John Gildea
John Gildea (born 27 March 1971)[1] is an Irish former Gaelic footballer who played for Naomh Conaill and the Donegal county team. He is originally from Glenties.[2] Playing careerGildea made his championship debut for Donegal as a substitute against Down in 1995.[3] Pat Ward and Michael Gallagher were county footballers when Gildea was "coming through".[4] His early career was troubled; suffering a problem (which turned out to be a Vitamin B12 deficiency) that affected his ability to train, he made no further championship appearances while P. J. McGowan was manager of the county.[2] Gildea then played illegally under an assumed name for Donegal New York in 1997, the illegality due to him officially registering to play in Boston.[2] He was suspended for one year, reduced to six months on appeal.[2] Gildea credited McGowan's successor Declan Bonner for persisting with him through his difficulties.[2] Fourteen hours after the suspension had ended, Bonner started Gildea in the 1997–98 National Football League semi-final at Croke Park; Gildea scored two points but his team lost the game to Offaly.[2] Gildea featured prominently for his county from 1998 onwards.[3] Having played as a wing-forward against Offaly and against Antrim in the 1998 Ulster Senior Football Championship quarter-final, Bonner moved Gildea into the midfield position where he would make his name when Martin Coll was sent off early on against Cavan in the Ulster semi-final.[2] Donegal won that game, with Gildea outmanoeuvring Dermot McCabe, but the county then lost the Ulster final to a late Joe Brolly goal.[3] Gildea quit the panel in May 2001, shortly after Bonner's successor as manager, Mickey Moran, controversially substituted him during a championship loss to Fermanagh in Enniskillen; the decision was part of why selector Michael Houston also quit, while Gildea went to the United States to play for Donegal Boston.[5][6] He vowed to retire after 2002, but carried on.[7] By 2003, Gildea was the most senior player in the county team.[8] He started the first game of Brian McEniff's last spell as Donegal manager, a league defeat to Galway in Tuam in February 2003, during which he scored a point.[9] That year he was an important player during a six-game championship run through the All-Ireland Senior Football Championship qualifiers.[7] He played in the 2003 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship semi-final against Armagh.[10] Gildea continued to play for his county until 2004.[3] Gildea won a Donegal Senior Football Championship in 2005, his club's first, which came after a replay.[11] Gildea first met Stephen Rochford, who went on to work with Bonner in his second spell as Donegal manager, during two visits to Australia from twenty years previously.[2] Gildea is married to Sharon (née Rouse); they have two sons.[12][1] He lives in Letterkenny.[1] References
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