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This
article is taken from the Pegasus 25th anniversary
book, 1994.
Looking around
at the current Pegasus Over 35 team, I am taken
aback when I see 'young lads' like Dave Cowhey
lining out. Only Cathal Travers and myself remain
of the intrepid crew who started with UCD in
1969. All of the others grew up and retired.
Over the intervening 25 years, we have enjoyed
some golden footballing days and plenty of wet,
miserable, losing days too. The outstanding
and enduring feature for me is the element of
common purpose and teamwork.
Our most successful team of the 1975-1981 era
was a more effective team than the sum of the
individual talent. Even on bad days, the resilience
of that team made it exceptionally difficult
to beat. A good number of that team were football
obsessives, capable of drifting off during important
business meetings and dreaming of a dipping
30 yard volley into the top corner ten years
previously.
Life had its ups and downs in a Pegasus jersey
but what about those martyrs of the 20th century,
the occasional Pegasus supporter (singular not
plural)? Anybody who has read Nick Hornby's
'Fever Pitch', describing life as an Arsenal
fan, will be aware of an uncanny resemblance
to life as a Pegasus supporter. In the book,
a chapter devoted to a friend of Nick's who
fervently supported Luton Town, reads as follows:
"He has single-handedly driven Mike Newell and
a number of other players away from the club,
by ensuring that he is always positioned near
the dressing rooms to abuse incessantly anybody
he believes not good enough to tread the Kenilworth
Road turf."
Surely Joe McDermott's late father and his faithful
dog were no less enthusiastic in their support
of Pegasus!
Football with Pegasus is likely to confuse and
dizzy you - and that is just getting to our
home grounds. The list of home (?) pitches include
three in Belfield, Masonic, Bird Avenue, Marley
Park, St. Raphael’s, Cypress Grove, St. Paul's
Raheny, Harold's Cross and Dolphin's Barn -
evidence of superb strategic planning by the
graduate intelligentsia of our committees over
the years.
Yet, in a perverse way, our nomadic existence
somehow serves to increase the will to win.
Appalling refereeing decisions against us have
often tended to work in our favour, by fuelling
our indignation and enhancing our grim determination.
Maybe there is a football Utopia - with beautiful
pitches, excellent referees, polite supporters,
kindly opposing centre halves, hot showers and
Jacuzzis. If such a place exists, it is unlikely
that the Leinster Senior League teams will be
admitted - nor would they want to be.
The league which we have competed in for a quarter
of a century is enlivened by its characters
on and off the field. The competitive edge continues
season after season and the joy of winning a
trophy is enhanced by the knowledge that every
victory has to be worked for. The footballing
Walter Mitty in us would not have it any other
way.
However serious soccer gets, it is still the
unintentional humour that is the hidden bonus.
My Pegasus favourite quote is an Irish Times
report of an FAI Cup Tie which stated that:
"Pegasus, the ex-graduates defended stoutly."
I conclude with an analytical gem from Ron Atkinson,
when previewing a televised game. "I am going
to make a prediction - it could go either way."
More History: The Winger Horse Is Born - Dick
Purcell
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