Crescent: good excuse for a party
Crescent College Comprehensive has won the Munster Schools Junior Rugby Cup for the second year running. It clinched the title in a thrilling win over Ard Scoil Ris 22-3, all the scores coming in the second half. Fifty years earlier to the very day, on 23rd of March 1961, Crescent had achieved a similar result when winning the same piece of silverware in a final against their sister college Mungret. Several of that 1961 team were present at this year’s game in the company of their coach & trainer, Fr. Jim Moran S.J., to relive 50-year-old memories and rejoice with the present generation of Crescentians. The misgivings stirred by the 1972 move of the school from the city centre to Dooradoyle have long been laid to rest. But the jubilee victory was a good excuse for a party. Read more.
The euphoria of seeing the 2011 side triumph prompted the idea of a reunion. Although four of the team – Brian Reddan, Dermot Sheridan, St. John Kelly and Cecil Harrow – had passed on to their eternal rewards, 18 of the original panel of players together with Fr. Moran and the captain of the defeated Mungret team, Garret Barry, gathered for a meal at the Clarion Hotel in Limerick City on May 7th.
Some of the team members had not seen each other for several decades, but the bonds of friendship forged 50 years ago were still strong. Trying to remember how one thought and felt 50 years ago is not easy. Suffice to say that the vibes between old team mates were still good. Playing on a rugby team can feel like being part of a tribe at war. Feelings of mutual dependency and loyalty never disappear completely. Somebody posed the question, “What was the key to our success?” Was it Moran’s ‘big idea’ to create a team whose sum of its parts would be greater than the sum of its individual talents, as Michael Wallace (Scrum-half) surmised, or that a disparate bunch of dreamers had the confidence in themselves not to yield to anyone, no matter what was thrown at them, according to Coach Moran.
Paul Reeves, the dashing pack leader originally from Wolfe Tone Street, and now a noted Shakeperean scholar in England, was one of the primary motivators and enforcers on the team. He said that the success was all due to ‘Talk’ which helped to nurture a group aspiration and self-belief in spite of an inconsistent winning record prior to embarking on the cup campaign. Reeves recalled that Fr. Moran “wasted a lot of chalk on blackboards to make sure that everyone understood his place in the great scheme of things. He empasized the importance of self and group discipline; the need for detailed research when confronted with a major task; the acknowledgment of individual’s strengths and weaknesses; the process of honest analysis and evaluation; the importance of motivation; the joy of commitment; the value of mutual support and joy of friendship. Best of all, winning rugby matches could be achieved without having to open a book or write an essay.”
Ivan Morris (Full Back) remarked that Coach Moran was a dossier-man long before anyone heard of Don Revie of the damned Leeds United. Billy Thompson (No. 8) said: “My 11 years at the Crescent were essentially dull. I was very shy. Classes seemed to be conducted at the pace of the slowest, which was boring. Pupils had no input. Rugby was the exception. I always loved running about. Rugby gave me a license to crash into people. I loved the physicality of tackling. For the first time, I had an obviously enthusiastic teacher. Fr. Moran actually smiled at us and complimented us! I wanted to be on his team and win every match we played. I loved the taste of success. It was my first adrenaline rush – a great feeling.”
Derek Hickey (Prop) brought an overdue piece of modesty and good sense into the proceedings when he said: “The older we get, the better we were! That is something for the team of 2011 to look forward to.” Willie Foley (Lock) said: “For me 1961 was special. That victory has remained with me over the years. It has given me a sense of belonging to the game, to Munster rugby and to Thomond Park.” Kevin Uniacke (Wing) remembers “walking to Thomond Park for the final and then walking home afterwards, which brought a sense of normality to an exciting, unforgettable day. Success is like a Darwinian accident. We all become wise AFTER the event.”
Before departing for his home in Clifden, County Galway, Des Fogerty, Centre and prolific try scorer during the 1961 campaign, remarked that, “JCT 1961 was one of the most positive experiences of my entire life and will always be cherished and never forgotten.” The Jesuit pioneers who opened the doors at Crescent College in Limerick City in 1859 to ‘help souls and educate future, worthy citizens’ by instilling in them an ‘Ignatian character’, should be gratified that the mission they envisaged 150 years ago lives on.