Legendary Kerry footballer and manager Mick O’Dwyer dies aged 88

Kenneth Fox

Mick O’Dwyer, one of Gaelic football’s greatest icons, has died at the age of 88.

The eight-time All-Ireland senior football-winning manager had been suffering from illness in recent years.

Born in June 1936, O’Dwyer made his first appearance for Kerry as a minor in 1954.

He graduated to junior level a couple of years later before making his senior debut in 1957.

Between then and his final senior game for his county in 1972, O’Dwyer played 48 senior championship games, although he stepped away from the inter-county game in 1966 and ’67.

He claimed four All-Ireland medals (1959, ’62, ’69 and '70) in nine final appearances, was voted footballer of the year in ’69 and was a victor in 12 of 13 Munster senior finals.

He lined out in 93 league games for The Kingdom, winning seven Division 1 honours.

O’Dwyer filled several roles for Kerry, moving from wing-back in his early years to corner-forward towards the end of his inter-county career.

With Waterville, O’Dwyer claimed eight South Kerry championships and three county championships with South Kerry.

His managerial acumen was evidenced in three consecutive U21 All-Irelands with Kerry between 1975 and ’77, losing the ’78 decider to Roscommon.

O’Dwyer’s glorious 15-season career as Kerry senior manager, in which he experienced 10 All-Ireland finals, began in 1975, and the Sam Maguire Cup was forthcoming that September when they defeated Dublin by seven points.

That treasured piece of silverware returned to The Kingdom seven more times in O’Dwyer’s reign, including four consecutive years between 1978 and ’81, the five-in-a-row famously stopped by Offaly and Seamus Darby’s goal in the ’82 game, a score which O’Dwyer admitted haunted him for several years.

Kerry returned to claim a three-in-a-row between 1984 and ’86, and among O’Dwyer’s other managerial achievements were 11 Munster SFC triumphs and three Division 1 crowns as well as six Railway Cup titles in charge of Munster.

In his second term in charge of Kildare, O’Dwyer in 1998 led the county to a first Leinster senior title in 42 years. They followed it up with an All-Ireland semi-final victory over his native county before they were beaten by Galway in the final.

Laois were next to experience the Midas touch of the Waterville man as he brought them provincial glory in 2003, the county’s first since 1946. They again reached the Leinster final the following year, where they lost to Páidí Ó Sé’s Westmeath.

O’Dwyer is predeceased by his first wife, Mary Carmel, who passed away in 2012 and son Michael (Hauli,e), who died in ’22. He is survived by his wife Geraldine and sons John, Robbie and Karl. O’Dwyer married Tyrone native Geraldine in January 2023.

Leading condolences, Taoiseach Micheál Martin said: “Micko lived and breathed Gaelic football. He embodied everything good about the game - dedication, ambition, positivity and community.

“His sporting legacy is unmatched. He will forever be one of Kerry’s iconic players, winning four senior All-Ireland medals in 1959, 1962, 1969 and 1970.

He added: “Despite his many, many sporting achievements, Micko remained humble. In RTÉ’s 2018 documentary on his life, Micko famously said: 'I had a marvellous run, but wasn’t I lucky to be born in Kerry'.

“Kerry, and all of us, were lucky to have him,” said Mr Martin.