Hundreds of people have been queueing in Waterville, Co Kerry to pay their respects to the family of Mick O'Dwyer.
The legendary former Kerry football player and manager died yesterday at the age of 88.
His remains are reposing at Fitzgerald’s Funeral Home in Waterville and will be followed by removal to St Finian’s Church at 8.30pm.
Many people lined the streets and applauded as the funeral cortège made its way through the village, pausing outside his pub, the Villa Maria, and at the local GAA pitch.
GAA players from Kerry, and from throughout the country, were among those who paid their respects this evening.
His funeral mass will take place tomorrow morning at 11am followed by burial in the adjoining cemetery.
President Michael D Higgins led the tributes, saying that Mr O'Dwyer will be remembered as "one of the greatest figures ever to be associated with Gaelic Games".
He expressed his deepest sympathies to his family, teammates, former players and his many friends.
Taoiseach Micheál Martin said it was with great sadness that he had learned of the passing of Mr O’Dwyer.
"He was an iconic figure, particularly during the 1970s," he said, a decade that had marked a new era in GAA management.
"From a Cork perspective all of us remember Mick O'Dwyer saying before every Munster championship final that Cork were the second best team in the country," he laughed.
"That great capacity to butter us up," he said, noting that Cork had won some back.
He said Mick O'Dwyer was a wonderful figure in the GAA, a great modern coach and a great footballer.
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