Brian McEniff (born 1 December 1942) is a former Gaelic football manager, administrator and player.
McEniff played as a wing-back for the St Joseph's combination of clubs from Bundoran and Ballyshannon. He won seven Donegal Senior Football Championship titles with that combination of clubs, and another one with Réalt na Mara, when St Joseph's divided. He won two Ulster Senior Football Championship titles with the Donegal county team as player-manager in 1972 and 1974, and was awarded an All Star after the first of these, before being ousted. He returned to manage the county to a third Ulster SFC title in 1983, then left again. He returned once more in 1989, leading the county to its fourth and fifth Ulster SFC titles in 1990 and 1992, as well as the All-Ireland Senior Football Championship in the last of these. After becoming chairman of the county board, McEniff was unable to find a manager so did the job himself for a final time, reaching the 2003 All-Ireland SFC semi-final in his last term as senior manager of the county team.
McEniff managed his county during four successive decades, earning a reputation as the dean of Donegal football.[3] In July 1992, Hogan Stand described McEniff as "one of the most successful football gurus in modern-day GAA history" and he has been likened to a footballing Godfather-type figure.[4][5] Until 2011, he was directly involved in each of his county's Ulster SFC and All-Ireland SFC title wins. That year, Jim McGuinness (whom McEniff had recommended for the under-21 managerial role the previous year) won the first of the post-McEniff Ulster SFC titles. Declan Bonner, who won his first Ulster SFC title as manager in 2018, also regards McEniff as a mentor. Both McGuinness and Bonner played under McEniff when McEniff was Donegal manager.
He was also player-manager of the 1974 Ulster SFC winning team.[11][12] He was wing-back in the final as Donegal defeated Down.[9]
Management career
In 1975, the Donegal County Board ousted McEniff as manager.[11][13]
In 1975, he assisted as a mentor the Sligo county team that won that county's second Connacht Senior Football Championship title.[1][11] Upon being made aware that he would be taking charge of Sligo's training sessions, Barnes Murphy, the team captain, talked to McEniff.[14] Murphy brought McEniff to Croke Park for the 1975 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship semi-final against Kerry ("although some of our friends in Sligo weren't too happy about that", Murphy told The Irish Times in 2007).[14] McEniff, according to Murphy, could not provide advice to the team at half-time: "And I can tell you why, because they [Murphy had also brought along John "Tull" Dunne] were snubbed. They wanted to make a few changes, and I was wondering where these men where, to give us some advice".[14] Sligo were routed by The Kingdom, 3–13 to 0–5.[14]
"Brian was a colossus in Donegal football because he was forward thinking. He would have united the clubs in Donegal, who at that point would have been killing one another, even at county level players wouldn't pass. There was no rapport or bonding or anything like that, but Brian worked on that. He got the players together, he really was very skilled at man management, he brought the group together".
He later returned as Donegal manager, for the first time as a non-playing member of the team.[11] He was manager in 1977.[15] He was manager again by late 1982.[15] He led Donegal to a third Ulster SFC title in 1983.[12] They narrowly lost to Galway in the 1983 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship semi-final.[9]
He left again.
He began to manage the Ulster provincial football team, with which he won 12 Railway Cup finals.[11][10] He managed Ulster for 23 years, until 2008.[16]He managed them from 1983 to 2007.[clarification needed]McEniff stood down from his position as Ulster manager in 2007, 25 years after taking the job in 1982.[clarification needed] He woon 14 titles.[17]
He helped Tyrone club Carrickmore, where his mother was from, when they were struggling against relegation in 1983 and 1986.[7]
McEniff returned as Donegal manager in 1989, succeeding Tom Conaghan.[18][19] He led the county to another Ulster SFC title in 1990, restoring such as Declan Bonner, Manus Boyle, Matt Gallagher, Barry McGowan and Sylvester Maguire, players that Conaghan had thrown by the wayside.[19] McEniff's success in Gaelic games culminated when he led his native Donegal team to glory over Dublin at Croke Park in the 1992 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship final.[20][21] It was shortly before this match that McEniff was informed that the brother of one of his players Joyce McMullin, had died from cancer.[21] He chose not to inform McMullin or anyone else on the team until after the match.[21] McEniff later described it as follows: "Everything had gone so smoothly but when I heard that I was knocked for six. Luckily, the lads were outside watching a bit of the minor match. I stamped up and down before deciding that Gerard would have wanted Joyce to play. When the team came back, they could see something was wrong with me, but I managed to hold it together".[21] It later emerged that there had been a miscommunication, and that McMullin's brother had not died.[21] He did so a year later.[21]
McEniff resigned on 26 June 1994 and was succeeded by P. J. McGowan the following month.[22]
He soon returned for a last outing as Donegal manager. He was chairman of the Donegal County Board in late 2002, but could not find a manager, so he did it himself.[11] McGowan, Michael Oliver McIntyre and Anthony Harkin were part of his backroom team.[26] In 2003, he led Donegal to the All-Ireland SFC semi-final.[9] This was the last occasion on which they would achieve this feat until the time of the legendary Jim McGuinness. McEniff left Donegal inter-county management in 2005 after a fifth and final tenure in charge ended with a drab qualifier defeat to Cavan at Breffni Park.[27][28] During his final time as manager, McEniff called such players as Neil Gallagher, Rory Kavanagh, Karl Lacey and Eamon McGee into the senior county team for the first time, in late 2003.[26]
Personal connections formed a critical part of McEniff's management style, so much so that when Declan Bonner brought his wife to Austria on their honeymoon McEniff maintained regular contact.[37]
Other ventures
Involved in Gaelic games administration in County Donegal, McEniff also spent time as Donegal's GAA Central Council delegate.[16] He served on national Gaelic games committees.[16] He has also been a referee.[38] He is Managing Director of the McEniff Hotel Group, which has a presence in such locations as Bundoran, Drumcondra, Sligo, Rosses Point and Westport, County Mayo.[39] Its portfolio includes the Holyrood Hotel (originally bought by his father John in 1951) and the Great Northern Hotel & Golf links (bought from CIÉ in 1977 by Brian and Sean McEniff and Brian's brother-in-law Michael Burke for £125,000).[citation needed] In 1969, McEniff bought the Hamilton Hotel, which was next door to the Holyrood Hotel.[citation needed]
McEniff is married to Cautie.[42] Her real name is Catherine (née O'Leary), a native of Cork.[8] He met her in Canada and married her there.[8]
Health
In later life McEniff developed a bad back. During his appearance on Up for the Match ahead of the 2012 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship final, McEniff was visibly stiff, awkward and in some pain. This may have been caused by his propensity to tuck his suit jacket into his trousers. One day after undergoing surgery on his back, he attended the 2012 All Stars Awards in Dublin—at which All-Ireland SFC champions Donegal received eight places out of a possible fifteen on the All Stars Team of the Year, and Karl Lacey was named All Stars Footballer of the Year—saying "I wouldn't miss this for the world."[43]
In January 2018, McEniff was inducted into the Donegal Sports Star Awards' Hall of Fame, with Donegal Sports Star Awards chairman Neil Martin quoted as saying: "As a committee we were unanimous when the name of Brian McEniff was proposed for 2017 Hall of Fame".[8]
On 19 April 2018, McEniff was presented with an All-Ireland Lifetime Achievement Award at the All-Ireland Business Summit.[48]
GAA Writers' Hall of Fame Award, received in May 2022, alongside Len Gaynor, who received the equivalent in hurling[50][51]
References
^ abc"Mickey Kearins had magic in his boots". The Sligo Champion. 15 July 2015. Retrieved 15 July 2015. But when asked who was the greatest defender he played against, he unhesitatingly plumps for hotelier Brian McEniff who was a mentor to the Yeats County in 1975. 'He would not foul you but he could get his hand or foot in and could knock the ball away from you as we was also very fit'.
^ abcdHeaney, Paddy (25 November 2013). "The life of Brian". The Irish News. Retrieved 25 November 2013. 'All of the boys — except myself, I went to a boarding school in Monaghan — were from De La Salle'… The hotelier cites his own club…
^Duggan, Keith (3 February 2003). "Meehan adds spark to Galway attack". The Irish Times. Brian McEniff, the dean of the Donegal game who yesterday returned to take charge of his county for the fourth successive decade, could but watch as Galway raced away in the first five minutes.
^"Reid, Donal". Hogan Stand. 31 July 1992. Brian McEniff, soon to be installed as one of the most successful football gurus in modern-day GAA history.
^ abc"Kerry GAA godfather Mick O'Dwyer won't disappear in retirement". Belfast Telegraph. 22 January 2014. Retrieved 22 January 2014. We expect to see him cropping up in some county as the Championship approaches, much like Brian McEniff suddenly appeared in Peter Fitzpatrick's Louth backroom team in 2010 when they were robbed of the Leinster Championship. Old Godfathers never really retire you see, they just become advisers. The lure of the game was too much for McEniff last year, who stepped in to become manager of his club Bundoran when they were faced with a crisis, digging out an old pair of trainers that he thought he might never wear again.
^ abcdeCrowe, Dermot (26 May 2013). "History on both sides of divide". Sunday Independent. Retrieved 26 May 2013. McEniff was chairman of the appointments committee that brought McGuinness in as under-21 manager after he had been overlooked initially for the senior post.
^ abcdefCampbell, Peter (15 July 2008). "Donegal heroes of 1983". Donegal Democrat. Archived from the original on 18 December 2015. Retrieved 15 July 2008. The 24th of July 1983 was one of the better days for Donegal football. Their third Ulster final victory with Seamus Bonnar making history picking up his third medal. Later in the year Martin McHugh would become the county's third All-Star while Brian McEniff was manager for the third time also… There was also a good deal of experience with the aforementioned Seamus Bonnar involved in the 1972 and '74 wins…
^Heaney, Paddy (27 August 2013). "Will Jim be back?". The Irish News. Retrieved 27 August 2013. So why was McEniff with Sligo in '75? the answer is simple. the Donegal County Board ousted him.
^ abcO'Connell, Cian (19 July 2017). "Paul McGettigan served Donegal and Galway". Retrieved 19 July 2017. 'Brian McEniff then asked me to come back towards the end of 1982, the beginning of 1983 with Donegal. He was also open to new ideas, he was involved in the '72 Donegal team which incidentally was the first Donegal team to win an Ulster. He was player-manager in 1974 in my first year and he was manager the year I was shafted [1977], but had nothing to do with Brian McEniff'… 'I went to Galway, a very, very good Donegal team was broken up'. Donegal didn't truly recover until the early 1980s again according to McGettigan. 'They didn't recover until Brian went back in 1983 as manager again'.
^Sharkey, Conor (19 July 2019). "The way we were: 25 years ago – July 20, 1994: McGowan new Donegal manager". Donegal News. Forty-two-year-old PJ McGowan from Ballybofey has been appointed manager… He succeeds Brian McEniff who resigned from the post on June 26 and will be in charge of the team for three years.
^ ab"Ireland take series with emphatic win". RTÉ Sport. 19 October 2001. Brian McEniff ended his tenure as Ireland manager with a comprehensive 71–52 victory over Australia to take the International Rules series at Adelaide's Football Park this afternoon.
^Boyle, Donnchadh (1 October 2014). "'Unfinished business' could sway Donegal decision for McGuinness". Irish Independent. Retrieved 1 October 2014. McEniff… has known McGuinness since he was a teenager… 'I took him in as a 19-year-old, and when the then-county chairman asked me to appoint an U-21 manager, I appointed Jim. So I have a great interest in Jim… There is a suggestion that I made, but Jim is not keen on, that some of the senior players… should take the first part of the year off and come the spring, they will have the appetite… Jim's not like that, but I recommended that to him'.
^McNulty, Chris (22 September 2017). "Declan Bonner: It'll be 'all or nothing' for Donegal's 'half mad' new manager". Retrieved 22 September 2017. On the day of his 32nd birthday, on August 11, 1997, a flu-ridden Declan Bonner sat nervously in Jackson's Hotel, Ballybofey… McEniff… remains a close mentor of the Lettermacaward man.
^McNulty, Chris (22 September 2017). "Declan Bonner: It'll be 'all or nothing' for Donegal's 'half mad' new manager". Retrieved 22 September 2017. McEniff… remains a close mentor of the Lettermacaward man… The personal touch was always important to McEniff… 'In the days long before mobiles Brian was always on the phone. He was always ringing the house to make sure this was done or that was done.
^Tunney, Paddy (24 October 2006). "Mc Larnon Cup 1978–79". Archived from the original on 24 October 2006. On the first Saturday in December we travelled to Fr Tierney Park to take on De La Salle, Ballyshannon. It had snowed and in very treacherous conditions we recorded our third win with 0–3 to 0–2 score line. Brian McEniff was the referee that day.
^"Brian McEniff honoured by the Gaelic Writers' Association". Now well beyond the age most GAA stalwarts retire he still serves as Chairman of Realt na Mara and can be found almost every Saturday outside SuperValu, Bundoran selling Bunotto.
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