Beating Kilkenny made Jimmy Barry-Murphy believe an All-Ireland was possible

Liam MacCarthy Cup not on Cork hero’s agenda until that quarter-final win over Cody’s men

Cork hurling manager Jimmy Barry-Murphy: ‘The win over Kilkenny was the fillip we needed. I think the county needed it as well because until then I don’t think you are sure as to what progress you are making’. Photograph: Cathal Noonan/Inpho
Cork hurling manager Jimmy Barry-Murphy: ‘The win over Kilkenny was the fillip we needed. I think the county needed it as well because until then I don’t think you are sure as to what progress you are making’. Photograph: Cathal Noonan/Inpho

He said at the time his mind was made up about an hour after he was asked. He must have seen headlines almost as quick: “Jimmy Barry-Murphy – The Second Coming”.

It’s not just that plenty of people in Cork do seriously consider him as their god. Not that a player who won five hurling All-Irelands, 10 Munster titles, an All-Ireland football title and seven All Stars during an incredible 13-year career (and that’s only the highlights) would ever be considered a mere mortal.

It’s more the fact that in his first coming as Cork hurling manager, Barry-Murphy delivered an All-Ireland title, back in 1999 (their first in nine years).

So it’s only logical to see him delivering another All-Ireland on Sunday to end an eight-year wait for Cork.

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Whatever about F Scott Fitzgerald's old dictum that there are no second acts in American lives, there have been few in hurling management.

God-like figures
Plenty of god-like figures have tried it and failed – Michael "Babs" Keating, Ger Loughnane, Eamonn Cregan, Michael Bond – either returning to their own county, or elsewhere.

The last man to realise it was Cyril Farrell, who managed Galway to the 1980 All-Ireland, took a breather, then came back and won two more, in 1987 and 1988.

When the Cork county board came calling, almost two years ago now, Barry-Murphy could have told them to go away:

“I just felt maybe I could contribute something again,” is how Barry-Murphy recalls it. “Maybe a bit naively at times, too, because some mornings I wake up and wonder what I’ve let myself in for. And some days, when I’m coming in for training, I look at the young players and I feel like I could be their grandfather.

“But it’s great to be back, and it’s certainly enjoyable at the moment. And when you’re involved in Cork you’re always dreaming of All-Ireland finals.

“Now I would be telling lies if I said at the start of the year that I was thinking of finals.

“I really didn’t think that far ahead, to be honest. I was just thinking firstly of respectability and then, kicking on to the next level so we would be able to go out any day and compete with the likes of Kilkenny, Tipperary and Galway, the three top teams in the last two years.

“I wouldn’t be cocky enough to say we were dreaming of All-Ireland final days.”

If anything that suggests he has taken Cork to an All-Ireland final ahead of schedule: when Barry-Murphy last took charge, in 1996, Cork hurling was also in transition.

Indeed it took him four seasons to deliver the All-Ireland, and only after a fairly desperate injection of younger players (his 1999 team still famous for being 15 bachelors).

Now, aged 59, and after a 12-year hiatus, his faith in youth and raw enthusiasm looks capable of reaping a similar reward.

“Once we beat Clare (in the Munster semi-final), things took off slightly. The Munster final was a setback. And I certainly didn’t think we could be in an All-Ireland final after that.

“There was a lot of regrouping going on. But in fairness to the players, they responded brilliantly in training after that.

“Then I think beating Kilkenny in the quarter-final was the key factor this year.

"After the disappointment of the Munster final, and thinking back to the league final last year, when Kilkenny absolutely hammered us, that was certainly a dressing down that we could have done without. But it was part of the learning curve.

Fillip we needed
"So I think the win over Kilkenny was the fillip we needed. I think the county needed it as well because until then I don't think you are sure as to what progress you are making.

“But the public have seen that now, and they got behind us brilliantly that day as well, but they saw that day that we were back competing on a level-footing with every county in the country.

“It was probably psychological more than anything else.”

Still, Clare are the one team who when they get it right can definitely beat Cork – just as they did in the league relegation play-off:

“In fairness, that day, nobody in their sane senses could have forecast a Cork-Clare final.

“They beat us in the league, and then when they got a run on us that day (in the relegation play-off) they blew us away. But we learned plenty from that. We are facing a huge task but we feel that we are up to it.”

So, given what’s at stake on Sunday, can Barry-Murphy ever expect to make a comparison between the first and second coming?

“I don’t know. I’ll tell you after the All-Ireland final night.

“It’s a tough one. But since my first time in 1973 I would say with all the talk about tactics and different players and all that, the one common denominator is that an All-Ireland is still very, very hard to win.”

Ian O'Riordan

Ian O'Riordan

Ian O'Riordan is an Irish Times sports journalist writing on athletics