*Kilmurry Ibrickane manager, David Egan. Photograph: Gerard O’Neill.ย
DAVID EGAN has married into a staunch รire รg family and on Sunday he tows the line as the Kilmurry Ibrickane manager looking to stop the Ennis club from winning a third Jack Daly in four seasons.
Thereโs been no way of keeping a safe distance from รire รg supporters as on Sunday just gone, he and his wife Louise were joined by the entire Skelly family. โWeโre christening our child on Sunday and the house is going to be full of รire รg people! Michael Skelly would be a big รire รg man, he ran the clubhouse for years, his daughter Louise is my partner, Louise is very supportive of everything I do but she will be wearing the red and white,โ he said in advance of the christening.
No ban on talking about the county final was implemented. โIt is a nice little sidetrack to it, it will be light hearted banter, Iโll have twenty or thirty down from Offaly who will surely back me upโ.
A future role with รire รg is likely for Egan given that they are living in Ennis. โMaybe with the U10s when the two boys come along is as far as Iโll look, Iโm not looking anywhere else other than Sunday week, I might not even be here after that,โ he laughed.
Having relocated with Louise and their family, David was quickly snapped up by Kilmurry Ibrickane to come on board as their manager for 2024 after John Talty came across him while working on a windfarm in Quilty.
From speaking with John and then Chairman Michael Considine, Egan could feel the club were frustrated to have not reached a county final since 2021. โYou could get a sense that they had unfilled their potential over the last couple of years, they felt they had let themselves down and let the club down, they wanted to make all those things right, if youโre coming in as an outsider maybe you can bring a fresh pair of eyes to that and marry into that, I think that is what Iโve done, weโve brought in a few younger guys which has helped that process, weโre in a county final so things havenโt been all bad and we still feel that there is more in us, coming from a semi-final win against last yearโs county champions and youโre back training with a lot of honest talking to be done that there is more in usโ.
Gaelic footballโs importance in Kilmurry Ibrickane is infectious, he said. โYou walk in around here and you get a vibe, now obviously weโre preparing for a county final so the vibe is going to be good, you walk here in January and it is a similar type of vibe, it is a community mad about football, if we werenโt where we were at the moment it would be deemed a failure around here and you get the vibe when you walk in around here early days that success is not mandatory because mandatory is too harsh a word but it is almost expected that you are ensuring you are doing things right to get lads this far, that comes from the players never mind the supporters and the community, they are really driven and they want to be successfulโ.
This drive has not brought a sense of pressure for David. โYou can let it pressurise you or you can marry into it, Iโve tried to marry into it, Iโve came in here with three intermediate medals in Offaly, fair enough Iโve played inter-county but some of the guys in the dressing room here have nine senior championship medals, one thing about them is they donโt go around wearing them around their necks, they want number ten so they marry into you and you marry into them, weโre a good partnership, I expect high standards and we expect them as well so we work well togetherโ.
Big day experience is a massive weapon in their armoury. โThey are not big headed about it which is what I like about them, itโs not like โlisten to me Iโve nine county medalsโ and it is more โcan we do it this way, can we do it that wayโ, the game has changed since a lot of them boys won their medals anyway, what they were doing back then wonโt necessarily win you something now anyway, thereโs a big focus on restarts now which is part of the modern era of the football, they are marrying into what we are doingโ.
He told The Clare Echo, โMy strength is that I bring energy to the table, if Iโm bringing the energy then hopefully that is rubbing off on them, they have the football, they have loads of football around here, weโve a panel and have used thirty eight players between Cusack Cup and championship, twenty two in the championship, thereโs guys going to be in the stand next Sunday that played Cusack Cup games that canโt make our thirty. There is a serious thirst for football around here and a serious depth of talent. The year has gone in stages for us, we got the Clare U20s back who brought a new level of energy to it, then the Clare seniors came back and brought another level of energy to it, weโd guys travelling and coinciding with Aidan (McCarthy) coming back from the All-Ireland hurling victory which brought another level of energy to it, it has all propelled us to where we are now, since the knockout stages came Iโve seen the real Kilmurry Ibrickane to be honest. The four weeks leading into that Miltown Malbay match was a different level of preparation, different level of training and focus, Iโm hoping to see another level before the county finalโ.
What does the real Kilmurry Ibrickane look like, he is asked. โThe real Kilmurry Ibrickane from my eyes from where Iโm sitting is a very hungry bunch of lads that are looking and striving for improvements, looking to get better, we work well together in that it is not me telling them this is what you need to do, it is them coming to me and me coming to them, they feel we can do this and I feel we can do this, we gel together and get it done. Itโs been working really well, weโve a great level of experience in the dressing room, thereโs lads with nine championship medals in our dressing room, thereโs not too many teams in Clare who can say that, success leaves clues, I drill into them as much as they are drilling into me and it is a two-way partnership.
โWeโve a very good management team here, Gary Sexton is an outstanding strength and conditioning guy, we havenโt had a whole lot of injuries this year, Evan Talty who was with the Dublin ladies and Roscommon U20s comes in and helps out with the coaching, a very experienced guy, everyone feeds off each other. Weโve a minor team in a county final and a ladies team in a county final, we all train on Tuesday nights, the girls are buzzing coming off the field and are really enjoying their football, our lads are rubbing off that going out on the grass, the community vibe has a big buy-in which I like about the place, hopefully we all keep rubbing off each other and get some silverware back hereโ.
Clareโs club scene has been โvery competitive,โ maintained David. โIt is a very competitive county for football, it would be wrong of me to say Iโm surprised with the thirst for football in the county because Clare has been a Division 2 for so long that there had to be football down here, the quality definitely didnโt shock me because Iโve been watching club games but going to games, seeing the crowds at games and the energy that surrounds it has probably surprised me a bit, I remember we played Miltown Malbay in a league match, I know weโre very close rivals but the stands here in Quilty and the far side there was maybe 1000 people at a league game which was unheard of in Cork where I coached and very much unheard of in Offaly where I played so there is a great thirst for football here. The championship structure is not bad, I actually like it, everyone has a reasonable chance of getting to a quarter-final and if you slip up you are still under pressure to stay in the championship so it keeps football alive, most teams then are probably playing football until the end of September which is good. In terms of quality, you only have to look at what will be out on the field for Sundayโs county final, if you picked a county team of what is going to be in Cusack Park on Sunday, youโre looking at definitely a high end Division 3 team without all the other clubs attached to it so thereโs plenty football in Clareโ.
Two points separated Kilmurry Ibrickane when they fell to their only loss of this yearโs championship against รire รg at the start of August. Egan responded โnot being arrogant but yesโ when asked if he expected to be facing Paul Maddenโs side again. โI felt even before we played that game that if we were to win a championship then weโd have to cross that path twice, I think I was right in my thinking in that the two best panels in Clare have arrived at the stage. I certainly donโt think it will be along the same lines as that game we played in the first round, it was pure shadow boxing in my eyes and that both teams stood off each other, Iโm expecting both teams to go hammer and tongs at each other, I canโt separate them football wise, it is energy, workrate, determination, want and all the clichรฉs, the conditions will all play a factor, the big one thing I think is going to be who is the most disciplined team on the day, both teams have very good freetakersโ.
Since then, the Bricks are in a much healthier place with Keelan Sexton getting a lot of game time under his belt plus the returns of Aidan McCarthy and Ciaran Morrissey from injury and Darren Hickey regaining his place in the first fifteen. The big caveat to all of that is the fractured foot sustained by captain Dermot Coughlan. โDermot is a bit of an upset for us, Iโm not medical and Iโm not trying to play games so if Dermot is fit Dermot plays, if Dermot is not fit then Dermot wonโt play, we still have a big question mark over that, he is the only one out of a panel of thirty four that we canโt call upon today which is a good sign. If you look at our panel, weโve Clare U20s coming on as subs, Ciaran Morrissey who was a county panellist last year only came on as a sub against Cratloe, them boys donโt want to be coming on as subs in the county final, the next two weeks will be helter skelterโ.
Egan along with Kevin Sexton and Vincent Talty will make the call on Coughlan this Thursday. โIf Dermot is fit the Thursday night before then he starts, that is my opinion, if Dermot is not fit then I canโt start him. Iโd love for the chap to be fit because he lives and breathes football, he lives and breathes Kilmurry Ibrickane too, Iโd love if he gets there and he wonโt let anyone down if he doesโ.
Prior to Kilmurry Ibrickane, Egan was in charge St Michaelโs based in Blackrock for three years where he led them to the top flight in Cork for the first time since 2006. The quality he has witnessed weekly in Pรกirc Naomh Mhuire in Quilty on a weekly basis is as good as whatโs in the province, he maintained. โI coached St Michaelโs down in Cork, we were a Senior B team, I was with them for one season at senior and they stayed up and they stayed up again this year which is great for the young lads coming on, if you look at what is at the top tier with Nemo Rangers and Castlehaven in the final this year if Nemo or Castlehaven walked in here I wouldnโt be afraid of themโ.