Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Irish name | Éamonn Mac Aoidh [1] | ||
Sport | Gaelic football | ||
Position | Right Corner Back | ||
Born | Letterkenny, Ireland | 26 April 1984||
Height | 1.87 m (6 ft 2 in) | ||
Occupation | Physical therapist | ||
Club(s) | |||
Years | Club | ||
2001– | Gaoth Dobhair | ||
Club titles | |||
Donegal titles | 3 | ||
Ulster titles | 1 | ||
Inter-county(ies) | |||
Years | County | Apps (scores) | |
2004–2016 | Donegal | 154 [2] (GLS?-PTS?) | |
Inter-county titles | |||
Ulster titles | 3 | ||
All-Irelands | 1 | ||
NFL | 1 | ||
All Stars | 0 |
Eamon McGee (born 26 April 1984) [3] is an Irish Gaelic footballer who plays for Gaoth Dobhair and also, formerly, for the Donegal county team (between 2004 and 2016). He is the older brother of Neil McGee. [4]
From Gweedore in County Donegal, he won one All-Ireland Senior Football Championship title, three Ulster Senior Football Championship titles and one National Football League title with his county and an Ulster title with his club. For a small time until Patrick McBrearty, Neil McGee, Paddy McGrath, Leo McLoone, Frank McGlynn, Michael Murphy and Anthony Thompson surpassed it in 2018, McGee's haul of Ulster SFC titles was a joint county team record (alongside such past players as Anthony Molloy, Martin McHugh, Joyce McMullan and Donal Reid).
McGee made his championship debut for his club against Seán Mac Cumhaills on 8 July 2001. [5] By 2023 he had won three Donegal Senior Football Championship (SFC) titles with his club: in 2002, 2006 and 2018; and he had played for his club in 23 consecutive championship campaigns, including in 35 consecutive championship games between 2001 and 2009. [5] Ahead of the 2023 Donegal Senior Football Championship final, he had made 97 appearances in the club championship (92 in the Donegal SFC and 5 in the Ulster and All-Ireland Club SFC). [5]
The final of the 2002 Donegal SFC, featuring McGee and his club, was not played until 2003 due to a disagreement between two other clubs over Eddie Brennan. McGee has described the medal he received as "tainted". [6]
In 2006, his club returned to the Donegal SFC final. McGee played as his team won a 14th title, in one of the worst Donegal county finals ever. [7]
McGee was sent off in the final of the 2018 Ulster Senior Club Football Championship. [8]
McGee was first called up to the senior team by Brian McEniff for winter training in 2003. [9] His early years in a Donegal shirt were marked by lapses of discipline—at one point Shane Carr left the panel when McGee moved ahead of him on the substitutes bench despite his lack of dedication. [10]
During the 2004 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, he and Brian McLaughlin were suspended from the Donegal panel for a breach of discipline. [11] The BBC reported that the pair had arrived for a "training session in an unfit condition" on two consecutive nights, one month after failing to turn up for one session at all. [12]
In 2006, he and Kevin Cassidy were suspended from the Donegal football panel over a breach of discipline. [13] [14] McGee later returned and played in the 2006 Ulster Senior Football Championship Final at Croke Park, scoring one point. [15]
McGee was a member of the Donegal team that won the National Football League in 2007, playing from the start to the end in the final against Mayo. [16]
He spent some time in London and trained with their county team before returning to Donegal in 2010. [17] [18]
He and his brother played in the 2012 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final against Mayo. [19] He had missed the start of the 2012 Ulster Senior Football Championship with a hamstring injury. [20]
He departed the inter-county scene in 2016. [21]
He thinks that the All Stars "mean very little" but admits his own total affects this thinking. [22] Himself and Paddy Andrews agree on this. [23]
McGee represented Ulster in the Inter-Provincial Series. [24]
In November 2017, he became part of Gary McDaid's backroom team when McDaid became the first manager of the new Donegal under-20 football team. [25] [26]
In March 2021, Donegal announced him as part of Gary Duffy's under-20 management team. [27] In November 2022, he was part of the management team announced for Duffy's successor, Leo McLoone. [28]
On the night of 25 November 2023, McGee was announced as a coach under the senior football management team of Gary Duffy at the Buncrana club. [29] [30] [31]
McGee has a profound fear of flying, a condition which has affected his ability to cope with flights to games. [32]
McGee supports marriage equality and has campaigned to Repeal the 8th Amendment of the Irish Constitution. [33]
The Donegal Senior Football Championship is an annual football competition organised by Donegal GAA and contested by the highest-level clubs, to determine the best team in County Donegal. Since 2016, it has been known as Michael Murphy Sports and Leisure Donegal SFC after its headline sponsor.
St Eunans GAA is a dual club which plays hurling and Gaelic football. Its home ground is O'Donnell Park in Letterkenny. It fields 35 teams, making it the biggest club in its county.
Kevin Cassidy is an Irish-Scottish Gaelic footballer, businessperson, columnist and commentator. Though born in Glasgow, Scotland, he has been living in Gaoth Dobhair, County Donegal from a young age.
CLG Ghaoth Dobhair is a GAA club based in the parish of Gaoth Dobhair in northwest County Donegal, Republic of Ireland. They are one of the strongholds of Gaelic football in County Donegal.
Naomh Conaill CLCG is a GAA club for the Glenties parish in south-west County Donegal. As well as the town of Glenties, the club also covers the area to the village of Fintown and the areas of Kilraine, The Glen and Maas down to the Gweebara Bridge. Much of this area lies within the Donegal Gaeltacht area.
Neil McGee is an Irish Gaelic footballer who plays for Gaoth Dobhair and, formerly, both the Donegal county team and the Ireland international rules football team.
Leo McLoone is an Irish Gaelic footballer who plays for Naomh Conaill and also, formerly, the Donegal county team.
Anthony Thompson is an Irish Gaelic footballer who plays for Naomh Conaill and, formerly, the Donegal county team. He is a wing back.
Marty Boyle is an Irish Gaelic footballer who plays for Naomh Conaill and also, formerly, for the Donegal county team. He played for his county during Jim McGuinness's first spell as manager.
Dermot Brick Molloy is a Gaelic footballer who plays forward for Naomh Conaill and also, formerly, for the Donegal county team.
Odhrán Mac Niallais is an Irish Gaelic footballer who plays for Gaoth Dobhair and, formerly, for the Donegal county team.
Eoin Waide is an Irish Gaelic footballer who plays for Naomh Conaill and also, formerly, for the Donegal county team.
The 2018–19 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship was the 49th annual gaelic football club championship since its establishment in the 1970–71 season. The winners receive the Andy Merrigan Cup.
Michael Carroll is an Irish Gaelic footballer who plays for Gaoth Dobhair and the Donegal county team.
Cian Mulligan is an Irish Gaelic footballer who plays for Gaoth Dobhair and the Donegal county team.
Daire Ó Baoill is an Irish Gaelic footballer and former association footballer who plays for Gaoth Dobhair and the Donegal county team.
Naoise Ó Baoill is an Irish-Japanese Gaelic footballer, reared in Japan and Australia and currently playing for Gaoth Dobhair. He formerly played for the Donegal county team. He has also played Australian rules football and association football in the past.
Teach Mhicí is an Irish pub in Gaoth Dobhair, County Donegal.
The 2023 Donegal Senior Football Championship was the 101th official edition of Donegal GAA's premier Gaelic football tournament for senior graded clubs in County Donegal. 16 teams competed, with the winner representing Donegal in the Ulster Senior Club Football Championship.
Brendan McDyer is an Irish Gaelic footballer who plays for Naomh Conaill and, formerly, the Donegal county team. He is one part of the "usually starting trio" for his club that also includes Leo McLoone and Anthony Thompson.
'I am looking forward to this more than any other game in the last few years', reveals Eamonn McGee, the imperturbable Gweedore man who now forms the central spine of the Donegal defence with his younger brother Neil.
It's easy to forget now but McGee has experienced similar disappointment where a Donegal SFC final was left in limbo and, in the end, not finished in the same calendar year it began. The 2002 SFC in the county was held up due to a spat between the Ardara and St Eunan's clubs over a saga that will forever be recalled as the Eddie Brennan affair. The final, between the Letterkenny men and Gaoth Dobhair, was eventually settled in February of 2003 with McGee and the Magheragallon side coming out on top… 'I've three medals at home [2006 and 2018] but one of them, in my mind at least, that is a wee bit tainted'.
…as Scotstown sought an equaliser, Eamon McGee was sent off…
The Ulster champions… confirmed that the game comes too soon for Gaoth Dobhair's Eamon McGee who will miss out due to a hamstring injury.
McLoone was part of the backroom team for the last two years under Gary Duffy, alongside Eamon McGee and Donegal GAA have confirmed the Naomh Conaill clubman will now take over the role, with McGee — who was also helped Donegal lift Sam Maguire 10 years ago — staying on.
The announcement was made last night…
The Inishowen club released a statement this evening…