A Hero and a Gentleman. One of a kind.
BILLY CELEBRATES HIS 84th BIRTHDAY – WITH A RUN!
by John Walsh
People
mark their birthdays in different ways, but for Midleton-man Billy Griffin
there was only one way to celebrate his 84th this Wednesday – by going for a
run. And what better place to do it then around the historic town of Cloyne
where Billy went to primary school and made his First Holy Communion back in
the mid-1940s.
Born at Ballymaloe on March 2nd, 1938, his family moved to Midleton when
Billy was 12. Commencing running in the year of 1956, it was an iconic
performance two years before that first whetted his appetite: “In 1954, Roger
Bannister broke the four-minute-mile. Although we had no television or anything
at the time, when we went to the cinema the Pathé News would come out at
halfway and they would show highlights of that famous achievement.”
As there was no club in Midleton, Billy joined the one in Carrigtwohill.
“I remember cycling to a sports meeting in Carrigaline as well as up to
Glenville, and cycling home again,” he recalls. He also did a bit of cycle
racing in his early days and remembers winning a two-bar electric heater at a
sports in Nohoval
Training for running at the time was all in the fields in Midleton. “We
lived on the Rocky Road near Castleredmond and I used to have a fierce problem
in the night-time but then I got the brainwave of putting on a beret and tying
a flash-lamp or torch to it,” he says.
Billy started working as a lorry driver with Rohan’s in the 1960s, where
he remained for over 20 years. “At that time I used to train at six in the
morning, although I often went out at half-five. When I went to work for John A
Wood we started at seven, so I had to get out at half-five then to train. I
couldn’t go out in the evening because we were working late, and anyway you
would be tired when you’d get home.”
In 1973 - along with future Olympian Liam O’Brien - Billy was a member
of the Midleton team that won the Cork County Novice and Intermediate
Cross-Country titles. He was also one of the pioneering 34 runners who ran the
first Ballycotton five-mile race in 1977 and later completed three Dublin City
Marathons.
Described last year as a “club legend” by Midleton AC registrar Danny
McCarthy, like all runners Billy greatly missing the many local races over the
past two years. One of his favourites was the Cloyne ‘4K’ Series so it was
appropriate that he would again take to that route - known locally as ‘The
Commons’ - on his 84th birthday, easily covering the four kilometres in just
over 30 minutes.
During the winter Billy does his training four days a week in the gym
and is now looking forward to the spring evenings and a few 5kms on the road.
Aside from his running, most of the day is taken up with the bright and
beautifully-kept garden that he and his wife Ann tend to at their Brookdale
East home.
“The gardening keeps the mind going,” explains this remarkable man who
is certainly a living example that at the age of 84 a life-long passion for the
sport of running certainly keeps the body in excellent shape as well.
Everyone in Midleton AC wishes our hero Billy Griffin a Happy Birthday.