O'Rourke made his debut on the inter-county scene when he was picked for the Meath minor team. He later joined the under-21 side but enjoyed little success in these grades. O'Rourke made his senior debut during the 1975-76 league. Over the course of the next twenty years he was a regular member of the starting fifteen and won back-to-back All-Ireland medals in 1987 and 1988. He also won five Leinster medals, three National Football League medals and was named Footballer of the Year in 1991. O'Rourke played his last game for Meath in July 1995.
In retirement from playing O'Rourke combined his teaching career with a new position as a sports broadcaster. His media career began with RTÉ where he has worked as a studio analyst with the flagship programme The Sunday Game for over twenty-five years. O'Rourke also writes a weekly column for the Sunday Independent.
Early and family life
Despite becoming a Meath county footballer, O'Rourke is not a Meathman by birth; he was born in the small parish of Aughavas within County Leitrim.[4] He moved with his family as a youngster from County Leitrim to County Meath
O'Rourke's son Shane also played with the Meath senior football team, while his nephew Paddy played as a goalkeeper for Meath.[citation needed]
O'Rourke received three All-Star for Meath in 1983, 1988 and 1991. His performance, playing with a bandaged knee, in the Dublin-Meath matches of the summer of 1991 are still recounted in Meath.[citation needed] When playing for Meath he was part of a full forward line of himself, Brian Stafford and Bernard Flynn, often considered to be one of the best full-forward lines of all time.
In May 2020, O'Rourke was included in the Irish Independent's "Top 20 footballers in Ireland over the past 50 years", where he was regarded as inferior to such players as Donegal's Michael Murphy and Tyrone's Seán Cavanagh.[6]
Management career
O'Rourke has managed Simonstown Gaels GFC in Navan, guiding them to two Meath Senior Football Finals in 2003 and 2004, only for the team to lose on both occasions. He also guided the club to its first adult title in 2005 when it won the Meath Football League Division 1.
He led Simonstown Gaels to their very first Senior Championship in 2016 and then again in 2017.
He returned as Simonstown manager for a fourth stint in November 2020, hinting that this would be his last managerial job.[7][8]
O'Rourke managed Ireland's team that competed in the Compromise Rules competition on two outings, 1998 and 1999.
He ruled himself out of contention to replace Andy McEntee as county team manager in 2022, stating: "My beautiful wife Patricia has a very negative view toward managing the county team and with good reason when you see the upshot of Andy McEntee going and the social media abuse that has taken place. People who put in enormous time at their own expense - it's not like Pep Guardiola getting £15m a year - and then being subjected to that sort of thing by unnamed people. I can't understand how, in a society, we can allow people to abuse others without having given their name and address. It's just a shocking indictment of society in general".[9]
In July 2022, O'Rourke was confirmed as the new manager of the Meath senior football team.[10] O'Rourke led Meath to win the 2023 Tailteann Cup, the second-tier Gaelic football competition, after defeating Down on a scoreline of 2–13 to 0–14.[11]
Teaching
For 42 years O'Rourke worked at St Patrick's Classical School in Navan, first as a teacher, then later as principal. He also trained the school's Gaelic football team, managing them to numerous successes at provincial and national levels.[12] In October 2022, O'Rourke announced that he would be retiring as principal to focus on his role as manager of the Meath senior inter-county men's team.[13]
Despite his classical education, he has been known to mix up his Latin with his Greek in public.[14][15]
During the COVID-19 pandemic in the Republic of Ireland, he voiced his disagreement with the then education minister Joe McHugh's plan to delay the Leaving Cert until July as well as his plans to socially distance it. He voiced his concerns on how this would be feasible and on the safety of teachers overseeing the exam.[16][17]
^ abc"Hills are alive with the sound of anger - GAA absolutely right to demand an explanation for us peasants on the ground". Sunday Independent. 23 August 2020. Retrieved 23 August 2020. Finals in empty grounds, no parties afterwards for winners or losers, no homecomings with a junior, intermediate or senior cup. The sort of stuff we peasants live for… In the midst of this absolute confusion, it is just as well there is no election or the Government would surely be replaced. Then we could have Sinn Féin. In the new Utopia, nobody would have to work, the dole would be extra generous and everyone, whether you wanted to work or not, would get a free house… A land of milk and honey, except there would be no cows.
^McGinn, Padraig: Carrick-on-Shannon (4 August 2019). "Letters to the Editor: Meath legend Colm waxes lyrical". Sunday Independent. I remember Colm O'Rourke as a magnificent Meath county footballer... Did you see last week where he referred to 'the Greek poet Horace', assisting those of us who are too old by translating the Latin quotation into English? ... Horace a Roman citizen, wrote in Latin. Homer was the Greek poet. Good luck to Meath at the weekend.
^"Great opportunity missed this year to alter provincial championship for the better". Sunday Independent. 30 August 2020. Retrieved 30 August 2020. [An]n almighty storm is created around an EU commissioner and he is hounded out of office... We need good people in big jobs. It is not a popularity contest... Arrogance is not a mortal sin. We would be better off with Hogan on the pitch fighting the European case, and by extension the Irish cause... the constant rage was a bit over the top. Original title in print edition was "Time is right to flip season on its head".