"If you can meet with Triumph and Disaster
And treat those two  imposters just the same
You'll be a man my friend"
Derry  Roots
Sean was born in the townland of Ballymaguigan on the shores of Lough  Neagh in County Derry. While the occupation of his working life, Bank Official,  has brought him to many towns his anchor in life has always been his native  place. This is reinforced by his family and the circle of friends which emanated  from his boyhood GAA Club St. Treas.
Sean was greatly influenced by his father 'The Master'. He went to the great nursery of Gaelic Games, St. Malachy's in Belfast. His first Bank placement was in Ballinamore, County Leitrim. This was followed by a period in Castlewellan County Down where a playing colleague was the great Down player Pat Rice. In 19 and 55 (as he enunciates it himself) he Captained the Derry Junior team to an All-Ireland title over Mayo at Charlestown. He played in two Ulster Senior Finals in the 50s' and was on two McKenna Cup and a Lagan Cup winning sides.
After a spell in Meath it was back to Ballymaguigan for a great Senior Championship victory in '62 in the company of his great friend, the legendry Derry player Jim McKeever. The well-travelled inter-county manager, Eamon Coleman, was also on the team. Sean had a great football spell with Seam Mac Cumhalls of Ballybofey winning two County Senior Championships and disappointingly losing out on an Ulster Club title. Sean married Anne in 1962 and pays tribute to her patient tolerance of his sporting passion.
Boyle's Abbey Park
The distinctive Derry  accent was first heard in Boyle GAA's spiritual home, the Abbey Park, in the  summer of '72. He had just been transferred to Boyle as Manager of the then  Northern, now National Irish, Bank. He was soon involved, with John McGowan and  the Boyle team as a player and trainer as they reached a Junior and two  Intermediate County Finals. His talents were quickly noted at County level. On  the instigation of Micheal O'Callaghan, then County Board Chairman, he was  appointed Coach to the County Senior team in '73. This policy was then in its  infancy but about to blossom. He introduced an innovative training regime and a  tactical dimension which brought success and laid the foundations for the  County's great period of the later seventies.
League Final of  1974.
Future success was not immediately evident in his first game in  charge of Roscommon in which they dispatched a lowly Dublin to Division Three.  If anyone had suggested that Dublin would win the '74 All-Ireland (beating  Galway) and that Roscommon would miss out on a National League title after a  replay against Kerry, they might have been shown the way to the local hospital.  That avoidable League Final defeat is one of Sean's deep disappointments. John  Egan's late Kerry goal, in the drawn game, with the Roscommon goalie injured, is  etched in his memory.
Sean speaks glowingly of that Roscommon team of '74  and puts them ahead of the All-Ireland finalists of 1980. The names jump out;  Lindsay, Heneghan, Regan, Kerrane, Earley, Kelly and Freyne and always the one  he rate best of all, Harry Keegan. Sean was succeeded in late '75 by Tony Whyte.  This transition could have been dealt with more diplomatically. The more things  change the more they stay the same.
Moulding Youth
Sean did not sulk  on the sidelines but took over and moulded a talented Boyle under-age team which  included, McLoughlin, Fitpatrick, Nerney, and Sean's own son Liam. In this he  was assisted by the writer. Double acts were very popular then, even in  coaching! It is said that Sean is at his best in this under-age coaching  context. This side had many fine tussles with strong teams such as the Clann na  Gael of McManus, Nicholson and Pettit; the Roscommon Gaels side of Hession and  McNeill; the Elphin side powered by Kelly and Glancy and Michael Glaveys with  their stars Paul Earley, Morgan and Doorey. These Club rivals combined to enable  the Roscommon Minor team to reach the All-Ireland Semi-Final where they were  beaten by a great Cork side. The Boyle youngsters helped in Sean's next Club  success with a county Junior title in '81 followed by a memorable Intermediate  victory over St. Ronans in '83 at Frenchpark. That team was; John Finn (ably  substituting for Gerry O'Dowd who was away),Gerry Carty, John O'Dowd, Dessie  Mcloughlin, Gary Wynne (Capt.), Christopher O'Connor, Peter Bolger, John  Finneran, liam Young, Sean Daly, Vincent Flanagan, Kevin Young, Gerry Nerney,  Colm Loftus, Paul Beirne, with John Joe Carty and Kevin Mahon.
County  Calls Again
It was back to the front lines of inter-county coaching in  '86 and another bitter pill. The gods did not smile on Sean's Roscommon in the  Connacht Final when a late Stephen Joyce goal 'robbed' Roscommon after an injury  to Harry Keegan. A strange below-par performance and the curse of the late goal  struck again in '87 in Sligo and heralded the end of Sean's Senior involvement  with the County. The margin between the elation of victory and the dejection of  defeat can so often be minimal. "Ironically", reflects Sean, "these teams did  the business after I had done a good deal of the ground-work!" Since his initial  involvement in 1973 he has been involved fifteen years with Roscommon teams at  under 16, Minor, U 21, Junior and Senior levels allied to a greater number of  years involved at Club level.
Return to the Abbey Park
Still Sean  soldiered on with Boyle and in '94, the Intermediate team, with a blistering  display, captured a second title, defeating St.Dominicks. The team; J. Conroy,  G.Wynne, V. Flanagan, M.McGovern, S. Bohan, G.Cregg, F. Costello, P.Carty, T.  Ryan, N. O'Donohoe, M. Smith, E. Cregg, O.O'Donohoe, S. Kerins, M. Tormey, with  N. Casey, A. King, D. McLoughlin, J. O'Dowd, R. Nerney, B. Shannon, A. Lavin, B.  Kennedy, J. Sweeney, D. Kelly, P.Flaherty, and J. Beirne. This was one of  the town's best ever teams with power players in abundance. Boyle returned to  Senior status and were still a force there when Sean passed on the reins of  management in '98.
A creaking hip kept reminding Sean to take time  out which he found difficult to do. Eventually he acquiesced. The creaking was  attended to and he returned to various under-age teams in the Club and schools.  His new squads having won U 12 and U 16 at Division 2 these are now competing in  division 1 at Minor level. He has extended his activity to assisting voluntarily  at Boyle Primary Schools.
GAA Friendships
Sean was part of a  very active and successful Scor (GAA social programme) in the seventies.  Accompanied by P.J. and Maureen Keane, Rosaleen Moran and Una Beirne he  participated in the All-Ireland Final of the Ballad group. They did not win out  due to flawed adjudication but they were selected for an R.T.E. highlights  programme. He is a talented singer whose anthem is, appropriately, 'The Town I  Loved So Well'. He regards the GAA as a great organisation despite its top level  bureaucracy. He sees friendships in every Club in the County, some formed in  the furnace of sideline argument. "Talking to Micheal O'Callaghan was like  talking to my own father", he recalls. No finer tribute could he pay. "I must  mention Barry and P.J., Ernie, Michael Costello and John McGowan and…" Once a  list starts it can take on a momentum of its own.
He admits his passion and  regard for so many players he has been involved with through the years; "I'd  like to thank all the players (Club and County) whom I have coached and are  still friends. Indeed now some of my 'students' are young ladies which is an  interesting challenge for an old timer!"
In answer to my query  regarding the future he answers with optimism; "Hopefully we'll get a Senior  Championship so that the major ambition will be fulfilled. Do you know  something, if Ryan's shot had hit the net instead of the crossbar, against Clann  , '96 could have been our year. I hope to continue to give ye a wee hand with  the under-age. I couldn't be passing the Abbey Park without going in  anyhow."
He is proud of his family, wife Anne and children Aileen, Liam, Jody, Sean, Paul and Catherine and now the next generation, his eight grandchildren. Paul is heavily involved in the creative arts as co-founder of 'Cartoon Saloon' based in Kilkenny. Sean retired from the Bank in '97 and was feted at a memorable night, in the then Forest Park Hotel, by the local business community and Boyle GAA Club and uniquely by Mac Cumhals of Ballybofey and Ardagh of Longford.
In the enveloping gloom, of a late evening, in the Abbey Park, in the Spring of 2006, while most of the panting figures are indistinguishable, Sean's distinctive voice marks him out. This voice has echoed across all the Gaelic fields in Roscommon, and many beyond, in exasperation, in disagreement but most often in encouragement.
I, a friend also, marvel at his youthful enthusiasm and reflect on how lucky Boyle GAA Club and its youth has been to have benefited from his spirit, for few, if any, have given as much to its cause.
 
 
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