Sean Cavanagh

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Sean Cavanagh
Personal information
Sport Gaelic football
Irish Name Seán Caomhánach
Date of birth February 16, 1983 (1983-02-16) (age 25)
Place of birth Tyrone , Northern Ireland
Height 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)
Occupation Accountant
Club information
Club Moy
Position Midfield
Inter-County
County Tyrone
Position Midfield
Inter-County(ies)**
County Years Apps (scores)
Tyrone 2002-present 36[1]
Senior Inter-County Titles
Ulster Titles 2
All-Ireland 2
NFL 2
All Stars 3

* club appearances and scores
correct as of .
**Inter County team apps and scores correct
as of 15:53, 17 May 2008 (UTC).

Sean Cavanagh (sometimes Seán Cavanagh) is a treble All Star-winning Tyrone Gaelic footballer. He has won All-Ireland championships for Tyrone at minor, Under 21 and Senior level, and has represented Ireland at the International Rules Series.

His playing style is very attack-minded, considering he is usually deployed as a midfielder, and he usually ends up scoring more than most of the forwards on the team. This is complemented on the team by Brian Dooher's tireless workrate from the half-forward line - something he is the first to admit.[2]

His brother Colm Cavanagh is also a current member of the Tyrone panel.[3]

Contents

[edit] Personal life

Cavanagh graduated from the University of Ulster in 2004 with a First Class Honours Degree in Accountancy.[4] He has since gone on to follow a career in accountancy.

[edit] Under-Age

Cavanagh was an integral part of the Tyrone Minor Team that won the All-Ireland in 2001,[5] and then went on to win two Ulster Championships in 2002 and 2003.

He was also enormously successful as school level, winning the Ulster Colleges Championship, the MacRory Cup in 2000, with Saint Patrick's Grammar School, Armagh, earning himself an Ulster Colleges All Star along the way, having scored the decisive goal in the final.

[edit] Senior career

Cavanagh made his Tyrone Senior debut in 2002, against neighbouring rivals, and eventual All Ireland Champions, Armagh scoring a goal which earned Tyrone a replay.[6] He was also a member of the squad that won Tyrone's first ever National League campaign.

In 2003, Cavanagh was pivotal in Tyrone's quest to their first ever All-Ireland Championship. He was voted Man-of-the-Match in their first round replay against Derry.[7] He returned from injury to appear in the drawn Ulster Final against Down, and scored a point in the replay (one of Tyrone's twenty three), while commanding midfield.[8] In the All-Ireland Quarter final (the next round), Tyrone beat neighbours Fermanagh 1-21 (24 points) to 0-05. Cavanagh again lead by example from midfield, and scored Tyrone's goal.[9]
The year ended with Cavanagh winning his first All Star, at the age of twenty, as well as the Young Player of the Year Award[10]

Tyrone's 2004 campaign was foreshadowed by the untimely death of their newly appointed captain, Cormac McAnallen. Tyrone were ultimately knocked out of the Championship by eventual finalists, Mayo. Cavanagh won Tyrone's only All Star that year.

In 2005, Cavanagh scored twelve points from midfield over the course of the championship. There was speculation as to whether he would emigrate to Australia to join a professional A.F.L. team, (Brisbane Lions), as Tadhg Kennelly had successfully done a few years prior.[11] However, he declined offers of a contract with Brisbane Lions, saying that he wanted to stay in Ireland and further both his football career and his career as an accountant. He claims that when he travelled to play Australia in 2005, he saw that Australia was a "great" place, but not somewhere he would be happy to settle.[12][13]

In the All-Ireland Semi-Final, Tyrone played Armagh for the third time in the Championship. With only a few minutes left, and Tyrone two points down, Cavanagh stepped up and embarked on a surging solo run, and dropping the ball over the bar for a point, inspiring Tyrone to go on to win the match.[14]
Cavanagh was again awarded an All-Star, his third in a row - the only Ulsterman to do that apart from Peter Canavan in the mid 90's, and the first midfielder to do it since Jack O'Shea in the early 80's.

Tyrone's 2006 campaign was plagued by injury from the start, and they were disappointingly knocked out of the championship by Laois. The early exit allowed players to take up 'ringer' positions in American GAA leagues and Cavanagh was one of the players that took up the offer.[15]

In the 2007 Championship, Cavanagh struck up an effective midfield partnership with Kevin Hughes, and has undertaken some free kick duties in the absence of Tyrone's regular free-takes due to injury. He won his second Ulster Championship in July, when he scored four points in the Ulster Final. In the All-Ireland quarter final, Cavanagh scored a spectacular solo-effort goal against Meath, but was unable to inspire Tyrone to victory and they crashed out of the Championship. Colm O'Rourke, RTÉ Sport's pundit, remarked about how Cavanagh was able to run faster while controlling the ball, than some players running after him.[16]

[edit] International Series

Cavanagh has represented Ireland several times in the International rules football Series, and has been chosen to play for them for the 2006 campaign,[17] scoring three points for Ireland in the opening test.[18]

[edit] Gaelic Players Association controversy

In February 2007, the Tyrone County Board issued a statement criticizing the actions and ideals of the Gaelic Players Association (GPA), and urged the GAA in an open letter to not give the GPA officially recognised status. This put the Tyrone players into a difficult situation, as many were active members of the organisation. One of the main opponents of the county board's position was Sean Cavanagh, and has since gone on record defending the actions of the GPA, and criticizing those of the board, stating, "they were not speaking for me or the Tyrone footballers, or the majority of GAA people in this county."[19][20] Cavanagh is one of the more visible proponents of the GPA, often starring in advertising campaigns for GPA affiliates, such as Club Energize.

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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