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Seán Boylan

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Irish hurler and Gaelic footballer

Seán Boylan
Personal information
Irish nameSeán Ó Baíolláin
SportGaelic football
Born (1949-12-12)12 December 1949 (age 75)[1]
Dunboyne,County Meath,Ireland
Club management
YearsClub
St Peters Dunboyne
Inter-county management
YearsTeam
1982–2005Meath
Inter-county titles as manager
CountyLeagueProvinceAll-Ireland
Meath488

Seán Boylan (born 12 December 1949) is an Irish formerGaelic football manager fromDunboyne,County Meath. He retired from his position as manager of the seniorMeath county team on the evening of 31 August 2005 after twenty-three years in charge. This was an inter-county managerial record with one team that was only surpassed inGaelic games byBrian Cody in 2022, his 24th and last season as manager of theKilkenny senior hurling team.[2][3]

During his time with Meath, he managed the team to: theCentenary Cup; eightLeinster Senior Football Championship titles; fourAll-Ireland Senior Football Championship titles (1987, 1988, 1996, 1999); threeNational Football League titles.

He also managed theMeath county hurling team, whom he also played with for 21 years. He managedIreland in the2006 and2008 International Rules Series.

On 6 August 2020, a documentary calledSeán, directed by Alan Bradley, aired onRTÉ about Boylan's life on and off the pitch.[4]

Gaelic games

[edit]

In recognition of his services to Meath GAA and his services to Meath as a county, Boylan was conferred as Freeman of the County of Meath – the first (and only) person ever to be bestowed with the title – on 23 April 2006. He was entered into the GAA Hall of Fame for his services to Meath football at a ceremony after Meath's Leinster Minor Football Championship victory overOffaly in Croke Park on 16 July 2006.

In August 2006, he was once again nominated for the role ofMeath senior hurling team manager, the position he originally expected to have been nominated for when he ended up as Meath's inter-county football manager.[5]

He has also been involved withUCD in theSigerson Cup and was announced as part ofConor Laverty'sDown under-20 backroom team in December 2020.[6]

In 2011, he was ratified as Meath's Director of Football, representing the Meath Co Committee in the sport's development at all levels and having a role in appointing all managers of county teams.[7]

AfterColm O'Rourke was appointed as Meath senior manager in 2022, he wrote that Boylan "will have open access to the team as adviser, counsellor, motivator or whatever else he wants to be".[8] O'Rourke ceased to be manager of Meath in August 2024.[9]

Managerial statistics

[edit]

Below is Boylan'sAll-Ireland Senior Football Championship record asMeath manager.

YearPlayedWonDrawLostHonours
19832011
19844301
19852101
19864301Leinster Champions
19875500Leinster andAll-Ireland Champions
19886510Leinster andAll-Ireland Champions
19893201
19905401Leinster Champions andAll-Ireland Runner up
199110541Leinster Champions andAll-Ireland Runner up
19921001
19932101
19943201
19954301
19966510Leinster andAll-Ireland Champions
19975221
19983201
19995500Leinster andAll-Ireland Champions
20001001
20017511Leinster Champions andAll-Ireland Runner up
20025302
20035212
20043102
20054202
Total95611123
Percentages64%12%24%

Honours

[edit]

Manager

[edit]
Meath
Meath management roll of honour

International rules football

[edit]

Boylan coached theIreland team againstAustralia in the2006 International Rules Series in two games inPearse Stadium, Salthill,Galway andCroke Park,Dublin in October 2006. Australia won the series by 30 points but the game was overshadowed by violent incidents in the first quarter of the second test match, including a serious injury sustained byGraham Geraghty. He also admitted that he brought his players off at the end of the first quarter in protest and did not want them to return, later saying: "I said I'd do it. Only the players themselves changed my mind. They said they wanted to go out and give it a go, they wanted to play football."

Boylan coached the international side again in the2008 International Rules Series. Ireland won on an aggregate score of 102–97.

Outside Gaelic games

[edit]

Boylan'slate father, also called Seán, was a leader of the Irish independence movement in the early twentieth century, being a prominent member of theIRA in County Meath during theIrish War of Independence.

Like another Meath football icon,Colm O'Rourke, Boylan has strongCounty Leitrim connections as his late mother hailed from near the small village ofCloone nearMohill.

Boylan is a traditional medicalherbalist, practising out of his home at Edenmore, Dunboyne.[10]

He hadprostate cancer in 2009. In January 2021, he gave an interview toRTÉ Radio, during which he said he had tested positive forCOVID-19 the previous March, lost ten kilograms in six days, and was inConnolly Hospital inBlanchardstown until the 31st of the same month.[11] Less than three months later, Boylan said he was "shocked" after photographs circulated of Dublin secretly training during Level 5 restrictions, breaching both GAA rules and Government regulations.[12]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Boylan, who turns 71 on Saturday…". RTÉ. 10 December 2020.
  2. ^Verney, Michael (17 January 2022)."Business as usual as Cody kicks off 24th campaign with victory".Irish Independent.
  3. ^"End of an era as Brian Cody steps down from Kilkenny". RTÉ. 23 July 2022.
  4. ^"'Brilliant', 'Inspirational', 'Gentleman' - tributes pour in after Sean Boylan documentary".The 42. 7 August 2020. Retrieved7 August 2020.
  5. ^"Boylan nominated for hurling position: Not for the first time, Sean Boylan has been nominated for the position of Meath senior hurling manager".Irish Examiner. 30 August 2006.
  6. ^"Boylan part of Laverty's new Down U20 football management team".Hogan Stand. 10 December 2020.
  7. ^"Boylan on board in new Director of Football role".Meath Chronicle. 14 September 2011.
  8. ^"Boylan to assist new Meath boss O'Rourke".Hogan Stand. 1 August 2022.
  9. ^"Colm O'Rourke departs Meath hot seat after two seasons". RTÉ. 26 August 2024.
  10. ^Western Herbal Medicine and Irritable Bowel SyndromeThe Irish Times.
  11. ^"'The terror, the fear. It was uncanny, it was unreal'". Hogan Stand. 17 January 2021. Retrieved17 January 2021.Duffy, Emma (17 January 2021)."'The terror, the fear — it was uncanny. I was never as afraid of anything in my life'".The42.ie. Retrieved17 January 2021.Boylan, who managed his native Royal county to four All-Ireland titles in a remarkable 23-year tenure, told RTÉ's Sunday Sport how he was 'just terrified' as the virus hit him 'like a bolt' last March. 'It's such a dangerous thing', the 77-year-old said. 'I'm speaking as somebody who went for a vaccination for pneumonia and the flu. Some six days later, I wasn't feeling well. It turned out that I had Covid'... Boylan, who turned 77 in December and previously fought a battle with prostate cancer in 2009..."'The terror, the fear, was unreal. I lost ten kilos in six days' - Sean Boylan opens up on Covid battle".Irish Independent. 18 January 2021. Retrieved18 January 2021.Speaking to Sunday Sport on RTÉ Radio One, Boylan revealed that although he has now made a full recovery, it was a long and scary process. 'I ended up in hospital and was discharged from hospital on March 31st', he said."Seán Boylan: There are positive signs in Meath football".RTÉ Sport. 17 January 2021. Retrieved17 January 2021.A routine trip for a flu vaccination ended with Boylan eventually being taken to hospital. He would go on to test positive for Covid-19, and he says it took him six weeks to get back to feeling normal... 'I was never healthier, fit as a fiddle. I lost 10 kilos in six days. the[sic] people in Connolly Hospital in Blanchardstown couldn't have been nicer to me'.
  12. ^Murray, Eavan (2 April 2021)."'It baffles me... I'm saying that as someone who suffered with Covid' – GAA legend Seán Boylan on Dubs' secret training".Irish Independent. Retrieved2 April 2021.

External links

[edit]
Gaelic games
Preceded byMeath Senior Football Manager
1982–2005
Succeeded by
Meath panels
Meath – 1987 All-Ireland Senior Football Champions (4th title)
Meath – 1996 All-Ireland Senior Football Champions (6th title)
Played in drawn game
13E. Kelly
Subs used in drawn game
23C. Brady for Kelly
17J. Devine for McGuinness
18D. Curtis for Reynolds
Subs used in replay
17J. Devine for Callaghan
20O. Murphy for O'Reilly
Subs not used in replay
16R. Finnegan
18E. Kelly
19D. Curtis
21K. Cahill
22S. O'Rourke
23J. Brady
24C. Sheridan
Manager
S. Boylan
Selectors
F. Foley
E. O'Brien
Meath – 1999 All-Ireland Senior Football Champions (7th title)
Meath – 2001 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship finalist
Ireland squads
U-20/U-21
Under-21 (1964–2017)
Under-20 (2018–present)
Minor
Authority control databasesEdit this at Wikidata
  1. ^"Mick O'brien's midas touch". 27 November 2011. Retrieved20 April 2016.
  2. ^Hayes, Liam (5 June 2014).Heffo – A Brilliant Mind: A Biography of Kevin Heffernan. Transworld Ireland.ISBN 978-1848271869. Retrieved20 April 2016.
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