What's new

GAA football and hurling

1224251963522_1.jpg

Dublin Manager Pat Gilroy

All change for Dubs

Dublin manager Pat Gilroy will hand five players their Leinster SFC debuts against Wexford at Croke Park on Sunday.

Mick Fitzsimons (Cuala), Philip McMahon (Ballymun Kickhams), Cian O'Sullivan (Kilmacud Crokes), Niall Corkery (do) and Kevin McManamon (St. Jude's) will all make their first championship starts for Gilroy's new-look side. McMahon and O'Sullivan have both tasted championship action before as substitutes against Louth in 2008 and Kerry in 2009 respectively.

The selection features just eight survivors from the side which suffered a 17-point drubbing at the hands of Kerry in last August's All-Ireland quarter-final - Stephen Cluxton, Denis Bastick, team captain David Henry, Barry Cahill, Ross McConnell, Paul Flynn, Conal Keaney and Bernard Brogan.

Flynn has been passed fit to start after recovering from a hamstring problem, but a similar injury has kept Alan Brogan out of the starting line-up. Injury has also ruled out Darren Magee (heel), Paul Casey (hamstring), Kevin Bonner, Alan Hubbard (heel) and former county hurler Ross O'Carroll, whose younger brother Rory starts at full back.

The substitutes will be announced before the game.

Dublin (SF v Wexford): S Cluxton; M Fitzsimons, Rory O'Carroll, P McMahon; D Bastick, C O'Sullivan, B Cahill; E Fennell, R McConnell; N Corkery, D Henry, P Flynn; C Keaney, B Brogan, K McManamon.

 
000363f4189r.jpg


Fermanagh 1-13 Cavan 0-13

Fermanagh created history with a first ever Championship win at Breffni Park to set up an Ulster Senior Football semi-final with Monaghan.

Two points each from Michael Brennan and Gareth Smith helped Cavan to a 0-08 to 0-07 interval lead, with Paul Ward hitting three Erne points.

Ryan Carson, Chris O'Brien and substitute Seamus Quigley were on target for Fermanagh in the second period, and they clinched victory with a Carson goal in the 64th minute.
 
Munster SFC preview: Cork v Kerry

CooperColm_grapplesVCork.jpg



Cork and Kerry have proven inseparable in Munster in recent seasons and another close encounter can be expected here.​

Cork and Kerry have proven inseparable in Munster in recent seasons and another close encounter can be expected here.

The Rebels looked to be on their way to victory in the drawn game when they lead by four points as the game entered its defining moments in Killarney, but such was the strength with which Kerry finished that Cork probably ended up content to draw.

This would suggest the momentum is now with the All-Ireland champions going into the replay and with Paul Galvin possibly able to put in a longer stint after coming on to turn the game with 15 minutes to go last weekend, Kerry will certainly be confident.

But, aside from the finish, Cork had dominated most of the match, especially around the middle of the field, which strangled Kerry's supply lines into Kieran Donaghy and Colm Cooper. It leaves the analysis nicely poised with ample reasons to fancy either side in the replay, but generally, the side that snatches survival from the jaws of defeat usually snatches the initiative along with it, as well as the greater capacity for learning from their mistakes and improving.

Cork will no doubt up their game also, after their mentality was questioned because of letting their lead slip, but if Kerry can get into their stride a little earlier and dictate things more in the middle third, they can further impose their psychological dominance over their neighbours and win this game.

But still, the uppermost question in peoples' minds is not the outcome of Cork and Kerry's Munster squabbles but how things will pan out if and when they meet nearer September.

Cork: A Quirke; R Carey, G Canty (capt), J O'Sullivan; N O'Leary, M Shields, P Kissane; A O'Connor, A Walsh; P O'Neill, D O'Connor, P Kelly; D Goulding, C Sheehan, P Kerrigan.

Kerry: TBC
 
Dublin 2-15 Wexford 0-16 (AET)




0003644e189r.jpg

Niall Corkery of Dublin shields the ball from Wexford's Brian Malone




Sunday, 13 June 2010


Dublin recovered from a disastrous first half, coming from behind to defeat Wexford after extra-time to book their place in the Leinster SFC semi-finals.


Pat Gilroy's side turned a seven points deficit into a seven points win, but the boss will be seriously concerned over the ineptitude displayed by his side in an opening 35 minutes that drew boos and jeers from their supporters among a crowd of 49,757 at Croke Park.


The Dubs clearly had difficulty in adapting to the new style of play embraced by Gilroy, despite the fact that they had embraced a more defensive strategy with considerable success during the National League.



Totally outplayed in the opening half, Dublin looked to be on their way to a first Leinster Championship defeat since 2004, but they turned the game around, despite being reduced to 13 men late in normal time.


Wexford displayed all the hunger and desire in the opening half, running confidently at an inept Dublin side, often with little or no resistance.


The Dubs scored just two first half points, both from Bernard Brogan, and could find no way to break down a tenacious Wexford defence.


Much had been made of the new Dublin defensive strategy, but it was their opponents who got men behind the ball and broke from the back with searing pace to set up scoring opportunities.


Matty Forde, returning from a two-year injury nightmare, swept over four frees, three of them from 45 metres, while Redmond Barry drilled a '45 between the posts.
Eric Bradley and Ciaran Lyng also hit the target, while Pat Gilroy reacted to his side's problems at midfield by calling Eamon Fennell ashore after just 21 minutes.


Still, they failed to spark, displaying an apparent lack of appetite and direction, their support play vastly superior to that of Jason Ryan's side.


As the Dublin players left the field with a 0-8 to 0-2 deficit at the interval, they were jeered by their own supporters.


Derision on the Hill grew louder when Forde stretched Wexford's lead, and the Dubs shot a succession of wides, some of them well off the mark.


Paul Flynn did manage to hit the target from a difficult angle, and Dublin spirits received a much-needed lift when substitute Alan Brogan landed a superb point.


Bernard Brogan reduced the deficit to four in the 53rd minute when he blazed over after Anthony Masterson had saved from Eoghan O'Gara, and finally, there was a sense that the tide was turning.


Substitutes O'Gara and Michael Dara McAuley added a spark to Dublin's attacking dynamic, and despite the straight red card dismissal of wing back Denis Bastic in the 57th minute, they continued to prosper.


The breakthrough came just a minute later when Bernard Brogan collected Conal Keaney's superb pass to crash home a goal, and they took the lead for the first time in the 64th minute through Keaney.


But Forde came to Wexford's rescue, his sixth converted free making it 1-9 to 0-12, and for the second time on a drama-packed afternoon, Croke Park went to extra-time.

Bernard Brogan grabbed his second goal, hitting the roof of the net after Quinn's shot for a point had come back off a post two minutes into extra-time, and midway through added time, Dublin led by 2-11 to 0-12.

Wexford had given their all, and had nothing left in the tank as Quinn reeled off four points and the Dubs stormed into the last four.

Dublin: S Cluxton, M Fitzsimons, Rory O'Carroll, P McMahon, D Bastick, C O'Sullivan, B Cahill, E Fennell, R McConnell, N Corkery, D Henry, P Flynn (0-1), C Keaney (0-2, 1f), B Brogan (2-4, 0-1f), K McManamon.
Subs: G Brennan for O'Sullivan, A Brogan (0-2) for Fennell, E O'Gara for McManamon, M McAuley (0-1) for Henry, T Quinn (0-4, 1f), B Cullen (0-1), Fennell for Corkery, K Nolan (0-1) for Flynn, P Andrews for B Brogan


Wexford: A Masterson, J Wadding, G Molloy, B Malone, C Morris, D Murphy, A Doyle, D Waters, E Bradley (0-1), S Roche (0-2), R Barry (0-2, 1 '5), A Flynn (0-1), C Lyng (0-1), PJ Banville (0-1), M Forde (0-7, 7f).

Subs: D Fogarty for Waters, A Morrissey for Doyle, B Doyle for Bradley, C Byrne for Morris

Referee: M Higgins (Fermanagh)
 
Noely how did cork do.Moh will be on the batter toolollollol

Cork 1-14 Kerry 1-15 (AET)


00036449189r.jpg

Colm 'Gooch' Cooper was superb for Kerry in Páirc Uí Chaoimh - he knocked over six points for The Kingdom





Sunday, 13 June 2010


Reigning All-Ireland champions Kerry showed the greater composure as they overcame old foes Cork after extra-time to reach the Munster SFC final.

A brace of points each from Colm Cooper and substitute Barry John Keane, in the two halves of extra-time, were enough to see Kerry through to a 4 July decider against Limerick.

A Daniel Goulding goal had Cork 1-06 to 0-05 to the good at half-time, but Kerry, with Kieran Donaghy finding the net in the 37th minute, fought back and a late Marc O Se point tied the game at 1-11 apiece.

The Kingdom had won a dubious free in the closing stages of normal time, which earned Cork captain Graham Canty his second yellow card, and Cooper stepped up to point the resulting free for a 1-10 to 1-10 scoreline.

Television replays showed that Canty had actually made a connection with the ball first, or at least at the same time as the advancing Cooper, but the Gooch's theatrics helped sway the decision.

An improvised overhead effort from Ciaran Sheehan nudged Cork back ahead, but Kerry swept forward to claim the levelling point in injury-time, which defender O Se popped over after combining with Donaghy.

Referee Pat McEnaney and his match officials certainly had an indifferent day, with some 'soft' frees awarded. Early in the second half, there was also questionable '45' given in Kerry's favour and duly pointed by Bryan Sheehan.

But the deciding factor in this Pairc Ui Chaoimh tussle was, once again, Cork's failure to put Kerry away having established a decent lead.

Goulding's 15th-minute goal had the Rebels 1-02 to 0-01 ahead and they continued to hold that advantage, leading by three points with 20 minutes remaining in normal time.

However, just like last weekend's drawn game in Killarney, Conor Counihan's men failed to show the necessary killer instinct and key men like Cooper, Paul Galvin and the O Se brothers, Tomas and Marc, helped Kerry get back on terms.

Galvin, on as a first half substitute, covered a huge amount of ground and frustrated Cork with some vital carries in defence and attack, while Cooper's six-point tally - five from frees - was crucial in windy conditions.

Kerry, who included Anthony Maher and David Moran in their team, had the elements to their advantage in the opening half but fell behind to two early frees from Daniel Goulding and Donncha O'Connor.

Bryan Sheehan opened Kerry's account in the ninth minute, converting a left-sided free, before O'Connor missed a kickable 12th minute effort, coming after a forceful challenge by Pearse O'Neill on Tommy Griffin.

Kerry's Brendan Kealy was the busier of the goalkeepers. He did well to put O'Connor off as the Cork centre-forward tried to fist a high ball to the net.

But, having seemingly gathered a second high ball in on top of him, Kealy allowed Goulding to dispossess him and quickly turn to poke home off the ground for Cork's only goal.

The Rebels lost the services of Aidan Walsh to a hamstring injury, with Derek Kavanagh coming on in his place, and Kerry reacted smartly to the concession of that goal.

Cooper notched his first pointed free and added his only point from play soon after, with Donaghy the provider. Sheehan missed a chance to make it a one-point game, and Kerry breathed a sigh of relief when Goulding clipped a shot inches wide of Kealy's goal, with Tom O'Sullivan putting sufficient pressure on him.

Goulding was back on target, drawing a '45' over from right to left, and efforts from O'Connor and defender Michael Shields put Cork in a commanding position at 1-05 to 0-03 in the 26th minute.

The action had been fairly stop-start up to that point, and Kerry ramped up the intensity when Declan O'Sullivan pointed and Paul Galvin, the 2009 Footballer of the Year, was brought on just moments later.

Tempers boiled over on the half hour mark, as Kavanagh and Canty picked up yellow cards for clashing with Cooper and Galvin respectively.

Cork missed another goal-scoring opportunity when Paudie Kissane laid the ball through on a plate for full-forward Sheehan, but the youngster's rifled right-footed shot skimmed its way over the crossbar.

The 26,486-strong crowd watched Kerry grab the half's final point through Bryan Sheehan, and Cooper should have followed it up with a goal. Donaghy plucked down a high ball and dished it off for Cooper whose placed effort slide away to the left of the target.

Cork almost engineered a goal at the start of the second half, only for Kealy to parry Alan O'Connor's punched effort. Kerry were quickly back on the attack and Donnacha Walsh's through ball allowed Cooper to create Donaghy's well-taken goal.

Gobbling up Cooper's hand pass, Donaghy fended off Canty's challenge and his low effort beat Alan Quirke to nestle in the bottom right corner of the net.

A brace of points from Donncha O'Connor - a free and one from play - saw Cork recover to take a 1-08 to 1-05 advantage, and as scores followed from Bryan Sheehan, Paddy Kelly, Declan O'Sullivan and Goulding, the home side maintained that three-point buffer.

Cooper provided some inspiration for Kerry as they sought to pull that deficit back. He sent over a free and did likewise after Jamie O'Sullivan had floored him with a hand trip.

Cork were suddenly struggling at just the wrong time, taking poor options and wayward shots from distance, as Kerry, helped by the influence of Galvin and fellow substitute Micheal Quirke, tightened things up around the middle.

When Canty felled the onrushing Cooper in the 65th minute and referee McEnaney reached for his red card, Cork were on the brink of imploding. Cooper mopped up with the levelling free.

A ball in from Colm O'Neill broke to Ciaran Sheehan who managed to squeeze the ball through the uprights for the lead score, but in the second minute of injury-time, a last-gasp raid down the left resulted in Donaghy cleverly putting O Se through for the point that ensured extra-time.

With Cork restored to 15 players for extra-time - John Miskella was introduced for Canty - a high quality effort from substitute Fintan Goold edged the hosts back in front at 1-12 to 1-11.

Kevin McMahon, another new man in, struck a wide from the left as Cork's Jekyll and Hyde performance continued and they paid the price when Cooper converted a free and Donaghy put Barry John Keane through for classy score.

McMahon kicked another wide after good work from Colm O'Neill, and Kerry finished the opening period of extra-time 1-14 to 1-12 ahead, with Donaghy again teeing up Keane.

Paddy Kelly hit a wide as Cork continued their struggle for scores, in the second period. A Cooper point attempt bounced back off a post, before Noel O'Leary got forward to close the gap to a single point.

A dubious foul by substitute Eoin Cadogan on Donaghy allowed Cooper steady Kerry at 1-15 to 1-13, and although John Hayes' late free produced a helter skelter conclusion, Kerry held on to secure their first replay win in Cork since 1976.

Scorers: Cork: D Goulding 1-03 (0-02f, 0-01 '45'), D O'Connor 0-04 (0-02f), C Sheehan 0-02, M Shields, P Kelly, F Goold, N O'Leary, J Hayes (0-01f) 0-01 each
Kerry: K Donaghy 1-01, C Cooper 0-06 (0-05f), B Sheehan 0-03 (0-01f, 0-01 '45'), Declan O'Sullivan, BJ Keane 0-02 each, M O Se 0-01

CORK: Alan Quirke; Ray Carey, Graham Canty (capt), Jamie O'Sullivan; Noel O'Leary, Michael Shields, Paudie Kissane; Alan O'Connor, Aidan Walsh; Pearse O'Neill, Donncha O'Connor, Paddy Kelly; Daniel Goulding, Ciaran Sheehan, Paul Kerrigan.

Subs used: Derek Kavanagh for Walsh (16 mins), Eoin Cadogan for O'Leary (53), Colm O'Neill for Goulding (56), Fintan Goold for Kavanagh (58), Kevin McMahon for Kerrigan (70); John Miskella for Canty (extra-time), Eoin Cotter for O'Sullivan, Noel O'Leary for Miskella (11, extra-time), John Hayes for O'Connor (16, extra-time).

KERRY: Brendan Kealy; Marc O Se, Tommy Griffin, Tom O'Sullivan; Tomas O Se, Mike McCarthy, Killian Young; Seamus Scanlon, David Moran; Anthony Maher, Declan O'Sullivan, Donnacha Walsh; Colm Cooper, Kieran Donaghy, Bryan Sheehan (capt).

Subs used: Paul Galvin for Moran (28 mins), Micheal Quirke for Maher (54), Barry John Keane for Sheehan (55), Darran O'Sullivan for Walsh (60), Daniel Bohan for T O Se (68); Adrian O'Connell for Young (8, extra-time), Donnacha Walsh for Scanlon (17, extra-time).

Referee: Pat McEnaney (Monaghan)
 
No drink for moh ally ;) although i feel like it after that performance ally....🤐
 
Hurling is my first love ally but i will say 👍 to Kerry the better team won :)

Sorry meant to add to my last post...Well done to the Dubs 👍
 
No Noel went to my local for a few had the kids with me ,what a day that was we got absolutely drenched thought there wasn't a bad seat in Croker anymore but believe me there is when it's peeing down it was my daughters first time think it will be her last she wasn't impressed lol
first half was terrible really thought we weren't going to do it but Wexford were as bad in the 2nd half and thankfully b brogan found his shooting boots in the 2nd half don't think there will be an AI for the dubs this year but fair play to gilroy didn't panic and made the changes when they needed to be done
hard luck moh really thought cork would do it
 
dublin%20v%20wexford%20sfc.jpg



Results
Sunday 13 June

Leinster SFC quarter-final
At Croke Park
Meath 2-13
Laois 1-16 aet

Leinster SFC quarter-final
At Croke Park
Dublin 2-16 👍
Wexford 0-15 aet

Munster SFC semi-final replay
At Pairc Ui Chaoimh
Kerry 1-15
Cork 1-14 aet

ESB Ulster MHC semi-final
At Casement Park
Armagh 0-13
Down 0-10


Saturday 12 June

Ulster SFC quarter-final
At Kingspan Breffni Park
Fermanagh 1-13
Cavan 0-13
 
Incident may spark Galvin probe

CorkVKerryPaulGalvinAndEoinCadoganJune132010INPHO.jpg

When Footballer of the Year Paul Galvin squares up to Cork, sparks inevitably fly.

And so it was again yesterday as the Finuge man spear-headed a Kingdom comeback against the Rebels.

Galvin may not have heard the last of an angry late confrontation with Cork’s Eoin Cadogan in which the Kerry man appeared to jab Cadogan in the mouth as he attempted to wrestle the ball back from him to take a Kerry free.

The pair clashed in the league game between the counties earlier this season in an incident which resulted in both being sent off. The Central Competitions Control Committee may choose to take a closer look at the incident when they convene today, disciplinary sources said last night.

Irish International Rules boss and television analyst Anthony Tohill last night described the incident as ‘totally unacceptable.’

Speaking on The Sunday Game he said: "There are certain things, certain taboos, you don’t do and this is one of them. It is totally unacceptable. Things like that have no place in the game."

Fellow analyst Colm O’Rourke believed the incident merited a dismissal for Galvin.

He said: "I Pat (McEnaney) had seen it, it would have been a red card. Often there is reaction from disciplinary bodies to what we (on The Sunday Game) say. They should make up their own minds on it."
 
Eight-week ban proposed for Galvin

00030e54189r.jpg


The GAA's Central Competitions Control Committee has proposed an eight-week ban for Kerry footballer Paul Galvin.

The Finigue clubman, who is no stranger to controversy, clashed with Cork's Eoin Cadogan in the Munster SFC semi-final last Sunday and appeared to fish-hook his opponent.

Referee Pat McEnaney missed the incident in real time but the panellists on The Sunday Game did not, with Anthony Tohill labelling the attack as 'unacceptable'.

The CCCC asked the arbitrator to review the offence on Monday and a four-week ban was automatically doubled as Galvin has already served a similar suspension earlier in the year.

That initial ban was incurred when Galvin and Cadogan tangled in the NFL in February.

The proposed ban would see Galvin miss the Munster final against Limerick on 4 July and a potential All-Ireland quarter-final.

Galvin now faces a date with Central Hearings Committee, with an appeal of the ban very much on the cards.




And quite right too imo Galvin is no doubt one of the best footballers around but is also a huge liability to the team and has yet again let Kerry down with that disgracful act on Sunday if it was up to me i'd ban him for the rest of the championship
 
Back
Top