Up to March this year, the only time Mark O’Shea had worn the Kerry jersey on the field of play was to virtually make up the numbers.

In 2020, and with Kerry away on a team holiday following their All-Ireland final replay loss to Dublin the previous September, then U20 manager John Sugrue was charged with putting together a team for the McGrath Cup.

After a hosing against Cork, Sugrue wanted to beef up the team largely comprising U20s so made contact with “over-age” players like O’Shea who, despite having no minor or U20 experience with Kerry, had impressed breaking into the Dr Crokes midfield the previous season.

I lár na pairce wouldn’t have been considered an option for him until his late teens. “I got a massive growth spurt there when I was about, I’d say, 17, 18. I went from about five nothing to about 6ft 2in or 3”. So, yeah, Crokes, my parents, they always kind of taught me, ‘Look, just keep at it’.

“I tried to master the skills when I was smaller. When obviously the height came, things kind of started to progress a bit fast and you’re kind of thrown into playing with Crokes. Obviously, playing with Kerry was something I thought probably would never come around and just very glad that it did.” 

It was a couple of days after Crokes went goal crazy against Dingle in last October’s county final that Jack O’Connor sent O’Shea a message. “‘Look, when you get the chance later in the week, will you be able to give me a call?’” 

The 27-year-old O’Shea was unsure what it entailed. “I was like, ‘The boat is probably gone here as well.’ But, look, Kerry is such a good championship. You’re playing against the Barry Dans [O’Sullivan], Diarmaid [O’Connor], David Moran and these fellas down through the years. So, it’s a good kind of place to be putting yourself up and you can get a bit of confidence from it too.” 

A nephew of Pat O’Shea, Mark has his own blood to thank for his progression as well as Edmund O’Sullivan and Brian McMahon in the Lewis Road institute. O’Connor was vital in making him feel as comfortable as possible in the Kerry set-up, even when things went awry mid-championship.

“Jack was saying, ‘You’ve nothing to lose,’ and after the Meath game I may as well have never put on boots again, and that was the first time I’d seen at inter-county, if you’re not at it… look, you can probably get the criticism, and rightly so, we weren’t at it and I wasn’t at it. Jack was just kind of saying to me, ‘Look, there’s no pressure.’” 

O’Shea is amusingly philosophical about his elevation this year to become the oldest first-time All-Ireland SFC winner as a starter since Tadhg Kennelly who was 28 in 2009 (Donnchadh Walsh was 30 in 2014 but had been part of ’09 panel). “I suppose there wasn’t many midfielders left,” he smiles.

When it was announced Kerry were to wear blue for the All-Ireland final, superstition got the better of him. “I was like, ‘Feck’s sake’ because I wore it when I made my debut against Mayo up in Castlebar and we were beaten. And I made my starting debut against Meath in the championship with the blue jersey. So I was like, ‘Jeez, I don’t know about these blue jerseys.’” 

Coming into a dressing room with five other Crokes men as well as Kerry masseuse and former club manager Harry O’Neill and videographer John C O’Shea made the transition easier for O’Shea. To see his clubman Gavin White excel last Sunday week before lifting the Sam Maguire Cup after his difficulties in the 2023 All-Ireland final and this year’s All-Ireland club semi-final was thrilling for O’Shea.

“Anyone that knows him knows just how meticulous he is with everything. And obviously, look, no-one in Kerry or Crokes ever even put any bit of blame on Gavin for either.

“But the reaction this year, and I’d say the captaincy there, there’s a lot of weight on the shoulders and when you’ve your captain kicking three points, I’d say won about 10 breaking balls, it’s easy to row in behind someone like that. And yeah, just absolutely phenomenal. Couldn’t happen to a nicer fella.” 

There was redemption for Micheál Burns too after he was dropped off the panel last season before he was recalled following a stunning run with Crokes. “The Armagh game there, you saw the ability. And look, he came back with a bit of freshness too.

“The summer away in Chicago served him unbelievable, because when he came back with Crokes, he was just a refreshed player and obviously, carried through to this year. He’s another fella I’m delighted for. Serious mentor to me coming up the last two years.”