Something In The Water: - Kieran McCarthy - E-Book

Something In The Water: E-Book

Kieran McCarthy

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Beschreibung

Olympic rowers Gary and Paul O'Donovan may be the face of Irish rowing and Skibbereen Rowing Club, and have enormously increased the popularity of rowing in Ireland, but they're just one piece of a much larger jigsaw. Without their club and the people behind the scenes, they wouldn't be Olympic silver medalists, 2018 world champions, former European champions and, in Paul's case, a three-time world champion. Almost one hundred Skibbereen Rowing Club athletes have represented Ireland at various regattas over the years; a staggering figure when viewed in light of the size of the club. Founded in 1970, it is now the undisputed most successful rowing club in the country, producing five Olympic rowers since 2000 and four world champions between 2016 and 2018. It is the characters involved in the club, the coaches, members and the athletes themselves, who come together to make Skibbereen Rowing Club what it is.  Something in the Water reveals what goes on behind the scenes to create an environment that allows locals to excel on the national and international stages. The story is told through the people and families involved, showing how relatable they are to people around the country.

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MERCIER PRESS

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© Kieran McCarthy, 2019

ISBN: 978 1 78117 752 5

This eBook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.

To all those rowers who have picked up an oar for Skibbereen Rowing Club and who have proved there’s no harm in being a little bit crazy.

prologue

Paul O’Donovan couldn’t see a clear path through the crowd. Everyone wanted a selfie or a handshake or a quick word. He needed to get from the far side of the banquet hall in the Celtic Ross Hotel in Rosscarbery to the Warren Suite on the opposite side of the building. He had to negotiate the hall, the bar, the reception and the stairs. It was a walk that should have only taken ninety seconds; instead, thirty minutes later, he was only halfway there.

Paul had tried to keep a low profile at the annual West Cork Sports Star Awards on Saturday night, 19 January 2019. He’s not one to seek the light. But as soon as he got off his seat, fans were drawn to him. He is big news, after all. A genuine sports superstar. Internationally recognised. Incredibly talented and driven. One half of the O’Donovan brothers, who had won Ireland’s first-ever Olympic Games rowing medal in 2016. The local lads who had transformed rowing in Ireland.

These two brothers from Lisheen, just outside the small town of Skibbereen in West Cork, caught the national spotlight in their heavily blistered hands and shone it directly onto one of the world’s toughest and most demanding sports. They are the best thing that has ever happened to Irish rowing.

Paul’s brother, Gary, had been forced to miss the local sports awards. He was training in New Zealand ahead of the 2019 season. So Paul flew their flag at the awards bash. Still, it had been a rush to get there. Earlier that day he had set a national record at the 2019 Irish Indoor Rowing Championships in Limerick. Another medal for the collection of the twenty-four-year-old, a young man who is already a four-time world champion and is rightly hailed as Ireland’s greatest-ever rower.

Before he left the banquet hall, the Drinagh Rangers soccer team, winners of the West Cork Sports Team of the Year Award, wanted a photo with Paul. Meeting him made their night. Fifty-two-year-old Drinagh goalkeeper Rob Oldham jumped in for a selfie to show his daughter at home, as she is a huge O’Donovan brothers’ fan. A group of local road bowlers stopped in the middle of posing for a photo and insisted Paul join them. He did. Good man, Paul. Well done, Paul. Great stuff, Paul. Legend, Paul.

This is the life of Gary and Paul O’Donovan. Ireland’s greatest rowers. West Cork’s greatest-ever sportsmen. Skibbereen Rowing Club’s best of all time. Lisheen’s two boys who are the talk of world rowing.

But they are only two pieces of a bigger jigsaw.

***

A couple of years earlier, the evening after the Irish team finished sixth in the medals table at the 2017 European Rowing Cham­pionships in the Czech Republic, Paul grabbed the microphone at the homecoming event at Church Cross, a few miles outside of Skibbe­reen. He stood on a makeshift stage. Behind him hung a freshly printed twelve-foot-wide poster from the Ilen Rovers GAA clubhouse. In big, bold white letters, it shouted ‘The Magnificent Seven’. On it was a photo snapped in the sweltering heat of Račice of the heroes and their medals.

Skibbereen Rowing Club had supplied the entire Rowing Ireland national team at the Europeans. All five medalled. Paul and Gary won silver in the lightweight men’s double sculls. Mark O’Donovan and Shane O’Driscoll surged to gold in the lightweight men’s pair. Denise Walsh rowed to silver in the lightweight women’s single sculls.

Dominic Casey was their coach. The mastermind behind it all. He’s one of this magnificent seven.

Only Italy, Romania, the Czech Republic, Germany and Poland won more medals than the Skibbereen team at those championships. Entire countries against a club with less than 100 members.

The poster also included a headshot of Aoife Casey, Dominic’s daughter, who a week earlier had taken silver in the Ireland women’s double at the European Junior Rowing Championships in Germany. It was the first time Ireland had ever medalled in this competition. More history.

Six of the seven were at Church Cross, Denise the only absentee. Paul, relaxed in a grey tracksuit and black top, took centre stage. Behind him Gary had a tricolour draped around his neck. Mark, Shane, Dominic and Aoife all stood in line. This was an intimate crowd. Paul knew them all. Family, friends, neighbours. Time to have some fun.

‘It’s fantastic to see the crowd out again tonight for this celebration of rowing in Lisheen and Aughadown and Skibbereen and Ireland, of course – but that’s just Skibbereen again,’ Paul quipped.

It drew a huge roar of approval from the home crowd under the dull grey sky.

This remarkable rowing club in a country town in West Cork, a club founded by a fisherman, a carpenter and a butcher in 1970, is tucked away from bright lights and fast cars in a small pocket of rural Ireland, but now punches well above its weight on the national and international stage.

This club creates Olympians, with five Olympic rowers since 2000. It moulded Ireland’s first-ever Olympic rowing medals at the 2016 Games in Rio. It shaped five world rowing champions inside four magnificent years between 2016 and 2019: Gary, Paul, Shane, Mark and Fintan McCarthy. Over 100 club members have represented Ireland on the international stage since 1976. The club has transformed Irish rowing, raising standards to new heights and making the world sit up and take notice.

Its clubhouse is built on the muddy banks of a farmer’s field. It once used a dishwasher as a filing cabinet. Its main double door has splintered glass panels held together by strips of red insulation tape. Second-hand weights in a gym with no windows have been cut from sheets of metal. In other words, Skibbereen Rowing Club doesn’t fit the normal profile of a rowing club. It’s neither upper class nor snobbish. It’s rough around the edges. This is a working-class club built on a foundation of simplicity, desire and, most importantly, its people. There’s nothing fancy here. They rail against the rowing stereotype that the sport belongs to those up there who look down on the rest. This is a culture clash: the country folk against the privileged.

From rags have come magnificent riches. International winners. More national titles than any other club. Skibbereen is a town reborn because of its rowing club – a town which grasped the attention of a nation in the summer of 2016 and has held it ever since.

The club itself is shrouded in mystique and a secrecy that has never been about its physical structures but always about its people. Driven. Dedicated. Passionate. Half-mad.

They’ve broken down rowing, one of the toughest of all Olympic sports, to its basics. Get from A to B as fast as you can. Don’t over-complicate it. Now they do it better than anyone else.

This is a country club from the back of beyond that has conquered the world, a club that defies logic and has changed an entire sport. It is the greatest Irish sports story of our time.

There really is something in the water in Skibbereen.

I

THE ROAD TO RIO

1

the ilen

John Whooley stood at the water’s edge, where the land gave way to another world, a utopian existence where it was simply rower, boat and river. He had stood here before, thousands of times, and always followed the same ritual. He looked to the sky, where, in this case, the clouds sat sullen. There was a faint outline of the sun behind them, a lowering grey shadow waiting for its chance to shine. The seagulls were in, which meant it must be rough to his left, the west, where the Ilen River introduced itself to the Atlantic Ocean.

The Ilen is the playground for Skibbereen Rowing Club, its boathouse and clubhouse sitting behind John on the riverbank. Just metres separate these structures from the river.

The Ilen had been home to fishermen for generations before the rowing club was formed in 1970, but as the fishing died away it was the rowers who reinvented the Ilen. They have it to themselves now, a ten-kilometre stretch from the clubhouse without having to stop. It’s the envy of every other rowing club in the country. Every year 7,000 boats are launched by the club onto the river.

John had it almost to himself on this October evening in 2007. There were four young bucks, early teens, getting ready to go out in a quad scull. They were busy doing their own thing.

The Ilen was in a good mood – not too choppy, not lazy either, but quite eager. The water rushed excitedly against his wellies, waiting to play. Its best time is an hour before high tide; that’s when it’s at its calmest as there’s less current and flow on it.

The wind was in impish form too. It blew from the south-west, racing in off the Atlantic. On its worst days it bullied rowers, daring them to take it on. However, the rowers never shirk a challenge. The wind was simply another competitor to beat and it could be like this on race day. Saying that, when it’s in a real mood, they know better. It’s not worth the hassle on those days. But this evening, with the nights shortening and the temperature dropping, it was calm.

John knew the signs were good. Most of the time he rowed downriver towards Baltimore, going with the current. Other days, depending on the strength of the wind and its direction, the height of the waves, the tide, the weather and the sunlight, he would row upriver, towards Skibbereen town, for its calm and sheltered water. On those other days, when the weather gods played spoilsport, he would stay on land and take out his frustrations on the rowing machine. This evening, though, he would point his boat west.

He headed out on the water in his single scull, a boat designed for one person. This was his familiar Filippi, white with its distinctive blue stripe, which he had bought two years earlier for just under €5,000. It was good value. John and two other Skibb rowers, Richard Coakley and Kenneth McCarthy, bought one boat each in a package deal that Richard organised after competing internationally. This was the first single John had owned. His pride and joy.

A heron across the water stared straight at him, waiting to see what John did next. The bleating of the sheep in Carey’s farm on the far side of the river didn’t stir the heron. Neither did the odd car passing on the road behind it. Instead the heron eyeballed John. It wasn’t keen on sharing the Ilen today. But it knew the signs, so it ultimately spread its wings and moved on.

John had been looking forward to getting back out on the water. By day he worked locally at O’Donovan’s boatyard whenever they needed him – the recession had cost him his job as a CAD & Design Technician in Galway in early 2007 – and in years to come he’d retrain to be a maths and physical education teacher, but on the Ilen he was a rower. Even better, a Skibbereen rower. That’s a badge of honour. It means something.

He lived on the opposite side of town, a short drive from the clubhouse, but for these next eighty minutes he would be in a different world. He quickly ran through his checklist: hat, leggings, enough layers of clothes to stay warm, shades, water bottle. He was good to go.

His bare hands felt the slightest chill in the air. It wouldn’t be long before the fading sun set behind Mount Gabriel in the distance and took a large splash of what little heat there was with it. His right hand gripped both oars, locked into their gates, to keep him balanced as he set about launching his boat on the river. He sat on the sliding seat. His left hand steadied the boat. One leg in, the other out, coiled to push the boat away from the slipway. He was almost free from the land. He used his right oar, as well as his free leg, to gently push his boat into the water. It looked easy now, but had taken plenty of practice in the early days.

Soon he was in deep enough. He was free. It was just him, his boat and the water. Wellies off. Feet into their straps. All set. A quick look backwards opened up a view of the Ilen that stretched for 800 metres. There was no one else there. He was pointed in the right direction and he had it to himself – for now, at least.

The rowers’ code says that your right blade should always be closest to the bank. That’s the simple rule to remember. A handwritten sign on a door in the clubhouse carries other rules:

You must have lights at all times on your boat.

Do not launch without lights.

Always paddle in groups and not alone.

Down – clubhouse side. Back – Schull road side.

Always stay off the centre of the river.

John was experienced enough to go alone. Soon, he was warmed up, the half slide of his seat gone to full slide as his hands felt the oars connect with the Ilen. He pulled in, down and away, and slid his seat under him to take another stroke. In. Down. Away. Reach. Slide. This was repeated, stroke after stroke after stroke. It’s a delicate balance of power and speed. He was in rhythm and conducting his own one-man orchestra. He would take over 1,600 strokes during this training piece. Practice makes perfect in rowing. It’s all about mileage and building endurance.

He was in the zone now, fully concentrating. The boat glided along the water. From a distance, rowing looks deceptively effortless and elegantly beautiful, but life in the boat is different. It hurts and burns and hurts some more, pushing the body and mind to their limits. It’s a life choice. You commit or you don’t. John had committed long ago.

He manoeuvred through the dogleg corners of Newcourt and Oldcourt. The boatyards in Oldcourt were crowded with summer sailing boats, resting for the winter, their masts clanking in the wind.

He saw them first, in the distance. It was that Junior quad. Then he heard them, whooping and hollering, like Indians in a Western film. He was their cowboy. He shook his head. It was Gary, Paul, Shane and Diarmuid, four little terrors that were causing wreck on the river. He knew them all. They were four different bundles of energy, each more wired than the next, some cheeky, others quiet. But none of them ever rested. They were in secondary school now, in St Fachtna’s de la Salle in town. Paul was thirteen, the youngest. The other three were fourteen years old and they were already fearless on the water.

John knew they wanted a race. That’s what they did. It was time to teach these pups a lesson, again.

John was twenty-eight years old and one of the club’s most experienced oarsmen, part of the Senior-level clan, along with Olympians Eugene Coakley and Timmy Harnedy, Richard Coakley (who was an Olympian in the making) and Kenneth McCarthy. Every weekend, when they were out in their singles, this Junior quad turned up and tried to beat them all. They trained all week for the weekend.

‘Old man John,’ broke the silence, carrying over the water. It was Gary.

It was time to race, to put them back in their box. All Skibbereen rowers are taught to race. Whether it’s a training piece on the Ilen or an Olympic final, they all approach it in the same manner: first home, first past the finish line. First, first, first.

Concentration was key. He drove his legs down faster, keeping his balance, not letting his oars hit the water. One of the earliest lessons taught to him was that friction is wasted energy and leads to a slower boat. Those words came from Dominic Casey, who taught him everything he knew.

It was also Dominic who saw a rower in John when no one else did. This tall, gangly teenager was a late starter in rowing, almost seventeen years old when he was cajoled into a sport that he had no interest in whatsoever. But Dominic spotted that there was raw material to work with.

‘One stroke at a time,’ he told John, over and over again.

Always one stroke at a time. Stay in the present, John. If you pull a bad stroke, make sure the next one is better.

‘You can’t control what has happened but what you can control is what you do right now,’ Dominic advised.

John took it one stroke at a time from the very start. And he got better and better. Faster than anyone could have ever imagined, apart from Dominic. His progress was startling.

But so too was that of the Junior quad, who at the time were coached by Gary and Paul’s father, Teddy O’Donovan.

‘Go get those old fellas,’ he would tell the four boys, as they almost climbed over each other trying to get into the boat. ‘Show them no respect.’

John had his game face on. This could be a race day. The quad was a good distance away still. He just wanted to make one burst, one lunatic minute. He made his move, pushing his burning legs, straining his body. It was the same stroke he had used to win his first National Champion­ship title in the men’s Novice coxed four in 1996, less than twelve months after he first picked up an oar. The same stroke that took him to the 1997 World Junior Rowing Championships in Belgium, where he represented Ireland in the Junior men’s quad less than two years after he started rowing. The very same stroke earned him a scholarship to the University of California in Berkeley and saw him excel there. That stroke saw John finish fifth in the world in the single at the Under-23 World Rowing Championships in 2000. That stroke served him well.

After his manic minute, he could tell that they were not gaining. Point proven, for now. He moved down from top gear and the prize was a few moments taking in his surrounds. Creagh, Inishbeg, forgotten churches and old landlord houses, a glimpse into Ireland’s past. This is a stunning backdrop for the rowers, a river with a variety of currents that prepare them for all conditions at regattas. It’s a setting straight from a novel.

The river smelled different to John at this point, the earthy smell now salty. The Atlantic was closer. He heard it in the distance. The water looked and felt different. He was near the end of the river now, not too far from Sherkin Island, so it was time to turn around and head for home.

John took his time and let the quad catch up.

‘Take it easy, lads,’ he snapped, ‘it’s getting dark so quit the messing.’

They took absolutely no notice. Diarmuid just laughed.

‘We’ll race you back.’

He let them off, as the boats turned for home.

Soon, heading back up the river, he caught a glimpse of Dominic’s house to his right. He was only in there a couple of years at this stage, but this beautiful, stone-clad, two-storey building perched on a hill in Ardralla that overlooked the Ilen from the north side was already the watchtower that cast its eye over the river. It has a magnificent view from Dominic’s open-plan kitchen, sitting room and the glass-windowed conservatory that wraps around the far end of the house. They are all vantage points offering a different angle, upriver towards O’Donovan’s boatyard at Oldcourt where he worked, downriver towards Inishbeg, an island, and directly across the river, where Lough Hyne hill rises in the distance. If a boat moves on the Ilen, Dominic knows who is in it, what they are doing and how well they are doing it.

He has binoculars upstairs and downstairs. And a megaphone too – his trusty messenger that has gotten wet more times than some boats. If he spots a boat on the wrong side of the river, they will hear about it. Or if he has advice, he will offer it too. He never switches off. Ever. He either stands on the picnic bench outside the front of the house or appears out through a gap in their hedge. Dominic, his megaphone and his words of wisdom.

There were plans to trim the hedge at one point but his wife, Eleanor, prefers nature’s own look, no straight lines, so Dominic let it grow. It was over six-foot high now, as John passed it, the perfect camouflage to hide Dominic until rowers heard his voice bounce across the river.

Luck would have it, too, that his home is in line with ‘the first slip’, that is the starting point for Skibbereen rowers’ ‘pieces’, which are training races. From this point the river runs straight for almost three kilometres down to Inishbeg.

But this evening there was no megaphone. There were lights on in the house, but there was no Dominic to be seen or heard. That meant he was at the clubhouse, making sure every boat that went out had come back in.

The wind was at John’s stern now. This spin home would be faster, as he was on a speed-assisted tide. Daylight slowly fading, he rowed hard but steady, wanting to make sure that his time back to the clubhouse was minutes faster than the first half of the training spin. Stroke after stroke after stroke repeated. Before he knew it, and with a quick glance behind, he caught sight of the distant lights of the clubhouse as he rounded Newcourt corner. The Junior quad had already pulled in. Good, they’re home, he thought. Not long for him to go now. A look at his watch showed his time was quick as he eased his way into the slip. Good job. Good row.

Gary, Paul, Diarmuid and Shane were cleaning the quad. Dominic was there, all right, checking in. So was Teddy, their coach, who sensed something about his two boys. They were catching up with the Seniors all the time. And they were always hungry for their next feed of rowing.

Finished, John lifted his boat out of the water and around to the side of the boathouse. Then he rested it upside down on waiting stands, washed it with soapy water and rinsed it off with the hose until it was sparkling again. Next he carried it over his head into the boathouse and perched it in its familiar spot, inside the door to his left, on the rack closest to the water. This is where the Senior rowers keep their boats, closest to the doors. Junior rowers’ boats go to the back of the boathouse. You earn your spurs here, and the little perks that come with it.

‘We got you this evening, John; we were in first,’ Gary laughed, those wild eyes darting in John’s direction.

He smiled back. Tomorrow was another day.

2

two boys

Gary O’Donovan announced to the room that he was going to get the hatchet. He was five years old. Paul was four and quite content on his bouncing hopper ball, holding it by the ears as he bounced away. But Gary wanted it. So the hatchet was required.

There was a usual sequence to their rows: Gary picked on Paul until Paul got cross enough to retaliate and then Gary would run.

Their second cousins from Dublin were visiting on this occasion, down in West Cork for the weekend. Two girls and a boy, a couple of years older than Gary and Paul. They didn’t know their Lisheen relations too well. They were all in the sitting room when this fight broke out.

Gary shot out the door to hunt down the hatchet, but Paul stayed bouncing, while their mam, Trish, just shook her head. The cousins sat there, shocked, not knowing what was going to happen next. They didn’t know if Gary was going to return with the hatchet in order to chase Paul, or to burst the bouncing ball.

Five minutes later, the brothers were both outside in the front garden, swinging off the palm trees to the side of the house. They had buried the hatchet, so to speak, and were best buddies again.

***

In the summer of 2002, with Gary and Paul now nine and eight, their father, Teddy, surrendered to their constant badgering to take them out on the Ilen for the first time. He waited until he was sure they were hardy and strong enough.

They’d already travelled throughout the country with him to regattas and so it was clear that they had the rowing bug. In those early days, when he headed off to Fermoy, Limerick, whatever destination held a regatta, he would only take one at a time, as the two live wires together were too much of a handful – barrels of endless energy needing four eyes on them at all times.

But the interest in rowing was undoubtedly there, passed down from Teddy. He is the reason they row. The water is in his blood. His home in Lisheen isn’t far from the water. His mother’s people were fishermen. His grandfather and grand-uncle had boats. Teddy worked in a boatyard, he rowed and he coached. So it was no surprise that his boys were drawn to the water.

That summer Teddy realised that, though they were young and mad, they were ready. Still, he had some concerns: ‘If you take a young fella out in the middle of a football pitch and he gets a thump or a fall, you can pick him up in your arms. But when you are dealing with the water there is far more responsibility because if you go out, you have to get back,’ Teddy says.

The Sunday after the Irish Rowing Championships in July was the big day. Teddy milked the cows on his small dairy farm in Lisheen, numbers usually in the mid-twenties, sometimes hitting fifty. He then made the short journey back home to the small, three-bedroom bungalow that he’d built and shouted down the hall to Gary and Paul to get up. Practically before he’d finished his sentence they were sitting in the car, beeping the horn.

Ten minutes later they arrived at the rowing club. They were going to use the cox training boat, stable and ideal for beginners. Teddy caught one end of it and most of the weight, though Gary and Paul did put their arms under the other end. Together, the three of them carried it to the water. It was pointed upriver. Teddy had always been taught to go against the flow with beginners. Keep them pounding away until they get tired, then turn around and they get home faster.

The tide was low. They hopped in. This was it, their first row. Competitive as always, they almost tried to race each other in the boat, but they settled down fast. They didn’t need to be told how to row. They knew. They’d travelled enough with Teddy. After a small bit of nursing, soon they were rowing loops around the gravel bank that shows up at low tide right outside the clubhouse. Two natural-born rowers, Teddy thought.

Every Sunday morning from then on, for the rest of the summer and into the winter, the three of them went out on the Ilen. They got better and better and better.

Well before their first row, Gary and Paul already had their own rigger jiggers, the spanner that all rowers use. It is ten millimetres at one end, thirteen millimetres at the other, and it can look after every nut on a boat. Teddy had given them one each. Gary’s was spray-painted red on the thirteen millimetre end, Paul’s on the ten millimetres side, with Paul protesting that Gary got the bigger end painted because he was older. Already, he didn’t like being second. But he wouldn’t stay there for long.

Together they were a formidable team. They could rig a boat faster than any adult and there wouldn’t be a nut or a washer lost. They had the knack.

They were new to rowing but already obsessive, and Teddy wanted them at the club when an Olympic gold medallist came calling in October 2002. Great British rower Fred Scarlett was in West Cork for a private function, and was a friend of Arthur and Lydia Little, who knew him through their time at Oxford University in England. Arthur’s family owned The Eldon Hotel in the middle of town. The Eldon was Skibbereen Rowing Club’s sponsor at the time, so they organised for Fred to visit the club, have a chat with its members and bring the prized gold medal that he had won with the British Senior men’s eight at the 2000 Olympic Games in Sydney. This was big news for the club. Fred’s visit even made the local newspaper.

On a dull, grey day, that gold medal glistened. The contrast couldn’t have been any greater: a prestigious Olympic gold at this small, rural club that begged, borrowed and stole (figuratively) in order to survive.

Teddy’s two were mesmerised by the gold. Dressed in Republic of Ireland soccer gear – Gary in a grey Irish jersey and tracksuit, Paul in a white Irish polo shirt and matching white shorts – they stood either side of Fred at the entrance to the clubhouse and had their photo taken. Teddy stood beside Paul, his arm on his back. His sons, for once, looked shy. They were lost for words.

Paul wore Fred’s gold medal around his neck. It was his first time touching an Olympic medal. It felt heavy. But he wanted one. Gary too.

‘It shouldn’t really have resonated with them so much, but it did,’ Teddy says. ‘From that day on, they always believed they were going to go to the Olympics. Nothing was going to stop them.’

The boys were convinced. They made no secret of their desire to win an Olympic rowing medal. They told whoever listened: family, friends, club members, even their teachers at Lisheen National School.

It was Teddy who saw their potential and drive first. He juggled being their coach with being their father. He lit the fuse and watched it explode as they developed on the Ilen. They were competitive on and off the water. At home, he put up goalposts in the garden, in front of which they would kick ten different shades of shite out of each other, then run into the kitchen – Gary straight to the fruit, Paul to the biscuits – scoff down the food and head off out again, running each other into the ground.

On the water they wanted to race. Everything was a race. They’d race Kenneth McCarthy and John Whooley, the club’s Olympians Eugene and Richard Coakley and Timmy Harnedy, women’s crews. The boat they were against didn’t matter, but winning did. Others went for a paddle, they went for the challenge and to race.

Teddy has often wondered where that fiery competitive edge comes from. He never had that drive himself. He needed to be pushed. But his boys were different. Rowing suited them. They were built for endurance and power. They have Teddy’s broad shoulders and narrow hips, big ribcages too. Their bodies responded to rowing.

Gary was a class ahead of Paul in school. There are sixteen months between them, but they have always been stuck together. They’re two very different personalities. Gary’s more forward and lively, and Paul’s the quieter, reserved one, but they have each other’s backs. Trish remembers trying to make them more independent of one another at a young age. But when Gary was sent to playschool, Paul was outside crying to go in to him and Gary was inside crying to come back out.

In later years, the gang did swell with the addition of two more boys from the parish. Diarmuid O’Driscoll, living a two-minute drive away, was in Gary’s class and he was roped in. Soon Shane O’Driscoll, from just over the road and also in their class, joined their ranks. These were the four that formed the quad scull, four people with two oars each. That’s sculling. They were like four brothers. They’ve always had a special bond. Still do.

It was a quad that gave Teddy his proudest moment. It was the 2008 Home Internationals at Cardiff Bay that July, an annual competition between Irish, English, Scottish and Welsh rowers that, for some, is the first step towards greater things on the international scene.

Gary, Shane and Paul were in the Irish quad with Waterford rower Barrick Parker. This was their first time representing Ireland. They were kids. Paul had just turned fourteen the previous April. Gary and Shane were only a year older. They were up against Under–18s. That was the challenge.

The course was shorter than the normal 2,000 metres. The water was choppy. Teddy’s tactics were simple: fast start, settle down, then go hammer and tongs to the end line. It worked.

Gary and Paul’s mother, Trish, was there too, roaring on her boys as they beat England into second. She was frightened they’d stop short of the finishing line, like other crews had accidentally done in some of the races beforehand. But they didn’t. They won gold.

It was on the flight home from Cardiff that Trish realised she needed to start saving. For years, Gary and Paul had told her that they were going to go to the Olympics. What she saw in Cardiff made her a believer too. She went straight from the plane to Skibbereen Credit Union and started filling out cards with €2 saving stamps, planning for an Olympics.

Both Trish and Teddy, while separated for years, had the feeling that their two would achieve great things.

That Home International success sparked the first celebratory bonfire in their honour at Kilkilleen Cross, in between Gary and Paul’s home and Shane’s. It was soon to become something of a local tradition.

***

There’s a field that separates Gary and Paul’s home from Shane O’Driscoll’s. It’s the shortcut between their houses. But in rowing in September 2014 very little separated Gary and Shane in the trials to win a seat in the Irish men’s lightweight double, while Paul was the fastest and led the way.

By now Paul stood out. He was in a different league to the rest. When he was fifteen years old he was Irish Junior single sculls champion – that’s an Under–18 grade. That created a stir. He’s a freak of nature. The exception to the rule who is better than everyone else. He proved it over and over again. He was always faster than Gary. And still is. There’s no shame in that because he’s faster than everyone else too.

On the way up Shane was also faster than Gary. But by 2014 their roles had reversed. Paul was fastest in the trial, as expected. Gary was second. Shane, third. Gary had stepped up, making the jump to elite level. Paul and Gary formed the Irish double because they were quicker than everyone else. It just so happens that they’re brothers. It helps, of course, that they blend in nicely together, have similar styles and the same body composition. Also, having those years of rowing together means they both instinctively know what the other is thinking in the boat. It’s telepathy. They complement each other too. Gary has the technique and Paul has the power.

As 2015 began, the world outside Lisheen and Skibbereen Rowing Club didn’t know who Gary and Paul were. Slowly that changed. Fifth place at the European Rowing Championships was followed by fourteenth at World Rowing Cup I in Lucerne, before the 2015 World Rowing Championships at Aiguebelette-le-Lac in France. They needed a top-eleven finish there to qualify for the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro. They’d only started training together full-time in May, when they had both finished college exams. Paul was studying physiotherapy in University College Dublin and Gary was a marketing student at Cork Institute of Technology. It wasn’t ideal. They were on their own a lot.

By now Dominic was their coach. Teddy had sunk deep foundations, but he had no choice but to pass the baton on to Dominic, with whom he had previously worked, rowed and coached. Gary and Paul wanted Dominic. He’s the man behind the success of Skibbereen Rowing Club, after all. Gary and Paul wanted their freedom too. Like all teenagers growing up, they didn’t want their dad around them all the time. So, having coached them up to Junior level, including Paul’s bronze in the single scull at the 2013 World Under–23 Rowing Championships, Teddy had to step back.

‘I’m happy being their father. It probably wouldn’t have worked moving on to Senior level because they probably would have had doubts about me. It was getting difficult. It’s like a teacher teaching their own,’ Teddy admits.

Now Teddy had to shrug his shoulders and get on with it, just like he’d taught Gary and Paul how to act if they ever lost a race. He never really celebrated success or dwelled on a defeat, it was always about the next race.

Being a coach has never left Teddy. He has his own opinions on decisions made, but the fact remained – it was time for someone else to take them on.

Dominic was a part-time coach with Gary and Paul, juggling full-time work at O’Donovan’s boatyard at Oldcourt, a few miles outside Skibbereen town, and another full-time job outside of that in running the rowing club. It wasn’t ideal. But the early signs were encouraging.

At Aiguebelette, they clinched the eleventh and last Olympic qualification spot. In the B final on the Saturday morning they knew that if they didn’t finish last of the six crews, then they were going to Rio. They came fifth and beat Greece by 0.28 of a second – that was the minuscule difference between glory and failure. It was the big brother who made the difference that day. Gary got them over the line.

Paul was first to realise they’d qualified. Gary waited to see the result flash up on the big screen. When it did, they let rip. They were going to the Olympics, like they had always said they would.

There was another bonfire at Kilkilleen Cross the following Tuesday night. It was even better than the Monday night at Copper Face Jacks in Dublin, when their feet had touched down on Irish soil. There they mingled in the VIP section with the Republic of Ireland international soccer team who’d beaten Georgia 1–0 at the Aviva Stadium earlier.

But Tuesday meant more. They were home in Lisheen.

That week Trish cashed in her saving stamps. She booked nine nights in Rio for August 2016 with her partner, Mick McCabe, and Paul’s godmother, Kathleen Kiely.

Her sons were going to be Olympians. She knew what it meant to them. She saw the lives they’d lived by choice in order to realise this dream they’d shared since they were kids. It’s a monastic-like dedication, but one they don’t look on as a sacrifice. This is a calling that they love. Some love going to the cinema, some love going to a pub on the weekend; Gary and Paul – like the rest of the Skibb rowers – love going training. That’s where their friends are.

Trish understood this better than most. She used to ferry them to and from training in her small black Opel Corsa, packed with gear bags in the back and everyone squashed in like sardines in a can. When they got the Internet at home for the first time, Gary and Paul spent hours watching rowing videos from Olympics and World Championships on YouTube. Everything was rowing, rowing, rowing.

Trish had to drag them out to celebrate birthdays, sometimes almost against their will. Gary’s twenty-first in late December 2013 had been a timid affair. He didn’t want anything. Trish had to mark it somehow. She told him to call in to the West Cork Hotel in town after training for a quick bite to eat. He relented. Finishing up at the club, a session on the rowing machines, he dragged Paul with him. They met Trish and Mick. The four of them ate in the restaurant. As soon as it was over it was straight home and into bed for training in the morning. There wasn’t even time for a Guinness in the Corner Bar in town or a stop-off at their local, Minihan’s Bar in Lisheen.

Paul’s twenty-first in April 2015 was an even smaller gathering. He was studying in Dublin. Trish and Mick drove up there to surprise him. He wasn’t overly impressed and took some convincing to go for dinner. Training came first. Like Gary, he eventually relented. But it felt like a chore. The three went out and ate, then he went back to his place and into bed. It was just another day, nothing out of the ordinary.

The life of a rower is a quiet one, by choice and necessity. It is a lonely existence and, insists Dominic, you need three qualities to survive: you must be mentally strong, you must be physically strong and you must train hard.

Gary and Paul tick every box. And so does Dominic.

3

the secret is out

There’s a canvas photo hanging on Dominic’s kitchen wall that deserves a few minutes’ attention. It was a Christmas gift one year from his wife, Eleanor. She bought it from Charlie Lee, who runs Skibbereen Garden Centre. That’s where he also sells some of the photos he takes in his spare time. This particular photo is Charlie’s bestseller. Sunday 10 November 2010 is the date it was captured. He didn’t go looking for it. He left home that morning destined for Bantry, where his son was involved in a rally. Just on the Ballydehob road outside of town, heading west, he spotted a fleet of Skibb rowers making their way upriver, through the lightly hanging fog, like an armada.

They’ll turn, he thought.

By then Charlie had pulled in to the side of the road, quickly changed the lens on the camera and jumped out, just in time to fire off three quick shots as they moved downriver and past where he stood.

Snap. Snap. Snap.

In the photo, the rowers, numbering into their teens, are emerging through the morning fog. Every rower is in sync. All the oars touch the water at the same time. The white house of Liam O’Regan, former editor of TheSouthern Star, the club’s local newspaper, in the top left-hand corner adds a sense of location. It was a contemporary-looking house, ahead of its time when it was built in The Abbey. The location is unmistakeably the Ilen River, which has been a central character to Dominic’s life from the very start.

His first home was Collatrum, down the river from where he now lives in Ardralla.His father, also Dominic, was a farmer and owned sand boats, first St Anthony and then the bigger St Mary. He moved all types of cargo from the islands to the mainland. Cattle. Sheep. Gravel. Lime. And lots of sand.

It was a hard slog. Dominic Junior grew up working hard. He knew no other way. Moving sand was particularly back-breaking. They’d set off at half tide in the morning, beach the boat on the island, shovel the sand onto it, wait for the tide to come in to lift the boat, drive upriver and drop the sand off at one of the piers.

That was work. But the water was also for pleasure. He’d watch the local Ardralla crew in the fixed-seat rowing. Regattas all across West Cork on Sundays were social events, family days out. He enjoyed those. At one stage it planted the thought of setting up a Lisheen crew using the Ardralla gig. It stayed an idea. Instead, sliding-seat rowing became his great love, as he set off on his own successful rowing career. Then Eleanor Lane came along.

She is the eldest of three girls, from Townshend Street in Skibbereen, a one-way route that has produced an above-average number of Skibb rowers. There were the MacEoins in No. 49, where Richard Roycroft, himself a rower in the early days, now lives. Of the six MacEoins, five rowed – Eddie, Mairead, Seamus, Gearoid and Rita. Across the way were the O’Briens, and Patricia, Barry and Ger were all involved too. Club Captain Seanie O’Brien was also born on Townshend Street and his father ran a filling station there. Seanie’s children, David and Kate, went on to row with the club.

Next door to Seanie was T. J. Ryan, who joined the club in the 1980s as he chased the attention of a woman there. He lost that race but stayed rowing. These days T. J. is the club’s secretary and the country’s chief rowing umpire. Across from his house were the O’Donoghues, Triona, Kieran and Avril, all involved in the club at one stage. It was one street but many rowers.