following the All-Ireland Football Final defeat to Dublin.
Can you recall how you felt in that moment?
There was a lot of disappointment and regret, I suppose. Croke Park is the best place to be when you win and the worst place to be when you lose. To have somebody like Tony and to have such close friends on the team shows how lucky you are. You survive through the bad days together. You must move on from it too, your life can't revolve around whether you win or lose a game. It would make for a long career for you, because you're going to have more losses than wins.
Is it hard not to overthink things?
We're all guilty of that. You need to be well settled off the field and have plenty going on away from sport. It's very easy to think about football all the time, but then there would be no enjoyment in it anymore. Off the field, for you, is it hard to get the balance right? It can be at times. The people around us make a lot of sacrifices so we can go out and train so many evenings a week. I try to be settled and relaxed, and I try to enjoy my life as much as I can. That allows me to put everything into the game.
Your son Óigí is nearly three now. Does he recognise you on TV and know what the green and gold jersey means?
Yeah, he's gone mad for sport at the moment. He's wearing jerseys and he loves it. But he's not too happy with me going out training because I'm going to be gone for a couple of hours. He loves coming along with me to watch the Fossa games at the weekend. He's great craic.
Does that add an extra level of enjoyment for you, seeing him loving it as well?
I hadn't thought about it like that until you said it. He's also copying the celebrations of the soccer players he sees. He's getting to that age now where I've an extra reason to go out there and play.
Óigí is clearly gearing up for the All-Ireland! The structure of the championship has changed. The national league, provincial championship, round robin series and knock-out games are condensed into the first seven months of the year. How are you finding it?
When you're stuck in the middle of it and you're going to work, training and matches, you don't think about that kind of stuff. It's great to have games and the structure at the moment is great because you've got a game, then a week off and then another game. You're recovering for a week and then preparing for a week. The four or five week gaps in the old system used to be long. I like that element of it. We're getting a lot of good competitive games, and there's very few negatives to that.
Kildare legend Johnny Doyle won a club championship at 45 years old last year. Would you like to do something similar?
It's hard to know. I want to play for as long as I can anyway. The day you're inside in the full-forward line and some young fella beats you out to the first couple of balls, that's probably when it's time to move on [laughs].
There has been talk of a return to September All-Ireland finals again. What do you think of that?
I'm very happy with the split season. From a selfish point of view, as a teacher anyway. Nobody wants to hear about teachers and their holidays, but we get to have a month of summer holidays after the All-Ireland. That's very enjoyable, being able to go away. On the other side of it, when I was in primary school the build-up to an All-Ireland final in September was brilliant. There are pros and cons.
What's your own schedule like? Much has been made about how busy you are with Fossa, East Kerry and Kerry.
We're very lucky with our three managers, there's no problem if we need breaks here and there. We're conscious that winning doesn't last forever. East Kerry hadn't won the county championship for 20 years and Fossa has never won the junior. We have to milk it while we have it. It's important to get the breaks as well.
It's not just tough physically, it's mentally draining as well. You have to deal with the highs and lows and the build-up to games. How do you deal with the pressure of being David Clifford in a football-mad county?
The main thing is trying not to think about it like that. I have different targets for myself or different targets for the team. You always hear [Manchester City manager] Pep Guardiola saying that having targets takes the emotion out of the game. As boring as it sounds, that tends to work a lot of the time.
You're big into other sports and you're a Celtic fan. How important is that, having interests away from GAA?
That's my approach anyway, I try to have interests in other things. For other people, their interests may not be sports. At the moment, it's impossible to keep up with all the sports. You'd nearly want two or three TVs on the go [laughs].
You've been compared to Tiger Woods and Michael Jordan and been called a "once in a generation" talent. What's that like?
There's an uncomfortable nature to it. I learned from my parents to be humble and not to appear arrogant. You don't want to be talking about yourself in that light, you want to let it brush off you.
The Pittsburgh Steelers were in Dublin last April. Would you ever try your hand at playing in the NFL?
It hasn't really crossed my mind. I'm a relatively safe person in that I'm settled in a job and settled in life. To turn that upside down to try something new isn't something that would appeal to me too much. It's class to see the Irish players that have joined the NFL. We're looking forward to seeing if some of them can get on the pitch.
How does it feel to be settled so young? You've made your career in football at an early age, you've a child and a good job.
Maybe it will all turn upside down at some stage [jokes]. It's fine, that's just the way things have happened for me. Things fell into place nicely. I'm far from perfect, let that be known. I enjoy life and I feel like I've a great life. I'm very lucky with the people I have around me.
You were one of the youngest players when you joined the Kerry panel in 2018 and six years on you're one of the most experienced in the dressing room.
It's hard to believe. A lot of us came into the panel together in 2018 and 2019, so we've gone through the years together. Without even noticing it, we've had some incredible life experiences with trips away and big wins and defeats. Every year before you commit to another season you have to make sure you're still enjoying it – thankfully, I still am.
Your brother Paudie is team captain this year, what's that like?
It's much the same as before. Paudie and I don't spend too much time talking about football together, but we do spend a lot of time together in general whether it's golfing or being around our same circle of friends. Him being captain is great for Fossa too.
If you finished your career with one All-Ireland win, how would you accept that?
You'd like to win the All-Ireland every year, but that's not the reality of it. If I was to retire I wouldn't be going around telling people that I've an All-Ireland medal or don't have an All-Ireland medal. While they're great to win and you do everything in your power to win them, you just have to get over it. Hopefully, that won't be the case! David Clifford of Kerry celebrates his goal (Image: ©INPHO/James Lawlor)
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The Irish Sun
18 minutes ago
- The Irish Sun
Inside Gavin White's life from stunning fiancee to job after MOTM display inspired Kerry to All-Ireland glory
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The 42
24 minutes ago
- The 42
A day of days for Kerry as they complete the Ulster clean sweep
YOU CAN SAY these things now, and I have the What's App receipts if you'd like to check up, but after the semi-finals weekend, I messaged around a dozen people to tell them that, 'Remember this in a fortnight's time – Kerry will have walloped Donegal.' It was part hop-balling and a bit of craic to provoke some chat. But I would be selling myself short by saying I didn't think that Kerry were going to lift their 39th Sam Maguire. Forgive me for my lap of honour here. Or don't. It matters little to me anyway, but Ulster is well stocked with journalists and pundits and pretty much all of them went for a Donegal win. And I can back it up by directing you to the GAA Weekly podcast last week when Fintan O'Toole and myself both predicted a Kerry win. So there you have it; Declan Bogue, the Punter's Friend. Come all ye working men and women and invest your meagre wages. The logic I used was based on the fact that Kerry are forever the most ruthless cut-throats in Gaelic football, bar none. 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Advertisement And somehow, he got the name that Ulster sides spooked him. They didn't. Apart from the 2005 final against Tyrone, his record in that record was strong. Beating Armagh, then Tyrone and now Donegal was the exact way he would have wanted it. And that it was against Jim McGuinness would have satisfied Kerry most. Jack O'Connor. Laszlo Geczo / INPHO Laszlo Geczo / INPHO / INPHO In McGuinness, Donegal have a supreme motivator and a leader that anyone who plays under him, adores. But he is not above questioning when it comes to the tactics selected. Cast your mind back to the 2014 All-Ireland final. In the last few plays, Kerry had possession. Donegal needed to get the ball back. Instead, they stayed in a defensive shell, waiting for Kerry to launch an attack so they could force a turnover. Kerry weren't fools. Instead they held the ball and recycled it around their most talented ballers, eating up the clock. The System, as it was called then, ate itself whole. The thing is that the exact same thing happened here. The end of the first half was almost comical as Paudie Clifford, more than anyone, held onto the ball. He could have had a picnic in possession, and yet there were no challenges going in. Down on the sideline, McGuinness got close to where Brendan McCole and David Clifford were hanging out. Immediately, McCole had his hands on David Clifford. Essentially, Donegal decided the game would stop by not engaging. And once the hooter went, Paudie Clifford decided the game was back on again. In quick order, David Clifford booted the two-pointer of Jim Gavin's dreams. 'You've got your plans and you've got your processes and you've got all the things that you're working on all year. Where we got rattled was in possession ourselves. We gave the ball away at times today where it's very uncharacteristic. Against Kerry, you can't do that. They keep the ball very well,' said McGuinness. To which you can only ask, why did you leave the best pound for pound footballer in the country in Paudie Clifford unmarked throughout the entire game? There's a rumour going round right through that claims Paudie touched the ball 76 times. I checked it out by asking some colleagues and it appears it's Kosher. What the hell were Donegal thinking? 'Paudie Clifford is almost pressure-resistant. It's very, very difficult to get heat on him. He's physically strong, controls the game, protects the ball very well and obviously plays very well with his brother,' said McGuinness. It was a day of slightly odd behaviours from Donegal. They had to be asked twice to join the parade while they conducted a mini priming session in the middle of the pitch. They broke early from the parade then. And they did their usual thing of keeping the opposition waiting at half-time. It reminded one of Armagh in 2003, which felt at the time like Death By Huddles. It took nine minutes for David Clifford to touch leather in this game. Before that, he and Brendan McCole could have been wearing the same shorts. His first score was a spectacular two-pointer. Three minutes later he had another one. Kerry emerged from the first quarter, blinking into a 0-13 to 0-4 lead. Gavin White had been superb. Their defence was on top and Donegal's handling deserted them. Kerry's greater ambition carried the day. They had nine digs at two-pointers in the first half, with four flying between the posts. Donegal had none. By the time they did try a few, the options were questionable. Caolan McGonigle attempted one that was blocked down by Joe O'Connor and gave Kerry oxygen. They did suffer bad luck in losing a cast-iron two-point threat in Ciaran Thompson to an early injury. And further misfortune with the departure of Ryan McHugh after Gavin White steamed into him at the start of the second half. After twenty minutes, Michael Murphy went back into his own half. Throughout the game, he never got a sight of a two-point attempt but across the ground, he simply does not match Jason Foley for pace anymore. Michael Murphy. Laszlo Geczo / INPHO Laszlo Geczo / INPHO / INPHO The greatest footballer Donegal ever produced had a remarkable season after two years away. Truly remarkable. Related Reads 'I was inside here a month ago and there steam coming out of my ears' - Jack O'Connor How Joe O'Connor put injury hell behind him and played his way into Footballer of the Year contention Kerry name unchanged side for All-Ireland final as Diarmuid O'Connor makes squad He is in a cohort of players that you wouldn't be surprised to see leave over the winter. This was a team that looked at the end of a season that began in Abu Dhabi and had more hotel residentials than Judith Chalmers. But, to use the device the GAA President is fond of to bring his speech to conclusion; the day belonged to Kerry. The day belonged to the side that had the sharper skills, the better shooters, the innate understanding of what every play meant and how to cook it up themselves. This was one year that football didn't need a big final to redeem itself after the manure of earlier rounds. And it didn't get it either. But football, and Kerry football, is in a good place right now. * Postscript: Naturally, we will gloss over the predictions that both Kilkenny and then Cork were going to end Tipperary's hurling summer. Check out the latest episode of The42′s GAA Weekly podcast here


Irish Examiner
an hour ago
- Irish Examiner
How Kerry won it: Two-pointers, a kickout masterclass, and Clifford
The two-pointers For their first score, Gavin White took off from the throw-in and fed Dylan Geaney. For their second trick, Paudie Clifford went for two. They set the tone. The number 14's shot dropped short but Sean O'Brien's fist still managed to direct the ball over the bar. In the first half into the Canal End, Kerry went for 11 two-pointers. They converted four. In total they went 5/13. As the Ulster champions started chasing, Patrick McBrearty and Jamie Brennan were introduced and went for two. They had three attempts and didn't score a single one. The final shot tally was 35 for Kerry, 31 for Donegal. It was 22 scores to 19. In a year when the sport has been changed spectacularly, Jack O'Connor's side showed you have to be able to mix it up. They had the ability to kick the ball and run it. They can press aggressively and zonally. Kerry hit ones, twos and a three. David Clifford versus Brendan McCole It only took eight minutes for David Clifford to make his mark. A punch-for-punch opening exchange was swung towards the Kingdom with a terrific effort from outside the arc that stretched the margin to four. The first ever orange flag in an All-Ireland final was produced by the Fossa sensation, closer to the 45m line than he was the arc. McCole dedicated himself to the task but it proved formidable. When Clifford wasn't involved, he brought himself out wide to disrupt Donegal's zonal system and ensure they could only defend with ten. Just before the turnaround, Kerry worked the clock until the hooter had sounded. Everyone in the ground knew what was coming. No one knows how to stop it. Clifford roared off his brother's shoulder and swung over his third two-pointer of the afternoon. That relationship was a key feature of an awesome attacking display. Paudie's second-half kick to Clifford cutting in towards goal was pure genius. Clifford's championship record is now phenomenal. 45 games, 22-222 scored, two All-Irelands in the pocket. Remember, he is 26 years old. The half-back burst This was a kickout masterclass. Shane Ryan finished with 71% retention. A crucial part of that was their half-back axis, with Mike Breen and Gavin White in particular excelling. Together they were monsters on breaking ball. White roared into the contest with his very first involvement. He scored three points from play. The third was the definition of a captain's score. Michael Murphy nailed a point to cap three successive scores and make the gap just four with 15 minutes late. White took it upon himself to drive forward and fist over a point. Jim McGuinness made one late change, bring in Caolan McGonagle as expected but in place of Hugh McFadden. They sorely missed his physical presence on restarts early on, losing five of their first 11 kickouts while Kerry won all of their own during the same stretch. McFadden was brought on for McColgan at half-time. White managed to show all the ways a half-back can impact a game. It has been a whirlwind year for the Dr Crokes man. He led his club to county and Munster titles before suffering a nail-biting defeat to Errigal Ciarán after extra-time in the All-Ireland club semi-final. In the aftermath of that, White was criticised in places for a late free that they failed to retain. He sat down, watched it again and backed his decision. On the biggest stage, he showed exactly why he trusts his instincts.