FOR HUNT, the road to Reading has been a little different. Signed as a youngster by Coppell when the former England international was in charge at Crystal Palace, he then followed the manager to Brentford, where he scored 25 times in 136 league appearances over four seasons before falling out with Coppell's successor, Martin Allen, and accepting another offer to join his long-time mentor.
He started just three league games last season, but came on no fewer than 35 times in the league and came to be regarded, he says himself, "as something of a supersub".
Funny, self-confident and, in common with his team-mates, enormously likeable, the 25-year-old had the option of leaving over the summer to play more regularly elsewhere, but says his gut feeling was to hang on and fight for his chance to make an impact at the higher level.
"I have a good relationship with the manager and he said I'd get my chance so I believe him," says Hunt before revealing his thinking on the various contract offers.
"I was tempted," he says with a smile, "because there were three- or four-year deals on the table from good Championship clubs (his new deal at Reading is for one year, an extension dependent on the number of games he plays this season) and one made a very good effort to get me, but, I, well, I want to be on Match of the Day basically. I want to have more coverage and hopefully stand out in the Premiership."
His ambitions don't stop there, for, he argues - not entirely unreasonably - that if he can establish himself at Premiership level then international recognition should not be too far behind.
"Don't get me wrong, I know this season is going to be a big step up. Physically it's more demanding. The pace is quicker. I presume you don't run around as much, but then I don't know to be honest because I've never played in it. I know that you turn on the television and watch some Championship games and they look slow, but then you're in them and you think, 'crikey, this is fast,' so I don't know really what the Premiership is going to be like, but, one thing is for sure, I'll give it a right good go.
"After that, I know what I want. I haven't any international caps yet, but I'd chop my right leg off to get one. That's the sort of fellow I am. . .
"I'm passionate about my country and I'm looking forward to getting in the team because I know I will. I haven't spoken to Stephen Staunton about it, I haven't spoken to anyone, but I believe in my ability and I'll get some caps."
He was, he says, capped just once at underage level having missed another couple of chances because of injury. "I'll make up for that at senior level. If I can't get them when I'm playing in the Premiership and hopefully shining then I might become Nigerian or something. . . do a Graham Stack on it and declare for another country."
DOYLE MIGHT be still getting used to his status as a senior international, but he doesn't sound like he would be terribly surprised to find himself lining out in the same Irish side as Hunt some time soon.
"Why not? Everything else I do Hunty seems to copy me," laughs the 23-year-old. "I sign for the club, he does too. I buy an apartment, he buys one virtually next door. I buy a new car, so does he. And now he's even going out with my cousin (Joanne, to Hunt's obvious delight has just moved over from Wexford)."
His own international rise has been swift and he admits to still feeling a little shock each time he sees his name in an Irish squad. But then last season generally, he concedes, was something of a dream in terms of his own career.
"The move wasn't that hard for me because Reading's a good town and I was already used to living away from home.
"Also, I'm at an age where I have plenty of mates who are more than happy to get on a plane and come over for a game and I'm near to Heathrow so I get to see a lot of my family.
"But when I came over I probably didn't expect to play so soon," he observes, "because I was told that Leroy and Dave (Kitson) were first choice, but unluckily for Dave and luckier for me he got an injury three or four games into the season. I came on, scored and played every league game from then on, started every one.
"This year's going to be very difficult, I know that, and I don't want to be a one-hit wonder. But that's why I've worked hard. When I came over from Cork I made a big effort to improve and now I have to do that again.
"If it doesn't work out I don't want there to be any excuses, I want to have been as good as I possibly could have. It'll take a while to settle into the Premiership, it certainly won't all be as rosy as it was last season, but we'll learn. . . "
A keen Manchester United fan in his teens, he has, he says, cooled on the Premiership giants since becoming a professional himself, but he reckons there will still be a particular buzz about playing at Old Trafford for the first time.
"After that, they're all just football grounds and we've got a great one here so I'll enjoy every game."
As for targets, he cautions, "you don't tell anyone you are going to score 10 or 15 Premiership goals unless you are Thierry Henry. I'll look to my first and when I've done that I'll start trying to get a second."
Last year's tally of 18 in the league will surely prove beyond him, but by this evening perhaps he'll have achieved his first target by scoring against Middlesbrough, Long will have gotten his first taste of the challenge that the Premiership will provide during the coming months and Hunt will get to watch himself on Match of the Day.
The Irish trio's Premiership adventure, after all, is only just beginning and in an era when money almost always equates to might within the game, it's impossible not to leave the Madejski stadium hoping that next summer they're reflecting on a year in which they defied expectations and made their dreams come true.
© The Irish Times
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