Paul Geaney commits to Kerry but will take 'big break'
Dingle's Paul Geaney plans to "get the body right" following this weekend's All-Ireland Club SFC final against St Brigid's. Pic: ©INPHO/James Lawlor
Itās fair to say that Dingle talisman and probable incoming Kerry captain Paul Geaney will not see very much league action for Jack OāConnor this year.
His most likely return will be against Clare in the Munster Championship in April after eight months of bad luck, although Geaney revealed that he has actually been very lucky overall with injuries during his decade-plus playing career with Kerry.
āIāve been lucky for most of my career not to get injuries during championship,ā he said.
āThe Cork game in PĆ”irc UĆ Chaoimh was the first championship game I missed for Kerry nearly between my debut and say 2014 and 2020.
āThat was a nice stretch without missing a championship game. And then I missed one more since and last year I ended up missing five on the trot but Iāve been lucky most of my career and in fairness I was able to contribute some bit to the team in the last while so it could have been worse.āĀ
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Geaney reckons it all went wrong against Cork and he now has an injury that cannot get any worse, with all his setbacks coming from the same issue.
āIt was the one injury that was after Kerry. I broke my scapula against Cork and then 10 days later I came down from a thing in Dublin that we had to do before the championship, a launch basically.
āI was running and I hurt my calf that evening and that kept me out.
āBut in Kerry, we had so many injuries at the time and we were under pressure, and we had Cavan (in a preliminary All-Ireland quarter-final) two days after Iād done the injury.
āThe following week then weād obviously Armagh and we probably just needed some experienced fellas just in case.
āI had about 15 minutes in the body, which was perfect, 15 minutes and then after that I was probably going to get more injured or whatever.
āI decided that Iād give it a go and if we came into a situation where we were down, whatever it was, a couple of points maybe and we needed a goal that I might be going on.āĀ
Geaney believes he should have stopped after Cavan and he would have made the All-Ireland.
āThe weeks kind of rolled on and I was still trying to train rather than recover.
āIn hindsight if I stopped and recovered, I would have made an All-Ireland final, no problem.
āBut it was the fact that I was going week on week and trying to make the Tyrone game (All-Ireland quarter-final) again because the pressure was still on.
āIf you put yourself in that situation before the Tyrone game, thereās still pressure on, backs to the wall, got a few bodies back but still, only had the flash of whatever we had against Armagh and SeĆ”nieās performance obviously.
āObviously we were always in control against Tyrone, and I was never coming on but then youāre in an All-Ireland final so youāre going to give it everything to try and be involved there.
āBut it just didnāt give me a chance to recover. So, after that I had to take a month pretty much to get it right and about three weeks in we lost to Kenmare the second week.
āIt was smooth sailing really until the county semi-final and I tore a bit of hamstring in the first play after half-time so that was week on week; the county championship, that was tough, I just had to play through that one really.
āThen I just had a niggle in the calf in the second half against Finbarrās and again thatās what kind of helped me out.
āI didnāt do a whole lot since the Finbarrās game. I was trying to do what I did after Kerry to give it as much of a chance.
āI didnāt know where I was, but we know where I am now so itās good.āĀ
So having said all that, Geaney intends to return to Kerry but not straight away after next Sunday.
āIām going to be taking a rest anywayā he revealed. āItās not an issue. Anything I pick up in the meantime or in the game itself is not an issue.
āItās going to be a big break afterwards. Iām going to get the body right. Itāll be a case of take a rest and then start pre-season then.
āIāll be starting a block of pre-season again after probably a two or three-week rest or a month rest and then Iāll be starting from scratch.
āThatās usually about six weeks. I mean, it depends on what you have. After the four weeks as well. And obviously things can change there with Kerry. But Iād say the plan is Iām going back,ā concluded Geaney.
That will be music to Jack OāConnorās ears.


