Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Sport | Gaelic football | ||
Position | Wing-back | ||
Born |
Bundoran, County Donegal, Ireland | 1 December 1942||
Occupation | Hotelier[1][2] | ||
Club(s) | |||
Years | Club | ||
196?–197? 197?–19?? |
St Joseph's Réalt na Mara | ||
Club titles | |||
Donegal titles | 8 | ||
Inter-county(ies) | |||
Years | County | ||
19??–197? | Donegal | ||
Inter-county titles | |||
Ulster titles | 2 | ||
All Stars | 1 |
Personal information | |||||||||
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Born | Bundoran, County Donegal, Ireland | 1 December 1942||||||||
Inter-county management | |||||||||
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Inter-county titles | |||||||||
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Brian McEniff (born 1 December 1942) is a former Gaelic football manager, administrator and player.
McEniff played as a wing-back for the St Joseph's combination of clubs from Bundoran and Ballyshannon. He won seven Donegal Senior Football Championship titles with that combination of clubs, and another one with Réalt na Mara, when St Joseph's divided. He won two Ulster Senior Football Championship titles with the Donegal county team as player-manager in 1972 and 1974, and was awarded an All Star after the first of these, before being ousted. He returned to manage the county to a third Ulster SFC title in 1983, then left again. He returned once more in 1989, leading the county to its fourth and fifth Ulster SFC titles in 1990 and 1992, as well as the All-Ireland Senior Football Championship in the last of these. After becoming chairman of the county board, McEniff was unable to find a manager so did the job himself for a final time, reaching the 2003 All-Ireland SFC semi-final in his last term as senior manager of the county team.
McEniff managed his county during four successive decades, earning a reputation as the dean of Donegal football.[3] In July 1992, Hogan Stand described McEniff as "one of the most successful football gurus in modern-day GAA history" and he has been likened to a footballing Godfather-type figure.[4][5] Until 2011, he was directly involved in each of his county's Ulster SFC and All-Ireland SFC title wins. That year, Jim McGuinness (whom McEniff had recommended for the under-21 managerial role the previous year) won the first of the post-McEniff Ulster SFC titles. Declan Bonner, who won his first Ulster SFC title as manager in 2018, also regards McEniff as a mentor. Both McGuinness and Bonner played under McEniff when McEniff was Donegal manager.
McEniff managed the Ulster provincial football team for many decades. He coached Ireland to victory over Australia in the 2001 International Rules Series, held at the Melbourne Cricket Ground and Football Park in Adelaide in October that year.
tsc_15072015
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).inews_25112013
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).Brian McEniff, the dean of the Donegal game who yesterday returned to take charge of his county for the fourth successive decade, could but watch as Galway raced away in the first five minutes.
Brian McEniff, soon to be installed as one of the most successful football gurus in modern-day GAA history.
bt_22012014
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).