يحاول ذهب - حر

With all that was known, how was this snuffing out of a young life permitted to happen?

January 10, 2026

|

Irish Daily Mirror

ON Thursday, there were two riveting hours in conversation with Jason Sherlock, the Dubliner's unsparing, emotionally-intelligent reflections carrying us to the very heart of life.

- ROY CURTIS

With all that was known, how was this snuffing out of a young life permitted to happen?

Unthinkably, the boy prince of Hill 16 - for so many a speedboat zipping forever across the lake of that sun-kissed summer of '95, the one which he so memorably and with such audacious teenage dazzle seized the title deeds - turns 50 today.

Elsewhere on these pages, in an interview of uncommon honesty, Jason opens doors to the most private rooms of his being. His words offer the latest cautionary tale against judging a book by the artwork on the dust jacket.

In that breakout season over three decades ago, Sherlock, gambolling across the most-storied rectangle of grass in Irish life with the joie de vivre of a young thoroughbred colt on the Curragh plains, seldom gave a hint of vulnerability.

Little did we know.

An access-all-areas autobiography a decade ago, a documentary of rare depth that followed, a moving production tracing the feelings of a boy abandoned by his father, and now today's words, offer a view from a more revealing angle.

Sherlock is thankful for the many blessings in his life, he is rewarding and thoughtful company, successful in life, a man who has learned to accept events that tormented him in the past, but, as today's interview shows, his skyline is not yet cloud free.

BATTLE

It shines a light on a truth, the one that echoes Michael Stipe in announcing that pretty much everybody hurts. All of us. Regardless of status or fame or outward appearance, few are offered complete immunity from life's waspish stings.

The bite can be superficial or deep. Its toxins can have a financial, emotional, social or psychological strain.

المزيد من القصص من Irish Daily Mirror

Irish Daily Mirror

More gang for your buck at auction

Two properties seized by CAB from son of mobster Keane up for sale

time to read

3 mins

January 14, 2026

Irish Daily Mirror

Geller: United Cup exit was down to me

BIG CLAIM Uri Geller

time to read

1 min

January 14, 2026

Irish Daily Mirror

Mickey: Hey, hey, we were the improvs

MICKEY Dolenz has claimed that The Monkees were “heavily weighted toward improvisation” rather than musicality.

time to read

1 min

January 14, 2026

Irish Daily Mirror

Irish Daily Mirror

HILL READY FOR FLAT DEBUT

WEATHER PLAN Constitution Hill will run at Southwell in February

time to read

1 mins

January 14, 2026

Irish Daily Mirror

ALONSO'S LEFT WITH REAL REGRET

XABI ALONSO has admitted that his spell with Real Madrid didn't turn out as \"we would have liked\" following his exit from the Bernabeu.

time to read

1 min

January 14, 2026

Irish Daily Mirror

Chelsea's Eddie dies

FORMER Chelsea player and manager Eddie McCreadie has passed away at the age of 85.

time to read

1 min

January 14, 2026

Irish Daily Mirror

Beauty retailer store in Belfast

BEAUTY retailer Sephora UK has said it will open its first store on the island of Ireland next month.

time to read

1 min

January 14, 2026

Irish Daily Mirror

Box office set to scale new Heights

Cinema chain reveals unmissable 2026 movies

time to read

1 mins

January 14, 2026

Irish Daily Mirror

Irish Daily Mirror

'We need Grok-solid safeguards' Grok

Cabinet meeting to discuss crackdown on Musk Al's child sex pics

time to read

3 mins

January 14, 2026

Irish Daily Mirror

Lottie hadn't 'a clue' sister is pregnant

LOTTIE Ryan has revealed she didn't have a clue her sister Bonnie was expecting and she only found out as Christmas time.

time to read

1 min

January 14, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size