This article is from page 46 of the 2009-11-03 edition of The Clare People. OCR mistakes are to be expected so download the original SWF or the rendered page 46 JPG
MIDFIELD on the stand side of Cusack Park and Fiach O’ Loughlin is locked in an embrace and goes on and on. It’s longer than the couple of minutes injury-time allowed by Rory Hickey at the end of this All Souls Day county final.
Given the day that was in it, he was surely thanking some higher power from the hurling heavens. Whatever, the streams were stream- ing now as the realisation at what Cratloe had achieved shine through the rain clouds.
“Tm stuck for words,’ he says after a few minutes. “I can’t really talk, give me a few more minutes”.
Meanwhile, Barry Duggan’s words flow as he addresses the Grecia elem ntl eCOeMOKeyeoMe)OmmONEAMBNOMENAL™ Ard Comhairle. “There’s a man who came in when we were down,” says Duggan. “He’s played for and captained Ireland, he’s captained Shannon to an All-Ireland League title and he picked us up after being beaten by Newmarket and made us believe what we could do. It’s Fiach O’Loughlin and I salute him.”
It’s the perfect cue for O’ Loughlin to explain his role in this romantic hurling story. The 125th year of the GAA’s founding. The 125th year to the day, to the afternoon. Cratloe. First time champions in their first ever senior hurling final.
“Belief,” he says. “It’s all about be- lief. That’s what this team is about. We had great faith in our guys all season and knew that we could win this title. It came down to belief at half-time. In the dressing room we said to the lads, ‘we believe in ye, we know ye believe in yourselves and it’s a matter of going out and winning it’.
‘They showed the belief they have as a team out there. The one thing I’ve said to the guys, whether it’s at half-time in games, the start of games, or 1n training 1s just “believe in yourselves because you are win- ners’. Anything we asked of them they did. They’re amateurs but they did it like a group of professional athletes. That’s the commitment they gave to the cause this year.
“We were never going to give up, whether we were one, two, three, four points down or whatever. The belief was there in the team that we knew we’d come good and win this championship. Never say die, that’s what did it for Cratloe today. We never said die and that’s why we got there in the end.”
At once you know this means as much as anything O’Loughlin has achieved on the rugby field.
And, why not. He’s Cratloe after all and this was with his own. The parish. The pump. The very rocks on which the GAA was built 125 years ago.