Marc Ó Sé

Marc Ó Sé
Personal information
Irish nameMarc Ó Sé
SportGaelic Football
PositionRight Corner Back
Born21 April 1980
Tralee, Kerry
Height6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
OccupationTeacher
Club(s)
YearsClub
1999-An Ghaeltacht
Club titles
Kerry titles2
Munster titles1
Inter-county(ies)
YearsCountyApps (scores)
2002-Kerry80 (0-8)
Inter-county titles
Munster titles8
All-Irelands5
NFL3
All Stars3

Marc Ó Sé (born 21 April 1980) is an Irish sportsman. A teacher by profession, he works in the CBS in tralee co.kerry, he plays Gaelic football for the Kerry county team and the local An Ghaeltacht club. He has played right across the back line for Kerry. His older brothers, Darragh and Tomás, also represented Kerry.

Playing career

Early years: 2002 - 2005

In his rookie season of 2002, Ó Sé impressed throughout the All-Ireland Senior Football Championship in a Kerry team under the management of his uncle Páidí. In the final of that year he marked Diarmuid Marsden of Armagh. Marc was given a torrid time as Kerry let what looked like a certain win with 25 mins to go slip and lost by a single point, 1-12 to 0-14.

In 2003, Kerry reached the All-Ireland semi-final, but again suffered disappointment. After a terribly below par performance against a Tyrone team who used what analyst Pat Spillane (himself of Kerry origin) called "puke football" to suffocate Kerry,[1]

2004 was a busy year for Ó Sé. First he lost the All Ireland Club Championship with his club. He then won the National League beating Galway in a cracking game by a single point. He starred in the 2004 campaign showing great defensive awareness and beautiful on the ball skill.[2] Kerry won the title, defeating Mayo 1-20 to 2-09 in what was described as a 'rout'.[3] Ó Sé's brother Tomás won the player of the year award, but despite his fine performances Ó Sé did not win an All-Star.[4]

In 2005, Ó Sé continued to perform for Kerry who this time were narrowly defeated by Tyrone. Many people from around the country felt the fact that Kerry had not been tested in the championship in almost a year and a half, and the fact that this was Tyrone's 10th game of a gruelling campaign as key factors in the final result. Again Ó Sé was overlooked in the All Star selection despite a sterling campaign.

Middle years: 2006 - 2009

Kerry bounced back in 2006. The team defeated Galway in the final of the National League again in a far less impressive game as the corresponding fixture 2 years earlier. Kerry were shocking in the Munster Championship, in which they were nearly defeated by minnows Waterford and eventually defeated in a replay against Cork. However, this proved to be a false dawn for the rest of Ireland as Kerry regrouped. They beat Longford in the qualifier and were written off for their quarter final against Armagh. Armagh and Tyrone were perceived as Kerry's bogey teams in recent years and Armagh were expected to deal with Kerry in a similar fashion as Tyrone had done the previous year. As it happened, Kerry produced a masterful second half display achieved a 10 point turnaround. Marc was immense and scored 2 glorious points from the back, many experts said that there were few forwards in the game who could have taken their scores as well. Kerry gained revenge against Cork in the Semi-Final before handing Mayo and even more severe beating than they had two years ago. Kerry had the game wrapped up after only 10 minutes with a score of 2-04 to 0-00 and despite a mini revival by Mayo, Kerry won comprehensively, 4-15 to 3-05. Marc won an All-Star award in 2006.[5]

In 2007, Ó Sé won the Munster championship with Kerry. The team advanced to the All-Ireland series, and reached the final, in which they beat Billy Morgan's Cork side 3-13 to 1-9.[6] It was Kerry's 35th all-Ireland. Marc's performances were recognised as he won an All-Star and was named Texaco Footballer of the Year.[7] His brothers Darragh and Tomás were also included, making it the first time three brothers had been selected for the All-Star team.[7]

In 2008, Ó Sé reached the National League and Munster finals with Kerry, but lost both. The team went on to reach their fifth consecutive All-Ireland final, but lost to Tyrone by four points.[8]

In 2009, Ó Sé won the All-Ireland again.

Later years: 2010 - 2014

There have been no other All-Ireland wins in this time. One Final appearance (2011). and another on the way...

References

  1. Haughey, John (26 September 2003). "Ulster occupy All-Ireland stage". BBC News. Retrieved 12 May 2010.
  2. Western People - 2004/09/29: Final marks: rating the teams
  3. "Kerry v Mayo Classics: 2004 SFC final". RTÉ News. 16 September 2006.
  4. Football All Stars 2000's | Cumann Lúthchleas Gael Official Website - GAA.ie
  5. "O'Se dynasty grows ever stronger". The Irish Times.
  6. "Kerry 3-13 Cork 1-09". RTÉ News. 16 September 2007.
  7. 7.0 7.1 "Kerry dominate football All Stars". RTÉ News. 19 October 2007.
  8. "Tyrone 1-15 Kerry 0-14". RTÉ. 21 September 2008. Retrieved 2008-12-10.