At club level, Graham won the Meath Senior Football Championship with Seneschalstown in 1994. He has also won the Meath Under-21 Championship with Seneschalstown in 1992.
Although his greatest achievements have come in football, he is a versatile athlete, with various honours in the fields of athletics, soccer (having traveled to London for trials with British club Arsenal F.C. as a teenager, and signing for Bohemians in September 1994,[1] he also played for Drogheda United reserves in the 1996-97 League of Ireland season), and rugby, playing and training one season with Buccaneers Reserves in 2003.
In late 2003, he published his autobiography, titled Misunderstood, which documents his childhood, adolescence, and sporting career up until the early years of the 21st century.
In 2007, Geraghty helped Meath back to the top and scored a magnificent goal against Tyrone to help earn the team a place in the semifinal.
On 23 July 2008, Geraghty retired following Meath's exit from the 2008 Championship at the hands of Limerick.
On 20 May 2011, just three days after his 38th birthday, Geraghty returned to the Meath panel after a three-year absence.[2][3][4][5]
He came on as a substitute in Meath's first game of the Championship against Kildare at Croke Park, scoring a goal which was wrongly disallowed as a square ball.[6]
In 2012, Geraghty announced his second retirement from inter-county football and became a selector.[7]
In December 2013, Geraghty confirmed that he would play Sigerson Cup football for Blanchardstown IT in 2014 as he is enrolled in a Social and Community Development course at the college.[8]
In January 2021, he was named as a selector of the Meath under-20 county team under the management of Bernard Flynn.[9]
In May 2020, the Irish Independent named Geraghty as one of the "dozens of brilliant players" who narrowly missed selection for its "Top 20 footballers in Ireland over the past 50 years".[10]
Association football
Geraghty played association football with Kentstown Rovers. After scoring 1–2 in the 1994 Leinster Senior Football Championship final loss to Dublin, Manchester United manager Alex Ferguson (a spectator at Croke Park) namechecked Geraghty in an interview with Ger Canning on RTÉ Television. Ferguson remarked that he did not have his checkbook with him, but Arsenal were alerted and invited Geraghty for a trial. In his autobiography, Arsenal's England international player Paul Merson described Geraghty as "the fittest player I ever saw". Geraghty played two matches for Arsenal before returning home to resume his career with Meath.[11]
Managerial
In November 2017, Graham was announced as the new Intermediate Football manager for Glen Emmets GFC in Tullyallen, County Louth.
Political career
In 2006, Geraghty was selected by the Fine Gael political party to contest the general election of 2007 in his home constituency of Meath West.[12] However, he performed poorly in the election, obtaining only 1,284 first preference votes - the lowest of the three Fine Gael candidates standing - and was eliminated from the race after the fourth count.[13]