Winning formula needs to be ‘fixed’ if Dublin want to win again

Jim Gavin knows change is good even for champions, says Michael Darragh MacAuley

Michael Darragh MacAuley: “I nearly feel a bit guilty because the lads  worked their socks off all year and I only scraped in to rob a medal.” Photograph: Morgan Treacy/Inpho
Michael Darragh MacAuley: “I nearly feel a bit guilty because the lads worked their socks off all year and I only scraped in to rob a medal.” Photograph: Morgan Treacy/Inpho

If it ain't broke, fix it and make it better, as basketball coach Phil Jackson once said and which Michael Darragh MacAuley reckons could be the secret to Dublin winning back-to-back football All-Irelands.

MacAuley, the 2013 Footballer of the Year, admits to constantly reinventing his own game, including his preparations off the field. He recently returned to his first love, basketball, after helping Ballyboden St Enda's land a first club All-Ireland, and returned to the Dublin panel just in time to make a second-half appearance in their Allianz League title last month.

“Yeah, I think you’re always doing something different,” says MacAuley. “I’m always trying the latest fitness thing, latest weights thing. There is a point where you can almost get obsessed by that, but I don’t think I am. I’m always open to finding something fresh.”

Conditioning programme.

He cites the examples of Dublin’s evolving strength and conditioning programme.

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"When Paul Caffrey came in, that Dublin team really hit the weights hard, they were big units. I remember I had just started training with the Ballyboden senior team and Collie Moran and Conal Keaney were on that team at the time. They came back in, had doubled in size, were swatting lads away," he says.

“I think people have gone away from that. It’s less about looking for size and more about looking for power. It’s not about who can benchpress the house any more; it’s about who can run the fastest with the house on their back. That’s some analogy, eh?”

For MacAuley, speaking at the opening of the Skill Zone multi-sport indoor facility in Stillorgan, returning to basketball also helped freshen him up for the championship, which for Dublin begins on Saturday week against Laois in Nowlan Park.

“Going back playing basketball was huge. I managed to get back for a few weeks and felt so fresh afterwards. It was mostly short sprints and I really enjoyed it. I was a bit nervous. It was a few years since I was back dribbling on the hard wood, but it went well, and hopefully I can get back in the off season as well,” he says.

“I was only kind of scraping my way back for the final. I nearly feel a bit guilty because the lads have been working their socks off all year and I only scraped in to rob a medal. I wasn’t sure Jim was going to play me. I had no part in the league, so I thought he might have just stuck to what he had and then let me come back in at the start of the championship or whenever instead.”

Realisation

That philosophy, he says, is what sets Jim Gavin apart: his realisation things must change, that Dublin can’t simply repeat 2015. MacAuley hopes to help convince him of that.

“It’s sometimes easy just to say, ‘look, we’re after winning most of the games this year, why wouldn’t we just stick with a winning formula?’ I suppose I have to go in there and kind of put a spanner in the works and say, ‘this is why we don’t stick with a winning formula’,” MacAuley says.

“I’m looking forward to doing that. Jim’s not stupid. Jim doesn’t really go on what has been. He’s going to look forward and see how he can make the team better and if I’m playing well enough, I’m going to play in the team. If I’m not, I won’t and that applies to everyone.”

Ian O'Riordan

Ian O'Riordan

Ian O'Riordan is an Irish Times sports journalist writing on athletics