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Tadhg Lyne

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Irish Gaelic footballer

Tadhgie Lyne
Personal information
SportGaelic football
Positionhalf-forward
Born1930
Killarney,County Kerry
Died2000
Club(s)
YearsClub
1950s–1960s
Dr. Croke's
Inter-county(ies)
YearsCountyApps (scores)
1952–1960
Kerry24(5–65)
Inter-county titles
Munster titles6
All-Irelands3
NFL1

Tadhgie Lyne ( 8 December 1930 – 31 May 2000) was an IrishGaelic footballer withKerry. Called 'the Prince of Forwards',[1] Lyne was one of the finest scoring forwards of his time.

Early life

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Tadhgie Lyne grew up on High Street,Killarney, only half a mile from the famous Kerry ground ofFitzgerald Stadium. His football talent apparent from an early age, and he spent hours daily practicing the skills of the game with a ball suspended from the rafters of his father's house. Nevertheless, despite being called for trials for the KerryAll-Ireland Minor Football Championship for two years in succession he could not make the panel, with contemporaries such asJerome O'Shea andSeán Murphy outshining him.[citation needed]

Playing career

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Lyne's county career only began after his club, the Dick Fitzgeralds, won the 1951Kerry Senior Football Championship. Lyne kicked 1–5 from right-half forward in the final against Dingle. He became a fixture in the Kerry team for a decade. In 1953, Lyne played at wing-forward on the Kerry team that won theMunster Senior Football Championship and went on to play in his firstAll-Ireland Senior Football Championship final, giving a man-of-the-match display with six points as Kerry beatArmagh 0–13 to 1–6.[1]

Kerry won Munster and reached the All-Ireland final again in 1954, butMeath beat them by 1–13 to 1–7. In 1955, Lyne might have been lost to football, but he turned down the offer of a professional soccer contract with Glasgow Celtic to play with Kerry. Kerry was Munster champions for the third consecutive time that year. They progressed to faceCavan in the All-Ireland semi final. Lyne scored 1–6 and punched a goal in the last moments to earn Kerry a draw. They went on to win the replay and facedDublin. Lyne kicked a fine point in the first minute and notched five more as Kerry won by 0–12 to 1–9. The game is remembered as "Tadhgie Lyne's All-Ireland". He was the championship's top marksman that year with five goals and forty-two points and was named Footballer of the Year.

Lyne won another Munster senior medal in 1958 when he came on as a replacement in the final. However, Kerry was beaten in the All-Ireland semi-final. The 'Prince of Forwards' gained his third and final All-Ireland in 1959.[2] Kerry won the Munster championship and went on to qualify for the All-Ireland final, in which they beat Galway by nine points.

Later life

[edit]

Tadhg Lyne died at his home on Killarney Road, Castleisland on 31 May 2000 at the age of 69.[1]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcWeeshie Fogarty's Weekly Article - March / 1[usurped]
  2. ^Roscommon Herald - 2006/03/01: Great All-Ireland finals

External links

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Sporting positions
Preceded byKerry Senior Football Captain
1952
Succeeded by
Kerry – 1953 All-Ireland Senior Football Champions (17th title)
Kerry – 1954 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship finalist
Kerry – 1955 All-Ireland Senior Football Champions (18th title)
Kerry – 1958–59 National Football League Champions (5th title)
Kerry – 1959 All-Ireland Senior Football Champions (19th title)
Kerry – 1960 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship finalist
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Tadhg_Lyne&oldid=1275779714"
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