*Jack Lynch and John Arkins. Photograph: Joe Buckley
NORTH CLARE has been deprived of a visit from the Jack Daly for over seven decades and the last two surviving men from the region with Clare SFC medals are hopeful the drought will soon end.
It was 1950 when Kilfenora defeated Clonhanes in the Clare SFC final on a scoreline of 1-04 0-03, their opponents were an amalgamation of Mullagh and Doonbeg. Wing-backs for the victors were John Arkins and Jack Lynch, they were the youngest members of what was only the second Kilfenora side to taste senior glory, thankfully they are still hale, hearty and well able to recall the events of seven decades ago.
Now aged 91 and 90 respectively, both John and Jack are incredibly fresh for their age and remain impressively sharp both with their views of the current game and the memories of times gone by. โWeโre toughโ, said John when divulging their respective ages.
Dermot Hogan was captain of the Kilfenora side and spoke on the occasion of his delight at bringing the championship title back to North Clare. The occasion is still to the fore of Johnโs mind, โItโs 72 years ago, thereโs a lot of floods gone down the river since but we can remember it, weโre still hoping someone in North Clare will pull it off again. Jack is a mighty man for going to the gamesโ.
As ever keen to bring his teammate and close friend into proceedings, Johnโs mention of Jackโs attendance at games sparks another discussion about how the pandemic has led to more opportunities to watch club games without leaving the house. โWith COVID, youโre able to watch the club games on television and things like that, there isnโt much going out nowโ.
That may have been a positive in widening the reach of the game but John remarked, โThe COVID ruined it allโ relating to the reduction in mingling associated with championship encounters.
โBefore that even too you could take a drink and drive, thatโs so many years back, we used to have great times with the few drinks after,โ Jack quipped when diverted to the big changes that have occurred since their playing days.
Arkins noted, โit was a social occasionโ and this was met with definite agreement by his colleague who espoused on how the debriefs and sometimes post-mortems among teammates after games in Nagleโs were often more memorable than the action on the field, โIt was indeed, youโd be describing a fella hitting a belt, it was so funny, youโd be watching it now itโs grand but even the hurling has changed, you canโt touch anyone or youโve a yellow card, youโll be sent off or get a black card, I think it started with the soccer and the fellas inside in Limerick, a fella went to the soccer and heโd know how to fall, that started to happen in the GAA too, a fella would fall down for no reason and start roaring.
โI always remember, Dermot Hogan one day back in Miltown, the one time I got a belt that turned me upside down, I was lying down and I was mad to get up because I was so disappointed but Dermot came over and said โstay downโ, I said โI must get upโ but Dermot was looking for a bit of a breather, it was so funny, that was the way it was, it was great funโ.
They soldiered together in the back-line in the underage ranks and at senior level, they tasted glory in 1950 but came up short in the 1957 and 1958 county semi-finals when going down to a Raymond Clancy inspired Kilrush Shamrocks, John himself scored a goal in the 57 clash when it took two meetings to separate them and the Shams. โOh in 57 we were blackgarded, the ball hit the side of the net, it never went in at all, it hit the side of the net but Gerry Lynch was in goals that day, he had the habit of walking back and lifting up the net to take up the ball and then he hopped the ball, the umpire was only a young fella and it seems the father was on the sideline watching them, someone from Kilrush shouted that it was a goal and the young fella put up the flag, Tommy Waldron a lovely fella admitted after that it wasnโt,โ Jack protested.
Jack began working in Limerick at the beginning of 1951 which took him away from the sport but he was back in action by the time they returned to the last four.
Mention of the special team bus which brought them from Miltown Malbay following their county final win plus the line of cars and bonfires which marked their return and that of the senior championship to the โPopeโs Parishโ brings a smile to their faces.
John in particular can recite conversations from that very night of September 3rd 1950. โI can remember it well, Dermot gave a speech in the square, there was a desperate crowd at that game, in those days there was huge crowds. John Joe and Patrick Lynch they were brothers, they were mighty supporters, we were all in the pub together, we had mighty craic, they would describe every kick of the game, I remember John Joe saying to me โthe wet ball was like catching a sod of turfโโ. Fielding during the match had been poor with the greasy leather and heavy underfoot conditions blamed for this.
As well as moving to Limerick, Jack got married, โthat finished me altogether,โ he said with a smirk. Heโs now based in Inagh, โwhen I went to Inagh first there was nothing there, they had no hurling pitch, JJ Keating across from me on the Ennis side, he was a bachelor living in a big farm, that was the big field and he allowed lads to go in and do a bit of hurling but it was only walloping each other, if you hit a good shot into the river then it was gone, they were only able to drive the ball a short distance so when they went out playing they thought it was fascinating because they could drive the ball. All of a sudden, theyโve developed a beautiful team since joining with Kilnamonaโ.
Kilfenora has always been home for John a farmer, who has five children, they live across Clare and in Galway with his sons Sean and Joe picking up plenty of injuries while representing Kilfenora, post-playing he served as Chairman while holding roles of manager and selector with plenty of teams within the club. Jack also has five children, three of which are based in the United States and our sit-down prompts him to make a point that he must ask his grand-children Stateside what sports they are involved in.
Back to the field and further smiles eek out when reminiscing on their rivalry with Lisdoonvarna. โThey had a great team, I remember one year they had six Gardaรญ playing with them, youโd to be careful what you did on the field. Mick Greene had some pull with getting Gardaรญ into the town. They were our biggest rivals in North Clare, it was about the bragging rightsโ John said. There was something sweet about their meetings, Jack pointed out, โWe used to beat them always though and it was lovely to hit a shot on the Gardaรญ, it was the only time you could hit them with no repercussionsโ.
Moving West, Miltown and Kilrush always gave tough encounters, Jack recounted, โThey controlled it with Sean Guinnane. When we went to Miltown playing the match, you had to beat the ref, the umpires and the linesman, if there was any doubt about the ball going out it was the other side that got it, Kilfenora never did because they were afraid of their life, they played a lovely nice style of football, we used to shove it into them, they used to hate it, it was so funny. We were always the best of friends, thatโs what I loved about it, you would kill each other on the field and when it was all over we were the best of friends. It was great to beat Lisdoonvarna just to quieten them for a whileโ.
They credited Paddy Hennessyโs training with strengthening Miltown but John acknowledged that it was Jack that โcalmed downโ their half-forward line of John Donnellan, Donie White and Johnny Neville but he observed, โback the West they were all big strong guysโ.
Returning to conversations of the 1950 happens for the duo more than youโd think with the topic coming up for Jack following an anniversary mass in Kilfenora three years ago, โwe started talking about that game in 1950, they were drawing me about Clahane and their mother with Doonbeg now, I said they were big strong lads with Clahane whereas theyโre more refined with Doonbegโ.
He continued, โThe 1950 side was some team, they were all lovely footballers, football was lovely at the time, it was tough but thatโs what made it goodโ. Current Clare and Kilfenora footballer, Cian OโDea is singled out by John as one of the top footballers in the the province. Praise is harder to come by from Jack when asked if OโDea would make the 1950 team, โHeโd hardly be picked, heโd be too softโ.
Arkins remains defiant that OโDea would have made it despite the lack of comparisons between the styles of play, โItโs a different game, you played your square on the field, you played your man and that was it, mind your patch, beat your man and youโre doing wellโ.
Down through the years, they have had to bid farewell to their teammates that have passed on before them. They were the youngest members of the 1950 side, โthe grace of God,โ is what John maintained served as their reason for the present health, โYouโve no say in that, some win and some loseโ.
Nonetheless saying goodbye to men they soldiered on the field with has never been easy, โThey were all nice fellas. Brian Mahony was the last of them, he died two years ago, he was a fiddle player, he was two years older than us, a lovely man,โ John outlined. He then points to a picture of their team which has Tommy Lenihan smoking a fag. This reminds Jack, โthe amount youโd smoke at that time was so little because you hadnโt the price of them. Before a match, if they thought you were smoking theyโd give out to you. When I came to live in Inagh, they were big horses of men, on the Saturday night over fifty years ago, those big fellas would come in, they were playing the hurling match the next day and theyโd play mighty matches, Iโd say to myself we must be pure useless because we hadnโt a drink taken and all this training but then I discovered they were Junior B, all these big strong fellas and they belting each otherโ.
They live in hope that the Jack Daly will return to North Clare. โSt Breckanโs last year I thought were shaping up, they are the nearest to it. They are good enough to get over the line. รire รg have some very good players but St Breckanโs are as good, without a doubt, they are a nice team to watch. I donโt know what the hell happened against รire รg, they were better than what they showed in the semi-final,โ John said.
Even though they are Kilfenora through and through, they are eager for a team whether it is St Breckanโs, Ennistymon or Corofin to bridge the 72 year drought. โOh God, we would, definitely we would love to see it,โ John stressed with Jack adding, โanyone from North Clare would be greatโ. Success like this would be timely according to Arkins, โthe danger is with populations dwindling, it needs the liftโ and the pair flag that areas such as Kilfenora, Liscannor and OโCurrys have very small panels at adult level. โBefore everyone in North Clare was playing football, if you could kick a ball at all then you were playing but that has changed. The rules and the refereeing has changed, the same with the hurling it was a lovely game to watch with the sliotar up and down the field,โ Jack said.
There is a confidence mixed with the hope for the fortunes of the North Clare sides at senior level tasting success but they are not as optimistic of the chances of Kilfenora returning to the top tier, โWeโd only be hopeful. Cian OโDea is an excellent footballer but he canโt win a match on his own,โ John surmised.
Feigning of injuries and playing for frees are features of the current game that irk the duo. Of the falling for frees John said, โYou wouldnโt do that in our time, youโd give him a dartโ while Jack revealed, โYou would want to hurt him but only for that moment in timeโ. Since leaving Kilfenora, Jack has ironically ended up living in hurling dominated parishes, โI didnโt get the hurling bug because I loved football. The soccerโs touch was a pityโ while John interjected, โIt took away the love of it a bit, definitely. I donโt get the same kick out of it watching it on televisionโ.
Jack continues the debate, โThey go right up to the goal and youโd say, why donโt you kick it over the bar, then they turn around and pass to someone elseโ with John questioning, โIs it that they are not able to kick it over the bar? The county fellas can be 25 or 30 yards from the goal and they go handpassing to a fella who hits it wide. Clifford in Kerry can do it alrightโ.
Opting for the fisted or handpass score is โa pityโ says Jack while John admitted to being in awe of the fitness levels of the current crop. โBut itโs easy for them to be fit, they are only running around but if they got a good dunt that would slow them, that was the idea, hit the good fella and it will slow him upโ. โTommy Casey in his day wing back would do it, thatโs for sure,โ pipes up John having done his genealogy during the conversation to discover that the man asking him the questions is the grandson of five-time Clare SHC winner with Ruan, the late Tommy Casey. โHe would indeed, they had Jimmy Smyth too, a great player, he was a lovely hurler with Ruan and the Leahys, I knew everyone of them at that time,โ Jack agreed.
Remarkably the only senior titles won by Ruan and Kilfenora were all achieved during the window of 1941 to 1962. โIt was great, we supported each other. Tony Meaney would talk about the old days, the Smyths and the Lyons, big strong men,โ John noted. Like their Ruan counterparts, they never suffered any hamstring injuries, โthere wasnโt a word about them,โ John observed with Jack adding, โbut shur everyone was walking and cycling, pushing wheelbarrows, they had bicycles and if you had a puncture youโd to walk. Fellas were as tough as iron, they didnโt mind getting a dart because they would give it themselves and thatโs where you would enjoy itโ.
If they were given the opportunity to rewind the clock 72 years and do it all over again, theyโd jump at the chance and most definitely throw a few dunts along the way. โWe would to be sure, every bit of it. It was our life. Itโs the friendships, medals are two a penny nowadays, itโs about the friendship. Frank Mahony when he used to come in here playing the fiddle, Christ it was lovely to meet him again,โ John concluded.