Friday, 30 January 2015
Premier League Predictions
The Premier League returns this weekend after last week's FA Cup action. The biggest game of the season so far will take place at 5.30.p.m on Saturday between top of the table Chelsea and second placed Manchester City at Stamford Bridge. Diego Costa will not be available for the home side after picking up a three match ban for his stamp on Liverpool's Emre Can during Tuesday's League Cup semi-final. Yaya Toure and new signing Wilfred Bony will be unavailable for City because they are both still involved in the Africa Cup of Nations with Ivory Coast. 3 points for the right score and 1 point for the right result.
Saturday
Hull v Newcastle (1-1)
Crystal Palace v Everton (1-2)
Liverpool v West Ham (2-1)
Manchester United v Leicester (3-1)
Stoke v Queens Park Rangers (2-1)
Sunderland v Burnley (2-1)
West Brom v Spurs (2-3)
Chelsea v Manchester City (1-1)
Sunday
Arsenal v Aston Villa (3-1)
Southampton v Swansea (2-1)
Copyright Seamus Egan 2015
Friday, 16 January 2015
Premier League Predictions
There will be 10 more games over the next 3 days in the Premier League in England and Wales. The following are my predictions. 3 points for the right score and 1 point for the right result.
Aston Villa v Liverpool (0-1)
Burnley v Crystal Palace (1-0)
Leicester v Stoke (1-1)
QPR v Manchester United (1-3)
Swansea v Chelsea (0-2)
Spurs v Sunderland (2-1)
Newcastle v Southampton (2-2)
Sunday
West Ham v Hull (2-1)
Manchester City v Arsenal (3-2)
Monday
Everton v West Brom (1-0)
Copyright Seamus Egan 2015
Aston Villa v Liverpool (0-1)
Burnley v Crystal Palace (1-0)
Leicester v Stoke (1-1)
QPR v Manchester United (1-3)
Swansea v Chelsea (0-2)
Spurs v Sunderland (2-1)
Newcastle v Southampton (2-2)
Sunday
West Ham v Hull (2-1)
Manchester City v Arsenal (3-2)
Monday
Everton v West Brom (1-0)
Copyright Seamus Egan 2015
Tuesday, 13 January 2015
Playlist
This is the playlist from my most recent appearance on Tipperary Mid-West Radio which took place on Saturday January 10th 2015. Enjoy.
Going Underground - The Jam
Losing My Religion - R.E.M
Step On - Happy Mondays
L.S.F - Kasabian
Blue Moon - Beck
Jealous Guy - John Lennon
A Horse With No Name - America
Cigarettes And Alcohol - Oasis
Come As You Are - Nirvana
You Don't Have To Say You Love Me - Dusty Springfield
Dakota - Stereophonics
Vapour Trail - Ride
Space Oddity - David Bowie
Ashes To Ashes - David Bowie
Blue Monday - New Order
True Confessions - The Undertones
Clash City Rockers - The Clash
The Boys Are Back In Town - Thin Lizzy
The Dry Law - The Last Tycoons
Let England Shake - PJ Harvey
Girls And Boys - Blur
Psycho Killer - Talking Heads
Search And Destroy - Iggy And The Stooges
Love Me Tender - Elvis Presley
Heartbreak Hotel - Elvis Presley
Copyright Seamus Egan 2015
Going Underground - The Jam
Losing My Religion - R.E.M
Step On - Happy Mondays
L.S.F - Kasabian
Blue Moon - Beck
Jealous Guy - John Lennon
A Horse With No Name - America
Cigarettes And Alcohol - Oasis
Come As You Are - Nirvana
You Don't Have To Say You Love Me - Dusty Springfield
Dakota - Stereophonics
Vapour Trail - Ride
Space Oddity - David Bowie
Ashes To Ashes - David Bowie
Blue Monday - New Order
True Confessions - The Undertones
Clash City Rockers - The Clash
The Boys Are Back In Town - Thin Lizzy
The Dry Law - The Last Tycoons
Let England Shake - PJ Harvey
Girls And Boys - Blur
Psycho Killer - Talking Heads
Search And Destroy - Iggy And The Stooges
Love Me Tender - Elvis Presley
Heartbreak Hotel - Elvis Presley
Copyright Seamus Egan 2015
Monday, 12 January 2015
Jim Gavin Interview
I recently met the
Dublin senior football manager Jim Gavin. I spoke to him about his employment,
his playing and coaching and management career. I also spoke to him about his
views on dual players and the current format of the football championship,
while Gavin also gave a very interesting insight into the philosophy of Dublin
football.
Firstly I asked the
current Dublin senior football manager about his role in the Irish Aviation
Authority and life as a pilot “I am a Flight Operations Inspector and Aeronautical
Officer. I work in the safety regulation division of the IAA or more
specifically in the airline standards division. My day to day job is working with the
airlines to insure that they fly the aircraft as safely as possible in the
interests of the travelling public and that they fly in accordance within Irish,
European and international regulation. It is a very dynamic industry. Aviation
is always progressing and growing. I have been involved in aviation for the
last 25 years and I find it really a fascinating job and I am lucky to have it.”
“At the moment I am rated
on the Avro RJ85 aircraft. I would fly as part of the pilot crew with Cityjet.
I would do that a couple of times a month to keep my professional pilot licence
which is one of the requirements of the job. I would also fly with the other
Irish airlines. I have been flying as a pilot for 25 years. Previous to that I
was in the military as an officer pilot for 20 years. That was my background.”
Jim Gavin played club
football for Round Towers in Clondalkin. As part of the Dublin senior football
team he won four Leinster titles, one National Football League and one All
Ireland title, which the 43 year old describes as the highlight of his playing
career. Gavin, who scored a point against Tyrone in the 1995 decider, described
what it was like to play in an All-Ireland final “The All-Ireland success of
1995 was definitely the highlight of my playing career. An All-Ireland final is
a unique occasion. As a player it is all about the players. There is a lot of
tension. It is a game that you want to win and with that comes a lot of
pressure from supporters. In some ways in Dublin you always get used to that
expectation. They are always intense occasions because it is winner takes all.
On that day we won by a point. Charlie Redmond got sent off in the second half.
We played for nearly half the game with 14 men. We were quite in control when
he got sent off. After that it was all hands on deck. We just fell over the
line and we won by a point.”
Dublin hadn’t won the All
Ireland for 12 years before their victory in 1995 and the Round Towers man
admits there was a lot of expectation on that team to deliver “The team I
joined were beaten by Donegal in 1992 and in 1993 Derry beat us in the
All-Ireland semi-final. In 1994 I broke my wrist and got back on the bench for
the final where Down beat us. It was a team that was up there and winning
Leinster titles. Dublin were having great battles with both Kildare and
particularly Meath at that time. There was a lot of expectation on that team
and there was a sense of relief particularly among the senior players that we
finally got over the line. It was a sweet feeling.”
Gavin joined the Dublin
senior set up in 1992 where he was brought into the squad for the National League.
Ten years later after winning a fourth Leinster title with the Dubs he decided
to retire from playing “I retired from football in 2002. I had given 10 years.
The mind was willing but the body was quite tired at that stage.”
It may have been the end
of Jim Gavin’s playing career but it was only the beginning of his coaching
career after a conversation with former Dublin manager Tommy Lyons “I had a
long discussion with Tommy Lyons about it and where he saw me in the team. In
fairness to Tommy (Lyons) he was very open and that is something that I would
have learned to be with the players, to tell them as it is. That is what they
want to hear. When I retired Tommy (Lyons) asked me to coach the under 21 team.
We brought along Declan Darcy as well. Tommy (Lyons) was still the manger but
the day to day coaching of the team was left up to Declan (Darcy) and myself.
That was a great experience.”
Gavin led Dublin to their
first under-21 All Ireland football title in 2003. He also worked with some
players who he would later manage in the senior team “I would have been
involved at that time with Brian Cullen, Alan Brogan, Paul Griffin, Conal
Keaney and Declan O’Mahony, who are iconic players in Dublin. We went on to
beat a very good Tyrone team in the final in 2003. That was the first time Dublin
won the under 21 competition. That was a great occasion and a nice milestone to
have.”
After being away from the
Dublin set up for some time Gavin took over the under 21s again and led them to
more success. He revealed that working with Dublin under 21 teams helped to prepare
him for the senior role “I got back involved in 2008. I was invited back in to
look after the under 21 team. We won another two All Irelands along the way.
Certainly that would have prepared me, not only that I was familiar with the
players, but more importantly that they were familiar with my particular style
and all the coaching techniques. That was a very good form to practice some of
the coaching and managing techniques that I have carried out with the seniors.”
Jim Gavin was ratified as
Dublin senior football manager in October 2012. He admits that his military and
aviation background have helped him in his management career in Gaelic football
“There is a preparation phase that goes on there. From my military background
and aviation background, that has giving me great tools in terms of managing
people and in terms of setting plans up but your plans are only as good as your
people. The teams that I have had success with there has been a cohort of
really strong people in those teams.”
The 1995 All Ireland
winner led Dublin to National League, Leinster and All Ireland success in 2013
and declared that it is “better” to win the senior championship as player than
as a manager “As a manger I am there to serve the players to get them to be the
best that they can be. We are looking after 30 individuals to get them to
self-actualise and to get them to play as best that they can. Each of them have
an individual skill. It is trying to blend them all together to get them to be
the best that they can be. My management team and I are serving the players. As
a player you are out in the field of play and in the heat of battle and can
really influence games. Managers have tactics and set plays and you can
influence matches by making substitutions and having a tactical game plan but
ultimately it is a player’s game. Players play the game as I always say. It was
a great experience to win the All-Ireland as manager and last year was a great
experience as well winning the National League again and the Leinster but I
always say it is a player’s game.”
Dublin retained the
National League and Leinster title in 2014. They were strong favourites to
retain their All Ireland title but after scoring 10 points from play in the
first half against Donegal in the semi-final the Dubs were eventually beaten by
the Ulster champions. Gavin admits that his side maybe lacked some composure on
the day “We prepared meticulously for the game. I think that reflected itself
in how we performed in the first quarter. We got some great scores off some
really good moves. We opened their defensive system up and created lots of
scoring opportunities and didn’t take some of the goal chances. The goals came
right for Donegal just before and after half time, which is always challenging
for a team to deal with. However still throughout the game we created 32
scoring chances. Just some of our shot selection wasn’t the best on the day.”
“I just feel that we lost
a little bit of composure which would have served us well in previous games. I
reference the game against Kerry in the previous year’s semi-final. They had
pushed ahead and looked to be in a very strong position. We had kept our
composure and created a high level of scoring opportunities and we happened to
get those. Against Donegal some of those shots didn’t go over for us. That’s
just one of those unfortunate days. That gives us plenty of areas to work on
for the following season.”
Despite having won a
number of trophies during his time in football, the Dublin manager admits that
he finds it hard to accept defeat “Some days you are just beaten by the better
team. In my sporting career I have lost more than I have won and I accept that.
I don’t find it easy to accept and it is hard. When you don’t achieve victory
there is a lot of self-pity but I realise that defeat is part of the process.
There is a bit of a paradox there in that sometimes they grow as a team in
defeat. I know for sure that this group of players having spoken to them in the
last couple of months will come back stronger in the 2015 season.”
Jason Sherlock recently
joined the Dublin senior football management team. Gavin explained what his
former teammate can add to the set up “Jason was a prolific forward in his
time. He has a lot of experience playing with the Dublin senior football team.
He is a great thinker of the game and can really articulate his views and
opinions on the game and he would see the way Dublin football should be played
as well. So we have commonality in that regard.”
The Dublin boss went on to
give a very interesting insight into the philosophy regarding the type of
football that his county play and how he feels it is important for him to keep that
style going “Our heritage and the type of football that we play goes back to
that team that was beaten in the 1953 and 1955 All Ireland final. They
eventually won it in 1958 with Kevin Heffernan. They introduced a bigger style
of football including the creation of space, exploitation of space and pass and
move. At the time Doctor Eamon O’Sullivan had great success with Kerry with
traditional catch and kick. The big change was the way that generation of
Dublin guys introduced a new concept of football and I like that particular
brand of football. I was thought that way when I played at under age and at
senior by Doctor Pat O’Neill. I am just carrying on the torch. Jason (Sherlock)
has a similar view and that is why he is on board.”
“In Dublin football there
is a particular way that the clubs will play and the clubs will play pretty
similar to the way the senior team will play as well. That is the culture that
the players are brought up on. I am not saying it is the right way. It is just
the Dublin way.”
Cormac Costello has
committed himself to the Dublin senior football panel for 2015 having
previously played minor hurling and football for his county. Jim Gavin believes
that if one of his senior players is involved in another sport it will have a
negative impact on his skills as a Gaelic footballer “From the football
perspective we go after a very skill based and technical game. All of our
training sessions are based on the skills of the game. We do very little
running with the players without the ball. Over 95% of our work is with the
ball. I take a very skilled based approach to the game and if a player plays
another sport, be it hockey, hurling or tennis, that’s a dilution of that
player’s skill set. So if a player has a desire to play some other sport I will
always try and facilitate that but ultimately I can only pick players who are
highly skilled and that just takes repetitive practice on the skills of the
game.”
The Dublin manager would
also like to see a change to the current format of the senior football
championship. However he is a great believer in retaining the provincial
championships “I’m a traditionalist. I really like the Leinster Championship.
The Delaney Cup is something which we have our goal set on to win every year. I
like it because it is pure knock out and winner takes all. We have three
different competitions in the calendar year. We have the National Football
League which is one competition, the provincial championships are another
competition and after that you have the All-Ireland series. We look at it as
three competitions because if we are not successful in Leinster we
automatically go into the All-Ireland series. So they are different
competitions already. People say they are not but they are. So I would
certainly retain the provincial competitions. I have gone to Munster and
Connacht finals in both hurling and football. I have been to many Ulster
football finals. They are great occasions. I would be extremely reluctant to
let that part of our culture go in Gaelic Games but the games need to grow and
it is not change for the sake of it.”
Gavin is of the view that
teams should be guaranteed more than two games in any championship season. He
also believes that counties should be rewarded for doing well in their province
when it comes to the All-Ireland series “There is various things being proposed
with a Champions league style format but I just think some type of a group
format with a seeding based on if a team put the effort into doing well in
their province they should get some reward in terms of getting a seeding in the
various group stages. For any team and for the work that I know goes into any
Inter County teams to be guaranteed two championship type games isn’t really
acceptable anymore. I think if teams are guaranteed even four or five games more
in a season that is a very good starting point.”
“The FRC back in 2000
under Eugene McGee who was on that committee along with people including Art
McCrory, Pat O’Neill, Colm O’Rourke and Martin Kearney put together a
recommendation to combine National League and the championship and I think that
would be a good model to go down.”
Jim Gavin would like his team to play to the best of their ability “The way I see my job is every day with
the senior squad is to get them to be the best that they can be. I realise that
I am in a very privileged position to be the manager of the Dublin senior team.
With that comes a responsibility to try and keep that flame of how Dublin play
their football while at the same time trying to blend a squad that can play
that style of football and ultimately be there to serve the players to get them
to be the best that they can be. If I can get that done on a daily basis when I
am with the players then I have done what I have been asked to do.”
Regarding the future Gavin
would like to remain on as manager of his county as long as the players and the
county board want him to “I would like to be there as long as the players and
the county board want me to be there.
Obviously we are all volunteers from the players to everybody on my
management team. Some of my backroom team have had to step away from it because
of work commitments over the years. Who knows what’s around the corner for one
in their employment as well? I do have a profession outside of my hobby of
Gaelic games. Dynamics can change. As I say I have been involved for 18 years
now between playing and managing and it has been a fantastic journey. I am just
enjoying it at the moment.”
Copyright Seamus Egan 2015
Thursday, 1 January 2015
Happy New Year
Happy New Year everybody. It was 3 years ago today when I started this blog. Thanks for reading so far and make sure that you continue to read in 2015.
There will be 10 more games in the Premier League today. The following are my predictions. 3 points for the correct score and 1 point for the right result.
Stoke v Manchester United (1-1)
Aston Villa v Crystal Palace (1-1)
Hull v Everton (1-2)
Liverpool v Leicester (2-0)
Manchester City v Sunderland (3-1)
Newcastle v Burnley (1-2)
QPR v Swansea (3-1)
Southampton v Arsenal (1-1)
West Ham v West Brom (4-1)
Spurs v Chelsea (2-2)
Copyright Seamus Egan 2015
There will be 10 more games in the Premier League today. The following are my predictions. 3 points for the correct score and 1 point for the right result.
Stoke v Manchester United (1-1)
Aston Villa v Crystal Palace (1-1)
Hull v Everton (1-2)
Liverpool v Leicester (2-0)
Manchester City v Sunderland (3-1)
Newcastle v Burnley (1-2)
QPR v Swansea (3-1)
Southampton v Arsenal (1-1)
West Ham v West Brom (4-1)
Spurs v Chelsea (2-2)
Copyright Seamus Egan 2015
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