Defeats to Dublin the only blot on Éamonn Fitzmaurice’s All-Ireland record

After classic semi-final, it is not yet clear whether Kerry manager is less likely to leave

Dublin manager Jim Gavin and Kerry manager Éamonn Fitzmaurice shake hands after Sunday’s All-Ireland SFC semi-final at Croke Park. Photograph: Ryan Byrne/Inpho
Dublin manager Jim Gavin and Kerry manager Éamonn Fitzmaurice shake hands after Sunday’s All-Ireland SFC semi-final at Croke Park. Photograph: Ryan Byrne/Inpho

Such are the cruel and at times unbearably high expectations of Kerry football that even after one of their finest performances of recent times a large question mark hangs over the future of their manager: in this case, Éamonn Fitzmaurice.

Indeed there already was an expectation that, win or lose to Dublin last Sunday, 2016 would mark the end of his four-year term. It’s just not clear yet if the two-point loss, as close as it was, will reinforce or else somehow reduce that expectation.

Last October, when only agreeing – or else asking – for a one-year extension to his term, Fitzmaurice himself hadn’t looked past Sunday’s game. That term has now expired, and the asking or agreeing may not even be his decision any more.

Retirements

“Possibly, but today isn’t the time for that,” said Fitzmaurice, in the immediate aftermath of Sunday’s game, when asked would there be retirements both on the field and on the sideline. “There’ll be a lot of emotion after that effort, but I would encourage everyone to take stock. For me, too, that’s for another day. I was only hoping to win today, and be back here in three week’s time.”

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The question of his successor has also been raised already: Jack O’Connor, who stepped down in 2012 and was replaced by Fitzmaurice, would appear the most natural, given that he has since delivered two All-Ireland minor titles, while currently in charge of the Kerry under-21s. It may be, however, that O’Connor would rather sit tight for another year or two.

Fitzmaurice did shake up his backroom team last October, in the wake of the 2015 final defeat to Dublin. Trainer and selector Cian O'Neill departed to take over as manager of Kildare, while three-time All-Ireland winner Liam Hassett came on board as a selector alongside Mikey Sheehy and Diarmuid Murphy, with Padraig Corcoran from Dingle also coming on board as the new trainer/selector.

It does, however, appear unlikely that a successor will come from within that backroom, given the lack of any individual managerial experience.

Even by Kerry’s own high standards, Fitzmaurice’s record over the past four seasons certainly isn’t bad. In the All-Ireland championship series, Kerry under Fitzmaurice have played 11 games, won eight and lost three – the problem being all three have been to Dublin (the 2013 All-Ireland semi-final, the 2015 final, and now the 2016 semi-final).

In the meantime, he has delivered one All-Ireland and four successive Munster titles. And while Dublin have extended their winning streak to an incredible 27 games, stretching back to March 2015, there is solace in the fact that Kerry were the last team to beat them.

Temptation

Still, it’s those three successive championship defeats to Dublin which may ultimately define his four-year term, and as tempting as it might be to stick around for one more year to arrest that, the temptation to step aside may also be hard to resist.

Again, those three defeats are the only championship games Fitzmaurice has lost as Kerry manager, meaning his summer has always ended either losing to Dublin or winning the All-Ireland.

Former Kerry team-mate Dara Ó Cinnéide, told this newspaper before Sunday’s final: “For what’s been available to Fitzmaurice over the past four years, he is absolutely getting the maximum out of them. The dynamic has changed now, four years later. We’ve had a couple of All-Ireland minor winning teams that will hopefully provide players over the coming years.”

With the expected retirements of Aidan O'Mahony (36), Marc Ó Sé (36) and Kieran Donaghy (33), the future of Kerry football may already be coming up from behind, which for Fitzmaurice may simply mean it's time to step out of the way.

Ian O'Riordan

Ian O'Riordan

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