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Published 11:23 29 Nov 2022 GMT
Updated 11:24 29 Nov 2022 GMT
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Brian Sheehy was full back on the Dublin U20 hurling team in 2021[/caption]
Kilmacud Crokes and Na Fianna contested both senior finals this year in Dublin but between the two teams, in Sheehy, Donal Ryan and Conor McHugh, there were only three dual players.
It's similar all over the county, where men like Ballyboden's Conal Keaney or Cuala's Con O'Callaghan are rarer by the year. In fairness, with numbers so plentiful in many of the county's clubs, it's a very difficult to see it changing.
"There’s always that worry of being caught in between the two stools. But I’m very passionate about being a dual player and I think that it’s a lovely thing to be able to do in the GAA and have groups of friends in either team.
"I am conscious that I am the only one at Kilmacud Crokes and I want kids looking up and thinking ‘there’s someone there’, even if I’m not playing both. But ‘he’s there so I can do it when I’m older’… I think that’s very important that I can inspire the next generation that it can be done.
"I don’t have any real plan of stopping either," he adds, "even though I get a few old heads in the club giving me their own opinions about it…" He may not be getting his game for the footballers but there's no doubt about it, for the club, and for the science student in UCD in particular, these are very heady days. Sheehy has done the double-double in Dublin over the last two years. "These days don’t come around that often. I know I was lucky enough to be involved in two last year but I grew up watching many Crokes’ defeats in finals so I’ve been enjoying it as much as anyone else." "I think it comes back to the club," he says of the dual dream. "Each individual club has to have a template for how a dual player can work. Each mentor for each underage team has to promote it underage. "It’s not like people are playing hurling and football till minor then quitting one. People are quitting much younger, there are different sports involved. "Communication between both sets of management is very important to keep everyone on board. "It’s tough because you’re only training 50% of the time. If there’s a lad who only plays football training all the time, how do you justify starting ahead of him when he’s at all the sessions and you’re not? "Every training I go to, football or hurling, I’m only going to one a week. There’s extra pressure to perform at that session compared to the lad that has two chances that week. I only have one chance. "I’m in a very demanding college course at the moment, science at UCD, which is pretty much full-time. So you’re going to college and training three times a week. Then you’re trying to juggle other things like relationships, family, socialising, which is obviously a big part of college. "It’s demanding but I wouldn’t do it if I didn’t enjoy it." And if you were only talking to him, you wouldn't even have to ask the question. Because there'd be no doubt in your mind that this man is enjoying every second of it.
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