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Irish Mirror
Irish Mirror
Sport
Karl O'Kane

2022 All Star football team named as 11 players win award for first time

This year’s All Star football team features a whopping 11 first-time award winners.

The emergence of Galway and Derry to win their respective provincial championships, with the Tribe going on to the All-Ireland final, sees the counties pick up seven of those.

The other four inaugural winners come from All-Ireland champions Kerry – goalkeeper Shane Ryan and defenders Jason Foley, Tadhg Morley and Gavin White.

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That also reflects the Kingdom’s defensive power in a year where they conceded just three goals across all competitions with Morley as a sweeper, Foley at full-back and White at wing-back.

Morley is the Templenoe club’s 14th All Star, with Pat Spillane winning nine, Tom Spillane three and Mick Spillane one.

The other Kerry winners were the Clifford brothers – Paudie and David – and Sean O’Shea. This is David Clifford’s fourth award in five inter-county seasons at just 23 years of age.

The Fossa star is already well on the way to surpassing Spillane’s football record of nine All Stars.

Paudie Clifford and O’Shea both landed their second awards with David Clifford making it back-to-back All Stars.

Kerry’s David Clifford celebrates with the Sam Maguire Cup (©INPHO/Bryan Keane)

All-Ireland finalists Galway have five first-time winners in defenders Liam Silke and John Daly, midfielder Cillian McDaid and forwards Shane Walsh and Damien Comer.

Comer and Walsh missed out narrowly in 2018 when Galway reached the League final and All-Ireland semi-final, losing both times to Dublin.

Daly gets into the team for his footballing ability at No.6 and some huge displays with Morley accommodated on the wing.

Corofin All-Ireland winner Silke is rewarded for big man-marking jobs on the likes of Sean O’Shea and Shane McGuigan in the All-Ireland final and semi-final.

McDaid turned in some incredible displays at midfield for Galway, hitting four points in the All-Ireland final against Kerry and scoring the winning goal in extra-time of the quarter-final victory over Armagh.

The other two first-time winners are from Derry, with Chrissy McKaigue and Conor Glass honoured following the Oak Leaf county’s first Ulster title victory since 1998 and a first All-Ireland semi-final appearance since 2004.

Interestingly, both McKaigue and Glass were with Australian Rules clubs as was McDaid.

Conor Glass on the ball (©INPHO/Lorcan Doherty)

Derry’s last All Stars were Kevin McCloy and Paddy Bradley, both awarded honours a decade and a half ago in 2007.

McKaigue is the Slaughtneil club’s first All Star, while Glass joins fellow Glen winner from the Derry 1993 All-Ireland winning side Enda Gormley who won two All Stars.

Glass was Derry’s midfield anchor this year, operating alongside a series of partners including Brendan Rogers, Gareth McKinless and his clubmate Emmett Bradley.

The other player who made the team was Dublin’s Ciaran Kilkenny, who equalled Stephen Cluxton’s record capital record of six All Stars.

Kilkenny is 29 now but could well pass Cluxton as he continues to show remarkable consistency despite Dublin’s run of six All-Irelands in a row coming to an end.

Dublin’s Ciaran Kilkenny and Jason Foley of Kerry (©INPHO/Ryan Byrne)

No player from outside the four All-Ireland semi-finalists made the side with Armagh’s Rian O’Neill and Ethan Rafferty missing out.

Rafferty – a former forward – brought goalkeeping to a new level this year, scoring two points against Tyrone in Armagh’s qualifier win.

O’Neill slotted a magnificent equaliser against Galway from a long-range free and was superb in the qualifier victory over Donegal as the fulcrum of the Armagh attack.

The other players who were unfortunate to miss out were Derry’s Brendan Rogers, who had a big shout in defence and midfield, and his fellow Oak Leaf defender Conor McCluskey.

Slaughtneil dual star Rogers was named the Player of the Ulster Championship after a huge Ulster final in which he kicked three points from play.

Kerry’s Tom O’Sullivan was unfortunate too, suffering for a Shane Walsh tour de force in the All-Ireland final, having been a Footballer of the Year candidate going into the decider.

It didn’t help O’Sullivan, Rogers and McCluskey that the hottest competition this year came in defence. Gavin White got the nod at wing-back after enjoying big games in the All-Ireland semi-final and final against Dublin and Galway with his lightning counter-attacking play a key to Kerry’s game.

Jason Foley has been a coming force for Kerry at full-back and his marking job on Comer in the All-Ireland final sealed his first award.

McKaigue was touch tight all year in the Derry defence, putting the shackles on the likes of Monaghan’s Jack McCarron, Donegal’s Patrick McBrearty, Clare’s Keelan Sexton and Galway’s Robert Finnerty.

The Ulster Championship winning captain turned 33 back in July and is one of the oldest first-time All Stars.

Keeper Ryan has been a model of consistency for Kerry.

He had a massive final against Galway, losing just four restarts, and was unflappable late on when Dublin applied the pressure in the All-Ireland semi with a high press.

The last Kerry goalkeeper to land an All Star was Brendan Kealy back in 2014.

2022 PWC All Stars

1 Shane Ryan, Kerry (first award)

Club: Rathmore Age: 26

2 Christopher McKaigue, Derry (first award)

Club: Slaughtneil Age: 33

3 Jason Foley, Kerry (first award)

Club: Ballydonoghue Age: 25

4 Liam Silke, Galway (first award)

Club: Corofin Age: 27

5 Tadhg Morley, Kerry (first award)

Club: Templenoe Age: 29

6 John Daly, Galway (first award)

Club: Mountbellew-Moylough Age: 24

7 Gavin White, Kerry (first award)

Club: Dr Crokes Age: 25

8 Conor Glass, Derry (first award)

Club: Glen Age: 25

9 Cillian McDaid, Galway (first award)

Club: Monivea-Abbeyknockmoy Age: 25

10 Paudie Clifford, Kerry (second award)

Club: Fossa Age: 26

11 Seán O’Shea, Kerry (second award)

Club: Kenmare Shamrocks Age: 24

12 Ciarán Kilkenny, Dublin (sixth award)

Club: Castleknock Age: 29

13 David Clifford, Kerry (fourth award)

Club: Fossa Age: 23

14 Damien Comer, Galway (first award)

Club: Annaghdown Age: 28

15 Shane Walsh, Galway (first award)

Club: Kilmacud Crokes Age: 29

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