Mick Dunne

Michael 'Mick' Dunne (27 May 1929 – 11 August 2002) was an Irish sports journalist who pioneered television coverage of Gaelic games.[1]

Mick Dunne
Born
Michael Dunne

(1929-05-27)27 May 1929
Died11 August 2002(2002-08-11) (aged 73)
NationalityIrish
EducationKnockbeg College
Occupation(s)Sports commentator, journalist
Employer(s)The Irish Press
Raidió Teilifís Éireann
Spouse(s)Lilly Fox
(m. 1956-2002, his death)
ChildrenEileen Dunne
Úna Dunne
Moira Dunne

Birth and childhood

He was born 27 May 1929 in Clonaslee, County Laois, one of two sons of Francis Dunne, insurance agent, and Agnes Dunne (née Foley), schoolteacher. Educated at Clonaslee national school and Knockbeg College, County Carlow, he went to work in the etchings library of the Irish Press in 1947, becoming Gaelic games correspondent in 1957.

Awards

He was central to the negotiations with sponsors to set up the annual GAA All Stars Awards which grew out of the Cuchulainn Awards in the 1960s and were established on an annual basis in 1971. He remained its driving force up to the 1990s, and before his death he was honoured with a special award for his work on the scheme.

Broadcasting

In 1970 he joined RTÉ as the station's first Gaelic games correspondent, developing the Gaelic Stadium preview programme and after the arrival of a camera unit in 1976, expanded GAA television coverage.

Handball and camogie

A fan of the lesser Gaelic games of camogie and handball, he helped devise the televised handball series Top Ace in 1973. It was expanded to include Mexican and American players in 1980. On his retirement he was awarded the Waterford Crystal Handball Award for special services to handball. Four communications awards presented annually by the Camogie Association are named in his honour.

Magazine

After his retirement he wrote regular columns for the Irish Independent and Gaelic Sport magazine. He was contributing editor to High Ball magazine following its establishment by Mike Hogan and Eoghan Corry in 1998, having previously edited Gaelic World.

Books

Dunne contributed updates on the GAA's own records for the 1975 Our Games Annual and what was to be eventually published as the Complete handbook of Gaelic games up to 1999. Own-name works include The Star Spangled Final (1997), an account of the staging of the 1947 All-Ireland football final in New York and a history of Gaelic football in the Gardaí, The Story of the Garda GAA Club (1998). In 2010 his archive was handed over to the GAA museum in Croke Park by his daughter Eileen, a newsreader with RTÉ.

Marriage and death

Dunne married Lilly Fox, from Delvin, County Westmeath in 1956. They had three daughters, Eileen, Una, and Moira. He died on 11 August 2002.

References

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