Enda McGinley | |
Height: | 1.850NaN0 |
Occupation: | Physiotherapist |
Sport: | Gaelic football |
Code: | Football |
County: | Tyrone |
Province: | Ulster |
Clposition: | Midfield |
Club: | Errigal Ciarán |
Clcounty: | 4 |
Clprovince: | 1 |
Clubs: | Errigal Ciarán |
Counties: | Tyrone |
Icyears: | 2002–2012 |
Icposition: | Midfield |
Icprovince: | 4 |
Icallireland: | 3 |
Nfl: | 2 |
Allstars: | 1 |
Birth Date: | 1981 |
Birth Place: | County Tyrone |
Enda McGinley (born 1981) is an Irish Gaelic football manager and former player for the Errigal Ciarán club and the Tyrone county team. He managed the Antrim county team between 2020 and 2022.
McGinley was part of Tyrone's All-Ireland-winning teams of 2003, 2005 and 2008. He is known for his hard working style of play and for scoring from midfield. He announced his retirement from inter-county football in November 2011.[1]
McGinley plays his club football for Errigal Ciarán. He was a member of the Tyrone minor team who won the All-Ireland Minor Football Championship under Mickey Harte in 1998. With Harte again in charge he won two All-Ireland Under-21 Football Championship titles in 2000 and 2001. He was there when Harte guided Tyrone to the National League title in 2003 and then their first All Ireland later that year. He picked up his second All Ireland in 2005.
McGinley has suffered a number of injuries during his career. In 2003 he suffered a broken neck in the twelfth minute of the All-Ireland final during a clash with Armagh player Tony McEntee, but unaware of the seriousness of his injury he played on before spending weeks afterwards in a neck brace. In 2004 he fractured his skull in a training ground accident, while in 2005 he almost missed the All-Ireland final after picking up a leg injury in the semi-final against Armagh. Just two months after the final, he sustained a serious knee injury in a club game and required reconstruction on his cruciate ligament.
His playing came to the fore in 2008, when Tyrone unexpectedly made it to the All-Ireland final, with commentators such as Adrian Logan attributing a lot of the credit to McGinley's form. He was described as being among the top three midfielders in the 2008 championship. Tyrone went on to win the championship for the third time in six years. He finished his inter-county season by representing Ireland in the 2008 International Rules Series.
McGinley has become a manager, such as with the Derry GAA club Swatragh.[2]
In 2020, he was appointed manager of the Antrim seniors, succeeding Lenny Harbinson.[3] McGinley and his backroom team left the Antrim senior job at the end of May 2022.[4]
Awards