Mattie McDonagh

Galway Gaelic footballer

Mattie McDonagh
Personal information
Irish name Maitiú Mac Donnchadha
Sport Gaelic football
Position Centre-forward
Born 1936
Ballygar, County Galway
Died 11 April 2005
Height 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
Nickname Big Matt
Occupation National school teacher
Club(s)
Years Club
1955–1969
Ballygar
Club titles
Galway titles 0
Inter-county(ies)
Years County
1956–1968
Galway
Inter-county titles
Connacht titles 10
All-Irelands 4
NFL 2
All Stars 2

Matthew "Mattie" McDonagh (1936 – 11 April 2005) was an Irish Gaelic footballer who played for his local club Ballygar and at senior level for the Galway county team from 1956 until 1968. McDonagh later served as manager of the Galway team. He is the only man from Connacht with four All-Ireland Senior Football Championship winner's medals.[1]

Biography

He sprung to sporting prominence as a teenager when he starred with Summerhill College, Sligo, where his colleagues remembered him from his striking stature as a youngster. Before he was 18 he had won the Connacht Colleges title and also won a Roscommon minor hurling medal with Ballygar.

Big Mattie burst on to the national scene in 1956 when forming the midfield partnership with Frank Evers which provided the possession lifeline for the side which powered their way to a 2–13 to 3–7 All-Ireland final victory over Cork on the day that Seán Purcell and Frank Stockwell ran riot, Stockwell setting a scoring record of 2–05 from play.

After the initial flush of success some lean years followed and Mattie had to bear the disappointment of two county final defeats with Ballygar at the hands of Tuam Stars and Dunmore McHales, the later by the narrowest of margins but the best was yet to come.

McDonagh was one of the most influential players in the Galway teams of the 1960s. After Galway had been beaten by Dublin in the 1963 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final, when Gerry Davey scored the controversial winning goal, the county under the stewardship of John Dunne, was to embark on their greatest ever run of success, winning three All-Ireland titles, beating Kerry in the first two and Meath in 1966 to complete the three-in-a-row, where Mattie McDonagh will be forever remembered in firing home ’left footed’ the only goal of the match in a 1–10 to 0–7 victory.

McDonagh is the only Connacht player to have won four senior All-Ireland medals.

He never shirked a challenge and took on the task of managing the Galway senior team in 1980 after a turbulent period when player power made the headlines in the county and a cool and respected head was needed to settle the ship.

McDonagh, although fiercely competitive in every sport, had an easy temperament which helped him to assuage fears and tensions. One year later he led Galway to what turned out to be their last National League success when routing Roscommon in the Croke Park final although their semi-final victory over Kerry in Ennis was the real highlight of that series.

The same year he and his charges had to endure the shock of a Connacht championship defeat when Willie Nally and Willie Joe Padden of Mayo "caught all around them" but the following year Galway were desperately disappointed to lose out to Offaly in the 1982 semi-final before going all the way to the final in the infamous decider of 1983 when Dublin edged Galway out.

In the years after he was always willing to help out with under-age teams and threw in his lot with John Tobin's minor winning team of 1986 where his experience and cool ahead proved to be an invaluable asset to the management team.

Mattie McDonagh died at the age of 68 on 10 April 2005. Tributes poured in from GAA colleagues and officials including GAA president Seán Kelly, who said that the Association was greatly saddened by his loss. He was buried in his native Ballygar soil.

Honours

Ballygar

Galway

Connacht

References

  1. ^ Breheny, Martin. "Martin Breheny's Greatest All-Ireland Finals". Irish Independent. 1 September 2018, p. 12–13.
Sporting positions
Preceded by
Liam O'Neill
Galway Senior Football Manager
1980–1983
Succeeded by
Tony Regan
Awards
Preceded by
Martin Newell
(Galway)
Caltex Footballer of the Year
1966
Succeeded by
Galway squads
  • v
  • t
  • e
Galway – 1956 All-Ireland Senior Football Champions (4th title)
Sub used
A. Swords for J. Young
  • v
  • t
  • e
Galway – 1959 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship runners-up
Subs used
J. Keeley for J. Nallen
P. Dunne for M. Greally
  • v
  • t
  • e
Galway – 1963 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship runners-up
Sub used
B. Geraghty for S. Cleary
  • v
  • t
  • e
Galway – 1964 All-Ireland Senior Football Champions (5th title)
Subs not used
16 M. Moore
17 K. O'Connor
18 T. Sands
19 P. Donnellan
20 B. Geraghty
21 M. Coen
22 T. Keenan
Selectors
J. Dunne
B. Nestor
B. Coleman
  • v
  • t
  • e
Galway – 1965 All-Ireland Senior Football Champions (6th title)
Sub used
16 M. Reynolds for J. Keenan
Subs not used
17 T. Sands
18 T. Keenan
19 B. Geraghty
20 M. Moore
Selectors
J. Dunne
B. Nestor
F. Stockwell
  • v
  • t
  • e
Galway – 1966 All-Ireland Senior Football Champions (7th title)
Sub used
17 J. Donnellan for S. Meade
Subs not used
16 F. McLoughlin
18 T. Sands
19 M. Reynolds
20 C. Tyrrell
Selectors
J. Dunne
B. Nestor
F. Stockwell
  • v
  • t
  • e
Galway – 1983 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship runners-up
Subs used
19 M. Brennan for B. Talty
21 W. Joyce for P. Lee
24 J. Tobin for J. Hughes
Subs not used
16 N. Hynes
17 P. Connolly
18 F. Broderick
20 T. Naughton
22 P. Kelly
23 T. J. Gilmore
25 M. Joyce
Manager
M. McDonagh
  • v
  • t
  • e
Galway football teammanagers
  • E. Colleran (1975–77)
  • T. Sands (1977–78)
  • L. O'Neill (1978–80)
  • M. McDonagh (1980–83)
  • T. Regan (1983–84)
  • C. Dunne (1984–86)
  • W. Joyce (1986–89)
  • J. Tobin (1989–93)
  • B. McDermott (1993–96)
  • V. Daly (1996–97)
  • J. O'Mahony (1997–2004)
  • P. Ford (2004–07)
  • L. Sammon (2007–09)
  • J. Kernan (2009–10)
  • T. Ó Flatharta (2010–11)
  • A. Mulholland (2011–14)
  • K. Walsh (2014–2019)
  • P. Joyce (2019–)

Under-20s incl. G. Fahy: until 2018  • P. Joyce: 2018–2019  • D. Ó Fátharta: 2019?–

Minors incl. S. Joyce: c. 2015  • D. Ó Fátharta: c. 2018

  • v
  • t
  • e
Texaco Footballer of the Year