Paul O'Mahony, 07 Sep 1994
Some catch a
glimpse of him carrying a bag of footballs over his shoulders; others
observe him as a miniature five-feet-one-and-a-half version of Jack
Charlton who is constantly there at his manager’s side – yet few truly
understand the nature of what Charlie O’Leary does for a living.
Fools
might demean its worth as an occupation for a grown man, while the
envious would give their left testicles to be in such a position.
Because Charlie O’Leary is the Equipment Officer to the Irish soccer
squad. The Kitman.
Although no formal
qualifications are required for the job, Charlie’s experience is clearly
relevant. He is steeped in football. From 1955 to 1974 he was a
FIFA-listed referee, during a stint which took in the FAI Cup Final of
’72-’73 between Cork Hibernians and Waterford (Miah Dennehy, I remember
him well!). He subsequently went on to become a Referees Inspector with
the League Of Ireland, had a brief spell as Secretary of Shelbourne FC
during the tenure of Liam Tuohy, and legislator with the Leinster Junior
League. All of these activities played a part in landing the job as the
FAI’s liaison man for visiting teams to Ireland for Charlie. Then came
the lucky break.
“I was looking after the
Wales team, Ian Rush and all, and I got on well with them,” he explains.
“While they were in the pavilion in Lansdowne before the actual game I
had to get the balls pumped up, and when I went in to Mick Byrne (Irish
physio) to get the pump, Jack Charlton – whom I’d refereed when he
played for Leeds against an all-Ireland selection – remembered me and
said ‘What’s he doing here?’ and Mick said ‘He’s a traitor, he looks
after the visiting teams!’ So then Jack said ‘Who does that for us?’ and
Mick replied ‘Nobody’. So the following match I got a call from Mick
and that’s when it began.”
With Ireland’s
qualifying and friendly games usually on a Wednesday, Charlie O’Leary’s
pre-match build-up begins the week before. “I’d make sure the training
gear is laundered and pack that separately,” he explains. “The match
gear would arrive a few days before the game, long-sleeve and
short-sleeve jerseys for each player, to allow for preference.” And the
destination of the unused jersey? “Well, he either keeps it or swaps it
with one of the opposition,” he adds, “but the players are always very
generous with various charities looking for signed jerseys, or whatever.
“Some
people think that when you’re preparing for the match that the only
thing you take with you is nicks, stockings, jerseys and tracksuits,”
continues Charlie, “but there is an awful lot more. The players might
give you their boots to bring, you’ve got to bring shinpads, the various
different sets of studs. Every time they go to a session you’ve got to
care for twenty footballs, properly inflated, and supply inside soles as
well because there’s rarely a match somebody isn’t looking for them.”
In
the high pressure build-up to a key game, Charlie doesn’t go to the
ground in advance of the squad to set up the kit and necessaries. “Our
lads like to get their nicks, socks and jerseys into the hotel before we
leave. Nine out of ten of them will put their jersey on then, under the
tracksuit, to get the feel of it. When they get to the ground, they’ll
remove the jersey and I’ll give them a warm-up top for going out on the
pitch, and when they come back in they’ll change into the jersey again.
“It
seems to me that the players love to get the feel of a jersey, but I’m
in a position where the boss gives me the numbers before anybody, so I
can’t give them the jerseys until I know who’s playing. Liam Brady,
though, would wear the jersey going around if it was given after
breakfast, just to get the feel of it! They especially seem to like to
get the shoulder and chest area of it lovely and loose.”
Of
necessity, he likes to keep himself in shape for the job in hand. “I
was always very fond of training,” he explains. “Even when I’d retired
from refereeing, I was training three nights a week. Hard training. When
I was with Shelbourne I found the job took too much of my time and I
never went back to training. I always try to keep myself fit by walking.
During squad sessions for the lads, though, you’re chasing the ball to
keep them supplied all the time. At all times, Jack wants at least
twenty balls on the field and if one goes out, he wants it back
immediately.
“For home matches, I’d have to
bring three balls for the match itself, and let the ref check them,” he
explains. “Before the match, but after the warm-up, one or two of the
lads might prefer a shower before the game. Then I get into the hard
work, with the lads saying ‘Charlie, long studs!’, ‘Charlie, short
studs!’. You’d want about four hands at that time, and it happens
because maybe the weather has changed or the groundsmen might have cut
the ground a bit shorter than they thought. I do the studs with pliers –
they’re much better than anything else, but I always let them do the
final twist because each fella has his own preference.”
“Under
normal circumstances,” he adds, “the players bring their own boots to
training and to the matches, but, like in the USA, I looked after all
their boots in a case.”
Has he heard the
players’ views on what makes a good boot? “Oh, I’ve seen players with
five separate makes of boots and, I suppose it’s like anyone, you get
fond of a pair of shoes. Ray Houghton, for example, puts his boots into a
washing basin before a match, lukewarm water, and puts them on then.
It’s the boot they fall in love with. They’d nearly cry if they forgot
that pair of boots! The perfect fit. No-one touches them!”
In
the heat of the American summer, did the Irish lads wear screw-in or
moulded studs? “The funny thing about that,” he explains, “is that the
professional player is not too happy in the course of a match to wear
moulded studs. As you point out, it’s a physical game and some of them
feel they have protection on the feet. In the States, the grass took a
stud, beautiful. If you had the same weather here it’d be like concrete
and you’d wear the moulded. Most of the lads wore short screw-ins during
the World Cup.”
Half-time is also critical
for Charlie. “There’s a private joke about that,” he laughs. “About
seven or eight minutes before half-time I go to get the tea and water
ready and if there’s no sign of a score someone, maybe one of the
reserves, will say ‘Charlie, are ye not going to get the tea ready?!’
because I have rarely, if ever, seen Ireland score the first goal.
Nearly every time I go in, they’ll score! It’ll be either going in to
prepare the tea, or getting an injured player to the dressing-room!”
During
the last game against Holland in the World Cup, Charlie admits that
afterwards both he and the lads were “just flattened”. All felt the team
could’ve progressed. What was it like in the dressing-room? “Jack was
great. He did his best to take the onus off everybody and let’s get on
with it. Very positive in his approach. After the game he went around to
everybody and tried to lift their spirits. He was smashing, but they
were bitterly disappointed.”
Some managers are
passionate shouters, others adopt a cool, stern approach. What about
Jack in match situations? “Well, I’ve been connected with teams where,
as soon as the manager turns away, players talk behind his back,”
explains Charlie. “I’ve never seen or heard anything like that about
Jack. They’ve total respect for him. I mean, he’s unbelievable the way
he can assess a game. He’ll see a team and tell our lads that that’s the
way the others play and if you do this then you’ll commit hara-kiri.
Every time he says that it comes true, and they really believe him now.
Even when we’re winning and it’s half-time, there’s no better man to
assess the situation. And I’ve never seen him lose his temper with them.
He’s very positive and constructive at all times.”
As
we all know, there were several areas of conflict between Ireland and
FIFA resulting from the World Cup, the infamous substitution incident
and water problems to name but two. The fact that Ireland had to do a
swift kit-change minutes before kick-off for the Italian match was
another.
“I always check which kit we’re to
wear with Sean Connolly (FAI) and the day before I said ‘Sean, you’re
positive we’re wearing white-green-white?’ and he said ‘Yes.’ So I’m
packin’ the gear and Maurice Price (FAI) says to me ‘what are you
packing green for?’ and I said never take a chance, and put that
green-white-green kit in the bottom of the bag and put another set of
green jerseys in to be presented to UNICEF.
“So
there we are kitted out and ready to go out when Donie Butler says to
me ‘Charlie, I think the Italians are wearing white’ and I said ‘they
can’t be, they’re wearing blue’. So we sent for the FIFA man and he said
‘I’m sorry, you’ll have to change!’. I had the spare kit in the bottom
of the bag, so we did! Interestingly enough, the lads said afterwards
that while it wasn’t my fault, and I think the Italians tried to pull a
stroke they’re so powerful, the lads said ‘Charlie, you worked a miracle
because it took the pressure off us’, meaning that while we were
changing the Italians were left standing in the sun! We’d no standing
around and all of a sudden the game was on.”
Why,
though, did Ireland have to wear white for the other three games? “I
couldn’t understand why we had to wear all-white for the Mexico game,
and they were wearing white nicks too. So we went through the FIFA man’s
check again and I said to him ‘what about the white nicks?’ and said
‘go ahead’. Then Jack says ‘I’m sorry, I want that in writing’, so I got
it in writing. For the third game against Norway, we were in white, and
again for the Dutch match! But I got it in writing from the FIFA man. I
can’t give you the reasons why because FIFA don’t tell me why, but it
seems we were the away team every time! I could only go with the
directions I was issued with.”
With white
rapidly becoming our ‘unlucky’ colour, how did the players feel? “Nobody
said that but I feel, like you, that green is the national colour and
you should be wearing your national colour. When I saw the lads on the
pitch against Mexico in all-white I said to myself ‘what’s that got to
do with Ireland?’ and felt a bit upset, but it wasn’t my position to
ask.”
Although the US was an experience
Charlie would not have missed, Euro ’88 remains a high point. “It was
absolutely brilliant in every respect. It was all new to everybody and
the organisation in Germany was brilliant. From my position, being new
to it, I brought enough gear for four training sessions! When I went to
Germany, though, I could’ve used nearly the same set for the afternoon
session because the laundry was right beside us and you’d bring it in
and it’d come out pressed and everything. Everything in Germany was
unbelievable. You asked for footballs, you got a lorry load!
“Italy
was the opposite. The hotels, other than in Genoa, were not for a
national team. The travel, the lack of co-operation from the Italian
people. There was an occasion when the lads had to load the bus
themselves because they wouldn’t give us any help! And you’d nearly have
to go down on your hands and knees to beg for them to do the laundry
for you!
“America was organised, but the
humidity was a real problem. And the size of the dressing-rooms and
facilities were hard to believe. They could’ve been thirty times the
size of the Lansdowne dressing-room, but I’d sooner have a small,
private area.”
And did he make use of Jack’s
private bar? “No, I’m a pioneer. Never drank or smoked. I don’t think
anyone fell for that ‘con’ trick. He said there was a bar in the room
and they could come down, but they were too cute for that!”
Citing
the audience with the Pope in 1990 with the squad as his best moment,
Charlie also keeps the defeats of England in ’88 and of Italy this year
as treasured memories. Yet, for all the achievements and deadly
seriousness of international competition, levity can be a vital relief.
“We
had a great laugh in Orlando during a pool game when I was up against
Gary Kelly and all the lads were shouting for me. All of a sudden I’m
their hero. Poor Gary, a lovely quiet lad! But there was also a time
when we were in Finnstown House preparing to go to Germany in ’88 and
Jack decided to run a snooker competition. Now, John Aldridge is one of
the better players and I’m hopeless, can hardly reach the table, and
we’re up against each other just before teatime and so all the lads were
there.
“So Jack says ‘I’ll bet a pound the
little fella doesn’t even pocket one ball!’, and one of the lads took a
bet on me. Aldo takes a shot and it hangs over the pocket like you’d be
afraid to breathe on it. Just as I’m about to shoot Jack says ‘If you
pot that ball you’re not coming to Germany!’. So, I let fly at it and it
shot back off the cushions and up the table and Jack put his arm around
me laughing and we hugged each other, only to turn around to see the
ball in the far pocket! There was a bit of suspicion that one of the
lads threw it down so Jack couldn’t take the pound!”
On
the bench throughout the games, Charlie is also in a position to gauge
the increasing popularity of various players such as Gary Kelly, Phil
Babb and Jason ‘Trigger’ MacAteer, for example. “Yes, but the crowd can
be finicky,” he suggests. “Yesterday’s star may no longer be that two
days later. Younger players might become pop stars with the female
followers, but the older players will remind them to prove themselves
first. There’s never any shouting, just a quiet word. Jack would never
say anything, but the older players might. I’ve no fears for those three
lads, though.”
The notorious ‘homecoming
celebrations’ in the Phoenix Park. Charlie O’Leary, key man that he is
in the Ireland set-up, was not introduced to the crowd. Was he there?
“I
was there alright,” he explains, “but you must remember that event was a
hurried thing and Pat Kenny as MC was given a list. I’m not introduced.
After it was over, myself and my wife were going into the reception
tent when Aidan Doyle, Opel’s number two man, comes over to me and puts
his arm around me and says ‘Charlie, thanks for everything. You were
effin’ marvellous over there!’. So I said ‘Thanks, Aidan, but I don’t
think your man up there recognises it like that’, and he said ‘I do’.
“Then
I went over to get a cup of tea and Pat, Jack’s wife, comes over and
says ‘Charlie, I really felt for you’, and I said ‘do you know what I
do? Does Jack?’ and she said ‘Of course, certainly’ and I said ‘You
know, Jack knows, the players know. End of story’. In fairness, on the
bus to the helicopter Jack said ‘Charlie, I didn’t write that script
but, if I had, you would’ve been the first name on it’. Mind you, I
heard that the next day calls came into Pat Kenny’s radio show about it
and, credit to him, my name wasn’t on his list and, on top of that, I
believe he was more than complimentary to me on the radio, so I got more
spoken about me!
“Once the lads and Jack
knew, that’s what mattered. The young kids in the Park, whom I respect,
really weren’t interested in Charlie O’Leary. They were only concerned
with the players.”
But you’re just as photogenic as the rest of them, Charlie.
Paul O'Mahony