Showing posts with label DonegalGAA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DonegalGAA. Show all posts

Friday, 9 November 2012

McGuinness Adds Celtic Code


Celtic Football Club have announced that Donegal GAA Football manager Jim McGuinness is joining the club as a performance consultant. 

The 39-year-old, who has enjoyed great success with Donegal, leading them to the All-Ireland title in 2012, will be based at Lennoxtown and will help in the development of the Club’s young players. 

And grateful to Neil Lennon for earning this opportunity, he´s relishing getting started towards the end of this month. 

"It´s a fantastic opportunity for me on an individual level and I´m very thankful to Neil Lennon for giving me this chance and bringing me into the club," said Jim McGuinness, speaking exclusively to the official Celtic website. 

"Obviously I work in amateur sport and the opportunity to work in professional sport in any capacity is a wonderful chance for me and one I´m very looking forward to. My role will be based on developing the younger players in the club, development and Academy players that are U20 and that level. 

"It´s really about trying to work on every single one of the players on an individual level, trying to develop them in several areas, something I have experienced often in the past. 
"You are really looking to create a finished product that is good enough to be pushing for the first team and creating a stronger squad at the club. 

"We will hopefully look at every single player as an individual project and move them forward as best we can. We will revaluate every couple of months and try and move them forward and give them the best opportunity to develop and grow within the club so they can put their best foot forward in making the ultimate step up to first-team football."

Neil Lennon has been an admirer of what the coach has achieved at Donegal, leading to the pair fostering a strong professional relationship.

"I suppose the bottom line is that it has been through my work with Donegal,” explained McGuinness. "We started off at Donegal at a very low base, a low level but we have worked very hard in moving the thing forward and getting people to up a level and ultimately getting success on the pitch. 

"So I suppose Neil was looking in at that and watching that unfold. I was invited over then saw around the facilities and met all the coaching staff and the support people. 

"It was great for myself to see that as you are very interested from your own point of view from bringing things back into your own group. That´s how it really developed. 

Neil Lennon is delighted to bring Jim on board to add to his team and feels he will make a real difference. 

The Celtic manager said: “We are absolutely delighted that Jim has agreed to join us. He is a first-class coach and manager and a high-quality individual who has achieved so much already in sport. 

"We feel he will add real value to the Club in terms of moving our young players forward and in making sure they develop in the right way for the benefit of the Club."

Source: Celtic FC



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Monday, 27 August 2012

Donegal Equal 1992 All Final Record


Donegal are through to the final of the All-Ireland Football Championship for the first time since 1992 after a superb 0-16 to 1-11 win over Cork.

The Ulster title holders held a slender 0-8 to 0-7 advantage at the break and then pulled away with a storming second-half display at Croke Park.

Donegal looked home and dry at five points up before Colm O'Neill's goal gave Cork hope in stoppage-time.

Holders Dublin play Mayo in the other semi-final on Sunday, 2 September.

However, Jim McGuinness's heroes will fear no-one after having disposed of Cork in such emphatic fashion.

They were worthy winners and their fans will believe they capture the coveted Sam Maguire trophy for only the second time in their history when they return to headquarters on 23 September.

Seven-times winners Cork had started favourites and held the lead several times in a nip and tuck first half - but neither side led by more than a point until the second half.

Donegal were quick to close down their opponents and in the second period their self-belief wore Cork down.

The Ulster side got the first point on the board when a foul by dual star Eoin Cadogan on Michael Murphy gave the Donegal captain the chance to score with a free in the third minute.

Cork, champions in 2010, hit back with two fine points from play scored by Paul Kerrigan and Patrick Kelly.

Colm McFadden levelled with a free and then restored the Ulster champions' lead after a high ball in was laid off by target man Murphy.

Cork's Daniel Goulding and Murphy then exchanged frees before Ciaran Sheehan's fisted point squared the contest at 0-4 apiece.

Rory Kavanagh then surged into space and delivered a fine 35-metre to edge Donegal ahead again, with perhaps the score of the half.

Cork's top scorer in the champions this year, Colm O'Neill, sent over two quick points from play but Karl Lacey levelled.

Donegal boss Jim McGuinness sent on Ryan Bradley and the substitute scored straight away and then Mark McHugh fisted over from a tight angle for the final point of the half.

The Ulster side made a storming start to the second half and forged a four-point lead through scores by McFadden, Frank McGlynn and Lacey.

Aidan Walsh landed a long-range point for Cork but Anthony Thompson kicked over a reply for Donegal after a goal attempt had been blocked by keeper Alan Quirke.

Cork could have cut their arrears to a point with a goal but Colm O'Neill's shot on the turn crashed off the underside of the bar and the danger was cleared.

Sheehan scored for the Munster men but McFadden's free restored Donegal's four-point cushion and a superb Murphy free made it a five-point game.

Cork's points by Kerrigan and O'Neill were matched by McFadden and substitute Martin McElhinney.

O'Neill's low shot into the net came too late for Cork. It cut the gap to two points but, in truth, Donegal's dominance merited a great winning margin.


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