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Martin Breheny

Irish journalist and sportswriter From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Martin Breheny is an Irish journalist and sportswriter from County Galway. He began his career at The Tuam Herald before moving to The Irish Press in 1979.

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Breheny is former Gaelic games correspondent with the Irish Independent, for which he continues to write as of 2025.

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Early life

Breheny is from the north County Galway village of Kilkerrin.[1] He played for, and later served as secretary of, his local Kilkerrin-Clonberne GAA club before he moved to Dublin in 1979.[2]

Breheny spent four years working for The Tuam Herald before embarking on a 41-year national media career.[3] At The Tuam Herald Breheny was a contemporary of Jim Carney and Michael Lyster.[4]

National career

Breheny began working for The Irish Press in 1979.[4] He had retired as the Irish Independent's Gaelic games correspondent by the time of the COVID-19 pandemic;[4] however, he continued to write for the paper.[5]

Breheny has covered All-Ireland Finals in both football and hurling for many decades, attending his first final in 1971 (football) and his 100th in 2019 (football; drawn game).[1] In 2020, he gave his favourite final in each code as 1998 (football) and 2009 (hurling).[4]

He is a regular member of the All Star selection committees,[4][6] first doing so in 1983.[7]

Breheny helped write the autobiographies of footballers John O'Leary (published 1997) and Mick O'Dwyer (published c. 2000),[8] and hurlers D. J. Carey (published 2013)[9] and Brian Cody.[4]

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Awards

Breheny won "Sports Story of the Year" at the 2017 NewsBrands Ireland Journalism awards.[10]

He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in March 2020.[3]

References

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