logo
John O'Mahony - In his own words

John O'Mahony - In his own words

RTÉ News​17-06-2025
Former Mayo, Leitrim and Galway manager, John O'Mahony was among the many figures within the game that contributed to 'Hell for Leather - The Story of Gaelic Football', RTÉ's five-part series that delves into the role of Gaelic football in the sporting, cultural and social history of modern Ireland.
O'Mahony, who had two stints as manager with his native Mayo, led neighbours Galway to a couple of All-Ireland titles and famously led Leitrim to Connacht title in 1994, contributed to the documentary that was over five years in the making.
Below are extracts from O'Mahony's observations on the game as well as his own journey from playing to highly successful manager.
John O'Mahony died in July 2024 at the age of 71.
Football, a way of life
People say to me, 'I am sure you're fed up with people talking about football to you'. I just say to them, 'look, I love talking about it'. That has been my life really. So I never get fed up with it.
I got an O'Neill's football from Santy. There was snow that Christmas Day. I remember it well. We had our own little pitch and it was kind of lost in the snow. I have two brothers and we were all involved in starting the dream.
Croke Park
The first time I attended Croke Park was the first 1967 All-Ireland semi-final between Mayo and Meath. That was a special occasion. Then I played in the minor final of 1971. I'll never forget running out at Croke Park, I had made it kind of, we had made. Little did we know that there'd be a lot of disappointments along the way, but at the same time, you were part of a journey and the bond that a team group keeps over the years.
Moving into management
I was retired at the age of 23 or 22 but again, the GAA was my only outlet. And while I was very disappointed, it didn't mean that I threw myself back into the club and became secretary of the club and all that kind of thing. It wasn't about walking away from the game or from the ideas. I started refereeing and was doing some inter-county games and so on. Then the management game came up and that was the next best thing to playing and that's where it all started.
I was a fringe player. I was dropped. I felt it gave me an edge when I got in charge of teams myself. I was asked to manage the Mayo Under-21 team in 1983 and I put all those things into effect and we ended up winning the All-Ireland. That projected me into the management game and I was senior manager a few years later.
I played at underage level and won a couple of All-Irelands, but never made it as a senior player, so I felt that management was the next best thing to playing. I remember going to many All-Irelands in the seventies, the Dublin-Kerry rivalry and watching Kevin Heffernan and Mick O'Dwyer. You had your dream. Could I be there someday?
Points of difference
I felt that I could bring something different that would make it more professional at the time. You got food when championship training started and you got big steaks, chips and milk. My wife was a home economics teacher, so we got the diet sheets done out. if It was easier to be ahead of the bunch back then, so I bought my own video equipment. I had team psychologists and used them when they weren't being used anywhere else. You were trying to get an edge and I felt that I was always trying to be open to that innovation that would make a difference.
Players want to win things and what you have to do is convince them. I told the players, 'we're going to have salads, we're going to have brown bread' and you had to kind of set the scene of what the benefits were. You had hydration, taking on water, not just on the day of the match, but continually. Flexibility and stretching and all of that.
Teaching
My school journey was hugely important. I went back to teach in the school that I was a student in and was asked to train a team the first day I went in. You are learning the skills, you're learning as well as a teacher, you have probably some of the communication skills. I quickly learned that if we get this unity of purpose as I call it, you can beat teams that are better than you.
You have 30 students in a classroom or whatever, you're connecting with them. You're dealing with the different levels of the highly academic students and maybe the one that needs a bit of help or a bit of a nudge along the way. And it's how you mix up all of that and you bring that to the dressing room as well.
Empathy
As a manager or a coach, if you think that you know it all, you're on the way down because you have to get inside players' heads a little bit and empathise.
One memory that sticks out is where we talked to a player who had a serious issue. All the guys were talking about it in the dressing room, but no one was saying anything to him. So I said, 'Look, let's share this if you feel you can, and I can assure you, everybody will support you in every way'.
And that's what happened, the admiration when he actually spoke in the dressing room, sharing the difficulty that he had. It broke the ice.
It's those little moments sometimes that you remember.
Management
I think that I probably did well at management. Because I was a fringe player, I was always thinking of the fringe player. It's easy to keep the captain or the top scorer or the major leaders happy because they're always going to be in the first 15, but what's important is that the number 26 has to feel that they have a contribution to make.
Management is not a specific science. You make mistakes and wrong judgements about guys. The main lesson there is that you have to make it happen rather than let it happen. And that's a message that you'd be trying to get to everybody.
Any success that I would've had, it would be in the sense of uniting the people involved in the mission. It's a wonderful adventure and you're learning along the way and it's the small little things that make the difference
Evolution
Cornerbacks were never the most talented players. They were functional. I was corner-back in the 1971 All-Ireland minor final. We played Cork and the guy I was marking was taken off, but I only got one kick of the ball. In the 60th minute, I kicked the ball out to the middle of the field, the referee caught it and blew the final whistle.
If you look at the modern game, some of the tackles can be ferocious. As a coach, what you want to do is to get people to tackle without crossing the line. The question you always ask yourself: is this helping my team or is it drawing back at my team or negating the advantage? It's a robust game, it's an intense game, but it's important to keep the right side of the line.
Success
I'm often asked the question, what's your biggest victory? Comparing wins with Galway or with Mayo, or even winning an All-Ireland B school title with my school, it's unfair. All of them were treasured memories and you don't compare them because the success is the success of the group, but the challenge of Leitrim was one of my greatest memories in the way that they bought into the mission that we were on.
You tap into the culture of the county that you go to and you ingrain yourself in that. I would've always told teams that I was with in either Leitrim or Galway, 'when I'm finished here, I'll be a Mayo person, but while I'm here, I'm a Leitrim person or I'm a Galway person'. The bond that you have there with the soldiers you have in your squad is something that is there for the rest of your lives.
Mayo
I was born two years after Mayo won the last All-Ireland. In Mayo, we have made up many excuses over the years of not getting to win that All-Ireland, I suppose, particularly in recent years. I was in that mission because back in the 70's and 80's as manager, if you won a provincial title, your job was safe. I tried to lift that ceiling a bit. As a result of that, we got to an All-Ireland in 1989 because I believed at the time that we were as fit, we were as talented, but maybe we didn't have the belief systems.
When people ask me, will Mayo win an All-Ireland? I always say, of course they will, but I cannot give you the year.
There's an awful lot of counties that would love to be in the same place as Mayo.
Reflection
I have been exceptionally lucky and I'm privileged to have been in a position where I managed my native county, I managed Leitrim, a so-called weaker county, and I managed maybe a sleeping giant like Galway and brought them back to where...when I say brought them back, the manager never brings them back. You don't have a magic wand, you get a group that can bring it back and I will be eternally grateful for their talent and commitment to do that. And to be even a part of that made my sporting career.
We're all just passing through. When I try and get that through to players, you need to win as much as quick as you can because it's a passing phase.
Sport is a bit like the circus: one night and one night only. You have to make the best of it. And I am sure that that's what Dublin used in their recent success as well. It's fleeting, it's cyclical. Teams will come and go, but when you get near to the top of the mountain, it's important to get over that mountain.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Kerry ratings: Gavin White plays captain's role for victors
Kerry ratings: Gavin White plays captain's role for victors

RTÉ News​

time26 minutes ago

  • RTÉ News​

Kerry ratings: Gavin White plays captain's role for victors

Kerry are All-Ireland champions once more after a dominant performance against Donegal. Here is how we rated their performances. Shane Ryan - 7 Kept a clean sheet on All-Ireland final day and got 16 of his 24 kick-outs away. A decent return, even if he did fail to convert a potential 0-03 from a two-point free and a 45. He'd only scored 0-04 all season so Sean O'Shea was probably the better option for those kicks, particularly the two-point attempt which was at a crucial stage. Ryan put a kick-out over the sideline late on too though performed his basic duties well. Paul Murphy - 7.5 Marked Oisin Gallen who scored three points in the first 22 minutes and, in the 25th minute, passed straight to Gallen who fed Michael Murphy for a score. But Murphy kept Gallen scoreless after that and the Donegal forward was eventually replaced. The former captain conceded a free for receiving a kick-out inside the arc in the 45th minute. Probably the sensible option to avoid a goal at that stage. Jason Foley - 7 Went head to head with Michael Murphy. Fouled him twice in the second-half for frees that Murphy converted. Also fouled Gallen for a free that Murphy nailed. Kept Murphy to two points from play overall and will have been content with his efforts. Dylan Casey - 6.5 Bottled up and overcarried for a 21st minute free that Murphy should have converted. That was a bad start and Casey struggled at times to contain Conor O'Donnell who sniped four points from play. He marked Paddy McBrearty for a spell when the Donegal captain came on. Brian Ó Beaglaoich - 7 Coughed up a handy free with a touch on the ground in the 34th minute. He and Kerry got away with that one. Winced after kicking a wide in the third quarter also. Lent to a Trojan defensive effort overall, the best Donegal have come up against all season. Mike Breen - 7 Spent plenty of time in the Donegal half in the first quarter when Kerry were applying the heat and laying down the terms of engagement with their relentless onslaught. Kicked one two-point effort wide but got his hands on plenty of ball and moved it on efficiently. Eventually replaced in the 65th minute by Tadhg Morley. Gavin White - 9 Inspirational stuff from the Kingdom skipper. Ostensibly a wing-back, the Killarney man tormented Donegal's defence with his powerful running down the left wing. Ciaran Moore must have felt like he was in reverse gear at times, trying to cover that side against him. White scored 0-03 and was still setting up scores late on, feeding Paudie Clifford for a 61st minute point. Sean O'Brien - 7.5 Any nerves that O'Brien must have been feeling in just his ninth Championship game for Kerry were overcome early on. He powered into the game, putting in a brilliant block on Finbarr Roarty in the 16th minute and helping to provide a powerful midfield platform. Weighed in with two points and repaid Jack O'Connor's faith in him this season. Mark O'Shea - 7.5 The other half of Kerry's midfield engine. Lasted the duration and did plenty to ensure that Michael Langan wasn't the colossus for Donegal that he can be on his day. Joe O'Connor - 8 Another big performance from a player firmly in the running for the Footballer of the Year award. Two catches in the first half ended up in points for Gavin White and Paudie Clifford. Ran relentlessly at the Donegal defence, particularly in that first half and got through a ton of work. A big part of the reason why Kerry won the middle third battle. Capped a stunning effort with his late goal. Sean O'Shea - 8 The first player to finish an All-Ireland football final by booting the ball out of play. O'Shea deserved the honour after a strong display which yielded 0-06, taking his seasonal tally to 1-50. Nailed two two-point frees, a free and a score from play. Assisted Dylan Geaney for a point as well. Graham O'Sullivan - 7 Dropped a point attempt short late on. It looked like a jaded kick after a huge effort and he was taken off moments later. Jack O'Connor wasn't complaining about O'Sullivan's effort as he put in a huge shift around the middle. David Clifford - 9 A brilliant ending to a landmark campaign for Kerry's generational attacking talent. His nine-point haul took him to 8-62 for the season, just shy of 10 points per game. That's some shooting across nine matches but Clifford consistently delivers. His back-to-back two pointers in the first-half put Kerry in a winning position and provided a vital cushion. His solo point off his right foot in the second half after burning Brendan McCole again was the pick of the scores. Paudie Clifford - 8.5 Had Peadar Mogan for company for the most part. Played a stormer and delivered a sumptuous dinked kick pass to brother David for a 37th minute point. There were so many positive, creative moments like that throughout and Paudie struck three points too. The only blots on his copybook were a couple of two-point attempts that flew wide. Dylan Geaney - 8 We wondered if one Geaney, Dylan, might be forsaken for another, Paul, when the team was initially announced. But Dylan more than repaid his manager's faith and was probably unlucky to be taken off after 54 minutes. He scored three points from play and did well with a run down the right to create a Paudie Clifford score in the 43rd minute. Substitutes Diarmuid O'Connor - 7.5 Walked straight into a war zone as Donegal were turning the screw in the middle third, midway through the second half. Won an important free from a Ryan kick-out when under the cosh in the 54th minute, leading to a Gavin White point. Won another big free two minutes later. Killian Spillane - 7 The experienced attacker fed Joe O'Connor for Kerry's goal and can be happy with this contribution over the 15 minutes or so that he was on the field. Evan Looney - 7 An assured presence in the closing minutes when he handled lots of ball, gobbling up the break after one dangerous Garryowen in towards Michael Murphy. Retained possession well as Kerry played down the clock. Micheal Burns - 6

Jim McGuinness: 'We were chasing our tails'
Jim McGuinness: 'We were chasing our tails'

Irish Examiner

time26 minutes ago

  • Irish Examiner

Jim McGuinness: 'We were chasing our tails'

No ifs or buts or maybes from Jim McGuiness after Donegal's comprehensive All-Ireland final loss to Kerry. Out-thought and outplayed on the day, the Ulster side never got to grips with the puzzle posed them by Jack O'Connor's side and ended up on the wrong end of a 10-point defeat that absolutely no-one thought likely beforehand. The consensus was that this one was too hard to call. So… what happened? 'Ah, listen, it's a bit early for all of that, I suppose, and a wee bit raw. We didn't perform, Kerry did perform, that's the bottom line. They started very early in the game and they got a foothold in the game. 'I thought we responded quite well in the first-half on our attack, we were good, we were clinical, but I think they might have scored in their first six attacks, so we were struggling to deal with them in that period.' McGuinness wasn't asked about David Clifford, his first answer just gravitated inexorably toward the Fossa man who existed on the margins of the game for long periods while being the absolute fulcrum in so many ways at the same time. He finished with 0-9, six of his points coming from two-pointers. 'They went for a lot of two's and they hit a lot of them as well and that was big. David Clifford coming on to those balls on a loop… We'd done a lot of work on him and we did a lot of work in terms of managing him. 'I thought Brendan [McCole] did actually quite well on him for periods, but obviously it does take more than one person to try and close down David and he kicked some brilliant two's.' The easy take is that Donegal were beaten by that early Kerry flurry. McGuinness didn't see it in those neat terms. Yes, it didn't help to fall eight points adrift inside the first quarter, but the thing about mistakes and problems is that they shouldn't be compounded. Donegal compounded their issues at the big with more going forward. 'We made too many mistakes. We did things that we don't normally do, we made decisions that we don't normally do, and we just had too many turnovers. That's the bottom line. We had too many turnovers, and some of them were kind of clutch enough moments. 'So we were chasing our tails. There were a couple of moments before half time, a five-point game, then we lose possession, we give possession away, and then it ends up a seven-point game. That was a tough one to take. 'Had we been able to work that and got a score, we would have probably ended up getting four down at half-time. It might have been a very different dressing-room at that stage, very different dynamic in terms of going out for the second-half. But that was fairly significant.'

Healy-Rae to make complaint against garda over 'shoving' incident on All-Ireland final day
Healy-Rae to make complaint against garda over 'shoving' incident on All-Ireland final day

Irish Examiner

time26 minutes ago

  • Irish Examiner

Healy-Rae to make complaint against garda over 'shoving' incident on All-Ireland final day

Kerry TD Danny Healy-Rae has said he will make a complaint against a garda after an alleged shoving incident ahead of the All-Ireland football final. The incident took place on Sunday afternoon in Dublin City, where Kerry and Donegal fans were gathered ahead of the All-Ireland football final in Croke Park. Multiple videos, circulating on social media, shows Mr Healy-Rae walking through a large crowd of Kerry supporters near Brannigans pub. In the videos, Mr Healy-Rae raises his arms as he walks through the crowd to cheers from Kerry supporters, before a garda appears to shove him away. Mr Healy-Rae turns to talk with the garda, before walking away while the crowd boos. Mr Healy Rae said: I don't know what happened. I was walking here, minding my own business and the next thing this garda shoved me and he shouldered me. The TD also said that the garda 'effed and blinded' at him during the alleged incident. Asked if he planned on making a complaint against the garda, Mr Healy-Rae sad: 'I will, I will.' 'He needs to be brought to account for it,' Mr Healy-Rae said. However, Mr Healy-Rae said he has 'fierce respect' for the gardaí and they have a 'tough job'. 'It was just a very, very isolated incident.' He added the garda involved must have 'some spite for me'. In a statement, An Garda Síochána said it 'does not comment on unverified social media content'. 'Any person who wishes to report the conduct of a member of An Garda Síochána can do so by contacting Fiosrú,' the spokesperson added.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

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