Jayo

The Jason Sherlock Story

Biography & Memoir, Sports
Cover of the book Jayo by Jason Sherlock, Simon & Schuster UK
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Author: Jason Sherlock ISBN: 9781471166044
Publisher: Simon & Schuster UK Publication: October 26, 2017
Imprint: Simon & Schuster UK Language: English
Author: Jason Sherlock
ISBN: 9781471166044
Publisher: Simon & Schuster UK
Publication: October 26, 2017
Imprint: Simon & Schuster UK
Language: English

‘Its got to be said for the little man, give him a sniff at goal – and he is deadly.’ Jim Gavin**

**One of the greatest Dublin players of the modern GAA era.
A man who transcended the racial divide to carve out a stellar career.

Foreword by Jim Gavin - manager of the All-Ireland-winning Dublin team.**

Jason Sherlock grew up in Finglas, North Dublin. As the son of an Irish mother and Asian father, he experienced racism throughout his childhood. On the playing fields and basketball courts however, he found acceptance, along with a new-found discipline to fend off the daily taunts. Sherlock represented Ireland in under-21s soccer, captained its basketball team and spent his summers winning hurling trophies in Cork.

But in 1995 his life changed overnight as he was plucked from the fringes to become the best-known star in the GAA. He won an All-Ireland SFC title with Dublin, whose supporters gave him his own song. Jayo Mania came out of nowhere and spread through the country like wildfire. New opportunities arose from his new-found celebrity status. He became a TV presenter and started to mix with the good and the great, opened shops with Sylvester Stallone and Richard Branson, and gladly surfed the wave of celebrity.

His soccer and GAA performances however, declined, and he began to feel as though he was seen as a novelty or marketable product, rather than a sportsman. Over the next decade and a half, Dublin failed to win another All-Ireland and Sherlock became utterly obsessed with trying to get back on top. In 2009, he was dropped from the Dublin panel, his self-worth plummeted, and he started to label his career as fourteen years of failure. Not content to wallow for long, he began the fight to get his place back on the team.

Sherlock’s story is one of a battle for acceptance, a fight against racism, a climb to the highest levels of three sports with a stop off along ‘Celebrity Way’. It is the journey of a boy who was cast head-first into the full glare of the media and became an Irish legend. But more than anything else, this is a story of one man**’**s resilience.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

‘Its got to be said for the little man, give him a sniff at goal – and he is deadly.’ Jim Gavin**

**One of the greatest Dublin players of the modern GAA era.
A man who transcended the racial divide to carve out a stellar career.

Foreword by Jim Gavin - manager of the All-Ireland-winning Dublin team.**

Jason Sherlock grew up in Finglas, North Dublin. As the son of an Irish mother and Asian father, he experienced racism throughout his childhood. On the playing fields and basketball courts however, he found acceptance, along with a new-found discipline to fend off the daily taunts. Sherlock represented Ireland in under-21s soccer, captained its basketball team and spent his summers winning hurling trophies in Cork.

But in 1995 his life changed overnight as he was plucked from the fringes to become the best-known star in the GAA. He won an All-Ireland SFC title with Dublin, whose supporters gave him his own song. Jayo Mania came out of nowhere and spread through the country like wildfire. New opportunities arose from his new-found celebrity status. He became a TV presenter and started to mix with the good and the great, opened shops with Sylvester Stallone and Richard Branson, and gladly surfed the wave of celebrity.

His soccer and GAA performances however, declined, and he began to feel as though he was seen as a novelty or marketable product, rather than a sportsman. Over the next decade and a half, Dublin failed to win another All-Ireland and Sherlock became utterly obsessed with trying to get back on top. In 2009, he was dropped from the Dublin panel, his self-worth plummeted, and he started to label his career as fourteen years of failure. Not content to wallow for long, he began the fight to get his place back on the team.

Sherlock’s story is one of a battle for acceptance, a fight against racism, a climb to the highest levels of three sports with a stop off along ‘Celebrity Way’. It is the journey of a boy who was cast head-first into the full glare of the media and became an Irish legend. But more than anything else, this is a story of one man**’**s resilience.

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