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Inside Track

Hurling’s force of nature sweep Tipperary men aside again

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The Kilkerrin Clonberne team which won the Tesco All-Ireland ladies football club sevens senior final in Naomh Mearnóg GAA Club, Portmarnock. Back row, left to right: Back Row: Michael Divillly, Caoimhe Boyle, Sarah Gormally, Nicola Ward, Claire Dunleavy, Louise Ward, Emma Flanagan, Lisa Walsh, Willie Ward. Front row: Eamon Mahony, Niamh Divilly, Olivia Divilly, Ailbhe Mahony, Aoife McStay, Lisa Murphy, Annie Boyle.

Inside Track with John McIntyre

THE All-Ireland hurling final replay at Croke Park on Saturday evening was a different kind of animal to the epic drawn encounter and it was largely played on Kilkenny’s terms.

Again, it produced another riveting contest, but the Cats rarely allowed Tipperary the kind of space they had thrived in three weeks previously in maintaining their modern-day dominance over the county’s arch rivals.

Records fell all over the place at GAA headquarters. It was Kilkenny’s tenth All-Ireland title in 16 years; their seventh in ninth seasons; Henry Shefflin became the first hurler to win ten senior medals; JJ Delaney and Tommy Walsh reach nine; while Brian Cody leads the Noresiders to a tenth All-Ireland triumph under his watch.

Saturday’s replay success also underlined why Kilkenny have been a law unto themselves over the past 15 years. This great team’s long established attributes of savage commitment, intensity, manic desire and unrelenting work ethic were all at the core of their latest victory over Tipperary. They took hooking and blocking to new levels of defiance and though it’s hard to credit given all that they have won, Kilkenny had a clear edge in hunger over Eamon O’Shea’s chastened troops too.

What makes Kilkenny’s latest championship achievement all the more phenomenal was that many neutrals thought that they were a spent force after last year’s quarter-final exit to Cork in Thurles. They looked a battle weary outfit that day; had earlier lost a replay to Dublin in the provincial campaign; while Cody had to take a break from sideline duties due to illness. Furthermore, Kilkenny hadn’t even played in Croke Park in 2013 and, putting all those things together, it was easy reach the conclusion that they, at least, faced a couple of years in transition.

Against that background, Kilkenny’s immediate renaissance this year is nothing short of amazing, but this team has never conformed to normal standards. In 2014, they have won everything: the Walsh Cup; the National League; the Leinster title; and now the county’s 35th All-Ireland championship. Their longer serving celebrated in Croke Park on Saturday evening as though they were just after winning their first Celtic Cross. This was one against the head.

Kilkenny were admittedly stretched at times in the opening half of Saturday’s replay, but they reached the interval only two points behind before going on to largely dominate the second-half with the switch of the previously subdued Colin Fennelly to full forward a key move. The Power brothers, Richie and John, also burst into life and it was their goals in the final quarter which sent Tipperary over the edge.

In fact, Kilkenny ought to have won by more. Opposition goalkeeper Darren Gleeson made a couple of critical interventions while Seamus Callanan’s second goal in the 69th minute was more the product of a lucky break than Tipperary cutting the Kilkenny defence apart as Lar Corbett had done in setting up Callanan’s opening goal seven minutes from the break. You could argue that Brendan Maher and company were the better team up to half time, but they were too goal hungry and spurned a couple of routine point-scoring opportunities in the vain pursuit of rattling the Kilkenny net.

For more, read this week’s Connacht Tribune.

 

Connacht Tribune

Tyrone will come out guns blazing but Galway will weather the storm

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Galway manager Fergal Healy with his wife Karen and children, from left, Finn, Tess, Rowan and Conn after their Leinster Minor Hurling Final victory over Kilkenny in Portlaoise on Friday evening. Photo: Stephen Marken/Sportsfile.

Inside Track with John McIntyre

SOMETHING very odd happened to Tyrone in the Ulster championship in early April. On their home turf of Healy Park, they were doing nearly everything expected of them when leading Monaghan by five points at half-time. You couldn’t say for definite that the match was done and dusted, but the 2021 All-Ireland champions were in pole position.

You would have expected them to drive on against an honest if limited Monaghan outfit. Instead, Tyrone didn’t score for the opening 16 minutes of the second-half and in an enthralling finale, were left stunned by defender Ryan’s Toole’s stoppage-time goal snatching the honours for the Farney men on a 2-17 to 1-18 scoreline.

A couple of weeks later, Monaghan themselves had exited the Ulster title race when Derry comfortably got the better of them (1-21 to 2-10), leaving us more puzzled than ever by Tyrone’s dramatic decline since overcoming Mayo to claim Sam barely 20 months previously. Last year, they crashed out of Ulster by 11 points to Derry and subsequently came up six short against Armagh in the All-Ireland qualifiers.

Against that background, their recent loss to Monaghan shouldn’t have come as a surprise, but it did. Tyrone may have made a shambolic defence of the All-Ireland title, but there is still a lot of quality in their ranks. They have an adventurous ‘keeper in Niall Morgan, while the long-serving Peter Harte, Darragh Canavan, Darren McCurry, Cathal McShane, Conor Meyler, Mattie Donnelly, and Conn Kilpatrick are all top-class performers when in the mood.

There’s hardly been a word about them for the past six weeks. Tyrone are lying low, desperately trying to rediscover the verve and cohesion which took them all the way in 2021. Their pride is on the line. It makes them dangerous opponents for Galway in the opening round of All-Ireland group matches at Pearse Stadium on Saturday.

For more, read this week’s Connacht Tribune.

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Connacht Tribune

Galway footballers are shaping like a team which could go all the way

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Galway team manager Padraic Joyce with his daughter Jodie and son Charlie holding the Nestor Cup, along with Captain Seán Kelly after Sunday's Connacht Final triumph over Sligo at MacHale Park. Photo: Joe O'Shaughnessy.

Inside Track with John McIntyre

GALWAY footballers won’t get much credit for their easy victory over Sligo in Sunday’s Connacht Final in Castlebar, but when a team achieves something that hasn’t been done for 20 years, perhaps we should be a little more appreciative of the Tribesmen retaining the JJ Nestor Cup for the first time in two decades.

To be honest, if Galway were to live up to their standing as serious All-Ireland contenders, they needed to be doing a number on Sligo. In this year’s National League, the counties were three divisions apart and though Tony McEntee’s team achieved promotion and were on a nine-match unbeaten run, a serious rise in class faced them at MacHale Park.

Granted, Sligo made a bright start with three points in the opening five minutes from Pat Spillane, Sean Carrabine and the accurate Darragh Cummins, but they would only manage two more by the break despite having the wind behind them. Though wing back Luke Towey was catching the eye with his runs up-field, Galway rarely looked under pressure.

Sligo were bravely committing numbers to the middle third, which meant they were a little light in numbers around their own posts. They couldn’t afford to lose possession coming out of their own half, but that’s what happened in the build up to Galway’s second goal. Damien Comer overturned Cian Lally and from his counter-attack, Matthew Tierney expertly finished to the net at the near post.

For more, read this week’s Connacht Tribune.

Connacht Tribune Digital Edition App

Download the Connacht Tribune Digital Edition App to access to Galway’s best-selling newspaper.

Click HERE to download it for iPhone and iPad from Apple’s App Store, or HERE to get the Android Version from Google Play.

Or purchase the Digital Edition for PC, Mac or Laptop from Pagesuite  HERE.

Get the Connacht Tribune Live app
The Connacht Tribune Live app is the home of everything that is happening in Galway City and county. It’s completely FREE and features all the latest news, sport and information on what’s on in your area. Click HERE to download it for iPhone and iPad from Apple’s App Store, or HERE to get the Android Version from Google Play.

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Connacht Tribune

Leinster hurling race so predictable but skin and hair flying down south

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Galway’s Conor Whelan lays off a pass against Kilkenny’s Mikey Butler during Sunday's Leinster Senior Hurling Championship tie at Nowlan Park. Photo: Joe O'Shaughnessy.

Inside Track with John McIntyre

IS the Leinster hurling championship something of a sham compared to its Munster counterpart? Everybody knows who will end up in the provincial final in the east, but nobody knows the two teams who will feature in the ultimate battle for supremacy down south.

All-Ireland champions Limerick aren’t guaranteed to even make it out of the province, never mind reach the Munster final, after their narrow loss to Clare in Saturday evening’s epic at the Gaelic Grounds. Everything is still on the line for the five counties involved, although Waterford are again under serious pressure after losing their opening two matches.

In Leinster, there is little of that drama. Galway and Kilkenny are miles ahead of the rest; the only thing at stake is whether Dublin or Wexford – they meet in Croke Park on Saturday – will be the third team to emerge for the All-Ireland series. It’s a game which is hard to call. Wexford are going backwards while Dublin look callow as Micheál Donoghue is trying to build the nucleus of a new team.

Though Antrim are improving – they held the Dubs to a draw and only lost to Wexford by four points – the men from the Glens would be out of their depth in Munster; while Westmeath are proving cannon-fodder for everyone else. Since Galway headed east in 2009, they have clashed with Kilkenny in seven Leinster finals and another showdown is inevitable next month.

In contrast, every match in Munster is virtually do-or die. When Clare rolled into Limerick last Saturday, they knew another defeat after losing to Tipperary in the opening round would leave them on the precipice of exiting the championship. There’s a real dog-eat-dog appeal about all the games. In Leinster, there are two big hounds, and the rest are chihuahuas.

For more, read this week’s Connacht Tribune.

Connacht Tribune Digital Edition App

Download the Connacht Tribune Digital Edition App to access to Galway’s best-selling newspaper.

Click HERE to download it for iPhone and iPad from Apple’s App Store, or HERE to get the Android Version from Google Play.

Or purchase the Digital Edition for PC, Mac or Laptop from Pagesuite  HERE.

Get the Connacht Tribune Live app
The Connacht Tribune Live app is the home of everything that is happening in Galway City and county. It’s completely FREE and features all the latest news, sport and information on what’s on in your area. Click HERE to download it for iPhone and iPad from Apple’s App Store, or HERE to get the Android Version from Google Play.

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