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Why is there ever a debate about who was the best Irish Sports person ever? *READ OP*

189111314

Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 38,942 ✭✭✭✭eagle eye


    One match doesn't put you at the top. Ken Doherty is ahead of him as far as snooker players are concerned imo and the Hurricane is ahead of both of them.

    And I said Katie is no.1 based in the criteria mentioned.


  • Registered Users Posts: 663 ✭✭✭Fr D Maugire


    eagle eye wrote: »
    Well then Katie Taylor wins by a mile.


    As I mentioned, I think her sport is too small/newish. Not going to be many legends in a sport that was only admitted to the Olympics in 2012, held its first amateur championship in 2001 and has a tiny professional level. Its a bit like asking who are the legendary players of the Carolina Panthers? of course there will be some, but will be all from the last 20 years. Hardly comparable to say the legends of the Packers for example.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,159 ✭✭✭mrkiscool2


    As I mentioned, I think her sport is too small/newish. Not going to be many legends in a sport that was only admitted to the Olympics in 2012, held its first amateur championship in 2001 and has a tiny professional level. Its a bit like asking who are the legendary players of the Carolina Panthers? of course there will be some, but will be all from the last 20 years. Hardly comparable to say the legends of the Packers for example.
    So Tom Brady isn't one of the greatest of all time under this example? Seeing as how the Patriots only became champions at the turn of the millennium? It's a really bad analogy. I think Taylor is very underappreciated. Had she not been robbed in 2016 in her match of a decision she might have got a second gold. Also worth noting she is a big reason for it being an Olympic sport in the first place but London had to have a potential gold medalist (in Adams) be the first final. IOC originally wanted KT potentially being in that spot.

    I still think PH is our greatest sportsperson but I can see why KT is up there and she is a very close second for me.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,625 ✭✭✭AngryHippie


    Anything to be said for Brian O'Driscoll ....


    O'Driscoll is the fourth most-capped player in rugby union history
    141 test matches: 133 for Ireland (83 as captain), and 8 for the British and Irish Lions.
    He scored 46 tries for Ireland and 1 try for the Lions in 2001, making him the highest try scorer of all time in Irish Rugby.
    He is the 8th-highest try scorer in international rugby union history, and the highest scoring centre of all time.

    Player of the Tournament in the 2006, 2007 and 2009 RBS Six Nations
    World Rugby Player of the Decade (2000–09) by the magazine Rugby World
    2001, 2002 and 2009, O'Driscoll was nominated for the IRB World Player of the Year

    Bleacher Report

    We can argue individual v team until we are blue in the face, but when it boils down to it, as an individual and on a team, and not just a club or a nation, but lions tours etc. to boot in physicality, sportsmanship, skill, guile creativity and pure and utter determination, he will end up topping out any scale you try and put him on, balanced over a very impressive 16 year career.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,159 ✭✭✭mrkiscool2


    Anything to be said for Brian O'Driscoll ....


    O'Driscoll is the fourth most-capped player in rugby union history
    141 test matches: 133 for Ireland (83 as captain), and 8 for the British and Irish Lions.
    He scored 46 tries for Ireland and 1 try for the Lions in 2001, making him the highest try scorer of all time in Irish Rugby.
    He is the 8th-highest try scorer in international rugby union history, and the highest scoring centre of all time.

    Player of the Tournament in the 2006, 2007 and 2009 RBS Six Nations
    World Rugby Player of the Decade (2000–09) by the magazine Rugby World
    2001, 2002 and 2009, O'Driscoll was nominated for the IRB World Player of the Year

    Bleacher Report

    We can argue individual v team until we are blue in the face, but when it boils down to it, as an individual and on a team, and not just a club or a nation, but lions tours etc. to boot in physicality, sportsmanship, skill, guile creativity and pure and utter determination, he will end up topping out any scale you try and put him on, balanced over a very impressive 16 year career.
    Here is the thing. As a rugby head I'm like "yeah, BOD" and I also read arguments for most other sportspeople and I'm like "yeah!"

    I think this argument is, fully, subjective. Now, I think we can rule out certain sportspeople due to drugs and other such things, but, in general, for a small country we have produced some amazing talent that will forever be remembered as greats in almost every sport. Which, is pretty damn amazing.

    This should be personal and subjective and not a weird d1ck swinging contest like it has been.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,885 ✭✭✭Optimalprimerib


    Because Roy Keane is inherently unlikeable. He abandoned his country right before the big stage. He ended a plyers career with full intention to do so. Mocks and criticises pundits and then becomes one as he realizes management is too hard.

    Being the greatest ever sports person for a country makes you a representative of that country, so people would much prefer a better person than Roy Keane despite his accomplishments.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 381 ✭✭ToddDameron


    He ended a plyers career with full intention to do so.

    Why do people persist with this myth?


    "Håland had stated on his personal website that he had been playing with the injury to his left knee a few months, that it did not receive a knock in the game to his left leg (Keane went for his right leg), and that Keane did not cause his injury. Legal action was dropped in February 2003 after the club reviewed the medical advice."


  • Registered Users Posts: 663 ✭✭✭Fr D Maugire


    mrkiscool2 wrote: »
    So Tom Brady isn't one of the greatest of all time under this example? Seeing as how the Patriots only became champions at the turn of the millennium? It's a really bad analogy. I think Taylor is very underappreciated. Had she not been robbed in 2016 in her match of a decision she might have got a second gold. Also worth noting she is a big reason for it being an Olympic sport in the first place but London had to have a potential gold medalist (in Adams) be the first final. IOC originally wanted KT potentially being in that spot.

    I still think PH is our greatest sportsperson but I can see why KT is up there and she is a very close second for me.

    Not really, as the Patriots have been around since 1959(pre NFL) and reached 2 Superbowls before Brady arrived, Brady also has legendary status because of his success against all players in the NFL(American Football) Now if American Football only started 20 years ago, Brady would still be the best, but legendary? Compared to who?

    There is a difference in being a legend of a sport that dates back over a 100 years and one that is much more recent and limited, GAA players are not generally considered for this list as people view it as limited internationally in participation(I agree and I like GAA) yet I would wager more people take part in GAA than womans boxing around the world.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,503 ✭✭✭✭Mad_maxx


    If a Taylor is the winner it should be Dennis Taylor. Beat Steve Davis in the greatest comeback ever. Waiting for snooker is not a sport, he's a norrie answers

    Yes ,someone overweight should be in the running ( pun intended)


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  • Registered Users Posts: 798 ✭✭✭Rockbeast2


    LOL at the Roy Keane votes. He never played in a European Cup final. He played in one World Cup and Phil Babb had a better tournament.

    Giles, Brady, Whelan all outshone him on the European/World stage.

    At least there is a good case for Sonia O'Sullivan.

    Katie Taylor? Nah, that's like saying Joey Tribbiani is the greatest Italian-American sportsperson of all time for being the Fireball Champion of the World for 25 years when he only had to beat Chandler.

    Cycling is too tainted.

    Harrington in with a shout.


  • Registered Users Posts: 663 ✭✭✭Fr D Maugire


    Rockbeast2 wrote: »
    LOL at the Roy Keane votes. He never played in a European Cup final. He played in one World Cup and Phil Babb had a better tournament.

    Giles, Brady, Whelan all outshone him on the European/World stage.

    At least there is a good case for Sonia O'Sullivan.

    Katie Taylor? Nah, that's like saying Joey Tribbiani is the greatest Italian-American sportsperson of all time for being the Fireball Champion of the World for 25 years when he only had to beat Chandler.

    Cycling is too tainted.

    Harrington in with a shout.

    Cycling is tainted?? Does anyone actually realise how many scandals and positive tests there has been in athletics. As I pointed out, there was no EPO test in the 90s when Sonia was at her peak, and EPO at its most popular.
    This is a bit like the Covid testing, the more you test, the more you catch. Sports like Cycling/Athletics have far more stringent testing than any other sports, so naturally they are the sports with the highest amount of positive tests. I would love something like rugby be given the same level of testing, guys would be getting popped right, left and centre. Too many people bury their heads in the sand about their own sport as they dont want to know about it.


  • Registered Users Posts: 798 ✭✭✭Rockbeast2


    Cycling is tainted?? Does anyone actually realise how many scandals and positive tests there has been in athletics. As I pointed out, there was no EPO test in the 90s when Sonia was at her peak, and EPO at its most popular.
    This is a bit like the Covid testing, the more you test, the more you catch. Sports like Cycling/Athletics have far more stringent testing than any other sports, so naturally they are the sports with the highest amount of positive tests. I would love something like rugby be given the same level of testing, guys would be getting popped right, left and centre. Too many people bury their heads in the sand about their own sport as they dont want to know about it.

    Fair enough point. Cycling and athletics just had the illusion ruined sooner/first. Although rugby is probably my main sport there are a few dodgy Desperate Dan chins around the sport that I think may be unnatural.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,609 ✭✭✭stoneill


    Number 1: Jodie Ring, European Powerlift Champion 2019.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,239 ✭✭✭Jimbob1977


    It's tricky to pick out a greatest Irish sports person.

    You can have a brilliant player that hasn't won much because of high quality rivals.... and a decorated sport star that wins plenty because the competition is limited.

    I'll throw a few names out there...

    Ken Doherty winning a World Snooker Championship was a great achievement. A game of angles, logic, concentration... where the difference between success and failure is a millimetre.

    Padraig Harrington winning majors

    Brian O'Driscoll, Paul O'Connell and Jonnie Sexton acknowledged by their peers as world class.

    Liam Brady going to Serie A and being respected, at a time when Irish and British footballers were viewed as uncultured.

    Robbie Keane always delivering for Ireland. Even flying back from Los Angeles when he knew he mightnt get any game time.

    Stephen Roche winning the grand slam of cycling.

    Sonia O'Sullivan for her great achievements on the track, probably robbed by the Chinese trio of a gold medal

    Katie Taylor

    Ronnie Delaney and Eamonn Coughlan


  • Registered Users Posts: 859 ✭✭✭Randy Archer


    Feisar wrote: »
    Belfast is Irish the same way Paris is European.

    Wow

    Paris is FRENCH first and foremost , then European . Anyone whose being to that city will find out very quickly . The French lead they do not follow

    Belfast is British , baby , go to the city centre you will see quickly , then it European , and even then , the Brits were always aloof with Europe and its political organ

    Europe is a continent , made up of different competing cultures and beliefs . It’s not a country

    The thread isn’t about European sports people, it’s about IRISH sports men . (And the odd token woman )

    McIllroy posted his colours to the mast several times , he was only Irish when in the US (money money money ) because of the huge Irish following and the US weirdness over Blighty (like ourselves) He’s a Brit

    AP McCoy was happy enough to take the knight hood )the first jockey in donkeys years to revive it ) And BBC SPOTY which is only eligible for Brits , and spent most of his career in Blighty (Now one argument about the knight hood would be out of respect for Lizzy as she’s a huge patron and follower of horse racing )

    Dunlop most certainly was a Brit in even sense of the word

    Best , his family were orangemen , but they weren’t bigots . He’s drink with almost anyone

    Barry McGuigan actually sought to be a Brit


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  • Registered Users Posts: 859 ✭✭✭Randy Archer


    Well, from what I can find, a friend or relative was found with products, but was cleared of any wrongdoing as they were not PEDs or banned.

    TBH, the whole drugs thing is hit and miss. Sonia ran at a time when EPO was the drug of choice, but there was no test for it during most of her career. That is not accussing her of doping, just highlighting how random the whole doping thing was. End of the day Lance Armstrong was never caught and if not for being a complete dick, would probably have skated as well. I just think people swallow the whole Irish athletes dont cheat line a little too easily.

    So do you think Sonia would be Top 5 in the history of womens distance running?

    Lance Armstrong actually was caught . He did fail a drugs test !

    But he got doctors to lie and claim it was from a cream to help sores , they doctored up the prescription sheets . The UCI at the time turned a blind eye because they desperately wanted an American to be a star . (Lemons was very universal , he was loved by the French and Belgians - he was very Francophone. Lance was unquestionably a typical loud brash Texan ) Lance literally bribed the UCI by donating machinery to test drugs which UCI could never afford to buy (which begs the question , where was the money that they generated going ? )

    Sonia was top 5 women’s middle distance runner between 1990-2000 . I won’t pretend to know much of what went on before that period and I haven’t being paying much attention to athletics since 2008 .


  • Registered Users Posts: 859 ✭✭✭Randy Archer


    Then what is it?

    What criteria do you use to determine the best Irish sportsperson ever?

    Morgan is one of the top players in the world in a sport played by billions.

    Eh, the fact that Morgan quit the Irish team for personal gains (I have no issue with it , it’s professional sport) to join, of all the nations of the world , bloody Enger-land... as he was half British ... well, surely to god , that disqualifies him as being a “great” Irish man never mind sports man . England ? The enemy , ra ra ra

    Sure English Rugby man, Kieran Bracken (mostly pre professional era) use to get a lot of stick when he came to Dublin with the England team . He was born in Ireland and spent a fair bit of his childhood here . Boo boo

    Cricket , oh wow, played by a handful of nations at elite level and a couple of more . Bit inflated by the large populations of India and Pakistan , topped up by the likes of South Africa and England and Oz . Oh sure Netherlands play cricket but it’s hardly widespread there

    Hardly has the global reach of association football , does it


  • Registered Users Posts: 859 ✭✭✭Randy Archer


    eagle eye wrote: »
    Well then Katie Taylor wins by a mile.

    How ? Is a new sport , it’s quite young . Zero competition . Need to wait 30-40 years to see what comes next

    Understand what “greatest ever” means ?


  • Registered Users Posts: 859 ✭✭✭Randy Archer


    mrkiscool2 wrote: »
    So Tom Brady isn't one of the greatest of all time under this example? Seeing as how the Patriots only became champions at the turn of the millennium? It's a really bad analogy. I think Taylor is very underappreciated. Had she not been robbed in 2016 in her match of a decision she might have got a second gold. Also worth noting she is a big reason for it being an Olympic sport in the first place but London had to have a potential gold medalist (in Adams) be the first final. IOC originally wanted KT potentially being in that spot.

    I still think PH is our greatest sportsperson but I can see why KT is up there and she is a very close second for me.

    Eh NFL has been around since the 1950s , Brady is being compared to every QB since then (and earlier editions ) it’s a reasonable length of time with thousands of men to be considered

    Patriots existed before Brady too

    Not the same

    Katie was robbed of nothing. She was beaten fairly , she was nothing like her usual self for the whole 12 months coming into the event . Christ , in 2012 she nearly blew it as her opponent would have reason be question the loss (Katie did enough to win in 2012 but she didn’t have it her own way)

    There’s no guarantee that she’s have won gold in 2016 . She lost the worlds earlier . Also, as you alluded to AIBA weren’t having the Irish winning


  • Registered Users Posts: 859 ✭✭✭Randy Archer


    Cycling is tainted?? Does anyone actually realise how many scandals and positive tests there has been in athletics. As I pointed out, there was no EPO test in the 90s when Sonia was at her peak, and EPO at its most popular.
    This is a bit like the Covid testing, the more you test, the more you catch. Sports like Cycling/Athletics have far more stringent testing than any other sports, so naturally they are the sports with the highest amount of positive tests. I would love something like rugby be given the same level of testing, guys would be getting popped right, left and centre. Too many people bury their heads in the sand about their own sport as they dont want to know about it.

    Drugs existed long before EPO . Kelly got popped TWICE .

    As you know there was little to no testing in cycling up to the early 1990s bar the big races

    You can bet your last Euro that Rugby is dirty as **** !


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  • Registered Users Posts: 859 ✭✭✭Randy Archer


    Jimbob1977 wrote: »
    It's tricky to pick out a greatest Irish sports person.

    You can have a brilliant player that hasn't won much because of high quality rivals.... and a decorated sport star that wins plenty because the competition is limited.

    I'll throw a few names out there...

    Ken Doherty winning a World Snooker Championship was a great achievement. A game of angles, logic, concentration... where the difference between success and failure is a millimetre.

    Padraig Harrington winning majors

    Brian O'Driscoll, Paul O'Connell and Jonnie Sexton acknowledged by their peers as world class.

    Liam Brady going to Serie A and being respected, at a time when Irish and British footballers were viewed as uncultured.

    Robbie Keane always delivering for Ireland. Even flying back from Los Angeles when he knew he mightnt get any game time.

    Stephen Roche winning the grand slam of cycling.

    Sonia O'Sullivan for her great achievements on the track, probably robbed by the Chinese trio of a gold medal

    Katie Taylor

    Ronnie Delaney and Eamonn Coughlan

    Roche won a few seven day events like Tour of Switzerland / Tour of Romandi several times and places in stuff like Nice and came third in the famous Badger v Lemond Tour de France but he had one really big year and that is it . He had knee injuries . The grand slam had been done before and those two guys kept winning after achieving that

    Sean Kelly on the other hand competing from March to October in a season for 10 years, at least 8 of them as THE MAN. Won the fecking Gio Lombardi when he was nearly 40

    . Seven Paris Nice , around 9 monuments )one days and several podiums . He won a Grand Tour , Vuelta (nearly won another) and won the green jersey at TDF 4 times and STILL regularly in the top 10 of the GC. Had he converted a few more 2nd places in stage races of the TDF , no one would be seriously talking about Peter Sagan (only has 2 monuments and doesn’t look like adding to it )

    Despite Roche winning 2 Tours (and 3rd in another ), being a very good TT rider and climber King Kelly was better - lasted longer , could win the points jerseys at vuelta and TDF all the while being in contention in every monument race and other semi classics


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,544 ✭✭✭✭cj maxx


    Roche won a few seven day events like Tour of Switzerland / Tour of Romandi several times and places in stuff like Nice and came third in the famous Badger v Lemond Tour de France but he had one really big year and that is it . He had knee injuries . The grand slam had been done before and those two guys kept winning after achieving that

    Sean Kelly on the other hand competing from March to October in a season for 10 years, at least 8 of them as THE MAN. Won the fecking Gio Lombardi when he was nearly 40

    . Seven Paris Nice , around 9 monuments )one days and several podiums . He won a Grand Tour , Vuelta (nearly won another) and won the green jersey at TDF 4 times and STILL regularly in the top 10 of the GC. Had he converted a few more 2nd places in stage races of the TDF , no one would be seriously talking about Peter Sagan (only has 2 monuments and doesn’t look like adding to it )

    Despite Roche winning 2 Tours (and 3rd in another ), being a very good TT rider and climber King Kelly was better - lasted longer , could win the points jerseys at vuelta and TDF all the while being in contention in every monument race and other semi classics

    So was his drug dealer better?
    Nothing against SK or SR but with all that has come out about cyclists and drug taking , while we will always fondly remember the sight of Charlie swigging champagne in Paris, that golden age of cycling has lost its allure for me.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,620 ✭✭✭El Tarangu


    Strumms wrote: »

    Roy Keane :

    7 Premier League Championships

    4 FA Cups

    1 Champions League

    1 intercontinental Cup

    1 Scottish League

    1 Scottish League Cup

    12 years at United, 13 trophies.


    This could be an argument for Alex Ferguson being the best manager of all time, for the most part. You could just as easily make the argument that Dennis Irwin was Ireland's greatest athlete, as he had won almost all of the same trophies (indeed, Ferguson reckons him as being the only player guaranteed a spot on his 'best of all time' Man Utd team).


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,620 ✭✭✭El Tarangu


    cj maxx wrote: »
    So was his drug dealer better?
    Nothing against SK or SR but it's pretty obvious that all cyclist were taking enhancers

    You're not wrong; but, as the argument goes, surely if they beat all the other lads who were equally doped to the eyeballs, surely they would still count as 'the best'?

    Anyway, the number of dopers being caught in cycling versus other sports tells us more about the comparative levels of testing than it does about the levels of doping.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,544 ✭✭✭✭cj maxx


    El Tarangu wrote: »
    You're not wrong; but, as the argument goes, surely if they beat all the other lads who were equally doped to the eyeballs, surely they would still count as 'the best'?

    Anyway, the number of dopers being caught in cycling versus other sports tells us more about the comparative levels of testing than it does about the levels of doping.
    Maybe. But that's a vicious cycle ( pun ) imo. If everyone else is doing it and not being caught, you have to take them just to level the playing ground. So the amount of testing directly contribute to the amount of drug taking


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,698 ✭✭✭Feisar


    Wow

    Paris is FRENCH first and foremost , then European . Anyone whose being to that city will find out very quickly . The French lead they do not follow

    Belfast is British , baby , go to the city centre you will see quickly , then it European , and even then , the Brits were always aloof with Europe and its political organ

    Europe is a continent , made up of different competing cultures and beliefs . It’s not a country

    The thread isn’t about European sports people, it’s about IRISH sports men . (And the odd token woman )

    McIllroy posted his colours to the mast several times , he was only Irish when in the US (money money money ) because of the huge Irish following and the US weirdness over Blighty (like ourselves) He’s a Brit

    AP McCoy was happy enough to take the knight hood )the first jockey in donkeys years to revive it ) And BBC SPOTY which is only eligible for Brits , and spent most of his career in Blighty (Now one argument about the knight hood would be out of respect for Lizzy as she’s a huge patron and follower of horse racing )

    Dunlop most certainly was a Brit in even sense of the word

    Best , his family were orangemen , but they weren’t bigots . He’s drink with almost anyone

    Barry McGuigan actually sought to be a Brit

    You missed the point, baby

    First they came for the socialists...



  • Registered Users Posts: 1,620 ✭✭✭El Tarangu



    The Tour de France is the most important race - by a considerable margin!

    ...



    And Lance Armstrong was the greatest of them all...


    This statement demonstrates your particular lack of understanding in discussing the relative legacies of either Roche or Kelly; no-one with even a cursory interest in cycling would claim Armstrong was the greatest - he never won a Monument.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,544 ✭✭✭✭cj maxx


    If a Taylor is the winner it should be Dennis Taylor. Beat Steve Davis in the greatest comeback ever. Waiting for snooker is not a sport, he's a norrie answers

    This is ALL hearsay but a woman , from Tyrone, told me that she was told how that final would end ( that DT would win)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 617 ✭✭✭afro man


    Rockbeast2 wrote: »
    LOL at the Roy Keane votes. He never played in a European Cup final. He played in one World Cup and Phil Babb had a better tournament.

    Giles, Brady, Whelan all outshone him on the European/World stage.

    At least there is a good case for Sonia O'Sullivan.

    Katie Taylor? Nah, that's like saying Joey Tribbiani is the greatest Italian-American sportsperson of all time for being the Fireball Champion of the World for 25 years when he only had to beat Chandler.

    Cycling is too tainted.

    Harrington in with a shout.

    Rockbeast2

    explain how Giles and Brady outshone keane on European world stage

    what did Giles / Brady win on European / World stage
    think Keane has one less Irish cap and same amount of goals for Ireland


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,203 ✭✭✭partyguinness


    I am sorry but when you abandon your home country to play for England (or any other country) for personal ambition and gain you cannot be classed or even discussed as one of the best "Irish Sports person ever". Nobody in Ireland really gives **** about cricket anyway except a few ex pats and Asian medics. It had a novelty factor during the 2007 WC.

    And people criticise Roy Keane for apparently walking out on his country. Give me a break.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 1,620 ✭✭✭El Tarangu




    Close the thread, mods


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 38,942 ✭✭✭✭eagle eye


    How ? Is a new sport , it’s quite young . Zero competition . Need to wait 30-40 years to see what comes next

    Understand what “greatest ever†means ?
    So twenty years is not enough? Is that it? You cannot qualify if your sport is only twenty years?
    It doesn't matter if you are the GOAT amateur and well on your way to being the GOAT professional in the sport?

    I think you need to look a bit closer. Nobody from this country has ever dominated a sport like Katie Taylor. It doesn't matter if it's twenty years old or 100 years old, at the very top level it's extremely difficult. Katie Taylor first became World Champ at amateur level in 2006 and she's been on top pretty much ever since whether as an amateur or a pro boxer.

    There's only a handful of people in all of sports who have been as successful as she has.

    You can take points off for the age of the sport but she's still Ireland's greatest sportsperson for being so great for so long.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,826 ✭✭✭Truthvader


    afro man wrote: »
    Rockbeast2

    explain how Giles and Brady outshone keane on European world stage

    what did Giles / Brady win on European / World stage
    think Keane has one less Irish cap and same amount of goals for Ireland

    By showing up


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,203 ✭✭✭partyguinness


    Truthvader wrote: »
    By showing up


    You are just trolling.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,971 ✭✭✭teednab-el


    George best?

    He isn't Irish


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,203 ✭✭✭partyguinness


    teednab-el wrote: »
    He isn't Irish


    What is he then?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,971 ✭✭✭teednab-el


    Il name a few who derserve a mention as they were successful in the big stage.

    Roy Keane
    Paul McGrath
    Brian O Driscoll
    Ronan O Gara
    Katie Taylor
    Conor Mc Gregor
    Stephen Roche
    Sean Kelly
    Sam Bennett
    Michael Crute
    Michelle de Brun
    Eddie Jordan

    Should be in most lists.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,971 ✭✭✭teednab-el


    What is he then?

    Northern Ireland. That yet isn't seen part of Ireland politically whether we like it or not.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,203 ✭✭✭partyguinness


    teednab-el wrote: »
    Northern Ireland


    Still Irish. The clue is in the second word. Let's be generous and call him 'Northern Irish'.

    There is nothing restricting the debate to 26 counties which is what you are inferring.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 859 ✭✭✭Randy Archer


    cj maxx wrote: »
    So was his drug dealer better?
    Nothing against SK or SR but with all that has come out about cyclists and drug taking , while we will always fondly remember the sight of Charlie swigging champagne in Paris, that golden age of cycling has lost its allure for me.

    Well, the Italians courts in 1993 had a certain view about Roche, so.. Roche denies it all and has never been proven (anything else is liable so we shall move on)

    Cycling was huge in Ireland back then lol , with the RAS getting proper tv coverage and the Nissan International that made towns like Boyle famous and relevant

    Ah, there’s some good stories in cycling again. Eg peter Sagan ,even Sky /Ineos is amusing just to see the reaction of their fan boys vs the “haters” . Phil Gilbert is still a total Ledge . Our own Sam Bennett is doing very well . Best is the hype for Remco and Van Der Pool (who died on his arse in York at the worlds last year ,having the cheek to claim he would win it despite only having half a season - both lads got hype for winning minor races - semi classics are minor, brah );


  • Registered Users Posts: 859 ✭✭✭Randy Archer


    Feisar wrote: »
    You missed the point, baby

    The topic is: whose the best Irish sports person

    Said people ain’t Irish .

    The quote about Belfast being as European as Paris is laughable too , not to mention mentioning Europe in order to pretend that Belfast is an Irish city


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,285 ✭✭✭paul71


    Greyfox wrote: »
    Your having a laugh, the other 3 are only legends by Irish Standards. Keane is a legend by world standards, he's one of the best players to ever play in English football.

    Liam Brady is still a legend in Italy 30 years later. Keane never played for side outside a British or Irish league.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,203 ✭✭✭partyguinness


    The topic is: whose the best Irish sports person

    Said people ain’t Irish .


    Yes they are. They are Northern Irish and also Birtish citizens. I can also tell you that anyone in England for example will regard someone from NI as Irish.

    What you are saying is akin to saying Gareth Bale ain't Welsh. He is British- which is still true but "British" or "Britishness" is a collective term for the English, Scots, Welsh and NI.

    Interestingly the official title is "The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland".

    A person from NI is British citizen (or subject) but NI is not part of Britain. It is part of the United Kingdom.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,203 ✭✭✭partyguinness


    paul71 wrote: »
    Liam Brady is still a legend in Italy 30 years later. Keane never played for side outside a British or Irish league.


    Brady is still a legand but I wouldnt criticise Keane for not playing in mainland Europe. Plenty of players stick to one league.


  • Registered Users Posts: 859 ✭✭✭Randy Archer


    El Tarangu wrote: »
    This statement demonstrates your particular lack of understanding in discussing the relative legacies of either Roche or Kelly; no-one with even a cursory interest in cycling would claim Armstrong was the greatest - he never won a Monument.

    The Tour de France is greatly overrated too And way too much focus on it by the casuals

    I accept that even in one days, you need a team to do all the heavy work for the first 160km etc , but the Tour can be very boring in stages. Even the bunch sprints can be boring (Last two editions were fun)

    . You can win a tour without winning a stage eg LeMond and Froome ( or even a TT) So kudos to guys like Segan who compete for the sprints and the win and come back and try again after a few bad days in the mountains . It he’d come no where in the GC . In Kelly’s time, he was top 10 in several TDF GC while winning The Green jersey .

    The GC lads take it handy in the first week bar the team TT . (Though the last two editions, the organisers changed things up )

    Anyway, the Giro has been fantastic in the last few years , always something crazy going on, even when Roche won his. there was loads of drama . Very unpredictable Race , like the Italians themselves .

    Tom Doumlon (excuse the spelling ) win /Quintaina choking was a special one in 2017, even Froomes win in 2018 . The 2014 tour which came to Ireland was a good edition too

    The Vuelta is often overlooked but since they shortened the race length it’s very explosive , you got lads who are coming off a disappointing or a decent TDF going all out to win races

    With one day events, MONUMENTS matter ! **** the lottery that is the world championship. Bar Amstel Gold , sod the semi classics and mid mid week races (looking at you Mr Sagan )

    St Patrick’s week (Milan San Remro) to last week end of April, each weekend a major race with Paris Roubaix , Flanders, (then Amstel) liege Baston Liege ... hard riding , not a day for taking it handy . Very few riders compete in all 4 monuments and the semi classics like Amstel (other monument in October )

    Monuments matter. Most of the great Tour de France winners and contenders have won at least one monument (or least placed ,Contador )

    Armstrong , who was down as a future one day star didn’t win a lot when he raced before cancer. A world championship (meh, end of season ,it’s a lottery) and a semi classic. Poor record in monuments , (the few he rode in) post cancer he rode very little , just the Criterium and TDF and then stop for the season . Least Contador took part in early season stage races like Paris Nice . Valverde,lol, didn’t matter what is was he just rode and has his fair share of wins (won Vuelta )


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  • Registered Users Posts: 859 ✭✭✭Randy Archer


    Yes they are. They are Northern Irish and also Birtish citizens. I can also tell you that anyone in England for example will regard someone from NI as Irish.

    What you are saying is akin to saying Gareth Bale ain't Welsh. He is British- which is still true but "British" or "Britishness" is a collective term for the English, Scots, Welsh and NI.

    Interestingly the official title is "The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland".

    A person from NI is British citizen (or subject) but NI is not part of Britain. It is part of the United Kingdom.

    You can’t be both. Either one or the other, really. The Brits legally still see them as British as of birth . Northern Irish ain’t a nationality either and Northern Ireland Ain’t Ireland .There no such thing as Northern Irish citizenship. It certainly is not the same as Irish citizenship even if it existed

    The British government and Northern Ireland Courts were quite clear about that in the De Souza immigration case (before you look it up and note that the couple finally got what they wanted, it still was not an overruling of the court case on the interpretation of the GFA. An administrative decision was made to accommodate the situation that avoided re looking at GFA and the clear bad faith of the British over what GFA really means to them )

    So the English lad will class a Nordie as Irish, oh how lovely. Sure the rugby mob still class Ireland as a Home Nation and it is the United Kingdom of Great Britain AND Northern Ireland . Sure they always claim the Irish north and south as British , when it suits .Unionist class the six counties as Ulster, conveniently ignoring that the full 9 counties would have them in a spot of bother

    Gareth Bale ? Lol how ? Wales is PART OF Great BRITAIN . It’s legal jurisdiction is England AND Wales . There’s no dispute over the territory of Wales as to what “country” it is . Bar a tiny tiny minority , the Welsh are content with remaining British

    NI is part of the U.K. Ireland is NOT part of the U.K.

    Not the same

    The Gaul of “geniuses “ and fantasist like you to suggest that one missed the point . Dream land ain’t the same as reality, chief


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,544 ✭✭✭✭cj maxx


    teednab-el wrote: »
    Il name a few who derserve a mention as they were successful in the big stage.

    Roy Keane
    Paul McGrath
    Brian O Driscoll
    Ronan O Gara
    Katie Taylor
    Conor Mc Gregor
    Stephen Roche
    Sean Kelly
    Michael Crute
    Michelle de Brun
    Eddie Jordan

    Should be in most lists.

    Add in Jack O'Shea for example.
    Some of the great Dublin/Down of the 60's 70's.
    No word of international sports star in the title.!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,092 ✭✭✭The Tetrarch


    paul71 wrote: »
    Liam Brady is still a legend in Italy 30 years later. Keane never played for side outside a British or Irish league.
    I may have the facts wrong, but around 1980 the Italian League was the big money league in Europe.
    When Italian teams were allowed sign foreign players in 1980 (I think one player a team) Juventus chose Brady.
    Juventus won the League in 1981 and 1982.
    When Brady left Juventus in summer 1982 his replacement at Juventus was Michel Platini of Saint-Etienne (French league winners in 1981).
    Platini was French captain in the 1982 World Cup.
    France were knocked out in the semi-finals on penalties by West Germany, 3-3 after extra time, after leading 3-1 in extra time.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,971 ✭✭✭teednab-el



    A person from NI is British citizen (or subject) but NI is not part of Britain. It is part of the United Kingdom.

    Depends on what passport they have. Some wont agree with that statement. Not all NI citizens have British passports. Half of them have Irish passports and see themselves as Nationalists not Unionists. 'Irish' passport in these terms refers to a republican passport.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,971 ✭✭✭teednab-el



    but "British" or "Britishness" is a collective term for the English, Scots, Welsh and NI.

    Not correct.

    Great Britain = England Scotland and Wales
    United Kingdom = England Scotland Wales and NI


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