Life after hurling: Wayne Hutchinson gunning in a new market
FAMILY TIES: Wayne Hutchinson with his wife Miriam and daughters Fia and Ella after his last hurling game, the 2022 Waterford junior final.
Four years after his last senior game for Ballygunner, the buzz of a Munster final week never fails to stir Wayne Hutchinson.
âWe are the kingpins in Waterford and taking a bit of a hold in Munster, which is remarkableâ he enthuses. âTo be the first to win three in a row would be one of the greatest achievements in the GAA.âÂ
This past Wednesday he had more reason for cheer. It was announced Dojo, the payment platform for whom he is regional commercial manager, received its Irish e-money licence. Hutchinson will head up its launch, which includes the wireless handheld card machine that has proven a success story in the UK.
âIf you said to me three years ago that Iâd be leading this product in Ireland, people would have laughed. I would have laughed myself but it just shows you that what can happen if you get the drop of a ball and you take it.
âI was involved with guys who were absolute winners with high performance mindsets. That builds good habits within yourself to go out and try and achieve something after hurling.âÂ
Ballygunnerâs holistic approach to mentoring and making their hurlers ârounded peopleâ has benefitted Hutchinson. One need only look at how his old team-mates Stephen OâKeeffe, Barry Coughlan and the Mahonys, Philip and Pauric, called time relatively early on their Waterford careers to realise they could see the wood from the trees.
Hutchinson also values how the Gaelic Players Association helped him understand there was life outside the game. âI see with a lot of lads, the inter-county game is just all or nothing. Itâs nine or 10 years of your life, you commit everything to it and walk away in your early 30s.
âIf youâre a smart enough guy, you have everything boxed off in the background but if you donât have the education or the growth mindset to develop as a person they mightnât be in a good position financially or have enough money to afford a mortgage.
âPlayers suffer in all sports after they finish up and the way itâs gone hurling has become professional. Players find themselves needing a new identity, needing something else.
âFor me, I didnât miss the game but I missed the dressing room. I was hurling from eight years of age and finished at 36, 37. Itâs been your life and finding something new is not easy.âÂ
Nine years ago, Hutchinson spoke publicly about his mental health difficulties. Clinically diagnosed with depression at the age of 18, his darkest days came at a time when he was playing for Waterford and his relationship with hurling was obsessional.
âWhat happened in my teenage years up to young adulthood was a force behind what Iâve achieved. Everything was wrapped around hurling. Everything. Nothing else mattered but I went back to college at 23 and thatâs where my own personal therapy started in terms of getting over the shit that I went through.
âI had a bit of support but I had the awareness to stop and think, âI have to do something with my life because hurling isnât going to be here foreverâ. I was content that I would finish up some day because I had prepared for what was going to happen next. Like, when the lads won the All-Ireland last year, there wasnât anything in me saying, âJesus, why didnât I hang on?â It was just my time to finish up.âÂ
Married to Miriam and father of three-year-old twins Fia and Ella, Hutchinson moved back to Ballygunner from Dublin six months ago. Home is a minuteâs drive from the clubâs McGinn Park where he is coaching the U20s with an eastern Waterford final to look forward to next week.
He is just one of the clubâs many former and current players paying it back from the sideline. âWe are in the midst of something special at the moment but all good things come to an end. We need to prepare our young lads to slip into a senior team sooner rather than later.âÂ
As one of those Ballygunner players who knew more heartache than happiness in Munster finals losing four before victory came in 2018, itâs understandable that Hutchinson walks easy with the full jug. So long as hurlers like Patrick Fitzgerald come through, Ballygunner will be in good stead and there can be no denying the return of Hutchinsonâs brother Dessie five years ago from his professional soccer career with Brighton was a godsend for the club.
Not that Wayne was initially pleased to see his sibling come home so soon. âI wonât lie, when I was his age when he came back, I would often look at Premier League footballers and think how great it must be so in a way I was disappointed he walked away from it.
âBut as his brother, I fully supported his decision. He was up training with us in the lead-up to the 2018 Munster final and then brought into the squad for the semi-final against Ballyhale. What I couldnât get over at the time was his ability to just pick up where he left off, as if he was never gone. Hurling is the type of game you need to have the hurley in the hand four or five nights a week all year round. Fair enough, he was doing a bit of pucking over in Brighton but not to the same level as the club.
âIâd say he felt comfortable being back so that would have made things easier. His level of professionalism he brought with him. Lads would be turning up and doing their activation work but Dessie would be that bit more focused and getting in extra stretches and shooting after training.
âIt was a big step coming back but heâs six months away now from being a qualified secondary school teacher. Iâd have been onto him about getting things right for when he finishes hurling. I mightnât have as much hurling as him but I could offer him my experience.âÂ




