Next »

Hyland: Johnston 'not an All-Star'


Cavan manager Terry Hyland wished Seanie Johnston and Kildare the best of luck together and then delivered a damning assessment of both.

Johnston made his long-awaited debut for Kildare against his native county in Cavan yesterday amidst a hostile atmosphere at Kingspan Breffni Park.

Hyland had kept a diplomatic silence for months over the whole furore surrounding Johnston's inter-county transfer but did not hold back after the 3-20 to 1-9 All-Ireland qualifier loss.

"Good luck to Seanie, he's a good footballer, but he's not an All-Star," insisted the Breffni boss.

"And good luck to Kildare, they have a team that's progressing - but they haven't won any All-Irelands yet.

"It has been a circus and there has been crazy stuff going all all week. Even in Cavan, there were cameras running round here and there. No one will mind that it's over."

Asked if the door was firmly shut on any possible return of Johnston to the Cavan fold in the future, Hyland responded: "You'd have to ask Seanie.

"I presume Seanie has made his decision, so if there are any other decisions to be made it's him that has to make them."

Meanwhile, Kildare supremo Kieran McGeeney criticised the GAA's handling of the Johnston saga and said the player's only mistake was that he was too honest and not sneaky.

He also defended his decision to introduce Johnston as a substitute for the last 10 minutes when the game was long over as a contest.

Cavan supporters felt the move was designed to rub salt into their wounds but McGeeney explained: "Seanie was playing well in training this week. He deserved his chance so he got it.

"All I know was that Seanie was available to play for Kildare today. That's all I know.

"I can't treat him differently to everybody else. If he is playing well, then he is entitled (to play) but you could obviously see he was nervous."

There was a very bad atmosphere at Kingspan Breffni Park throughout the afternoon and the introduction of Johnston sparked loud cheering from the huge Kildare support as well as boos from the home crowd.

Despite the venom spilling down from the stand and terraces, McGeeney insisted he had not heard or seen anything untoward.

"It was a great atmosphere. The Kildare supporters today were brilliant. They were fantastic from the word go. Did you see hostility there? I didn't, because all I could hear was cheers."


Next »
Click to stay connected with
more stories like this:
Sign up here to receive news by emailSign up here to receive news by email.
- once per day, no spam.

Most Read in Sport»

  • Liverpool boss' son cleared of sex assault

    Four footballers were cleared today of sexually assaulting a 19-year-old woman in a hotel room.

  • The decision is part of a shake-up instigated by David MoyesPhelan and Steele leave United

    Manchester United are to part company with coaches Mike Phelan and Eric Steele.

  • Eamonn Fitzmaurice.Fitzgerald to debut for Kerry

    Dr Crokes defender Fionn Fitzgerald will make his Championship debut for Kerry in Sunday's Munster SFC quarter-final against Tipperary at Fitzgerald Stadium (throw-in 2pm).

  • Cork name five debutants for Munster Football quarter-final

    There is a fresh look to the Cork team to face Limerick in tomorrow night's Munster SFC quarter-final at the Gaelic Grounds (throw-in 7pm).

  • United cut interest bill

    Manchester United have cut their interest bill by £10m (€11m) a year after a major refinancing through Bank of America.

  • Fresh twist in Garcia saga

    The racism row surrounding Sergio Garcia took another twist this afternoon when European Tour chief executive George O'Grady used the phrase "coloured athletes" when discussing the decision not to sanction the Spaniard.

  • Paul Stirling, Ireland, hits a run to score a half century. Picture: SportsfileIreland draw exciting opener

    Ireland fell agonisingly short of a first-ever win over a Test-playing national in Dublin as the opening RSA Insurance one-day international against Pakistan ended in a tie.

  • Ahern lodges appeal

    Eddie Ahern has lodged an appeal against the decision of the British Horseracing Authority to suspend him from riding for 10 years.

sport on tv