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Mary Sweeney – Youghal's First Lady of Running - Report by John Walshe

MARY SWEENEY – YOUGHAL’S FIRST LADY OF RUNNING

This article by By John Walshe, appeared in the Youghal and Midleton & Dist News on Thursday 02/06/2022

 

mary sweeney national intermediate xc champion 1978 mary sweeney railway run 25k 2022 photo derek costello
Back in February 1978, Mary Dempsey wins the National Intermediate Cross-Country in the snow, at Rockwell College A smiling Mary Sweeney at the finish of the recent Great Railway Run 25km from Cork to Carrigaline - Photo: Derek Costello

 

On a February day all of 44 years ago, on a snow-covered course at Rockwell College, Mary Dempsey from Youghal won the National Intermediate cross-country title when finishing a half-minute clear of Mary O’Sullivan from Limerick

Now, almost four-and-a-decades later, Mary Sweeney (as she is today) is still winning prizes and will take to the streets of Cork on Sunday next for which, fittingly, will be her 46th appearance over the classic marathon distance

One of the most familiar figures on the running scene, the St Finbarr’s athlete has played a pivotal role in the popularity and acceptance of women’s running in Cork county and beyond. Not just by her achievements alone, but also by her encouragement and enthusiasm for the sport she loves so dearly

And it all began over 50 years ago in the seaside town when, as a young girl, she joined the local athletics club. “My running career started off with one of the greatest men in Youghal, Jimmy Drake, Martin’s dad,” she recalls. “We used to run around the pitches of St Raphael’s Hospital and then, after Jimmy passed away, my father, Jack, who was a nurse in St Raphael’s, got involved”

Despite being part of a thriving club, success in the juvenile grades wasn’t immediate. “When I started off, at 10 or 11, I wasn’t much good at the short races but my father used to say ‘you have stamina and you definitely have determination’ and so the longer distances suited me"

“Midleton had a great club at the time and one girl, Elizabeth O’Brien, used to always beat me. When I got to 14, I beat her for the first time and it went on from there.” After representing Ireland in the Home Countries Schools’ cross-country at the age of 16, the following year at Rockwell College on a course that had three inches of snow underfoot, she took the National Intermediate title. “The course was tricky enough I recall but I think I led from the start and won easily enough”

As the 1970s came to a close, road running was still in its infancy, especially for women. The second edition of the Ballycotton ‘10’ in 1979 had just five females amongst the 82 finishers. Leading them home, in a time of 68:47, was Mary Dempsey from Youghal. “I had never run 10 miles in distance as my father minded me and to this day I appreciate that. But I said I would love to run this race as a lot of people were talking about it and he gave in, so you could say that was the start of another part of my athletics career.”

In an era when the prize structure was what would be construed as sexist nowadays, Mary’s Ballycotton reward was a hair dryer. However, it proved to be somewhat of a little earner as she used to hire it out to her siblings at the weekend: “I made a few bob out of that orange hair dryer as in a family that contained five girls, a hair dryer was a very, very valuable item.”   

Countless victories on the local scene followed and in 1993 Mary made the Irish team for the world half-marathon championships in Brussels. “I qualified for that from the national half-marathon which was held in Cork. The first five were selected to go and we had a great four or five days out there and to me I was amongst the elite.”

Eleven years previous she had taken part in her first marathon in Dublin, followed in 1983 by the second of the original Cork marathons. “Although I didn’t run that many marathons when I was running well at the shorter distances, when Cork returned in 2007 I ran three or four a year so now, please God, Cork on Sunday will be my 46th,” she says

Ten years ago, Mary won the F50 category in Cork in a time of 3:11:42 and a decade later is still way ahead of her contemporaries in her present F60 category. Last Friday night she ran 27:29 for four miles at Ballymacoda and then turned out the following morning to record 22:52 in her 91st 5km parkrun.

“The parkruns are amazing, not alone the runners but the volunteers as well. Every level is acceptable at a parkrun and every level is treated with the same kindness and dignity. It doesn’t matter what time you do and I can’t speak highly enough of them,” she says

A total of 80 of those parkruns have been achieved in Ballincollig where Mary now resides. Although living in the satellite town now for the past 35 years, the love of Youghal is still evident: “Youghal will always be home to me. When I’m going to Youghal I always say I’m going down home. The loss of my dad did take it away for a little while but Mam is still there as are my sisters and brother, so I’ll always be a Youghal girl.”

Looking back at the training that brought her so much success, Mary says she always listened to her body. “I was good to do the mileage which I felt was the backbone of your running but I always took a day off a week. I was a working mum, I had two young kids, I was working 12-hour shifts in a nursing home at the time so I ran to and from work. I was covering around 50 miles a week and maybe went up to 60 or 65 for a few years when I was younger and the body was able to take it

“I was lucky with injuries; I was blessed. So to be told four years ago that I had rheumatoid arthritis was an awful knock. Amazingly, when I’m resting it’s then that the rheumatoid arthritis attacks my body. I don’t dwell on it too much as I find when I’m out running I’m doing something that’s good for my health and my arthritis.”  

But what shines though the positive energy that this remarkable 61-year-old conveys is an immense sense of gratitude. “Running gives me a purpose and it’s what keeps me going. I count my blessings and I am privileged and so lucky to be able to do it. Number one, I’m grateful for my health, number two I’m grateful for the people around me that have made running so good to me and for me. Everybody is a friend and I know from the bottom of my heart that I don’t have an enemy. I do feel that God is always around us all and if you’re kind to people you’ll always get kindness back.”

Saying she’s not interested in what time she runs on Sunday, there is no doubt that Mary Sweeney will go home happy in the knowledge that she achieved what her body was capable of on the day. “And when I cross the finish line on Patrick Street, regardless of what’s up on the clock, I’ll have a happy smile that says ‘Thank You’.”

 

 

Other Guest Articles by John Walshe

Stephen Hennessy – A Youghal Sporting Legend

 

1972 Fermoy Cross-Country Championship Recalled

 

Midleton AC County Novice Cross-Country Team 1971

 

Donie Walsh - 1971 European Championships 10,000m Recalled

 

Willie O'Mahony has clocked the miles building East Cork Athletics

 

Memorable Youghal Road Race Took Place at Midnight on New Year's Eve

 

Midleton AC Virtual Club Challenge

 

Cork Cross-Country of 1980

 

Cork Marathon Magic in 1986 as Marion Lyons Wins


The 1985 Cork 800 Marathon


Tullamore Man Won First Cork Marathon


Pioneering Women of Cross-Country

 

Grange International Cross-Country of 1980 Recalled 40 Years On

 

Youghal AC's London Emer Casey 10k Exploits

 

30 Years Ago - Liam O'Brien Wins Cork County Senior Cross-Country Championship

 

50 Years Ago - When John Buckley Beat The Olympic Champion

 

40 Years Ago - Jerry Murphy Wins Munster Marathon Championship

 

Aoife Cooke Runs 55:17 in Mallow 10 2019

 

Munster Cross-Country of 1989

 

Steeplechase Legends Meet at Antrim International

 

Aidan Hogan - Ultra-Athlete

 

RUNNING FOR BETTER

 

Cork to Cobh 40 Years Ago

 

Unique National Double for McGraths

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