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22nd March 2019
05:43pm GMT

'"When my mother died, I promised I'd play for Ireland for her," he said. "It's very emotional when I hear the Irish national anthem. It was a very tough time. We didn't know (how ill she was) until a couple of weeks before she died. We got pulled in, and told this was going to happen with mum. I remember crying for two days, non-stop. "I went to see my mum in the hospice after she passed away, and the next day, I went straight back to school, carried on as if everything was alright."It wasn't alright for Walters, not for a long time but in some respects it may have helped morph him into the leader he became on those Irish teams. It has become clear now that things weren't always exactly rosie under Martin O'Neill and Roy Keane's leadership and the height of the instability was arguably at its peak when the latter went off at Harry Arter and Walters for missing a training session ahead of a friendly with the USA last summer. Bare in mind, former Ireland forward Clinton Morrison recently said that he felt like sticking his head under the table when Keane went after manager Mick McCarthy in Saipan for fear the former Manchester United skipper was going to come for him next, but Walters does not appear to be one for hiding, at least not according to recently retired Ireland international Stephen Ward.
"Roy was getting on the boys for not training like three days in a row. Johnny’s got a bad knee so he can’t train all the time. “They were at the training ground and him and Harry were just sitting on the bench, just relaxing and icing themselves and stuff. Roy walked over and was like, ‘Why aren’t you lads training?’ and he obviously blatantly knew why they weren’t training because the manager would have told him. "And they were like, ‘We can’t do three days in a row’. ‘What are you lot? Professional footballers? That’s a f***ing shambles that is’. They both didn’t say anything and Roy walked off and came back over again, ‘So when are you going to train, I’m sick of people pulling out with injuries, what the f*** is wrong with ya?’ and the lads were like, ‘Listen, we’ve got problems, we do it at our clubs, we can’t do it’. Roy said something under his breath about Johnny and walked off. “Johnny lost his head, jumped off the bench and walked after him, grabbed his arm and said, “What’s the story Roy? If you’ve got a problem say it to my face, don’t f***ing walk off’ and he was like, ‘I do have a problem, you’re not training, you’re getting soft, it’s no wonder Dyche doesn’t play ya, you’re f***ing always looking for an argument like you are now’ and he was like, ‘No Roy, you are the one trying to cause an argument’, and apparently they were squaring off to each other and having it off and had to be pulled off each other. All the lads were grabbing Johnny away from him… Johnny was going to kill him. “Roy brought up something about when they were at Ipswich, they had like a falling out as well. He said, ‘You’re threatening me again Jon, like you did at Ipswich’, and Johnny was like, ‘Yeah what, are you going to be a s***house again and send me my fine in the post rather than saying it to my face?’Keane is one of the spikier characters in Irish sport, the type that tells Kieran Richardson to go home for being too brash or refuses to sign Robbie Savage over his voicemail message, and here's Walters going toe-to-toe with him over his professionalism. It's the hill that he chose to die on and it's one of the many reasons we respect him. He was fearless on the pitch, and seemingly on the training ground too, and he was adored by Irish fans. When Ireland needed a goal, he was often there. When they needed someone to hold off German defenders and cling on to a vital home win, he was there. When they needed someone to bomb down the wing or lead the line, he was there. He was reliable, likable and loved. 'Ohhh Jonathan Walters! Ohhh Jonathan Walters!' How you'll be missed.
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