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Obituary of handball player Joseph Patrick ‘Joey‘ Maher

‘A moment in his time was a moment to savour’ by Paul Fitzpatrick

We call them ball alleys and if walls could talk, they’d have some stories to tell about handball’s golden age, when big tournaments could attract 1,200 players and the superstars truly were household names. And in that glorious period, for a couple of decades on from the 1950s, no star burned as brightly as Joseph Patrick ‘Joey’ Maher.

Born in Drogheda in 1934, Maher – who passed away suddenly a fortnight ago – was a man who could turn his hand to anything.

He was a painter, a handballer, a musician, a publican, a champion greyhound trainer and, in Canada, a cop.

As a young man, he would travel down the coast to places like Taghmon, Co Wexford to play. On the way home, he’d stop in Arklow, Gorey, Delvin or Kells; wherever he spotted a game going on, he’d join in and bedazzle the locals.

That was where he learned his trade, and he became a master. In 1964, he won his way to the play at the World Championships in the New York Athletic Club, a gleaming, world-class athletic facility overlooking leafy Central Park.

Read more, HERE>

DV: David Vincent formed the World Players of Handball in 2005 and ushered live handball viewing into our living rooms for the first time. Since its inception, the World Players of Handball has broadcast over 1,500 matches live. Dave Vincent serves as the lead play-by-play announcer for virtually all matches, combining his unique perspective and personality with a lifetime of handball experience. DV brings 25 years of broadcast radio experience (in Oregon and California) to World Players of Handball & ESPN broadcasts and provides professionalism and wit to the amazing game of handball. DV also serves as the Executive Director of the World Player of Handball at the WPH headquarters in Tucson, AZ, working daily to grow the game of handball through innovation.
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