It might rally our troops before the battle!

http://www.independent.ie/opinion/colum ... html?r=RSS"To be fair, there wouldn't have been an awful lot of bitterness between the counties. Even though the football wasn't for the faint-hearted, the supporters would have been fairly gracious to one another.
"Maybe up around the North County Dublin, you might get a bit of it (bitterness). But I think, in general, it's good and healthy. Tough mind, very tough. But I often go down to Offaly and the rivalry between them and Westmeath would be bitter stuff."
Jasus LS, you had me so psyched up after reading that, I'm just after bursting out through the office door, throwing a few shoulders at my colleagues and roaring "c'mon the faithful!!"Lone Shark wrote:Being honest, neither of these two teams are going to win the All Ireland. One is an Offaly team that is carrying serious uncertainty in key areas of the field and lacks experience, the other is a Westmeath team, so that says it all by itself.
What is true is that to a big chunk of this county, this is the most important game we will play this year. I'm a sceptic when it comes to how much tradition counts for in games - I don't think it matters a jot what teams fifty years ago did. What does matter is the strength of your spine, the depth of your character and your willingness to go that extra yard. It is based on this that Offaly have achieved what they have on the fields of Gaelic Games, and it is a spirit of instinctive competitiveness and pride of place that is bred into each and every one of us. Some choose to discard it by moving up to the city and ignoring their past and developing a D4 accent, others of us thank God for our Biffo roots every day, whether we wake up in Rhode, Walsh Island or Rhode Island and it is people like these that pass on the torch of what it means to be an Offaly native from generation to generation. It is no coincidence that the Offaly Associations in London, Dublin and New York continue to thrive when most of the others have fallen by the wayside - being fom Offaly matters and we know it, the residents and the ex pats alike.
The world is full of people who think they are individuals, but ultimately are no different to many others. We are something else - we are a breed of our own, not individuals, but one gloriously individual community. We are not midlanders, which is a generic term used when talking of people from Laois, Longford or Westmeath - we are the Biffs. We are a unique culture, hewn out our unique landscape and united by a common love of that place and the people around us in all of our towns and villages. Unlike the east coast, we don't need to ape a bigger culture to feel proud of who we are. Unlike the west coast, we don't need to live up to the stereotype and go around having impromptu music sessions in pubs and developing piercing leprechaun like shouts. We are Biffs. We don't need any more.
There is no natural selection - we are not now, nor never were, any more endowed with natural gifts than the men in our neighbouring counties, men who look at their sparse histories of occasional success amidst sustained mediocrity and weep at what we have achieved. We did not win All Ireland and Leinster titles through any magic, but by being brought up in a community that cared about where we came from and wanted to do something for it.
On Saturday our footballers go out with that community not dependant on them, but driving them on. I do not ask that our players fight harder than Westmeath for every ball, because I know I don't need to. It is who we are. We may or may not win, but I believe that if every player spends thirty seconds before the game looking into his soul and calling, nay demanding that he do justice to the nurturing he received in our homeland, we will once again remind our neighbours to the north why we are who we are and why they can only aspire to maintaining a comfortable spot in our shadow.
The blood tingles at the prospect. Roll on Saturday.