Curran's career spanned four decades, with performances at minor, senior and club levels in 1989, 1990, 2003, 2004 and 2013.[citation needed] He also captained the Roscommon Junior Team to All Ireland success in 2000.[citation needed] He won two Connacht club senior football medals, in 2011 and 2012.[citation needed]
Curran was featured in an episode of TG4's Laochra Gael documentary series in January 2021.[2]
Sports
Football
With Roscommon, he won a Connacht Minor Football Championship medal in 1989. He made his senior championship debut with Roscommon as a forward in 1991, however, he was injured early on in the game. He played in the 1992 Connacht Senior Football Championship but couldn't help his side from a heavy loss to Mayo. He drifted away from intercounty football for the next few seasons after the loss,[tone] but played in both the 1994 and 1997 championships.[citation needed]
He returned to the senior set-up in 2001 making his first championship appearance in four years in the Connacht Senior Football Championship opening round game against New York. He was sent off during the game and failed to regain the starting spot as Roscommon won a first Connacht title since 1991.[citation needed]
In 2003, he was made captain of the side by new manager Tommy Carr. While Roscommon lost out to Galway in Connacht, they beat Cork and Leitrim in the qualifiers. After two games needing extra time against Offaly and Kildare, Roscommon qualified for an All-Ireland quarter-final with Kerry. It was Roscommon's first game in Croke Park since 1991, and despite scoring three goals they came up short[tone] on a 1-21 to 3-10 scoreline.[citation needed]
Curran was also the goalkeeper with Athlone Town FC in the League of Ireland.[citation needed] He retired from association football in 1997 to devote his sporting time to Gaelic football.[citation needed]
Business
Since retiring from inter-county football, Curran has set up a number of businesses.[citation needed] He was commissioned by the GAA games department to contribute to the development of a kicking tee for use in Gaelic football.[citation needed] His design became the one most goalkeepers went on to use.[3] Curran was "involved in producing the Puntee", for use by goalkeepers in kick-outs, as a means of "reducing goalkeeping injuries".[4]
Curran also co-founded a flood defense company, Global Flood Solutions, in 2009.[5][6] This company has entered into several contracts internationally.[6]
Politics
Curran stood unsuccessfully in the 2016 general election as a Fianna Fáil candidate in the Roscommon–Galway constituency.[7][8] He received approximately two thousand first presence votes (4%), and was eliminated on the seventh count.[9]
Holds championship record for being the only goalkeeper in GAA history to score 1 goal and 1 point in a championship match and finish top scorer.[citation needed] He received the Irish Independent "May Player of the Month" for the same achievement.[citation needed]
^ ab"Man who saved for Roscommon wants to save Roscommon". irishtimes.com. Irish Times. 22 February 2016. Retrieved 18 October 2021. In 2009, Curran co-founded Global Flood Solutions which has won international contracts to deal with flood relief