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16th January 2024
09:25am GMT

"In the All-Ireland final against Galway, Jack turned around to me and said 'Speak to the lads before they go out'."I'm like, 'In 15 seconds I'm going to have to say something that sends these guys back out'. Luckily I'd been taking a few notes in the first-half! So very varied. But it's great," he says. [caption id="attachment_296898" align="alignnone" width="1000"]
24 July 2022; Kerry performance coach Tony Griffin lifts the Sam Maguire Cup after the GAA Football All-Ireland Senior Championship Final match between Kerry and Galway at Croke Park in Dublin. Photo by Stephen McCarthy/Sportsfile[/caption]
Keen to differentiate between performance coach and sports psychologist, Griffin says his role with Kerry came about 'by accident.'
Having previously worked with the Kildare footballers under Jack O'Connor and Dublin hurlers under Anthony Daly, Griffin really immersed himself in Kerry by moving down to Ballyferriter for a few months last year.
It was there where he was struck by the Kerry public's infatuation with football, which leads to something of a pressure-cooker for players.
He name-checks former captain Joe O'Connor as an individual who is unfazed by such pressure, however.
"There's certain players among the group, like, Joe O'Connor is a brilliant example, he's one of the most comfortable in his own skin people you'd come across and I think he's going to have a huge season this season."
"You hear 'Football is a religion in Kerry, well not until you live there do you realise it."
"People come up to you in ALDI when you're only in the backroom, and I'm in the back of the backroom, and they tell you what they think of things and you've only moved to the parish.
"It's a different world down there.
"As someone said to me recently, the best analogy in any other sport is the All Blacks. It's the same for Kerry. At least in Dublin, players can be anonymous, in Kerry you're not anonymous, you're never off really and it's just a fascinating construct.
"And if the process is more enjoyable then it's not a chore to go to training."
This will be his 'last twist' with the team, however, with novels and other such individual projects on the horizon, though he has enjoyed all aspects of his work with the team, none-more-so than getting the chance to work with David Clifford, who he descibes as 'Michael Jordan-esque.'
"I think some people are born with certain things. David Clifford was born to be David Clifford. He's just, he's ice cold. The other part of it is, he's a young man. He's 24, he's going to be 25 next year.
"Last year was a big, big mental load for any human being.
"I don't care who you are, you can only push things away so much and try to perform and, you know, the All-Ireland final showed probably that David has areas of his game that need work.
"And maybe it's getting parts of his game where the mental and the skill intersect.
"But that's brilliant, that's good news because everyone says he's the complete player. He knows he's not.
"And he knows his 'complete' is different to most other people's complete. But that's what he's after. It's Michael Jordan-esque. It's how can I perform? And you know last year was a hard year for him. He's an exceptional person."
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