Cahair O'Kane
Cahair O'Kane: Parkinson's brilliant Ali interviews underline how starved we are of debate
THERE is no rabbit hole like a YouTube rabbit hole.
Cahair O'Kane: More carrot, less stick needed to help Gaelic football
IN his book The Happiness Trap, Australian psychologist Russ Harris might as well have been writing about our relationship with Gaelic football.
Cahair O'Kane: Attack has to be the best form of defence
DAVID Moran draws his head back, throws his eyeballs to the sky and thinks not again.
Cahair O'Kane: Is change the answer for Tyrone or Armagh?
AS Mattie Donnelly altered his jog off the pitch to meet his young clubmate Seanie O'Donnell replacing him, it wasn’t so much of a handshake as a greeting that said ‘it’s your team now, look after it’.
Cahair O'Kane: No great team means a great journey for everyone
THERE’S a lovely Audi Q2 in front with two collie dogs in the back seat. One staring out the back window, its head tilted to the side, a kind of a cross between ‘hmm’ and ‘what are you looking at?’
Cahair O'Kane: GAA has to start planning for professionalism
WHEN Vernon Pugh and his two brothers were teenagers, their father took them down a pit.WHEN Vernon Pugh and his two brothers were teenagers, their father took them down a pit.
Cahair O'Kane: Evidence says Dublin won't win the All-Ireland
IT was after they had finished shooting The Usual Suspects that one of modern cinema's great endings came about.
Cahair O'Kane: Why so determined to put goalkeepers back in their box?
IF there’s a word to describe Tom Brady’s infamous 2000 combine photograph, it would be shapeless.
Cahair O'Kane: Armagh needn't panic over such small margins
THE decaying roof of St Tiernach’s Park hangs on for dear life as Rian O’Neill rises into the air.
Mixed emotions: Johnny McBride on life, death and football
JOHNNY McBride’s eyebrows clamp down hard as he realises what it is he’s been subjected to, sat in his own kitchen early on a Friday morning.