Peter Flannery R.I.P.
Many
people in the town of Boyle were saddened when they heard of the death of Peter
Flannery at the age of 60. During the times that we are living in I have not
seen or talked to Peter for a while. I believe he had been ill for some time in
the latter part of 2021. I remember him down the years as he played and
followed football. He loved to follow the Roscommon and Boyle teams. He also
loved to talk football and did so with enthusiasm.
I
remember him telling me of a meeting he had with Kevin Heffernan the great
Dublin footballer and manager. Kevin was down in Green Isle and met Peter who
may have been a workers Rep. at the time. Now some of the time they would have
engaged with the reason for Kevin’s visit to Boyle but a lot of the meeting
also included a good conversation on football. Peter was very impressed with
Kevin and I’m sure Kevin was impressed with Peter’s knowledge and enthusiasm
for the game, likewise.
No
Roscommon game was too distant for Peter and friends and I feel he was at the
Roscommon v New York game in the Big Apple in 2006.
In
his lifetime he covered a range of activities. He worked at Green Isle Fish
Factory in Greatmeadow and then went to work in Wo Co in Carrick-on-Shannon. He
was a taxi man for a period and also leased Wynne’s Bar for a time close to
twenty years ago.
He
had a great interest in politics being a follower and activist for Fianna Fáil.
He was elected to Boyle Town Commission in 2004 and later became a proud Mayor
of Boyle via the Commission.
His
nephew paid him a fulsome tribute at his funeral mass and referenced his kind,
honest and hard-working character.
He
was a big man with a big heart and it can be said he did his very best for his
native town, a town he loved. May his gentle soul now rest in peace.
The DOME
In
the Connacht GAA game ‘The Dome’ is the topic of conversation. This is the NUIG
Connacht GAA Air Dome at Bekan near Ballyhaunis. This certainly has the WOW
factor and it is great to see the poor ‘wehst of Ireland’ lead the way with
this innovation. The stats for the edifice are very impressive being 150m X100m
with 26 m high. It cost 3.1 million euro to put it in place. It has a normal
game capacity of between around two and two and a half thousand. Using the full
space for a concert it might take circa 15 thousand. It was begun in October 2019
and completed some 9 months later. It is heralded as the largest sports dome in
the world. Apart from the full-size playing pitch it also has a running track,
a gym and a flexible seating stand. One of the guiding lights in the project is
the long-time Connacht GAA Secretary John Prenty. It is really a remarkable
venture. It has already been storm tested. The only concern might be a major
snow fall.
I
asked Gerry Nerney, who was a spectator at the Roscommon v Sligo game last weekend.
He was very positive about it. “We would have been frozen on a very cold night
otherwise” he suggested. Donie Smith said it was a” very enjoyable experience”.
He continued “When we were on our way to the game we had a blast of hailstones
so we were thankful that we did not have to compete in those elements”. He
referred to “its ideal role in early year games in pre-season competitions as
we see now”. The pace of the game was
also a factor that may have positive fitness benefits. One of the stats from
watching these games was the high scoring of points suggesting that the no wind
dimension was a factor.
It
has many other roles as suggested by John Prenty and former Roscommon player
Cathal Cregg who is ‘stationed there’ as it were. There is a fee to use the
facility of course to enable upkeep etc.
Years
ago when I was involved in inter-school games and we looked to clubs for a
pitch for games it was difficult to get one. There was a reluctance for clubs
to give one as one game, at the wrong time, could do so much damage to a pitch.
The all-weather pitch that has been there at Bekan has alleviated that and this
dome will encourage teams greatly to try and avail of this major unique venue.
So
bless all who sail in her and I look forward to visiting it myself to see this
second wonder of the western world. (The first?…the airport up at Knock, close
by. All that reminds me of a reporter from Dublin seeking out the residence of
a big-time builder in the county. He stopped his car to enquire from a worker
on the roadside. That person told the reporter to continue for another 3 miles
and he would see the big house of the person he was looking to meet. “And can I
see the house from the road? Enquired the reporter. “It can be seen from space”
replied his informant. From now pilots have a clear marker for Knock. Another
miracle.)
I
imagine that the Connacht model will attract a great deal of attention and will
have surveyors queueing up to see this spectacle.
Pearses Crowned Kings of Connacht
I
have mentioned before how down I was when leaving the Hyde after the Roscommon
v Galway Championship game last summer. Now I have been healed a good deal with
the performances of the Minors v Kerry for the 2020 championship; the Minors v
Galway in the 2021 Connacht Championship and the U 20s’ performances v Down and
then Offaly in the All-Ireland final. Added to this then was the county minor
final between Boyle and Roscommon Gaels. Last Sunday Paraic Pearses gave an
exhibition of point-taking v Knockmore in the Connacht senior Club Final in
Ballina. It ended Pearses 1.13 Knockmore 1.11. They now go on to meet the strong
Dublin side, Kimacud Crokes, in the All-Ireland Semi-final.
Pearses
are a very good side with a finely balanced team throughout. Their work ethic
is totally effective and they have a number of game-changers. Paul Carey gave
an exhibition of point scoring on Sunday and got ‘Man of the match’ because of
it. He was still run close by Hubert Darcy for his award. The Daly trio
contribute hugely to the overall context while David Murray and Conor Payne
were other stand-out players. The one possible flaw may be the goalkeeper
Whelan. The All-Ireland Semi-final v Kimacud Crokes takes place at the end of
January.
It
was their first Connacht title and now join Clann na nGael, St. Brigid’s,
Roscommon Gaels becoming the fourth club to win the Connacht senior Championship.
Top
winner in Roscommon’s Connacht wins with 6 in a row from 1984 to 89 is Clann na
nGael.
Patsy Hanley Traditional Musical Giant.
On
Sunday night last I watched the repeat of a tribute to Roscommon traditional
musician Patsy Hanly from Cloontuskert. Patsy is known far and wide for his
music and also because he is gentleman and a funny man. He was earlier a
regular visitor to north Roscommon. Maybe it was there on the borders of Sligo
and Roscommon where there was a well of so many great flute players and Patsy
came to source of the music. He absorbed it totally and now is an ambassador
for the North Connacht style of music cultivated by giants like Coleman,
Morrison, Horan and Finn, Josie McDermott. The McDonaghs and McNiffs of Ballinafad,
Pakie Duignan, Tommy Guihan, John Carlos and John McKenna amongst
He
referenced many more musicians from various parts and a number were on hand to
express their positive opinion of Patsy such as John Carty and John Wynne.
Patsy mentioned Cosgrove’s bar in St. Patrick’s Street Boyle as a place he
played in in his early years. He played regularly later in the Ceili House Bar
on the Crescent Boyle many a time. The two great All-Ireland Fleadhanna held in
Boyle in 1960 and 1966 were historic watersheds in the popularity of
traditional music.
His
music is interspersed with stories and anecdotes and wit that makes him a most
entertaining individual.
He
was employed as a draughtsman for Roscommon County Council for most of his
working life. His life had a share of sadness. He lost his wife Pauline at her
early age. In 2003 he lost his daughter Nora to cancer aged 15 in 2003. He
reflected on her passing with “I think of her every day of my life”.
Patsy
Hanly is a person of which Roscommon can be justly proud.
Television Magnetism
I
watch a good deal of television
these times. Maybe I am not alone in doing that! Last night, which was Tuesday
night, I did not turn on the television at all. I was putting down a frame of
paragraphs for this blog and it was easier to abstain because I felt there was
nothing worthy of watching. That is a rare thing I confess. I know of a few
people who pay little heed to watching television at all. I knew of one of my
students back in the day who answered my query of what he had watched on
television over the week –end with “Sir, we don’t have a television in the
house”. That was the most interesting answer that I could have received.
Anyway
I seem to remember some writer –maybe Shaw- expressing something along the
lines of; “If I leave a theatre not having learned something I feel it has been
a waste of time”! Now I am diligent in
my approach! I get the Sunday Independent for a few reasons such as I am used
to it and its contributors, it can keep me going for half the week at least,
its sports coverage is pretty decent and it has a Sunday to Saturday inclusive
Television guide.
I’ll
outline one of the good days as a viewer and that was Saturday January the
first. It had a rich line-up of
programmes and being New Year’s Day I would have no conscience about occupying
the armchair for a lengthy period.
It had
the following programmes in no particular order;
1. A very good profile of the
BBC’s international sports star of 2021 Rachael Blackmore.
2. On TG 4 Connacht had a
tough struggle but overcame Munster.
3. ‘Sports Story’ with Joe
Brolly being interviewed by Tommy Martin. Brolly is always worthy of watching
or listening to for a variety of reasons.
4. There were 3 films (I have
not arrived at using the word ‘movies’ yet having moved on from the ‘pictures’
of my adolescence.) Two of them were ‘Sicario’ a pretty violent drugs
Mexico/U.S. border action film. Then there was David Lean’s ‘Great
Expectations’. This is probably the film I have at the top of my favourites
list with so many elements adorning it. It was adapted from the book by
probably the second greatest story teller in literary history, Charles Dickens,
the man who invented Christmas. (The Bard could hardly be pushed out of first
place).
5. Being New Year’s Day there
were games to watch with the BBC 1 ‘Match of the Day’ night-time compilation
being the micro-wave device for watching 8 or so of those games.
There were a number of names that failed then, but would not
on other days, to get a hearing with, Bob Dylan, Freddie Mercury, Morcambe and
Wise, Michael Caine and Tommy Tiernan as examples.
It is not always that there would be days like this but Christmas provides a bonanza of programmes that decorate Christmas as readily as any of the other elements.
From the Kingdom to the Capitol
We
Irish are pretty good at claiming people from abroad who have Irish
connections. The soccer people bought into that very successfully some decades
ago. The county GAA authorities are moving in that direction as if it was a new
thing for them. We had Conor Cox starring in the Dome last week and a good
goalkeeper from Oranmore as well. Sligo,
I hear, have tagged into a Spillane who plays his football with a Dublin club.
Also Kerry have brought three senior players from Limerick into their ranks.
That is Kerry hurling!
Now
back to the heading. I tune into CNN (Cable News Network) fairly often. Well over
a year ago a contributor with a very Irish accent caught my attention and my
hearing sensor was confirmed by the visual one as a teddy bear image appeared
on screen. A map of the south west with Kerry highlighted confirmed all. That
was my introduction to Donie O’Sullivan. He has in the past year become a real
decoration on the CNN platform. Donie first came into play as he attended some
Trump rallies during the 2020 Presidential elections. On those occasions he
tried to get a handle on why people favoured Trump to such a depth. While the
CNN tag was like the proverbial red rag to those supporters when Donie asked a
question his accent confused the subject and mellowed the interface. “You from
Ireland. I’d love to go to Ireland”. I suppose some people could not feel
threatened by this teddy bear correspondent. Then it all exploded. It was
January 6, 2021 in the Capitol area of Washington and the ‘insurrection’ and
occupation of the Capitol building by a mob. The first CNN man was already in
situ…the Kerryman. He stayed as close to the fire as he could despite the calls
from the top anchor newsman Wolf Blitzer to ‘be careful’. Donie was an
important contributor to the CNN account of that tumultuous day. His reputation went from near zero to hero.
Donie’s
parents returned to Ireland from the U.S. in 1977. His mother was born in
Boston. The morning after the Capitol Riots Donie was the prime name on
newshounds in Ireland and a TG 4 crew arrived at his parent’s house in
Cahersiveen. His proud parents got the first blast of celebrity by association.
Their boy had done very well. Later on a visit home, he was snapped up to do a
stint on ‘The Late Late Show’ and then a full and very good documentary arrived
on RTE 1 on January 4 with a repeat on the January 6th the first
Anniversary of the Capitol riot.
The
success happened because he was the right man in the right place at the right
time. His instant stardom was the result of a maybe 15 years’ immersion in modern
media and chasing his dream.
I
imagine that documentary will surface again.
Epilogue
I
had intended to refer to a few more items like the World Darts Championships at
the Ally Pally (Alexander Palace) in London and a related piece on the EU ban
on Tattoo ink but, I have to take the dog for a walk right now.
Stay
safe. Get proper quality masks. We are not there yet.
Have
a good (can one use ‘happy’ yet?) 2022.
As Dave Allen used to sign off with; “May your Gods go with you”.