Kevin Heffernan (Gaelic footballer): Difference between revisions
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'''Kevin Heffernan''' ( |
'''Kevin Heffernan''' (20 August 1929 - 25 January 2013) is a former [[Irish people|Irish]] sportsperson. He played [[Gaelic football]] with the [[Dublin GAA|Dublin]] senior inter-county team in the 1940s and 1950s. He later served as [[Manager (Gaelic games)|manager]] of the Dublin senior footballers in the 1970s and 1980s. Heffernan is regarded as one of the greatest players and managers of all-time - and has been credited with helping to save the GAA in the 1970s.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/sport/2007/0723/1184965208546.html|title=Comments in the Irish Times|accessdate=2007-07-23 | work=The Irish Times|date=7 July 2007}}</ref> |
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==Early & private life== |
==Early & private life== |
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[[Category:St Vincents hurlers]] |
[[Category:St Vincents hurlers]] |
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[[Category:Texaco Footballers of the Year]] |
[[Category:Texaco Footballers of the Year]] |
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[[Category:2013 deaths]] |
Revision as of 17:27, 25 January 2013
Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Irish name | Caoimhín Ó hIfearnáin | ||
Sport | Gaelic football | ||
Position | Corner-forward | ||
Born |
Dublin, Ireland | August 20, 1929||
Died | January 25, 2013 | (aged 83)||
Nickname | Heffo | ||
Club(s) | |||
Years | Club | ||
St. Vincent's | |||
Club titles | |||
Dublin titles | 15 football 6 hurling | ||
Inter-county(ies) | |||
Years | County | ||
1940s-1950s | Dublin | ||
Inter-county titles | |||
Leinster titles | 4 | ||
All-Irelands | 1 |
Kevin Heffernan (20 August 1929 - 25 January 2013) is a former Irish sportsperson. He played Gaelic football with the Dublin senior inter-county team in the 1940s and 1950s. He later served as manager of the Dublin senior footballers in the 1970s and 1980s. Heffernan is regarded as one of the greatest players and managers of all-time - and has been credited with helping to save the GAA in the 1970s.[1]
Early & private life
Kevin Heffernan was born on 20 August 1929 in Dublin. Unlike many of his contemporaries, he was not born into a football background, as his father’s interests included hunting and shooting rather than Gaelic games. Heffernan's family moved to the Marino area of the city when he was very young, and it was here that he first came into contact with both football and hurling. He later attended Scoil Mhuire and St. Joseph's Christian Brothers school where he made great progress as a hurler and as a footballer. It was in secondary school that he first tasted major success, as he won a Leinster Colleges hurling title in 1945.
By profession Heffernan was a personnel manager for the Electricity Supply Board (ESB) and he became Chairman of the Labour Court.
Playing career
Club
Heffernan's club hurling and football career coincided with a hugely successful period in the history of the famous St. Vincent's club in Dublin. In terms of football he won a huge tally of fifteen senior county championship medals, completing a seven in-a-row f1949 to 1955, a six in-a-row between 1957 and 1962, before winning his fourteenth and fifteenth county titles in 1966 and 1967. Heffernan also won six senior county championship hurling titles in 1953, 1954, 1955, 1957, 1959 and 1962.
Inter-county
Heffernan played both hurling and football at minor level with Dublin in the early 1940s. He had some success at these levels, winning a Leinster minor football medal in 1946 and a Leinster minor hurling medal in 1947. He made his senior debut for the Dublin footballers the same year that he was sitting his Leaving Certificate, breaking his jaw in a game just days before his first exam. In spite of this inauspicious start Heffernan went on to have a distinguished inter-county career.
Heffernan first tasted success in 1948 when he won an All-Ireland medal with the junior football team. In 1953 he won a National Football League before winning a second medal in 1955. Later that same year Heffernan claimed his first Leinster; however, his side were later defeated by Kerry in the All-Ireland final. Three years later in 1958 Heffernan was captain of Dublin when he won his third National League title as well as a second Leinster title. He later guided his native-county to an All-Ireland victory over Derry. Heffernan later won two further Leinster titles in 1959 and 1962, however, there was no further All-Ireland titles. He retired from inter-county football shortly afterwards.
Managerial career
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Following a great inter-county career with Dublin, he became manager of the senior inter-county team in late 1973. The era was dominated by the intense rivalry between Dublin and Kerry. In his first championship season in charge he guided ‘the Dubs’ to their first Leinster and All-Ireland titles since 1963. Following the completion of the championship Heffernan became the only non-player to be nominated Texaco Footballer of the Year. In 1975 Dublin captured a second consecutive Leinster title; however, a young Kerry team caught Heffernan's teams in a complacent mood in the subsequent All-Ireland final. Dublin bounced back the following year to win the National League as well as a third Leinster title in-a-row before going on to defeat Kerry in the All-Ireland final.
Following this victory Heffernan unexpectedly resigned as manger of Dublin, being replaced by Tony Hanahoe who acted as player-captain-manager. Heffernan returned as manager in 1979 but, after claiming a sixth consecutive Leinster title, lost out to Kerry in the All-Ireland final. Much of the Dublin team fell by the wayside after 1980 but Heffernan built a new team centred around midfield stalwart Brian Mullins and, in another memorable match remembered mainly for its unsporting conduct, a twelve-man Dublin team to victory over a fourteen-man Galway in the All-Ireland Final of 1983. Played in atrocious conditions the referee sent off four players, three of which were from Dublin, and their win saw the team being dubbed ‘the twelve apostles’.
Retirement
Following his retirement from inter-county management Heffernan continued to have a keen involvement in Gaelic football. In 1984, the GAA's centenary year he was named in the left corner-forward position on the GAA's Football Team of the Century before later managing the Ireland to victory over Australia in the International Rules Series in 1986.
In 2000 Heffernan's status as one of the greatest players of all-time was further cemented when he was named in the left corner-forward position on the GAA's 'Football Team of the Millennium.' He has also continued his involvement with the St. Vincent’s club. In 2004, at the age of 74, Heffernan was in charge of the club's under 15 hurling team, which, with a late free from Oliver McElvaney, won a memorable championship final against Cuala, having defeated Ballyboden in the semi-final. This particular St. Vincents team had never beaten either of those two clubs before, illustrating to all that Heffernan's management touch had not deserted him. [2]In 2006 he trained the club's minor hurling team.
In 2005 Heffernan was granted the Freedom of the City of Dublin, placing him in a pantheon that includes U2, Nelson Mandela and Bill Clinton. He was also among the 25 recipients of the Irish Examiner GAA President's Awards for 2006. The ceremony which was presented by the former GAA president Seán Kelly, took place on the Friday, 31 March 2006.
Heffernan was a consultant to the management of the Dublin minor football team for 2007. His appointment received the overwhelming approval from the Dublin County Board and he was working with the Dublin minor boss Timmy McCarthy and his managerial colleagues John Archibald and John Lowndes in an advisory capacity for the young Dubs[3]
See also
- List of people on stamps of Ireland
- Dublin GAA
- Dublin GAA Honours
- Dublin Senior Club Football Championship
References
- ^ "Comments in the Irish Times". The Irish Times. 7 July 2007. Retrieved 2007-07-23.
- ^ http://stvincentsgaa.ie/AboutUs.aspx?m=fp
- ^ "'Heffo' to help Dublin minors". Retrieved 2006-09-14.