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20th March 2019
10:30pm GMT

"I hope Andrew is remembered as Andrew O'Shaughnessy the hurler, rather than Andrew who got MS."
And there's plenty to remember.
Andrew Shaughs O'Shaughnessy first came into the reckoning in Limerick around the turn of the millenium and in the nine years that would follow, he lit up hurling fields from Limerick to Dublin.
He will be fondly remembered by the 'boy wonder' headlines that accompanied his rise to prominence and his consistent justification of that lofty billing.
It was his sharpshooting - Shaughs will go down as one of the cleanest strikers of a sliotar in the history of hurling. From the age of 16, he began striking knockout blows and his progress in St Colman's Fermoy - where he won three Harty and three Croke Cups, and with the Kilmallock minors sent him on his way.
https://www.sportsjoe.ie/gaa/andrew-oshaughnessys-story-inspiration-every-single-soul-country-196633
The Laochra Gael programme brilliantly remembers a county minor final against Na Piarsaigh when that man hit 4-9 of Kilmallock's 4-12 total in a one point win.
That's the type of talent you're dealing with.
And he took that through with him into a glittering under-21 career, where he won two All-Irelands with Limerick in 2001 and 2002. Always the go-too forward, always the scorer to step up to the plate, the type of talent who'd inspire youngsters to pick up a hurl in the first place.
With the Limerick seniors he didn't enjoy the same levels of success as the golden generation of youngsters didn't slot in seamlessly with the older stalwarts. Saying that though, he played a huge part in their magical 2007 season that brought them all the way to an All-Ireland final.
It was in 2009 when he received the MS news but he's far from bogged down by it. He went onto achieve a lifelong dream by winning a county senior title with his club Kilmallock the following year.
Now, he's still in the hurling field every second night as a coach and his teammates talk up his suitability to that role, and indeed to the role of manager in the future.
He continues to take on MS with a positive mindset every day and his 'take it as it comes' attitude is a simple one that every one of us can take inspiration from.
"If you're worrying about the future, you might miss the bus that's driving down the road and it will hit you. There's no point in worrying about that," he says.And he has high hopes for the future.
"How it hasn't escalated as normal from my diagnosis, that bodes well for the future hopefully." "It's not as dark as it seems, there's always light, as hard as it seems, you always have to stay positive."Gaels all over the country were inspired by his story watching the brilliant TG4 documentary. https://twitter.com/AussieGleeson/status/1108495901566341120 https://twitter.com/NedzerB13/status/1108491223512371200 https://twitter.com/Shaneytweet/status/1108494643929497600 https://twitter.com/mufcjr/status/1108489642876305410 https://twitter.com/MorgantheBriar/status/1108495132360433664 https://twitter.com/MikeCooke92/status/1108491755471675393
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