Richie Power: Henry Shefflin will definitely manage Kilkenny one day
Bill Cuddihy, Chairman of the Cois Nore Cancer Support Centre, receives a cheque for âŹ3,500 from Richie Power Snr from the proceeds of âPower, A Family Memoirâ. Also pictured are Maria Connolly, Richie Power Jnr, Ann Power and Dermot Keyes (author of the book).
Despite a trophyless three years in charge of Galway, Richie Power still expects Henry Shefflin to one day hold the title of Kilkenny manager.
After winning all that was to be won on the club scene with Ballyhale Shamrocks, Shefflinâs first foray into inter-county management was not a successful one.
Three years in Galway delivered two All-Ireland semi-final defeats to Limerick, two Leinster final defeats to his native Kilkenny, and a failure this season gone to even emerge from the Leinster round-robin. The latter proved to be his last chapter out west.
Although his stock is none the higher for his time in maroon, Richie Power is confident his former teammate will still come to hold the Kilkenny reins at some point down the road.
âOh absolutely, I definitely think we will see it. It could be five years, it could be 10 years down the line, you just donât know,â Power said of Shefflin one day managing Kilkenny.
âUnfortunately, it didnât work out for him in Galway. People will probably point that it wasnât a successful period and, personally, with the amount of underage success Galway have had, for them not to turn that into senior success, for me itâs a bit of a mystery and I donât think that should completely fall back on a manager either.

âI think it's a case that some of the players maybe just didnât train on and collectively as a group, the players just werenât good enough and they werenât there. Like they had Limerick on the ropes probably two of the years that Henry was there and couldnât get over the line.
âI know the first thing people will do, theyâll turn back and theyâll blame management, theyâll blame tactics, and theyâll blame this and theyâll blame that, but you always have to look at the players and I just donât think that the personnel was there in Galway to be good enough to win an All-Ireland.â
The job of Kilkenny manager currently sits with another of Powerâs old teammates, Derek Lyng. His job in 2025 is to end the countyâs 10-year wait for a return Noreside of Liam MacCarthy. Should their fallow spell extend beyond 2025, it would go down as the longest in Kilkenny hurling history.
What concerns Power more, though, is that the county hasn't won a minor All-Ireland since 2014 and has won only one U20 - 2022 - in the past 16 years.
âTheyâre probably the two standout statistics from a Kilkenny perspective because I can remember when I was playing minor and U21, obviously we were lucky to come with a brilliant team at the time, but we were winning minor All-Irelands and that was progressing to win U21s and then a lot of the U21 team was making the step up to senior.
"So I think thatâs where we as a county need to probably concentrate on and try and bridge that gap and break those two statistics.
âIf Kilkenny are lucky enough to get to a Leinster senior final (in 2025), win a Leinster final, theyâre 70 minutes from an All-Ireland again. This year, we saw they were one puck away from being in an All-Ireland, and Cork overturning Limerick the following day, you just donât know what way a final would have gone between Kilkenny and Cork.
"So it just proves that theyâre not a million miles away. We always feel that in Kilkenny and this group of players are going to be no different.â
Part of and central to that 2025 effort will be 37-year-old TJ Reid, what will be his 19th season in black and amber. Powerâs preference would be for Reid to become a permanent fixture in the inside line next season, rather than once again having him operating out around and beyond the â45.
âHeâs probably after losing a little bit of pace in relation to trying to get away from a player, but I still think someone of TJâs calibre, with his hurling brain, his aerial ability, his hurling ability, I still think heâs good enough to get away with all of that in circumstances.
âHeâs 37, he has a huge amount of miles on the clock when you take in the Shamrocksâ achievements on top of Kilkenny, so I wouldnât expect TJ to be playing in a half-forward line and maybe having to do all the dirty work around the middle third.
"I genuinely think weâd get more from him and more benefit from him in a full-forward line and having that threat closer to goal.â



