Dublin, Mayo and Cavan stars help Collingwood and Melbourne book AFLW preliminary final spots

AISLING SHERIDAN AND Sarah Rowe both featured as Collingwood booked their place in the AFLW preliminary finals next weekend, while Dublin’s Lauren Magee was in action for Melbourne as they also advanced.

Collingwood earned a 7.8 (50) to 7.2 (44) over North Melbourne to send them through having lost out to the same opposition at this stage last year. They will now face the Brisbane Lions in the preliminary final, a side that is home to Tipperary’s Orla O’Dwyer.

North Melbourne were leading by 14 points heading into the final quarter of the tie, but Collingwood rallied to a six-point win with Rowe and Sheridan making solid contributions.

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Cavan star Sheridan claimed 13 disposals and eight kicks while Rowe chipped in with 12 disposals and nine kicks. Rowe’s Mayo teammate Aileen Gilroy was in action for the defeated North Melbourne, and finished with 12 disposals and 11 kicks.

HISTORY MADE AT VIC PARK 🎉 pic.twitter.com/08LcYwWnnr

— Collingwood AFLW (@CollingwoodAFLW) April 3, 2021

Meanwhile, the Melbourne Demons were also victorious in their qualifying final, defeating Fremantle by 5.10 (40) to 3.5 (23) to pair them with Adelaide Crows in next week’s preliminary final.

The Crows have Clare’s Ailish Considine in their ranks.

Dublin defender Sinéad Goldrick was ruled out of the Fremantle tie due to injury, but her county teammate Magee featured in the 17-point win and helped herself to five disposals and three kicks.

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WINNERS! We’re off to a Prelim! 🤩#FiredUp | #AFLWDeesFreo pic.twitter.com/xqpTMSCRkr

— Melbourne AFLW (@MelbourneAFLW) April 3, 2021

‘In a good place’ – Dublin’s Covid breach won’t impact inter-county return, says GAA President

THE GAA PRESIDENT believes that Dublin’s training session which breached Covid-19 guidelines will not affect the return to inter-county activity — but another incident may.

Speaking on Red FM’s Big Red Bench this evening, Larry McCarthy said the planned return is “in a good place” despite recent reports of breaches of GAA and Government guidelines.

On Thursday morning, the Irish Independent published photos of Dublin players at an early-morning training session on Wednesday. It’s reported that at least nine players from the All-Ireland six-in-a-row winning side participated in the session at Innisfails GAA club in Balgriffin.

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Afterwards, the GAA expressed “frustration and extreme disappointment” in a strongly-worded statement, while Dublin suspended manager Dessie Farrell for 12 weeks.

The Irish Examiner also reported on Tuesday that Gardaí were investigating possible breaches of Covid-19 regulations with training sessions held by a club in West Cork.

These reports of breaches came the week it was announced that collective senior inter-county training is permitted to resume from 19 April, with a regionalised National League expected to start in May.

A letter was also issued to club and county secretaries afterwards, warning them that counties who resume training early will be punished and potentially put the return to play “in serious jeopardy”.

While McCarthy believes all will proceed as planned at the minute, another county team breaching restrictions would put the return at risk.

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“I don’t think honestly this particular incident is going to impact it,” he told Valerie Wheeler on the Cork radio station when asked about the Dublin breach.

“Now, if there was another one? Oh Lord, that would make it very difficult for us.

I’m reasonably confident at the moment that we will get back, assuming that the numbers stay where they are and that the public health authorities don’t decide that they’ve gone awry over Easter or anything like that.

“All going well, fingers crossed, I think we’re in a good place.”

McCarthy, living in the capital having recently moved from New York, confirmed that the GAA’s management committee appointed a special group to investigate Dublin’s breach.

“Coiste Bainistí had an emergency meeting and we appointed an investigation committee to look into it, as we did with the Cork incident and Down incident earlier in the year so we’re adopting the exact same procedures.”

Listen back to my chat with President of the @officialgaa Larry McCarthy. We chatted loads including how another county team breaching covid rules could put return of play at risk & getting clubs back playing is his priority📻🎙 https://t.co/oQY50OsReo

— Valerie Wheeler (@ValerieWheeler_) April 3, 2021

McCarthy noted that it will be difficult to “keep everybody happy” in terms of fixtures, but getting clubs back to action is his priority.

“We will have a comprehensive games programme,” he continued.

“We’re working on it at the moment. It’s going to be concertinaed a little bit so it’s going to make it a little more difficult and a little bit more challenging. But I’ve no doubt with the help of the counties and with the help of the players we will have a programme of games right through the summer.

But the more important element of that is I just hope to God we get the clubs up and operating. The 98% is more important than the 2% but the 2% are our shop window. The ideal here is to get the clubs back as quickly as is feasible.” 

Asked if he wanted a National League, a championship, and club action, McCarthy listed them in order of priority: “Let me rephrase that. I want club action, then we want League, and then we want Championship.

“I’d love to see the clubs back now but at the moment we only have permission obviously for the inter-county stuff to come back, so we’ll run a league and we’ll run a championship and see where we go after that.”

You can listen to the full interview with McCarthy here.

The current state of Irish football, the late, great David Rocastle, and the week’s best sportswriting

1. Like all tight games it was decided in a couple of key moments. The home team dominated the ball without carving out many openings; they created a couple of big chances and missed them. The away team pressed well and scored a belter off a half-chance. It could have gone either way: that’s football.

So why is this rather humdrum defeat being portrayed as some kind of historic disgrace? For no better reason than one of the teams is called Ireland, and the other is called Luxembourg. This apparently qualifies as a QED. Ireland once played in the quarter-finals of the World Cup, Luxembourg is a postage stamp on the map of Europe: what more is there to say?

‘Theatrical displays of outrage to Luxembourg defeat will get us nowhere,’ writes Ken Early in the Irish Times.

2. Behind every great sporting triumph there is often an untold story of struggle. Take Emma Hayes: the day before the Chelsea manager watched her side win the Women’s Super League title in 2015, she had to go to hospital to have a procedure to remove a contraceptive coil, which she had inserted to help relieve symptoms of endometriosis. 

This is not an easy subject to discuss – even for someone like Hayes, whose glittering CV, which includes three league titles, two FA Cups and two League Cups and brilliant coaching brain give her an aura of invincibility. She knows she is not superhuman, which is why, in her first major newspaper interview on living with endometriosis, she wants to talk so openly and in often disarming detail about the reality of life with the condition. 

The Telegraph’s Kate Rowan and Molly McElwee interview Chelsea manager Emma Hayes and Paralympian Charlotte Henshaw on their experiences of endometriosis.

3. The scars of that fateful night remain. For the Forristals. For the O’Grady family – “it’s a flame that never goes out,” says Martin’s brother Pat. “It was in a way a mini Stardust.” For the Costellos who gave their approval to this piece but politely declined to contribute.

‘Remembering Waterford GAA’s darkest night 40 years on,’ by The Irish Examiner’s John Fogarty.

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A general view of hurls.

Source: Laszlo Geczo/INPHO

4. Hipster has become a term of mild abuse in the football media and it is being bandied about in the current debate between Stephen Kenny supporters and those who dismiss his suitability for the job, the battle lines for which have been drawn along entirely predictable lines.

A legion of ex Republic of Ireland pros is lined up against Kenny, an individual who they do not know, nor probably wish to know, and probably won’t need to know if results continue along the present dismal path for too much longer.

Another comment piece after a dismal international window for Ireland, this one written by Paul Rowan for the Times (€).

5. David Rocastle’s family are huddled up on the sofa sharing stories and all his qualities shine through them. Waves of happiness, humility, humour — the way he lived his life — course through the conversation. His three children, Melissa, Ryan and Monique, carry the baton beautifully. 

It is not just the physical resemblance but the spirit that is unmissable. “I can look at each one of them and see David in them,” says their mum, Janet. “They all have a nice nature. He has left a lot here behind. Ryan is so much like David in his mannerisms and his character. He is kind just like his dad. As for the girls…” The family all crease up in a burst of hysterics. 

Monique has a determined glint in her eye as she picks up the explanation: “We are like how dad was on the pitch.” 

The Athletic’s Amy Lawrence profiles the late, great David Rocastle (€).

6. It’s perhaps, though, worth pausing and going back to basics, perhaps the most basic question of all: what is sport? Football boomed in the English public schools in the 19th century. It was partly because, with its demand for physical endurance, courage, strategy and calmness under pressure, it was seen as a tool for honing the skills required to run the Empire. It was also partly because Muscular Christianity, the prevailing doctrine of most of those schools, saw physical activity as worthwhile in itself, not least because it prevented what they euphemistically called “solipsism” (for it is a “truth universally acknowledged” that a boy left to his own devices will masturbate, a practice that at the time was thought to be not just a moral fault but to be physically debilitating; the sermons of the Reverend Edward Thring, headmaster of Uppingham School, contain numerous references to the belief without ever actually naming the practice that so concerns him, and he was far from alone).

Jonathan Wilson of Sports Illustrated on the future of the Champions League.

‘I was happy enough to slip away’ – 18-time All-Ireland winner on retiring, regrets and an incredible career

Updated Apr 4th 2021, 12:00 PM

BRIEGE CORKERY DESERVES a lot of credit for how she managed to execute the Irish goodbye on this one.

Briege Corkery [file photo].

Source: Lorraine O’Sullivan/INPHO

It almost deserves a spot along with her already weighty list of achievements that includes 18 All-Ireland medals across the Ladies football and camogie codes.

She slipped away behind the curtain without any fanfare. No applause, no streams of tributes on social media or a sit-down interview for a sign-off. A quiet exit was always how she envisaged the end of her inter-county career and she managed it somehow.

“Yerra, I don’t know, I’ll see,” was the typical response she offered whenever anyone made inquiries. 

Even on social media, where whispers spread wildly and quickly, no-one could catch her as she left. 

Almost two years into her retirement from playing football and camogie for Cork, Corkery is up for the Laochra Gael treatment. She joins a star-studded cast of fellow GAA icons who all feature in the 19th season of the show.

“I was humming and hawing a long time about doing it,” Corkery tells The42 about her initial reluctance to be featured in the programme which will be aired on TG4 this Thursday night at 9.30pm.

“I suppose when I was finished, I was finished and I was happy enough. I suppose Mairéad and Catherine, my sisters, they were like, ‘Do it for Mam and Dad, it’d be nice for them to watch it.’ And in years to come, maybe for my own family to watch as well.

“That was really the turning point. I’m cringing every minute I see the word Laochra Gael come up,” she laughs. “So I’m not looking forward to it but it’s done and it’ll be nice for my parents and my aunts and uncles and people who supported me all the way.

“It was a nice way to thank people for all their support and I hope it comes across that way.”

There’s a lot to unpack in the Briege Corkery story. The accolades and achievements in sport are one aspect of the tale, but there’s a lot more to her life story.

Coming from a family of 10, pursuing a job as a stone mason and her habitual drink the night before an All-Ireland final are all interesting elements that come up in Corkery’s programme.

She spent a year in Australia with her then-boyfriend and now-husband Diarmuid, and was also struck with viral meningitis. 

The extended format of the Laochra Gael episodes allows viewers to see more than just the on-field persona that they already know, a change which Corkery was happy to see coming in.

People sometimes formed misconceptions about her based purely on what they saw when she was on the pitch.

“I remember being at an All-Stars one time and one of the girls came up to me and said, ‘You’re nothing but a fitness freak, I bet you.’ And thankfully Nollaig Cleary was beside me and she was like, ‘You definitely have the wrong Briege.’

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

“I gave everything when I was on the pitch. I always trained and trained as hard as I could. But once I’m off it, that’s it. I don’t hold grudges off the pitch too much. When we’re beat in a game, I like to support the team that has beaten us.

“I don’t go out to play to be put in the paper or things like that. That’s the way I’ve always taken it.

“As a player, people can take you very differently. I love looking at them and seeing the personality of them. You’re a totally different person on the pitch than you are off it and I’ve always said that about myself.”

Corkery’s last official games in a Cork jersey were the 2016 All-Ireland ladies final against Dublin, and the 2019 All-Ireland camogie semi-final defeat to Galway. 

She also made an appearance at the 2018 Ladies inter-pro competition.

In 2017, she informed Cork camogie manager Paudie Murray that she was committed to play that season. A few days later, she discovered she was pregnant with her son Tadhg.

She returned to the panel in 2018, featuring in their All-Ireland semi-final win over Tipperary and was an unused sub in their decider win against Kilkenny.

2019 proved to be her final campaign with the Cork camogs. But nothing official ever followed to confirm her departure.

“I thought I was done in 2017,” Corkery expalins. “I was walking away. I remember having a conversation with Frankie Flannery and he said to make a decision. And I said, ‘What if I want to go back though?’

“I genuinely never thought I would go back. And then 2018 came and I did go back. I just wanted to slip away anyway, that was always going to be my thing.

“I do remember Linda Mellerick texting me saying, ‘Briege, what’s your story? I don’t think you should go as quiet [as this] after all you’ve won.’ I think I was pretty rude, I don’t think I even replied for ages. I just didn’t want to make a thing out of it and I suppose I was leaving off the inevitable. I didn’t want to make it final.

“There’s a small bit of regret that I went back in 2019 because I was disappointed with how I finished. And it wasn’t because we lost, it was more that I didn’t perform. My year went against me.

“I got injured, things went against me and it kind of left me in limbo land. In 2017, I was done and I was happy to be done. Part of me was saying, ‘I should have just stayed done.’

“I thoroughly enjoyed ’18 and ’19 but there’s just a part of me in limbo land thinking I should go back and give it another go. But time has just ran out.”

Ask Corkery for her standout memories and a few things get an instant mention.

“You’ll never be as fit again,” she laughs down the phone.

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Feeling fortunate to have achieved what she did alongside the players she shared a dressing-room with is another highlight for her. The craic and the stories from within the Cork camp and their nights out together get a nod too.

Of all the matches she played, Corkery immediately points to that famous All-Ireland Ladies final in 2014 when Cork resurrected from 10 points down to defeat Dublin. She fondly recalls their 2007 victory over Mayo as well, while also remarking on their win over Monaghan in 2013 “cos I nearly lost it for us.”

Eamonn Ryan [file photo].

Source: Cathal Noonan/INPHO

Éamonn Ryan gets a special dedication from Corkery too. The mastermind behind Cork’s success passed away earlier this year following an illness.

“Now that he’s passed away you’d be thinking, ‘God, we were really lucky to have him in our lives.’ You appreciate those kind of things.

“I spoke to him around Christmas, he was looking for a number for someone. We were chatting on the phone for a bit.  

“I’d have rang him a couple of times over the lockdown to see how he was doing. They’re the things you like, that you can pick up the phone to them all the time and it’s a great to have those times with them.

“I remember being out on the road here and we used to do these famous three-track runs and this was maybe a week or two after he passed away. I was out on the road and I was doing the three-track runs and I was like, ‘D’ya know what, I want to do something different. I’ll text Eamonn now and see what were the 45 runs. And then I realised, I can’t.

“He did so much for so many people and held everyone in such high regard. It was lovely looking back at what people said about him and stuff.”

Corkery says that there’s no on-one left in either Cork camp from when she started out. Time moves on as new waves of talent pour in.

But life is still busy for Corkery. She gave birth to a second child recently, with the arrival of little Nonie to the flock. Farming life is busy too as calving season continues.

“We won those medals because there was a gang of us together,” Corkery says reflecting on it all and the way she wanted to slip away to retirement unnoticed.

“I didn’t want to make anything out of it. I was happy enough to slip away and say nothing. If they remember you, they remember you, if they don’t, that suits me just fine. I’m happier if they wouldn’t.”

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Cora Staunton included in 2021 AFLW Team of the Year

CORA STAUNTON HAS been included in the 2021 AFLW Team of the year after another impressive campaign with the Greater Western Sydney [GWS] Giants.

The four-time All-Ireland winner is named among the forwards who made the shortlist, averaging 10.3 disposals, and kicking 10 goals for her club this year.

Staunton, 39, who first joined the Giants in 2017, has consistently been a standout performer since her move Down Under. She capped off her debut season by picking up the Giants’ Goal of the Year award.

She then suffered a career-threatening triple-leg-break injury in 2019 but managed to make a full recovery the following season and has continued to make a vital contribution for the Giants.

The https://t.co/FJ7UMYhaFF Team of the Year has been settled 👏#AFLW

— AFL Women's (@aflwomens) April 6, 2021

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Old foes Dublin and Cork to meet again in group stages of Lidl National Football League

ALL-IRELAND CHAMPIONS Dublin and defending league champions Cork will meet in the round-robin stages of this year’s Lidl Ladies National Football League.

The old foes have been drawn together along with Tipperary and Waterford in Division 1B ahead of the new campaign which begins on 23 May.

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Division 1A sees Galway joined by Mayo, Donegal and Westmeath.

All-Ireland Intermediate champions Meath are in Division 2A along with Clare, Kerry, and Wexford, while the Ulster quartet of Armagh, Cavan, Monaghan and Tyrone make up Division 2B. 

The three rounds of group matches are slated to be played on 23 May, 30 May and 6 June ahead of the semi-finals on 13 June and final on 27 June.

Although the fixtures are scheduled for Sundays, the games may be played midweek or Saturday by agreement with both counties. Fixture details will be confirmed by the LGFA in the coming weeks.

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GAA hopeful that adult club training will resume in May

THE GAA ARE hopeful that all adult club training in the 26 counties can resume in May.

Inter-county training has been permitted to resume on 19 April with non-contact juvenile training allowed from 26 April.

Club training in Northern Ireland can resume on April 12, though no timeline has been given to clubs down south yet.

“There is no fixed date on when adult club training can resume but it is hoped that this might follow soon after some time in May if government permits,” the Association said in the April edition of their monthly newsletter.

At last night’s Cork county board meeting, president Larry McCarthy told the delegates that he believes the GAA’s handling of the inter-county and juvenile returns will likely influence the government’s decision on a resumption date for adult club activity.

The current restrictions are in place until 4 May, when the government will look at potential changes for the rest of the month. 

Pressure has come on the government to allow outdoor sport take place following the publication of figures from the Health Protection Surveillance Centre that found just 0.1% of Covid-19 cases are traced to outside transmissions.

Over the weekend, McCarthy said his aim is to get the “clubs back as quickly as is feasible.”

The GAA are set to unveil their roadmap for the 2021 inter-county and club seasons on Thursday, following consultation with county boards.

It’s expected the inter-county leagues will resume in the middle of next month, with hurling possibly starting a week earlier than football on the weekend of 8-9 May.

The Irish Examiner reported that Division 1 and 2 hurling county managers and players have been consulted about the possibility of a three-week pre-season leading into a five-game league campaign. The regionalised football leagues would start a week later.

Both hurling and football All-Irelands are expected to run off in straight knockout provincial formats, with a backdoor anticipated for the small ball code.

Feargal McGill also told counties it is the Central Competitions Control Committee’s intention to leave a 13-day gap between the league and championship campaigns.

A conclusion to the inter-county action by August would leave an exclusive club window from September to December. It’s anticipated club leagues will be underway by June or July.

The big issues to be revealed by the GAA in this week’s roadmap are when the 11 outstanding 2020 club championships can take place. There are also last year’s minor hurling and football, plus U20 hurling competitions still to be completed.

Of particular interest in the roadmap will be the plans for this year’s minor and U20 inter-county championships. The Association have already stated that provincial and All-Ireland club competitions are set to run into 2022.

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The newsletter also urged members to hold firm as the return of games approaches.

“Breaches at club and county level in recent weeks have brought the spotlight on our Association and threaten to undermine the significant work done by the majority of members in the face of the pandemic,” it added. 

The day after a similar call was made last week, a group of Dublin players were photographed at an illegal collective training session. Manager Dessie Farrell was hit with a 12-week ban by his county board following a brief investigation.

The Cork county board confirmed last night that a committee has been established to investigate in relation to an alleged training breach by a GAA club in west Cork.  

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Monaghan GAA suspend manager ‘Banty’ McEnaney for 12 weeks following training breach

MONAGHAN SENIOR FOOTBALL manager Seamus ‘Banty’ McEnaney has been suspended for 12 weeks by the county board following his team’s training breach.

Gardaí are investigating after a dossier on a squad training session in violation of Covid-19 restrictions and GAA rules was passed to officials at the Department of Justice.

Following their own internal investigation, Monaghan GAA confirmed on Thursday afternoon that McEnaney has been suspended with immediate effect.

“Monaghan GAA acknowledge that following an investigation this morning, there was a breach of the Covid-19 regulations and guidelines,” a statement read.

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“Resulting from an internal investigation, our senior team manager, Seamus McEnaney, has admitted that this was a serious error of judgement and apologies [sic] unreservedly for the indiscretion.

“The county management committee have suspended the Monaghan GAA senior football manager Seamus McEnaney for 12 weeks with immediate effect and will fully cooperate and comply with any Croke Park investigation.”

The training session in question is reported to have taken place at Corduff GAA Club on the last weekend of March.

Although the senior inter-county GAA season is slated to begin next month, collective training is not allowed to resume until 19 April.

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GAA expected to announce new Farrell ban and rule him out of Dublin’s league campaign

THE GAA ARE expected to announce a three-month ban handed down to Dessie Farrell later today, while Dublin may also lose home advantage for an Allianz Football League game as part of the punishment.

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It’s understood the suspension decided by the GAA’s Management Committee will replace the ban of similar length imposed by the Dublin county board on 1 April for organising a training session at the Innisfails GAA club.

The suspension will start from the date Dublin were informed, which is believed to have been yesterday.

A 12-week ban from 8 April would run up until 1 July, which would mean Farrell will miss Dublin’s entire league campaign that runs from 15/16 May to 19/20 June if they make the Division 1 final.

He’s likely to be back on the sideline in time for Dublin’s Leinster SFC quarter-final on either for first or second weekend in July. Dublin typically receive a bye in the opening round of Leinster, meaning Farrell is unlikely to miss an early round championship game.

“[The Management Committee] have applied a sanction in the Dublin case and we are happy with the sanction we have applied. In terms of is it enough, management thought it was enough in this case,” said GAA president Larry McCarthy yesterday.

“Management are investigating the Monaghan one and will apply a sanction after an investigation.

“I think any breaches put it [inter-county’s return] in jeopardy,” he added.

The Cork native also confirmed that Farrell “can’t be involved with the team whatsoever” for the duration of his ban.

The same will apply to Monaghan boss Seamus ‘Banty’ McEnaney, whose training breach is the subject of an investigation by a group set-up by McCarthy yesterday.

A 12-week suspension is also expected in his case, again superseding the one handed down by Monaghan county board which began at the end of March when the collective session took place.

If the GAA impose a three-month ban on McEnaney next week at some stage, then the earliest he would return to the sideline would be the weekend of 10/11 July. With the Ulster SFC set to kick-off two weekends earlier, McEnaney could miss at least one championship tie.

It’s understood the GAA will ultimately overrule any penalties handed down by county boards for similar breaches.

Meanwhile, GAA director of games and administration Feargal McGill said the organisation wanted to include a backdoor in the All-Ireland SFC but there wasn’t enough weeks in the calendar to do so.

With just 11 sides involved in the Liam MacCarthy Cup, a qualifier system has been factored into the equation but the same has not been afforded to football.

McGill estimated that a further three weeks would have allowed a backdoor element to be implemented to give teams beaten in the provincials a second chance in the championship.

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“You needed another three weeks – it’s as simple as that. Otherwise, you would have had games on top of each other,” he said.

“There were two things that influenced it: you were going to have to take that time off the club season which you didn’t want to do or you were going to have to shorten the league season further.

“To the vast amount of counties in football the league is the more important competition.

“There were three things up for grabs – the qualifiers or Tailteann Cup or the other two, which was to maintain the number of games in the league and then protect the club window. That’s what it came down to. I wouldn’t say it was close.

“We felt the end of August was the latest we could with the inter-county. You could have squeezed them a little tighter? I’m not so sure. But you also have to remember you have to look at players as well and look at the fact you can’t just churn them out and whip them for a period just to have a nice-looking championship.”

From DCU to Down Under: The team-mates, house-mates and friends dreaming of AFLW glory

Updated Apr 9th 2021, 8:07 PM

THE RULE WAS no football chat in the house for the week. Well, for the rest of the week, after the usual Sunday night post-mortem of their respective inter-county league matches.

The house was home to some of the best up-and-coming ladies football stars in the country at the time, all having crossed paths in Dublin City University [DCU].

There was Sarah Rowe from Mayo, Aishling Sheridan of Cavan, Tipperary’s Aishling Moloney, and Muireann Atkinson and Caoimhe O’Sullivan, hailing from Monaghan and Kerry respectively.

Rowe and Sheridan are now flying the flag in Australia, one win away from reaching the 2021 AFLW Grand final with Collingwood this weekend.

They’re house-mates and team-mates on the other side of the world now, their colourful friendship beginning in Glasnevin in 2015 and taking on a life of its own ever since. Rowe studied PE and Biology Teaching, while it was Athletic Therapy and Training for Sheridan, but it was the ladies football team, and shared accommodation in the renowned House 15, or GAA house, which first brought them together.

Soon after, Moloney came on the scene. “The two girls were older than us, myself and Muireann Atkinson, so they actually did take us under their wing,” the Tipp star recalls.

“It’s amazing looking back now, and seeing them doing so well over in Australia. It’s really nice to see that. We’re obviously in different parts of the world now. I’m still in college and they’re gone off living life, but it was an experience I must say.”

An experience doesn’t even scratch the surface.

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The memories come flooding back from on and off the field, the most treasured ones coming in the house in Santry they moved into for Rowe and Sheridan’s final year in 2017/18, the year they won the biggest prize in third-level ladies football together, the O’Connor Cup.

Naturally, it became the base for team bonding activities and other general mischief.

Moloney can’t help but laugh as she remembers the late-night trips to Tesco, and the hunt for rice cakes. “You could hear the car before you saw it coming with the noise of the tunes absolutely blaring inside,” she grins.

The music took over, and there was no loud football chat.

“We had a rule in the house that when you came home on Sundays, you could talk about your league game but then that was it, football was done for the rest of the week. It was actually mad, although we were so involved in football, we actually never really spoke about it.

“It was a collective thing amongst us; we love football, we enjoyed it, but we just enjoyed different things we were doing, going to the beach or doing some activity every night. You need a break from football when you’re not training. It’s such a big part of your life and you need that extra outlet to just sit back, relax and not be thinking about it.

“We actually kind of did get that balance right between the group of us. I suppose we went out of our way to make it right, by just banning talk of football.”

When it was time for training and matches, football completely took over, though.

DCU days

Pat Ring experienced that first hand, the well-travelled coach a member of the 2018 O’Connor Cup-winning management team along with Peter Clarke, Angie McNally, Alan ‘Nipper’ McNally and Leona Byrne.

Ring and Clarke are a well-known double act in the game, enjoying success with many teams. Having previously guided DCU to glory around the turn of the decade, they were back in familiar territory after a triumphant stint with cross-city rivals UCD.

Rowe on the ball for Mayo in 2012.

Source: Morgan Treacy/INPHO

This was a completely new group to work with in their first year back, though they had crossed paths with a few individuals before; a younger Rowe, for one, from when they managed Mayo together in 2013 and 2014.

“We got to know them very quickly,” he nods, reflecting on a settled team containing a big group of final-years students. “A real bonus if you’re going to have a go off a championship.”

The team, Ring says, was a very professional one, and Rowe and Sheridan epitomised that.

“They were top class to work with. The one thing that stood out for me was their attitude to their football. It was as if they were operating on a professional level even back then.

“They were thinking, they came prepared, they were on time, out on the pitch early, never missed training, always had the proper gear… had a bit of a craic, obviously we all had a craic, but once we started, they were fully into it.

“I always remember their attitude to training was absolutely unbelievable. It was as if you were training professional sportspeople. They were just so professional in how they went about their business, and that was a big eye-opener for me personally, their overall attitude.”

That was the same for Moloney, their professionalism, attitude and appetite for training certainly rubbing off on her, and others, through their time at DCU.

“They would have always had a professional manner towards sport in general,” she nods.

“The two of them, I would have been that bit younger than them and they probably would have influenced me on different aspects that they might have taken into consideration in their daily routine.

“They’ve always been very professional in their outlook on sport. To see them doing so well over there, it isn’t a surprise really with the way that they have been dealing with themselves the last four or five years.”

As is evident in Australia, Rowe and Sheridan have a real telepathic bond on the pitch, both linking up time and time again, finding each other in the right place at the right time with ease.

That’s something that was forged in DCU, and one that really came to the fore in that double-winning season of 2017/18 Division 1 league and championship glory, beating University of Limerick [UL] in both deciders.

“To be fair to Sarah and to Aishling, they were our main scoring threats up front,” Ring agrees.

“They were like goal machines for us, they were just getting goals all over the place.

“That year, we got in a couple of first years that were ‘the future stars’. They really made the younger girls feel so welcome as well and they were very good with them. They were very good in making sure that the younger girls were integrated into the squad, included in everything, and they were never threatened by them.”

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Everyone was welcomed into their home throughout the college year for team bonding and everything that went along with it, winning the O’Connor Cup together the standout memory of their friendship so far for Moloney.

“The year we won that, we all got really close. What happened with Peter and his daughter passing away, it had a massive effect on us as well because obviously we were so close to Peter.

“We were a very tight-knit group. It was a team environment, obviously, but us in particular — myself, Sarah, Aishling and Muireann — it was that bit more special, playing with your friends on the same team. It was like a group within a group, kind of.

“I think it always will track back to that day we won. It was just really nice. There’s actually a picture of us together, that’s probably the nicest moment that we have, and we always talk about it.”

“We did have a nice social life too at times, when we tried to fit it in,” she laughs. “I’m sure there’s plenty of stories to be told about that as well! But what brought us together was football, and football is what we’ll always refer back to and talk about.”

Life in Australia

Communication at the minute is kept to FaceTime and WhatsApp, with Rowe and Sheridan starring for Collingwood in the AFLW. This is Rowe’s third season with the Pies, Sheridan’s second, and their first in the preliminary finals together.

The duo have played a central part for the club this campaign in particular, and combined brilliantly in a thrilling comeback victory over North Melbourne last week.

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With history made at Vic Park, it certainly was an emotional one — as best seen in that viral post-match picture of Sheridan calling home — and a huge milestone along their AFLW journey so far.

It’s one that hasn’t been easy, or straightforward by any means or manner, between various different challenges and setbacks, but that’s all paid dividends over the past few weeks. And that’s clear to see Down Under.

“When Sarah came out to Australia, there were a lot of conversations around what she’d bring alongside the likes of Cora Staunton,” CrossCoders co-founder Jason Hill, agent to Sheridan, notes.

“When Aishling came through the CrossCoders camp, there were a few clubs that put their hat into the ring to get hold of her, but once Collingwood made the offer it was hard to ignore due to the long-standing friendship between the pair, and they haven’t looked back.

“There have been plenty of Irish duos across the league — McCarthy and Herron, Seoighe and Gilroy, Staunton and Bonner, the Kelly sisters, Tighe and Flood — but it’s hard to look past the depth of this relationship on and off the field.

“Speaking to them both, they provide so much support to each other and that’s shown on the pitch with the impressive improvement by Aishling in 2021 and the fact Sarah is willing to push her body through the pain to get back into the side to help them make finals this year.”

Sheridan has kicked a huge number of goals, while Rowe battled back to her best from a shoulder injury. Taking a closer look at their scintillating displays, and link-up on the pitch, Hill explains:

“The way they have developed their play has become more and more effective as the year has gone on and it’s become a bit of a trademark seeing Rowe burst out of the midfield to hit up Sheridan inside the forward 50 after both players getting free with their speed and then using their quick ball movement to give opportunities to score.

“While they’re both so young in their respective AFLW careers, they’ve quickly established themselves in a quality Pies side, which wouldn’t be the same without either of them.”

Their team-mate and house-mate in Melbourne now, Ruby Schleicher, echoed those sentiments in an interview with AFL Europe earlier this week.

“They bring a nice refreshing dynamic to the club,” she said. “Their on-field stuff, explosiveness and that is really evident. Off-field, none of us have family – we’re each other’s family so that’s really nice.”

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Having lived together last year too, Schleicher explained how they were “good emotional support” as she was on the comeback trail from injury, helping her back on her feet in several different aspects towards an All-Australian-winning season in 2021.

And just like family, there’s plenty of time for messing and arguments over dirty rooms, kitchens and what not else. “They produce plenty of laughs with the accents! They get a lot of the piss taken out of them which is perfect.”

Keeping a close eye

That’s something Moloney must miss, the craic in person. But she’s delighted they can stay in touch over the phone, and she can keep a close eye on their matches on TG4 every weekend.

“Obviously, we always love to see Irish doing well and it just makes you that bit more proud when you see them doing so well over there. It’s great. You can only be happy for the girls going over.

“Knowing them and living with them for that length of time and knowing who they are, and how humble and honest they are, how they go about their sport and everything in general, it’s just really nice to see them do so well over there.”

Ring, who glowingly hails the legacy and “solid foundations” Sheridan and Rowe left at DCU, also tunes in to bits and pieces of the action, with Lauren Magee and Niamh Kelly from that O’Connor Cup-winning DCU team also playing in the 2021 AFLW season.

“I’d watch it now some days,” the Corkman, having recently brought the curtain down on his glittering club coaching career at Dublin powerhouse Foxrock-Cabinteely, nods.

“It’s great to see the Irish girls doing so well. Obviously, I’d be looking out for Goldie as well. She’s been a bit unlucky again with injuries, but anyway. No, it’s great to see the Irish girls doing well. But I have to say the physicality over there seems to suit Sarah Rowe and Aishling. They have the physique for it.

“It’s a great opportunity for them, to be able to go over for a period of months. It’s huge experience for them and it’ll really stand to them when they come home in whatever aspect of life, whether it’s sport or in their careers, it will really stand to them.”

One step away from making history and reaching their first-ever Grand final, we’re guaranteed an Irish Premiership winner this year. Rowe and Sheridan come up against Tipperary’s Orla O’Dwyer and her Brisbane Lions in the early hours on Saturday [7.10am Irish time] while it’s Dublin v Clare in the other last-four battle as Melbourne — with Magee, Goldrick and Niamh McEvoy in their set-up — lock horns with Ailish Considine’s Adelaide Crows [5.10am, Irish time].

It’s a strange one for Moloney with three of her good friends in Rowe and Sheridan, and county-mate O’Dwyer going head-to-head, but that’s sport.

Rowe and Sheridan in action for Collingwood last year.

Source: AAP/PA Images

“It’s no different really to playing here, we’re going to come up against each other in the league. The girls will always be respectful to each other. On the other side of the world, they’re going to have a lot of respect for each other as well.

“It’s lovely to see Orla getting the reviews too. I definitely will keep a close eye on them. It’s getting to the exciting stages of the championship over there so I think we’ll all have our eyes peeled to the TVs.”

In a few weeks time, all going to plan, they’ll be back on these shores and getting stuck in to inter-county football, and Moloney laughs that they’ll get the shock of their lives coming from the beach to being restricted to 5km from home.

The tips, hints and “extra centimetres” they all bring home will be more than welcome to their respective inter-county set-ups, their experiences of a semi-professional lifestyle certainly beneficial on home soil.

AFLW clubs’ interest in Moloney herself is no secret at this stage, and it’s certainly something that appeals to her. The big question is could she be returning with them?

“It would be in the back of my head,” she concedes, but finishing college later this month and the return to football after her knee setback is top of the list of priorities now.

The friendship and bond with Rowe and Sheridan that will never be broken stays front and centre. It’s only fitting that the last word go to that.

“We have such memories together. It was just a special bond. We just always got on really well, there was no arguing, no one ever annoying each other or getting mad with each other — and if you did, it was spoken about.

“I just love that we just had a really connection with each other — in all aspects as well. We all know a lot about each other, families and that, we just got to know each other very well.

“We always talk about our weddings… when the wedding day comes, that will be the best craic! Reminiscing on all those good times we had in DCU and the craic that we had.

“You take it for granted. When you’re in college, everything’s going a million miles an hour and you don’t actually stop to appreciate what’s going on around you — and the people that you might have met in your life.

“It’s only afterwards, when you leave, obviously you don’t see them that much, but you appreciate the times that you have spent with them.”

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