Mick Higgins Gaelic games player

Mick Higgins (22 August 1922 – 28 January 2010) was an Irish sportsperson who played Gaelic football for Cavan, winning three All-Ireland medals during his career. In later years he was a successful coach.His first All-Ireland Senior Football medal came as a member of the team that won the All-Ireland Senior Football Championship final played at the Polo Grounds in New York, United States in 1947. Cavan retained that title the following year and won it again in 1952 when Higgins was captain of the team. Higgins also won the Ulster Senior Football Championship with Cavan on seven occasions, as well as both the National Football League and Railway Cup on two occasions each.Higgins won the Cavan Senior Football Championship with Mountnugent GAA in 1946, he played with famous players such as Tony Tighe, Peter Donohue and Connie Kelly.Upon his death in 2010 Higgins was said by the Irish Independent '​s Martin Breheny to have been "widely regarded as one of the greatest talents ever to emerge from Cavan". The Longford Leader '​s Eugene McGee described him as "a man who became a GAA superstar of his generation, despite limited coverage of games he played". Seán Moran of The Irish Times described him as "one of the great football figures of the last century".

Personal facts

Birth dateJanuary 01, 1923
Birth place
New York City
Date of deathJanuary 28, 2010

Search

Gaelic games player

Career start1950
Career end1950
former team
Mountnugent GAA
sport
Gaelic football

Mick Higgins on Wikipedia