Joe Kernan: Davey Byrne incident must not be scrutinised in isolation
Dublinâs Davey Byrne suffered a broken nose in a pre-match fracas a fortnight ago and a video of the game has formed part of the Central Competitions Control Committeeâs probe.
Dublin manager Jim Gavin confirmed last week that a DVD of the match existed though itâs unclear if the incident was included.
All-Ireland winning manager Kernan, whose son Tony is part of the Armagh panel, agreed Byrneâs injuries were âseriousâ but urged the CCCC to consider âhow it startedâ also.
âOf course it was serious but if they are going to look at it, look at the whole video and see what happened, see how this started,â said Kernan. âItâs very simple.â Asked if he was suggesting that the CCCC hadnât considered provocation or werenât in possession of footage of the build up, Kernan shrugged.
âI donât know but just donât look back at an incident,â continued Kernan. âThese things happen every now and again and there was an injury and now that it has been brought to attention it is going to be looked at.
âBut I think both counties wanted to put that to bed and sometimes thatâs the best thing. Whereas if it comes out in the open you donât know whatâs going to happen.â
GAA President Aogan Ă Fearghail was critical of teams entering into âlocal arrangementsâ to bury acts of indiscipline that may occur in challenge games.
But any suspensions that may arise could have serious implications for All-Ireland quarter-finalists Dublin going forward in this yearâs Championship.
âIt could be tricky for (Dublin) this year if players are seen to be fighting in a video,â said Kernan.
âUnfortunately it happened, and they are going to investigate it and we will have to wait and see what the findings are. Theyâll make the decisions based on what they see.â
Kernan was speaking at the launch of the Dynasties exhibition at the GAA museum, where various medals from his and his famous familyâs football careers are on display. Other GAA families that have contributed to the collection include the McHughs from Donegal and Galwayâs Cannings.
Kernan revealed his disappointment with Armaghâs exit from the championship last weekend at the hands of Galway and suggested his son, Aaron, who surprisingly retired after 2014, could have contributed greatly.
âTo me, Aaron was still one of the best half-backs in the country,â said Joe. âWe were certainly sorry he didnât continue playing, he certainly would have been a help last Sunday, someone that could hold the ball, know what to do, move it and support it, like he did in Croke Park the previous year against Meath and Donegal.â




