
The Last Ditch by Eamonn Sweeney: Brave admissions about mental health struggles hit hard in follow-up
Author
:
Eamonn Sweeney
ISBN-13
:
978-1399734639
Publisher
:
Hachette Books Ireland
Guideline Price
:
£16.99
In a world of limited space, very few books survive the intermittent culling of the shelves in our spare room for very long. A few dozen new sports books get piled up there every year and a few dozen (and more, when the going's good) are lorried out to the charity shops the following spring. Any that remain have earned their spot.
And yet, as I crane my neck back to check, I see a hunch confirmed. Yes, I do still have an original copy of The Road To Croker by Eamonn Sweeney, published in 2004. Time and again over the past two decades, it has skipped merrily over the scythe and settled back in dusty situ, one of the all-time great
GAA
books. Can't give it any higher recommendation than that.
His follow-up, The Last Ditch, isn't really a follow-up at all. Despite having the same structure – Sweeney following the 2024 GAA championship around the country, just as he did the 2003 one – The Last Ditch is its own thing, with its own story. I don't know if it will still be on my shelf in 20 years but it's certain to be one of the most compelling sports books of 2025.
The reason for this is that Sweeney drives the first part of the book by telling the story of his
mental health
struggles. What began with a panic attack out of the blue on the way to a game in Killarney in 2000 gradually morphed into an all-consuming fear of travel that lasted the thick end of the past two decades. He couldn't fly, he found himself jumping off a train as the door closed, even being a passenger in a car became too much at times.
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Throughout it all, Sweeney was – and is – a well-known sports columnist with the Irish Independent. For someone who has been a public figure for so long, his bravery in laying himself bare like this shines through every page.
The vice grip with which mental illness can squeeze a person's life is remorseless. Sweeney's early account of how he bought himself a train ticket from
Galway
to Athenry on three occasions over Christmas 2023 but turned back from the platform each time is particularly excruciating.
He wants so badly to simply go and sit on a moving train but he can't bring himself to do it. Eventually, he somehow convinces himself that if he gets a bus to somewhere that the Galway train stops – the small village of Ardrahan in this case – maybe he can will himself to get the train back. When it works, you want to punch the air for him.
As a result, the book becomes something more than just an account of following the big old GAA jamboree around the country. It is still that, yes – but it's also the gradual, quiet process of Sweeney reclaiming his life for himself. He's doing the book because the publisher asked. But he's doing it for himself too.
And so he goes around the country – or at least the bottom half of it. Unlike the first book, there are no skites up to Tempo in Fermanagh or Mayobridge in Down or Ballygawley in Tyrone. But he goes to Killarney and Portlaoise and Thurles and Limerick and Salthill for games and then, as it all comes to a head in Croke Park, to Dublin. Some of the matches are incredible (hurling), some of them are deathly dull (football). He captures the GAA summer of 2024 perfectly.
Along the way, there are some hilarious vignettes beyond the games. As a non-driver, all his travel is on public transport so he's there for the lone Tipperary man who stands his ground in the face of a ribald and riotous group of Cork supporters as they call him
Hozier
. And he's there for the overheard conversations, the singing and the slagging, the quiet moments of life that have nothing to do with the GAA but feel a crucial part of it too.
Ultimately, and probably understandably, The Last Ditch doesn't have the same vim to it as its classic forebear. Sweeney is 57 now and has been through a couple of decades of mental turmoil, so it would be a surprise if it did.
In the Dublin passages, he spends some time going to religious services – Romanian Orthodox in Ranelagh, Russian Orthodox in Harold's Cross, Syriac Orthodox in Rathmines, the Dublin Mosque on the South Circular Road. Some of it is beautiful but some of it feels like padding.
The biggest difference between the two books is the author. In the first one, he was in his mid-30s, curious and probing, trying to find Ireland in the GAA championship. He rang up people to interview them, he went to pubs and clubs and towns and villages just to see who he'd find and what sort of GAA chat they could put on him.
In this one, he's more of a passive observer of it all. Older, wiser, less gung-ho. It makes for a book that while written with Sweeney's usual elan, doesn't feel as urgent or as vital as The Road To Croker.
And that's okay too. Some victories are more important than others.
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RTÉ News
27 minutes ago
- RTÉ News
More measured Darragh McCarthy key to Tipperary's All-Ireland final hopes
Oh no. Not again. You didn't have to be a mind reader to guess what Darragh McCarthy was thinking when referee James Owens flashed a yellow card and then a red at the Tipperary forward in the 58th minute of the All-Ireland SHC semi-final against Kilkenny. The 19-year-old put his hands on his head, frozen in shock, before opponent Mikey Butler and team-mate Jake Morris encourage him to leave the field with consoling pats on the back. Tipp are already one point down. This is going to be the Cork Munster round-robin game all over again, when his red card in the opening seconds was widely accepted to have decided the contest before it started. Fortunately for McCarthy, it isn't. The 14 men up their game, and beat the Cats by what controversially turns out to be two points, after Oisín O'Donoghue's goal in the final minute of normal time and a scoreboard fiasco. McCarthy embraces his fellow Under-20 All-Ireland winner at the final whistle, tears of relief as much as joy. His side had survived the red card to make this Sunday's All-Ireland final – just as they had in their most recent semi-final appearance, when John McGrath was dismissed against Wexford in 2019 – and, like McGrath was then, he is eligible to play. But has the youngster given his manager a decision to make? McCarthy has had a spectacular ascent in becoming the first teenager (he doesn't turn 20 until August) to nail down a championship starting spot for Tipp since his now team-mate Noel McGrath - who McCarthy has called "my favourite player of all time" - in 2009. Despite his obvious skill growing up, the Community Games U12 long-puck champion wasn't the tallest, taking a while to get to his current height of 5'10 (178cm) and didn't start a single game when the Premier pipped Offaly for their first All-Ireland minor crown in six years in 2022. However, as manager James Woodlock told The Examiner this year: "He was winning most matches for us coming off the bench. He attacked every game when he came on. Never a cross word. He knew what was expected of him. He was above his years for a 16-year-old. "There was absolutely no question Darragh was going to make it. He was ahead of his years, he was direct, he was aggressive. You couldn't ask for a better young fella." He started one game for the Tipperary U20s in 2023 but then just under 18 months ago, McCarthy captained St Joseph's CBS Nenagh to their first Harty Cup (Munster secondary schools). Nenagh were pipped by St Raphael's of Loughrea in the semi-finals but McCarthy went on to score 2-43 in six games (0-08 from play) as Tipp's U20s won the provincial title for the first time in five years, only falling short against Offaly in the All-Ireland final. He was also introduced to senior training with an eye to the near future – as Tipperary finished bottom of Munster with one point - and then lit up the county senior hurling championship for the second year in a row, finishing as top-scorer with 3-62 in six matches, 2-13 from play, as his club Toomevara (home to Tommy and Benny Dunne, and John O'Brien) reached their first county final in 16 years but were defeated by a John McGrath-inspired Loughmore-Castleiney. Last autumn, McCarthy was awarded a scholarship to study Sport and Exercise Sciences at University of Limerick but played for the first-year team (he was captain and man of the match in the Freshers 1 final) rather than with their Fitzgibbon Cup-winning side. He was plenty busy though, scoring 1-06 from placed balls on his Tipperary senior debut against Galway in January as he also took over the key role of free-taker, following a rotating cast last year. The young sharpshooter topped the 2025 Allianz Hurling League scoring charts, with 2-38 (0-07 from play), despite being rested for the final-round win over Clare, and scored four frees in the 10-point defeat in the decider to Cork. He then hit three points from play and the equalising late free (having missed a couple) on an excellent championship debut against Limerick in April, having played for the U20s midweek. But then it all went wrong, even before the throw-in, in Cork. His dismissal at Páirc Uí Chaoimh came for a jab of the butt of the hurl into Rebel corner-back Sean O'Donoghue even before the throw-in, as part of what appeared a team strategy to square up to opponents that had also been evident before the draw with Limerick. Cork scored three goals in the first 17 minutes and won by 15 points but manager Liam Cahill certainly wasn't throwing him under the bus afterwards. "It is a difficult day for young Darragh," he said. "He is 19 years of age. He is a lovely kid. He loves hurling and loves playing for Tipperary. He is just misfortunate today. That is Munster championship hurling. "He is beating himself up, as well, which is not unusual for a fella that loves his hurling so much. We all have his back in Tipperary and we'll support and he will have really good days in the Tipperary jersey. He is mentally a very strong young fella." 'That's the problem with adrenaline' - the panel assess the incident which saw Darragh McCarthy sent off before throw-in 📺 Watch @rte2 & @rteplayer 📻 @rteradio1 📱 Updates — The Sunday Game (@TheSundayGame) April 27, 2025 Former Premier manager Liam Sheedy noted: "That's the problem with adrenaline, when it takes over" and called it "a tough learning experience." The question for Cahill now is whether he is learning too slowly. McCarthy regained his place after suspension, scoring 23 points (0-02 from play) in the victories over Waterford – in between winning the Munster and All-Ireland U20 titles - Laois and Galway, and had scored 1-02 (2f) as well as setting up Jason Forde's goal in his almost an hour on the pitch in the semi-final. McCarthy had picked up his first yellow in just the fourth minute, for a slap of the hurl onto Paddy Deegan's elbow as he tried to close down the Kilkenny wing-back. "There wasn't much force. But at the same time, you can't do it, it is a striking action," observed Limerick forward Tom Morrissey on The Sunday Game. "Some refs might leave it go but you're still putting yourself at risk of getting a yellow. That meant he had to be careful for the rest of the game but, with 12 minutes left and the contest finely poised, Kilkenny keeper Eoin Murphy sidestepped the Tipp man, who left his hurl hanging out to rap Murphy on the knuckles. Owens called him over and ended his afternoon prematurely. Tipperary are down to 14 men after Darragh McCarthy is shown a second yellow card. That seemed harsh. 📺Watch 📻Listen 📱 Follow — The Sunday Game (@TheSundayGame) July 6, 2025 "It's only a slight little tip, but there's no need to do it," said a baffled Michael Duignan on commentary. "It's harmless enough, but when you're on a yellow you don't do that." Brendan Cummins, his U20 manager, Sheedy and Jackie Tyrrell all felt the second yellow was harsh but the concern is that McCarthy had no prospect of winning the ball with either challenge, and Cahill said he had "no complaints" with the decision. "There's no need to do it," agreed Morrissey. "On both occasions, the player wasn't about to play the ball where you could come in with the hurley. They were carrying the ball in their hand. Flicking with the hurley, the ref is going to have make a decision and you're the one who's going to miss out." Forde had already been switched onto the frees by the time of the red card, McCarthy having missed two scoreable opportunities. The 31-year-old then hit four placed balls of considerable difficulty, which were instrumental in Tipperary closing out the game. Speaking to RTÉ Sport afterwards, Cahill suggested McCarthy would not be taken off the frees: "It's great to have Jason in reserve, he's having a huge year again... I'll be backing young Darragh all day long anyway, I have no concerns in that regard." But, given O'Donoghue's match-winning impact off the bench, is there an argument to start him instead of his U20 team-mate? It would allow Forde to take over the dead-balls without drama and McCarthy could always step in as a sub if the veteran was having an off day. It might also spare him some surely inevitable attempts to test his composure. Does he risk being ineffectual if he is too worried about picking up cards to tackle? Speaking in the aftermath of being named man of the match on his SHC debut against Limerick, McCarthy gave an interview that sounded articulate and mature beyond his 19 years. "The atmosphere was class and I loved every second," he said. "Playing with the likes of John and Jason is such a privilege and it's so invaluable the experience you get from them. It's really kicking me on as a player. After the U20 triumph, he said: "To be able to put on this jersey is a massive honour. You're representing your club, your family, coaches. You're representing everyone. It does so much for so many people; it lifts the whole county, and we're in great preparations for the senior team as well." Though his second mistake this summer could have been very costly, Cahill called him "a very resilient young man" and gave every indication that he will retain his spot: "I think over the next couple of sessions, he'll arrive here in a good place." This time, the manager will hope McCarthy can be as clever on the pitch as he clearly is off it and keep his aggression on the right side of the line. If he does, he just might go one better than his idol Noel and become an All-Ireland champion in his debut season.


RTÉ News
27 minutes ago
- RTÉ News
Cork defender Robert Downey rates All-Ireland final as 50-50 clash
Cork defender Robert Downey believes the All-Ireland hurling final clash with Tipperary is a 50-50 type game, despite the Rebels being considered favourites to lift the Liam MacCarthy Cup. With the dominant side of much of the last decade Limerick out of the competition, the Munster champions showed their credentials by demolishing Dublin to reach the showpiece occasion. It's a first-ever meeting between the counties in an All-Ireland final, adding to many tales of provincial clashes which the Cork captain is familiar with. Downey told RTÉ Sport: "You're probably reared on stories of Cork and Tipp when you're growing up. The older crowd in Cork would always be talking about the great days when playing Tipp in Munster finals and things like that and I'm sure it's the same in Tipperary. It's a real traditional game, two traditional counties going at it. "We've played them twice this year and it's like any game at this stage of the year to be honest. There's going to be nothing in it. It's 50-50, everything will have to be fought for and I suppose on the day it'll just be a bounce of the ball here or there or a decision here and there that'll probably swing it." Cork are in the decider for the second year running and third time in the last five years. It is not a new feeling for Pat Ryan's side, but going one step further for the first time in two decades is the big goal. Downey said: "As a team and as a group we're really looking forward to the game. I think at the start of the year every team's goal and ambition is to get to the All-Ireland final. "We're there now and we're really looking forward to it. I think you would have your own routine that you would stick to. It's important to block out a few extra bits that might go on today too. "Look, we're lucky that we were up there this time last year and we know the running of things and we stay in the same place and things like that. We would stick to our own routines and what works for us. I think it's important. Obviously you're up there for a reason and you don't want to get distracted." 'Two traditional counties going at it' - @OfficialCorkGAA on facing @TipperaryGAA again, this time in an All-Ireland final #rtegaa #sundaygame — RTÉ GAA (@RTEgaa) July 14, 2025 Downey has played a restricted role this year due to injury. But he has timed it well to start the semi-final victory over Dublin and be in prime conditions for the showdown with Tipp on Sunday. He explained: "Injury can be a small bit frustrating and things like that but I suppose I was lucky that it wasn't one long bad injury. It was just a couple of two or three different small niggly injuries where I was able to get over quite easily but it just took a small by the time. "I think it shows the importance of your squad and the depth in your squad that if one fella does go down with an injury, it's just the attitude is next man up.


Irish Examiner
32 minutes ago
- Irish Examiner
Donegal's Ryan McHugh hoping to christen son with Sam Maguire glory
New father Ryan McHugh is hoping to christen the recent arrival of his son by emulating his father Martin and brother Mark and winning an All-Ireland SFC medal on July 27. Senan arrived safely into his and his wife Bridget's lives three weeks ago and McHugh is leaning on her heavily as preparations now kick in ahead of facing Kerry. 'It changes things, it changes life. But to be fair to my wife Bridget, we've sort of made a wee agreement that until the end of the year, she's doing the night feed, so I'm still getting my sleep. 'He was up at the game (v Meath) with Bridget, it just makes everything that wee bit extra special. I know he'll not remember or anything like that, but you've got a new cause in life and you're doing it for a different thing now.' A minor when Donegal last lifted the Sam Maguire Cup in 2012, McHugh joined the senior panel a year later so is the odd one out. It appears to the source of some ball-hopping among the McHugh men. 'It makes it tough at the breakfast table and dinner table at home, because Dad and Mark have one!' he smiles. 'But listen, it's all part of it.' Believing he didn't well in the 2014 All-Ireland final, McHugh admits that defeat to Kerry stung twice as badly. 'It was very difficult, no point lying. I've actually never watched the game back, to be honest with you. I have watched wee clips but never watched the full game back. 'You thought at that time, you were going to be in semi-finals, finals every year. But I think it was up to last year it took us to get back to an All-Ireland semi-final. So listen, we want to make the most of it; it could be another 11 years until we get back again.' McGuinness has been involved in all four of Donegal's All-Ireland final appearances, this being his third in charge. McHugh marvels at his consistency of his message and the intensity of it. 'The way I like to answer this question is, he brings it every single night. Although, we didn't win it, I've been fortunate enough to be involved with him in an All-Ireland final – and he is on it on the first night we meet in December, or whenever it is, until the last night in an All-Ireland final. And it's the exact same, every single night. Ryan McHugh breaks away with the ball during the GAA Football All-Ireland Senior Championship semi-final. Pic: Daire Brennan/Sportsfile. 'And I know that sounds easy, but it's actually an extremely difficult thing to do. You could have problems off the pitch, family issues, work issues, different things, but he is on it every single night. And demanding the most of us, and putting in the best. And to be fair, the team he's around him, it's all so professional.' Michael Murphy's impact is that such that McHugh wonders if he would have made a difference had he come out of retirement last season. 'Nobody knows what would have happened if Michael was there last year.' For the way he plays but also the manner in which he carries himself, McHugh can't stress enough the importance of Murphy's presence. 'It's similar to Jim, it's hard to put into words, but his whole leadership qualities, and I think the two of them bounce off each other so well. 'To be fair to Jim, in 2011, he made Michael Murphy his captain – who was 21, 22 years of age. If you think of that now, it'd be like Donegal making Finnbarr Roarty captain. So, the trust that he has in him. 'He's a phenomenal person, so he is, Michael. He's a phenomenal footballer, obviously, everyone sees that. But he's a phenomenal person. The way he lives his life off the field is just unbelievable, and I think it's helped all the younger boys – just watching him. 'If I touch on Finnbarr Roarty, he was probably six when Michael lifted the cup in 2012. He was his role model, he was his hero growing up, and to get to play with these boys. 'I know myself coming in, Karl Lacey was my hero. I just worshipped him, I followed every move he was making. And the younger boys are the exact same with Michael.'