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David Clifford relationship with girlfriend Shauna, son Oigi and day job

David Clifford relationship with girlfriend Shauna, son Oigi and day job

It was the year 2018 when David Clifford burst onto the inter-county scene, and since making his debut for Kerry, he's been hailed as "a once in a generation" talent, with comparisons drawn to international icons like Tiger Woods and Michael Jordan.
These accolades, coupled with his on-field success, including an All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, five Munster titles, and three National Leagues, hold immense value for the 26-year-old.
Yet, he remains humble and grounded. His list of individual honors includes the Young Footballer of the Year award in 2018 and the Footballer of the Year award in both 2022 and 2023.
In an interview with RSVP Live. the Fossa clubman delved into the highs and lows of his sporting career, life beyond GAA with his girlfriend Shauna O'Connor and their three-and-a-half year old son Óigí, and the importance of finding balance.
There was a viral picture of you with Kerry performance coach Tony Griffin after losing the All-Ireland Football Final against 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.
Does your son Óigí 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 now 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.
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!
This interview appeared in the July 2024 issue of RSVP Magazine

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Kerry blitz Armagh and again prove masters at confounding expectation
Kerry blitz Armagh and again prove masters at confounding expectation

Irish Times

time21 minutes ago

  • Irish Times

Kerry blitz Armagh and again prove masters at confounding expectation

All-Ireland SFC quarter-final: Kerry 0-32 Armagh 1-21 If the Devil's greatest trick is convincing people that he doesn't exist, then Kerry's is the old, recurring impression that they are too weakened by injury or in such poor form that they can be written out of matches like this. In such a state, they arrived into Sunday's All-Ireland quarter-final. Riddled with injuries, exacerbated when Tom O'Sullivan had to be replaced in the 24th minute, they produced one of their best halves of football this century to overwhelm champions Armagh just as it looked as if Kieran McGeeney's men were going to pull away at the start of the second half. [ Meath advance to semi-finals at expense of Galway Opens in new window ] The winners tapped a major energy source off the bench with the introduction of Paudie Clifford at half-time. Manager Jack O'Connor said that they had been thrilled with how the player had turned a corner in his injury woes and spoke highly of his impact. Micheál Burns came in later and he too added to the forcefield of energy. David Clifford came alive with an exhibition of kicking for four second-half points, one a two-pointer. It was like a boxing fight where the apparently technically superior fighter suddenly loses rhythm and starts to get hit from every angle. Armagh just couldn't get back into the fight. READ MORE Their middle third disintegrated. Joe O'Connor, one of Kerry's players of the year, was specifically lined out in his most productive position on the wing before the start but as his manager mentioned, the switch back to centrefield after a subdued first half was like everything the team did after half-time, blessed with success. Tiernan Kelly of Armagh reacts to a missed goal chance. Photograph: James Lawlor/Inpho Part of the dynamic for the overwhelming change of fortune was the devastation of Armagh's kickout, which fell to a match total of 50 per cent after a reasonable first half, while Kerry were touching 70 per cent. They were the bullets and the team were firing them remorselessly. After David Clifford dropped one short in the 42nd minute, they hit 0-17 with no wides to bury the champions. Who knows how or why momentum shifts in matches but the clinical detail of this match was that after Rian O'Neill had kicked a point to put Armagh five ahead, 1-16 to 0-14 in the 40th minute, Kerry set about a demolition job. Fourteen unanswered points went over the bar to turn the contest on its head. Back in 2009 when a comparatively unfancied Kerry arrived in Croke Park for the quarter-finals to play an unusually fancied Dublin, it took seconds for Mike McCarthy to make a rapier thrust through the middle and set up Colm Cooper for a goal. From then on, Dublin disintegrated. This wasn't as clearcut as that precedent. Armagh led at half-time despite not playing brilliantly and when they began to extend the lead after the break, heads nodded wisely and muttered conversations more or less concluded that the champions now had a grip on the match that would be difficult to prise loose. Rory Grugan of Armagh fires home the only goal of the game. Photograph: James Lawlor/Inpho That first half was an entertaining back-and-forth affair but it was clear that Kerry had come to play. Jack O'Connor said afterwards that with the pressure of favouritism on Armagh, his team were able to play with some freedom and they certainly did that. Seán O'Shea was a deserved Man of the Match with an afternoon's total of 12, including three two-pointers. When Armagh clicked for the goal in the 29th minute – a turnover on Dylan Casey by Tiernan Kelly – Rory Grugan raced in for a finish to regain the initiative for the Ulster side, who now led 1-8 to 0-9. O'Shea launched a fierce riposte within a minute, kicking a point and a two-pointer to wipe out the goal. Dylan Geaney added a point and Armagh were on the back foot again. They rallied well with a two-point free from Ethan Rafferty and a carefully crafted score after the hooter had sounded to give them the lead. Kerry's Seán O'Shea delivered a man of the match performance against Armagh. Photograph: James Lawlor/Inpho There was no doubting Kerry's stomach for the fight, however, and if O'Shea's 0-8 was the most tangible manifestation, there were other signs. From the throw-in routine, which sent Gavin White (who would have a super game) flying through the middle – an unconsummated move but reminiscent of Kevin Moran's flinging down of the gauntlet in 1976 – Kerry brought energy and focus, which their opponents sometimes lacked, as when Jason Foley disrupted Rian O'Neill during an overly casual Armagh passing move in the 23rd minute. The resumption started promisingly for the champions as they outscored their opponents 0-5 to 0-1 to establish that watershed lead of five. O'Neill kicked a two-point free – as hard won an award as any with Jarly Óg Burns being fouled three times as referee Brendan Cawley followed with his hand out to signal advantage. Kerry's surge began with Joe O'Connor's second point and the barrage continued for 15 minutes of relentless ball winning, clever movement and assassin finishing. Armagh wilted and fell, their All-Ireland tenure at an end. For Kerry the road ahead is clear, a date with old foes Tyrone in the semi-finals in a fortnight. The blood is up and silverware on the horizon. KERRY: S Ryan; D Casey, J Foley, P Murphy; B Ó Beaglaoich (0-0-2), G White (capt; 0-0-2), T O'Sullivan; S O'Brien, M O'Shea; J O'Connor (0-0-2), S O'Shea (12: 0-3-6, 2f), G O'Sullivan (0-0-2); D Clifford (7: 0-2-3), C Geaney, D Geaney (0-0-1). Subs: E Looney for T O'Sullivan (24 mins), P Clifford (0-0-2) for C Geaney (half-time), M Burns (0-0-2) for O'Shea (50 mins), K Spillane for D Geaney (63 mins), T Kennedy for G O'Sullivan (69 mins), TL O'Sullivan for Casey (temporary, 69 mins, unreversed). ARMAGH: E Rafferty (0-1f-0); P Burns, P McGrane, B McCambridge; R McQuillan, T Kelly (0-0-1), J Óg Burns (0-1-0); N Grimley, B Crealey; R Grugan (1-0-0), J McElroy (0-0-2), O Conaty (0-1-4); D McMullan (0-0-1), A Murnin, R O'Neill (0-1f-4, 1 45). Subs: C Turbitt for McQuillan (50 mins), J Duffy for Grimley (50 mins), A Forker for Kelly (54 mins), C McConville (0-0-1) for Crealey (56 mins), S McPartlan for Grugan (66 mins), C O'Neill for Murnin (temporary 66 mins, unreversed). Referee: B Cawley (Kildare).

2009 revisited as Jack O'Connor lays into Kerry critics
2009 revisited as Jack O'Connor lays into Kerry critics

RTÉ News​

time26 minutes ago

  • RTÉ News​

2009 revisited as Jack O'Connor lays into Kerry critics

Kerry manager Jack O'Connor lashed out at critics inside and outside the county after his team delivered the finest performance of his third stint in taking out the All-Ireland champions at the quarter-final stage. O'Connor's side had entered the quarter-final as underdogs after an uneven campaign, which was shunted off-course after a shock nine-point loss to Meath in the final round of the group stage in Tullamore. Following that defeat, there had been an outbreak of doom-laden commentary, most notably from six-time All-Ireland winner Darragh Ó Sé in the Irish Times, who said there was an air of inevitability about Kerry exiting to Armagh at the quarter-final stage. The mood was unaltered by Kerry's nine-point win over Cavan last weekend and the Munster champions entered today's game as clear underdogs. But a devastating second half scoring burst of 14 unanswered points saw Kerry "flip the script", in O'Connor's words. While it had some echoes of the 2006 quarter-final win over the same opposition, when a snarling Kieran Donaghy had set them on their way, it was the demolition job against Pat Gilroy's Dublin three years later that came more readily to O'Connor's mind. "I thought it was a bit more like 2009, to be honest," O'Connor said, after being asked about the '06 quarter-final. "I don't think too many people outside the camp saw that performance there. But we were very, very determined. "There was ferocious determination in the camp that we weren't going to let the season fizzle out after the Meath game. "It may have been difficult for Armagh not to listen to the outside noise where we were being written off and they were being written up. "It's a big performance and a big Kerry support came up and backed the team, which is great. We love seeing that because a lot of people had us written off during the week. "But obviously the supporters felt there was another kick in the team. "They've seen it happen before. They saw it happen in 2006, they saw it happen in 2009. "Kerry is a proud county and we weren't going to fizzle out of the championship without a hell of a fight. We saw that fight out there today." O'Connor bluntly admitted that Kerry had been motivated by critical moments in the lead-up, citing a Sunday Independent article in which they were described as a one-man team, as well as negative commentary from within Kerry. "One of the great motivators in life is trying to prove people wrong. We were being portrayed as a one-man team. "I saw somebody writing this morning that said the only Kerry player worthy of being called a Kerry player was David Clifford. "Now, David is a great player but David will tell you that there was a fair supporting cast there today. "We think we have a lot of good footballers but I think sometimes we're being judged on different criteria to other teams. "For example, Dublin got beaten by Meath in the Leinster Championship and I didn't see any ex-Dublin players coming out slating the team or slating the management like we had down south in our county. "There's a sense of commitment to the team and a sense of loyalty to the team. "Unfortunately a few pundits down our way let themselves down in that regard. "I'm not giving out about it from my own point of view. "What's to be gained by slating people? It's the easiest thing in the world. I'm in the business of building people up. I'm not in the business of knocking people. "I spent all my life coaching underage school kids, minors, Under-21s, seniors, at every level. "I'd ask people who are knocking that group and knocking people involved with the group to look in the mirror and say, 'What have you contributed? "What have you contributed to Kerry football off the field?' "Go away and coach a team. Go away and coach a development squad. Go away and coach a minor team. That's how you help Kerry football, not knocking people." O'Connor was on the sideline in 2009, when Kerry appeared in disarray for much of the year, losing badly to Cork in Munster before labouring to deeply unconvincing qualifier victories over Longford, Sligo and Antrim - the middle of those being especially perilous. Ahead of this week, the four-time All-Ireland winning managers invoked those experiences with the players. "Look, when everybody even down in our own county was throwing in the towel with us, I said in the dressing room after the Cavan game, 'Lads, I've been here before where we've been completely written off.' "And a Kerry team written off in Croke Park are dangerous because it just takes a bit of the heat off. It allows them to play with a kind of freedom and abandon. That's what you saw there today. Maybe it was very tough for Armagh." Regarding the display, O'Connor said he could sense there was a big performance coming and questioned the narrative that Kerry hadn't been tested in the lead-up to the quarter-final, citing the Munster semi-final against Cork. "We were fairly sure that the performance above in Tullamore was not us," said O'Connor. "We were missing some key players that day and things just went awry on us and the game slipped away. Plus, Meath are a good team. They showed that out there today. "But we were fairly sure that wasn't the real Kerry. "We felt we were going to give a really big performance. We had no idea where that would take us. "You see the teams up in Ulster and they're knocking lumps out of each other and playing very high-calibre games. "People dismissed our games against Cork in the Munster Championship and in the round-robin series. "We thought Cork against Kerry in Páirc Uí Chaoimh are a right good team. They toughened us up, they hardened us and we lost a few players up there.

Seán O'Shea: Doubters and team spirit fuelled Kerry win
Seán O'Shea: Doubters and team spirit fuelled Kerry win

RTÉ News​

time40 minutes ago

  • RTÉ News​

Seán O'Shea: Doubters and team spirit fuelled Kerry win

Seán O'Shea was delighted that he and his Kerry team-mates could prove the doubters wrong in their All-Ireland SFC quarter-final win over Armagh. O'Shea's unerring accuracy in front of the posts saw the Kenmare Shamrocks clubman finish with a personal haul of 12 points as the Kingdom ended Armagh's Sam Maguire defence on a 0-32 to 1-21 scoreline. The forward's stellar display saw him named man of the match in a last-eight encounter that Armagh were favourites to win. Seán O'Shea said there was a special energy in Kerry this week at the thoughts of playing Armagh 📱 Updates: 📺 Watch: — The Sunday Game (@TheSundayGame) June 29, 2025 "As soon as we saw the draw last week, it was one of those weeks where you're struggling to sleep," the 26-year-old admitted. "It's the last thought when you go to bed every night and when you wake up every morning. "There was a special energy in the group this week. "We were written off. People weren't giving us any hope, even back home. "But we've a really tight group. Nobody knows what goes on in our dressing room. The fellas that are inside, we love each other. We're just a really tight group and I think that showed today. "We asked the crowd to get behind us as well and they really made a difference in the second half." Their outsider status ultimately proved liberating for a side more accustomed to being overburdened by expectation and O'Shea admitted: "We just said that we'd throw the shackles off and just go out and express ourselves. "We were coming in as underdogs here today. Armagh were obviously incredible All-Ireland champions and they were flying all year and we knew the challenge. "But that second half, we really turned the screw." If Kerry's performance was one forged out of adversity, their shock round-robin loss to Meath may have been another apparent negative that eradicated complacency and sharpened their focus. Jason Foley felt a "great sense of satisfaction" from Kerry's performance today. He described their loss to Meath as a reality check. — The Sunday Game (@TheSundayGame) June 29, 2025 Full-back Jason Foley told RTÉ Sport: "We got a bit of a reality check and we went back to the drawing board and worked on a few things. "Since then, our training and performances have improved and we're just delighted that we were able to get a performance out there today."

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