Ballymun emerge tall from the rubble

DUBLIN SFC FINAL Ballymun Kickhams v Kilmacud Crokes: THEY DIDN’T see it coming

DUBLIN SFC FINAL Ballymun Kickhams v Kilmacud Crokes:THEY DIDN'T see it coming. How could they? As they walked out of Parnell Park in July 1989, Ballymun Kickhams and their people were chastened but they were a million miles from despair.

They’d just taken a 2-10 to 0-10 collaring from Thomas Davis in the Dublin county final but it wasn’t cause for a week-long wake or anything. Thomas Davis were a crowd of newbies and this was their first county title and sure who were Ballymun to be begrudging anyone a first county title? There’d always be next year.

That’s how it had been for the best part of a decade anyway. Always next year. This was the Ballymun of Barney Rock and Dermot Deasy, of John Kearns and Anto McCaul and Gerry Hargan. That 1989 final was their fourth in nine seasons, with two county baubles collected along the way. They’d won four league titles in six years as well. They were who they were. Top dogs.

Serial contenders.

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Until, all of a sudden, they weren’t. They fell off a cliff and tumbled down into a ravine that they’re only just now scrambling their way out of.

Thomas Davis went on to win three titles back to back and Ballymun Kickhams just ebbed and atrophied and melted away. A couple of years earlier, they’d lost Frank McCaffrey, one of those club lifers who bound it all together.

It wasn’t the only blow the club took but it was the most damaging one.

“He was a remarkable man,” says current chairman Tom O’Donoghue. “When he died, the arse fell out of everything. Almost overnight we lost four teams and hurling went into total decline in the club. We were stretched all throughout the club and it was often just a matter of keeping the thing on the road and no more.

“It almost went into terminal decline after Frank died. Well, maybe terminal decline is overstating it a bit but it was very, very bad.”

How bad? By the mid-1990s, there was just a single underage team in the club. You can’t plan for a future when the present doesn’t exist and to the teenage population of Dublin’s northside, Ballymun Kickhams just didn’t exist. Na Fianna and St Vincent’s gathered them up and found them a home instead. Had nothing changed, the club would have died.

Enter a 19-year-old DCU student in 1995 who took it upon himself to be the one who shouted stop. Paddy Christie was just starting out as an intercounty footballer but the ragged state of his club’s underage structure ate away at him.

He’d made it onto the Dublin team because of the work of the likes of Val Andrews and Anto McCaul yet there was nobody around to do the same for the next generation.

So Christie stepped in and did it himself. He rounded up the makings of an under-nine team and started coaching them. Bit by bit and year by year, they kept improving. For the next dozen or so years, he stayed with them.

They lost back-to-back minor finals in the middle of the last decade but turned it around to win under-21 county championships in 2007 and 2008.

“That team is the back-bone of the senior team now,” says O’Donoghue. “That was all down to Paddy.”

Along the way, they got the rest of their house in order. From under-nine all the way up, they have two teams for each age group now. And they have the facilities to go with them, although that wasn’t entirely straight-forward either.

“We got an all-weather pitch built back around 10, 11 years ago,” says O’Donoghue. “And sure it was the biggest con-job of all time. We lied to everybody. Everybody. We had €16,000 starting off for a €1.1m project. But we needed the facilities and the logic we went with at the time was, ‘Well, if the turf is down and the lights are up, they’re not going to come and take them away.’

“We put fierce pressure on Fianna Fáil at the time. We let it be known that Val Andrews was prepared to stand in the next general election.

“We’re in a three-seater constituency and Fianna Fáil had two of them, Pat Carey and Noel Ahern. So we said, ‘Look, Val will gather votes in Ballymun, in Finglas, in Glasnevin, all around the place. He’s in football all his life, he’s lecturing in the area too. He’d be a big threat.’

“We eventually got three or four hundred thousand of a grant from the National Lottery.”

You do what you can, you build and you work and you hope. Ballymun Kickhams have made it back to their first county final in 23 years and on Monday night in Parnell Park, they’ll drink in every minute. They know better than anybody that next year could be a long time coming.

“It’s a great way for the club to come back together again,” says Andrews.

“You know the way it is when you’re young – you don’t appreciate what you have. And I’d say that’s the way we were in the ’80s, we probably just didn’t appreciate how good we had it.

“We thought we’d always be at the top, that we’d always be the kingpins and up there along with the likes of Vincents all the time. It’s coming again and the structures are good this time.”

Malachy Clerkin

Malachy Clerkin

Malachy Clerkin is a sports writer with The Irish Times