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Football Families review: Affecting behind-the-scenes tale of what it takes to get to the top

Football Families review: Affecting behind-the-scenes tale of what it takes to get to the top

Irish Times5 days ago
Soccer documentaries are all the rage, whether it's
Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney's Welcome to
Wrexham
– the charming story of how an underdog club sold its soul to Disney – or Sunderland 'Til I Die on
Netflix
.
RTÉ
now laces up its boots with Football Families (RTÉ One, Thursday), a behind-the-scenes series about Dublin's
Shelbourne FC
and its underage academies.
The appeal of Shels was obvious when Football Families was commissioned last year. The club was riding high in the league while its manager,
Damien Duff
, was largely credited with helping make the League of Ireland cool (it was between him and
Bohemian FC and their infinite churn of novelty Fontaines DC shirts
).
Twelve months later, alas, the wheels have come off. Shels have been
dumped out of the Champions League qualifiers
and are struggling to stay mid-table. Worse yet,
Duffer has headed off into the sunset
after becoming an accidental meme when footage of the former Ireland international watching his side from a grassy knoll went viral (he was serving a touchline ban at the time).
That's bad luck for Shels fans and more so for Football Families, given how keen it is to push Duff as the face of the club. But if viewers can look past his departure, there is a lot to like, with the film telling the affecting story of a number of bright prospects at the Shels academy.
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We meet Jayden Marshall from Tallaght, who dreams of making it big and is coming to terms with the trauma of the family home burning down several years ago. Then there is 15-year-old Cillian O'Sullivan from Howth, small for his age but potentially talented enough to compensate for his lack of stature. We are also introduced to under-17s goalkeeper Ali Topcu, whose father, Atakan, is gung-ho about his son's progress, to the extent that he gave up his day job to help Ali progress his career.
Ali Topcu in action. Photograph: RTÉ
Cillian O'Sullivan from Howth, Co Dublin. Photograph: RTÉ
They are a likable bunch, but Football Families falls down in several areas, including basic accuracy. For instance, when Shelbourne play Cork City, the opposition is incorrectly and repeatedly referred to as 'Cork'. It's a sloppy error. After all, Cork City is a much bigger club than Shels, with a more successful academy. Can you imagine RTÉ making a documentary featuring Manchester City and referring to it as 'Manchester'?
Then there is the name of the series itself. As with many, if not most, Irish people, when I hear 'football' I think of the Sam Maguire, of David Clifford lofting another two-pointer over and of Mayo doing whatever it takes to not win the All-Ireland. 'Soccer' is, in Ireland, the widely accepted term for the 11-man game – as is, indeed, the case throughout the English-speaking world. That was also historically true of the UK – my old issues of Shoot magazine were full of the 's' word.
[
Joanna Lumley: 'I love Ireland as much as you can if you're not an Irish person'
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]
Such niggles aside, however, the series offers a moving snapshot of the challenges involved in making it to the top. Only a handful of Shelbourne academy players will break through to the League of Ireland, and even fewer will play for a big club on the Continent or in Britain. Whether it's fair to put such pressure on young shoulders is another question entirely, but this is a fascinating portrait of Shels during their (short-lived) imperial phase. It's just a shame that Duff was out the door and off into the sunset before it made it to air.
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Dublin's All-Ireland winning ladies team given hero's welcome in Smithfield after Meath demolition

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time35 minutes ago

  • Irish Independent

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There was a good atmosphere in the stadium, the sea of blue, green and gold, broken up by flashes of red, yellow, white and blue. In a much more exciting intermediate final, Tyrone beat Laois 2-16 to 1-13 to lift the Mary Quinn Memorial Cup. Goals in either half from Aoife Horisk and Katie Rose Muldoon powered the Red Hand to promotion after a one-point loss to Leitrim last year. Kate Flood in full flow. Leah Scholes / INPHO Leah Scholes / INPHO / INPHO Earlier in the day, Louth defeated Antrim 0-13 to 1-8 to win the All-Ireland junior championship. Kate Flood was the scoring hero with 0-4 before announcing her inter-county retirement, the talismanic forward and one-season AFLW star bringing the curtain down on a 15-year senior career. More would follow her into the sunset. Related Reads 'I was in a really bad way' - Dublin's goalscoring star bows out a five-time All-Ireland winner 'I'm just gutted for the girls. The game was nearly over at half time' - Meath boss McCormack 'She's given everything. This is a cherry on the top' - Dublin's retiring multi-sport star 5. What next? Hannah Tyrrell and Nicole Owens confirmed their retirements on the Croke Park turf after Dublin's win. A fitting stage to call it a day after glittering careers. Tyrrell and Goldrick shared a beer in the middle of the pitch when just the lawn mowers remained, two Irish sporting legends savouring the moment. Goldrick, at 35, is set for another AFLW season with Melbourne, but must be weighing up her inter-county future after winning her fifth All-Ireland title. Byrne, Caffrey, Rowe and Nolan are all over 30: similarly, they are at the peak of the powers, but have serious miles on the clock. Wall is the big name in focus for Meath, the multi-sport star recently signing a new, three-year deal with North Melbourne. Her AFLW commitments could again limit her inter-county involvement going forward. Captain Aoibhín Cleary is also Australia bound. Sub goalkeeper Monica McGuirk and former captains Shauna Ennis and Máire O'Shaughnessy are the only panellists over 30, and Shane McCormack was already looking to a 'positive' future on Sunday. Paul Casey and Derek Murray's side is also littered with young talent. Dublin may not dominate like before in a more open championship, Kerry and Galway among many who will be gunning for glory in 2026. Between now and then, the rules are sure to remain in the spotlight. *****

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