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5th March 2020
01:33pm GMT

But in Kerry, Gaelic football is the religion and Donaghy was soon coaxed back to the game he was beginning to drift away from.
"I had stopped playing," he says, in yet another brilliant Laochra Gael episode, that will air on TG4 this Thursday night at 9.30. "My effort and my practice levels had gone down, so I had gone down the pecking order..."Starting work in Aidan O'Connor's GAA stronghold 'The Greyhound Bar' was a turning point, his cousin convincing him to give the football another lash. "You had more belief in me than I had," remarked Donaghy as the pair cast their minds back. "I was kind of going 'I'm not a Kerry player'"
Donaghy went onto make the Kerry minor team soon after, and O'Connor, watching on proudly, coined the nickname 'Star' that still sticks with Donaghy today.
"I was just so glad that you had made your mind up you were going to play," says O'Connor.
"And I just said lads, 'we have a new star born!'
Starting out as a midfielder, it initially took Donaghy a while to make his mark but after Jack O'Connor's brainwave to move the big man into full forward for a qualifier game against Longford, his career took off.
"Marc Ó Sé turned to me and he said, 'Jesus, how do you mark that?" - said former Kerry player Micheál Quirke, as the player watched Donaghy's fetching and power on the edge of the square in training.
He went onto win Footballer of the Year that year, and followed it up with three more All-Irelands. For his distinctive style, Donaghy will always stick out like a beacon for Gaelic football followers.
"He absolutely changed the game," said Joe McMahon.
The programme airs tonight on TG4. It's definitely one not to be missed.
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