Connacht SFC: Aidan O’Shea denies Mayo are running out of steam

All Star says team can recover fluidity after surprise loss to Galway on Saturday

Mayo’s Aidan O’Shea: “I’ve never lost to Galway in a competitive game, minor, under-21, senior, so yeah, definitely a change and definitely didn’t see it coming.” Photograph: Inpho.
Mayo’s Aidan O’Shea: “I’ve never lost to Galway in a competitive game, minor, under-21, senior, so yeah, definitely a change and definitely didn’t see it coming.” Photograph: Inpho.

Aidan O'Shea has denied that Mayo are running out of steam after five years in contention for the All-Ireland. The current All Star was speaking after the weekend's defeat by Galway in Castlebar – the county's first in Connacht for six years.

The county was also chasing a record sixth provincial title in a row and must now proceed to the qualifiers. O’Shea was asked had the last five seasons, featuring two All-Ireland finals and five semi-finals including two replays, taken its toll .

“Personally I don’t think so. I don’t think it’s something that you feel; maybe it’s something that’s thought from the outside looking in. You’d have to say we looked a bit stale on Saturday night and our fluidity was gone a little bit. But I don’t think it’s something we can’t get back in the next couple of weeks.

“We weren’t playing particularly well but we were doing enough to be ahead and then I think just a few poor errors, a costly free and obviously the goal just swung the momentum. We couldn’t wrangle it back, which was disappointing because there was loads of time at that stage.

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“I’ve never lost to Galway in a competitive game, minor, under-21, senior, so yeah, definitely a change and definitely didn’t see it coming. A disappointing loss, obviously not the ideal situation to be in but it is what it is now.”

O'Shea said that the prospect of creating a record in the province had driven him and also addressed the issue of the Mayo players' revolt last autumn, which saw the enforced departure of last year's management team of Noel Connelly and Pat Holmes despite winning Connacht and losing an All-Ireland semi-final replay to eventual champions Dublin.

Control

“It’s obviously going to come up. It’s not something I can control or the team can control. We parked that a long time ago. It’s not something we’re too worried about. What we are worried about is we’re after losing a type of game that we haven’t lost for a long time. That hurts. We need to rectify it quickly.”

The defeat was a shock, as Galway were 4/1 outsiders and there was widespread pessimism within the county about their prospects. It was suggested to O’Shea that Mayo’s opponents had been better than given credit for. He appeared uncertain.

“I don’t know. We’ll have to wait and see. It was only a Connacht semi-final. I know it’s a big win for them but there’s a Connacht final to play yet. We’ll wait and see how the summer progresses.”

He was, however, sceptical about former manager James Horan’s claim last week that the gap between Mayo and the rest of the province had been growing.

“I knew James had written an article about how the gap was widening. We didn’t prove any gap was widening on Saturday night.”

Aidan O’Shea was speaking at the launch of Kellogg’s Powering Play, an initiative aimed at introducing children to the concept of good nutrition.

Seán Moran

Seán Moran

Seán Moran is GAA Correspondent of The Irish Times