‘Mickey made us aware of the occasion and especially aware of the prize at the other end of it’

TWO MEN WHO know a thing or two about how Mickey Harte approaches All-Ireland finals are Kevin Hughes and Brian McGuigan.

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

The pair worked under Harte since they were minors and feature heavily in the documentary ‘Tir Eoghain – The Unbreakable Bond’ which airs on TG4 tomorrow night at 8.30pm.

Hughes and McGuigan were part of one of the greatest minor sides in history, beating Laois in the 1998 All-Ireland final before achieving back-to-back U21 crowns. 11 members of those underage sides formed the backbone of the Tyrone team that annexed the Sam Maguire for the first time in their history in 2003.

Both players have long since ended their inter-county careers but remarkably Harte is in his 15th season as senior boss, having managed the minors and U21s for 13 years before that.

And he hasn’t lost any of his motivational qualities.

“I was speaking to Mickey on Wednesday night and when he was talking to me he was starting to make me believe too that we’re going down here to win,” says Hughes, Harte’s former midfield lieutenant.

“I remember us going into the 2008 final against Kerry and we were maybe 3/1 to win that. We probably knew we were going out against individually better players in the Kerry team but as a collective unit we just knew we’d a chance.

Source: Morgan Treacy/INPHO

“The one thing that will stand to Mickey is he’ll have three weeks to prepare. For the Super 8s games and the back door he only had a week to prepare his team for the match. The dangerous thing for Dublin now is that he has three weeks and he is going to be looking at Dublin religiously.

“He will definitely come up with some sort of plan. The unfortunate thing is Mickey might come up a plan and it still won’t be good enough against this Dublin team.

“Mickey instils that belief in you. Even after the Dublin semi-final last year I’d say on the Monday morning after it Mickey was saying, ‘we’re going to win the All-Ireland next year.”

There’s a famous story from Tyrone’s breakthrough All-Ireland in 2003. The night before the final a team meeting took place in Killiney Castle, where they were staying.

On returning to their rooms after the meeting, the players found envelopes addressed to each individual. Inside was a piece of paper with a handwritten message from each of their team-mates describing the recipient’s best qualities.

“I remember lifting that note when we came back from the team meeting that day and it was sitting in an envelope and you read it,” explains Hughes.

“There was obviously no names on it but everybody had written a comment about yourself. The overriding factor in that was there was no him or me or I, it was all about a team: ‘He’ll do anything for the team, for the cause.’

Pictured is Brian McGuigan, Kevin Hughes and Mark Harte who have teamed up today to announce the documentary TÍR EOGHAIN: THE UNBREAKABLE BOND which will air this Sunday 26 August at 8.30pm on TG4.

Source: Morgan Treacy/INPHO

“Even that alone, you knew that we are tight-knit here and we’ve got everybody’s back. Everybody had your back and you knew when you went out onto that Croke Park field that 1-15 and whatever subs are coming on, you’re in a battle to the death and you could trust your teammates to do that,” says Hughes. “That (letter) just instilled that.”

McGuigan believes the idea came from Paddy Tally, the new Down manager, who was part of Harte’s backroom team.

“That night before the 03 final maybe it was Paddy Tally’s idea to do that. When you got that the night before, nobody was going to say anything bad about you but it was the mindset that everyone was saying something good about you and you felt so big going in the next day.

“I do believe it was Mickey’s backroom team because Mickey wasn’t a man to speak one-on-one with you. You weren’t really that comfortable speaking with him one-on-one but the people around him – Paddy Tally, Tony Donnelly who was a great people’s person, you have Gavin Devlin there (now) who you would go through a wall for. The people in the backroom team maybe had a lot to do with that of getting the belief into you.”

Tyrone beat a great Kerry team in the 2003 semi-final and there’s a famous clip on Youtube of them swarming Daire O’Cinneide, Eoin Brosnan, Darragh O Se and eventually turning the ball over during the first half of that game. It was a seminal moment in the match.

The ferocious tackling and work-rate the Red Hand brought that day was like nothing seen in Croke Park before.

Source: Kevin McGillicuddy/YouTube

“Them Tyrone teams, as much talent as we had it was work-rate, collective work-rate,” continues Hughes.

“That clip against Kerry – I always refer back to. We were just like a pack of ravenous wolves. Talent didn’t win that game, it was pure hard work, dedication and backing each man up to the hilt.

“I think that’s what this team have because they’ve no stars, no stand-out forwards, no stand-out player there. As a collective unit they’re very strong and that plays into the favour of Mickey and how he’ll want to prepare them.”

During those team meetings, Harte would go into an intense level of detail on the opposition. No stone was left turned and the players would have no doubts in their minds they were going to do the business in the biggest game of all.

“I think personally as you prepare you’ll always go out and say, ‘It’s just another game it’s like playing on your club pitch,’” says Hughes. “Just to get your mind right. But then Mickey would always make us aware of the occasion and especially aware of the prize at the other end of it. And that really got you.

“Everyone has their own preparations for a game, whether it’s superstitious or whatever. But Mickey would take you to that next level of getting you prepared to go to battle: ‘Right, you’ve done all your own preparation, this is where you need to go now once we cross the line.’ He’s a real master a that.

Source: Bryan Keane/INPHO

“People will always say, ‘Ah we’ll just worry about ourselves we won’t worry about the opposition.’ Mickey meticulously looks at the opposition and he has a gameplan from number one (to 15). I remember vividly where before every game we would be going up, we’d have our team meal and then we’d go in and Tony especially would have went through the team and who you were likely to be marking.

“Their strengths – are they left-sided, both sided – and they knew every player individually meticulously and then we knew, ‘Right we need to expect this. If he can throw you a solo dummy or whatever else. We were as well prepared for the opposition as anybody could be.”
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McGuigan chimes in: “Mickey just does things that you don’t realise what he’s doing but there’s something behind it. I always remember, we stayed in Killiney Castle in 2003 and because the night before the biggest match after, everybody spoke about the great night sleep they had that night.

“It was just everything leading up the match that Mickey had done that you just felt so relaxed and confident going into the final that you were going to win it.”

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

Tyrone are big underdogs next weekend, but they were unfancied too in 2008 when they handed out a 3-14 to 1-8 beating to the Dubs in the quarter-final. During a team meeting, Harte sat the players down and they spent 20 minutes watching Dublin play.

“I think Dublin in 08 you really noticed it because Dublin steamrolled through Leinster,” continues Hughes.

“We got beat against Down in the first round, we were stumbling through the backdoor. Again we were large underdogs. I remember watching the video the Thursday night before and it was just all clips of Dublin.

“And he just said, ‘Boys sit down and watch 20 minutes of Dublin.’ And it just showed Dublin getting score after score, how they had played against all the teams. And he says, ‘What do you notice?’

“And we were like, ‘Nobody’s tackling them. They’re not putting a hand on them. What the fuck are these teams at?’

“And he said, ‘Exactly’. And this is how he made you confident. He says, ‘All you need to do is go out and close them down, tackle them and close the middle and the play our counter-attacking game.

“He says, ‘Dublin aren’t this great team.’ Back then they probably weren’t as good as they are now, but it was just wee things like that. And you were going out thinking, ‘Fuck, all I have to do is tackle this man.’ You were that comfortable going out because of the mindset that Mickey got you into.”

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Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO

Then the meeting would move on to the match-ups, where Donnelly would step up.

“Then Tony would put up the match-ups. – we’d always finish up by going through them. He’d go, ‘Right, Sean Cavanagh on Shane Ryan. Who would you rather have? He’d pick ou five that you knew you were going to win and then you’re just going out thinking, ‘Sure we’re a better team than these boys.’ It’s just all about mindset and Mickey’s good at that.”

Harte will need to use all his managerial experience and tactical nous to stop Jim Gavin’s side from winning a fourth title in succession next weekend. Dublin’s style of play has evolved over the last few years and McGuigan believes Harte set-up his side differently to last year’s semi-final.

“The one thing I’ve noticed about how Mickey has set up his team now is that in the past he would have wanted to set up a whole zonal defensive system in the middle of the field and that was leaving the wings idle at that time.

“The two defeats they got was Dublin in the semi-final last year, Monaghan in the Ulster Championship match this year. How those teams done the damage was keeping their teams wide and nobody following them.

“I noticed against Monaghan in the last match in Croke Park, when Monaghan went wide, Tyrone players followed them wide. The one problem with that is if we’re making the centre free… it’s trying to get the balance right between picking up the men going wide and protecting the middle.

“How Mickey deals with that, I don’t know. I know Colm (Cavanagh) will protect the middle. The one thing I’m glad to see is Colly and Frank Burns were playing sweeper. Colly came into his own when Frank Burns took off against Donegal. The fact that Colly has played sweeper on his own means he has to go for everything.

Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO

“When Frank was there and he was there, they were kind of in two minds whether are you going or am I going? Whereas now Colly has to go at every opportunity, he’s doing such a good job in there.”

For Hughes, Lee Brennan may be a better option off the bench to make a similar impact to Kevin McManamon for Dublin.

“I am a massive fan of Lee Brennan, and I have been since he was playing U21s. I think at the minute, where he’s at, I know he was injured and he’s coming back in and he’s probably fully fit now but he probably still doesn’t have too much game-time, I would prefer to see him coming off the bench to be honest.

“I think he can make a great impact because he’s one of these players. Because he’s skilful and he’s got that about him, he can have an immediate impact when he comes on even against a zonal defence.

“I think defences now, and Tyrone were exposed a bit last year against Dublin and Dublin pulled them out wide, they were caught in no man’s land because they had to defend for themselves.

Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO

“Whereas usually, Tyrone would be usually set up zonal defending, there’s two or three men always moving around and when they had to go man-for-man, they were found out a bit. I think even like that, when Lee Brennan came on, I think he’s he’s a better impact, and I probably would like to see Mark (Bradley) start ahead of him. Or the two of them start, which would indicate we are going to be more offensive and go for it.

“I think Kieran McGeary should start, he had been coming on as an impact sub. I’d like to see him start. He’s a good man who can take on an individual man-marking role for Ciarán Kilkenny or something like that, and Pádraig Hampsey is obviously there who’s a good man to take on a role like that.

“It’s a game of finding the balance. You want to have subs coming on making an impact, not a sub that’s coming on that’s going to do you a bit of a job. In the All-Ireland final especially, you want somebody like a Kevin McManamon coming on. So I think Mickey has to think about that and get a right balance.”

McGuigan agrees that Bradley might serve Tyrone better if he starts.

“I think Mark Bradley is even better starting, because when he came on, he didn’t make much of an impact. Where with Lee, he comes on and does make an impact. His theory behind that by all accounts was that he wanted Lee on for the free kicks.

“It has been a problem for Tyrone, especially the right sided free kicks. He would justify it that Lee Brennan scored one free kick against Monaghan and Tyrone won by a point, and he would probably justify that he was right in doing that.”

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Finn and Noonan goals the difference as Cork power back into All-Ireland final

Cork 2-11
Donegal 0-11

Emma Duffy reports from Dr Hyde Park, Roscommon

CORK’S EYE FOR goal was the difference as they saw off Donegal to keep their quest for a 12th All-Ireland title in 14 years firmly on course.

Orla Finn and substitute Saoirse Noonan both raised green flags as Ephie Fitzgerald’s Munster champions booked their ticket back to Croke Park for All-Ireland final day.

While they finally put the hurt of last year’s semi-final exit at the hands of Mayo to bed, the wait goes on for Donegal as their first-ever All-Ireland senior semi-final appearance ended in disappointment.

Doireann O’Sullivan was influential throughout for the Rebels, kicking three monster scores, while their defence — led by Roisin Phelan — was solid throughout.

Donegal on the other hand looked mainly to Geraldine McLaughlin and Karen Guthrie, who finished with 0-9 between them.

Proceedings were quite cagey from the get-go at a sun-kissed Dr Hyde Park, both the Ulster and Munster champions opting to start defensively.

On the scoring front, the Rebels opened brightest through Eimear Scally and Finn before Termon’s McLaughlin got the Tir Chonaill side off the mark after 10 minutes.

Saoirse Noonan fires home.

Source: Oisin Keniry/INPHO

The crucial moment in the first half came with 18 minutes on the clock as Cork raised their first of two green flags through Finn. The in-form Ciara O’Sullivan powered towards goal and as she was surrounded by a sea of yellow, cleverly offloaded to the Kinsale ace who palmed home to make it 1-3 to 0-3.

There were some uncharacteristic mistakes and wides on show as the first period progressed but Guthrie — who scored three from play, one from a free — was one shining light before the posts as Donegal stayed in pursuit of the Munster kingpins.

Moments before half time, she almost found the back of the net but the Glenfin star’s rocketed effort clipped just over the bar.

On the restart, Maxi Curran and Damien Devaney’s outfit looked to stage a comeback, driven mainly by McLaughlin, who hit four of their six second-half points.

Cork kept the scoreboard ticking over however, with 18-year-old sensation Noonan sprung from the bench in the 36th minute to contribute a vital 1-2.

The closest Donegal could get was three points despite valiant efforts as they chased down a much-needed goal. They looked more intense in the latter stages, but Cork had done enough and always looked like they could step up a gear.

Cork celebrate at the final whistle.

Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO

With two minutes remaining Noonan put the gloss on Cork’s win, firing home to ensure their Croke Park date with either holders Dublin or Connacht champions Galway.

Scorers for Cork: Orla Finn (1-4, 4f), Eimear Scally (0-2), Doireann O’Sullivan (0-3), Saoirse Noonan (1-2, 2f).

Scorers for Donegal: Karen Guthrie (0-4, 1f), Geraldine McLaughlin (0-5, 2f), Katy Herron (0-1), Yvonne Bonner (0-1)

Cork

1. Martina O’Brien

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2. Eimear Meaney
3. Roisin Phelan
4. Melissa Duggan

5. Maire O’Callaghan
6. Shauna Kelly
7. Emma Spillane

8. Aisling Hutchings
9. Hannah Looney

10. Ciara O’Sullivan
11. Libby Coppinger
12. Eimear Scally

13. Áine O’Sullivan
14. Doireann O’Sullivan
15. Orla Finn

Subs

24. Saoirse Noonan for Áine O’Sullivan (36)
17. Orlagh Farmer for Orla Finn (36)
15. Orla Finn for Aisling Hutchings (47)

Donegal

1. Laura Gallagher

2. Treasa Doherty
3. Nicole McLaughlin
4. Deirdre Foley

5. Therese McCafferty
6. Ciara Hegarty
7. Anna Maria McGlynn

8. Katy Herron
23. Kate Keaney

10. Karen Guthrie
11. Niamh Hegarty
12. Sarah Jane McDonald

13. Geraldine McLaughlin
14. Yvonne Bonner
24. Olive McCafferty

Subs

9. Aoife McDonnell for Olive McCafferty (22)
15. Eilish Ward for Niamh Hegarty (43)
19. Amy Boyle Carr for Kate Keaney (48)
11. Niamh Hegarty for Anna Marie McGlynn (51)

Referee: Brendan Rice (Down)

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2-4 for Aherne as dominant Dublin set to defend All-Ireland crown against Cork

Dublin 4-8
Galway 1-10

Emma Duffy reports from Dr Hyde Park, Roscommon 

REIGNING TG4 ALL-IRELAND senior champions Dublin were ruthless in attack as they booked their place in a fifth straight decider and beat Galway by seven points at Dr Hyde Park.

Captain Sinéad Aherne finished with a personal tally of 2-4 while Nicole Owens and Lyndsey Davey were the other goal-scorers as Mick Bohan’s side set up a mouth-watering Croke Park decider against Cork.

They’ll be looking to gain sweet, sweet revenge on the Rebels after narrow defeats at the last hurdle in 2014, 2015 and 2016 before finally getting their hands on the Brendan Martin Cup last year.

And they’ll be confident in their approach after a dominant display against Galway today. Despite being the only team to beat Dublin in competitive action this year, Stephen Glennon’s side wait for an All-Ireland final continues having last been there in 2005.

With three minutes on the clock, Owens set the tone for the day’s proceedings with a superbly-executed goal. The 2017 All-Star intercepted the ball 25 metres out on the left, beat three Galway defenders and fired into the top of the net.

Aherne got her scintillating first-half display off the mark with a point from play in the eighth minute and by the time the whistle sounded for the break, she had 2-4 to her name.

Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO

Her first goal came as she palmed home a well-worked team score with 2017 Player of the Year Noelle Healy’s lung-bursting run key in the build-up.

And Aherne expertly slotted from the spot after winning a penalty herself, finding the top-right hand corner as Dublin roared on.

Carla Rowe tagged on a point before the break.

11 points clear, Owens drew first blood once again on the restart before Lyndsey Davey added another but Galway’s fourth point of the game could well have been a goal only for the ever-reliable Ciara Trant between the posts.

Galway looked like they might raise their first green flag of the game to spark a comeback but the St Brigid’s shot-stopper tipped Leanne Coen’s effort over the bar.

Tracey Leonard’s free-taking kept the Tribeswomen’s scoring returns ticking over in the second half but by then the game was over as a contest. They battled gamely but Bohan’s charges’ dominant first half had the groundwork laid.

Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO

Lyndsey Davey palmed home the Sky Blues’ fourth goal of the afternoon and shortly after with 10 minutes remaining, Olivia Divilly gave Galway fans something to cheer about as she slotted a goal into the bottom right-hand corner.

As Bohan took the chance to introduce fresh legs, Galway’s wayward shooting let them down and Dublin had already done enough to hold on and book that coveted decider spot.

Scorers for Dublin: Sinead Aherne (2-4, 2f, 1p), Nicole Owens (1-1), Lyndsey Davey (1-1) Carla Rowe (0-1), Amy Connolly (0-1).

Scorers for Galway: Tracey Leonard (0-7, 6f), Sarah Conneally (0-1), Leanne Coen (0-1), Olivia Divilly (1-1, 1f).

Dublin

1. Ciara Trant

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2. Martha Byrne
19. Sinead Finnegan
4. Leah Caffrey

5. Sinead Goldrick
6. Siobhan McGrath
7. Niamh Collins

8. Lauren Magee
9. Olwen Carey

10. Carla Rowe
11. Noelle Healy
12. Lyndsey Davey

13. Sinead Aherne
14. Niamh McEvoy
15. Nicole Owens

Subs

27. Amy Connolly for Carla Rowe (38)
22. Jennifer Dunne for Nicole Owens (41)
23. Hannah O’Neill for Niamh McEvoy (49)
3. Deirdre Murphy for Martha Byrne (49)
26. Oonagh Whyte for Lyndsey Davey (51)

Galway

1. Lisa Murphy

2. Fabienne Cooney
3. Sarah Lynch
4. Sinéad Burke

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5. Emer Flaherty
6. Nicola Ward
7. Charlotte Cooney

8. Catriona Cormican
9. Sarah Conneally

10. Olivia Divilly
11. Tracey Leonard
12. Louise Ward

27. Aine McDonagh
14. Róisín Leonard
15. Leanne Coen

Subs

18. Lisa Gannon for Charlotte Cooney (20)
13. Mairéad Seoighe for Sarah Conneally (35)
20. Emma Reaney for Róisín Leonard (46)
17. Noelle Connolly for Sarah Lynch (46)

Referee: Seamus Mulvihill (Kerry).

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Goals win games, Dublin’s first-half storm and a mouth-watering All-Ireland final set

1. A mouth-watering All-Ireland senior final ahead

AFTER TODAY’S CLASHES at Dr Hyde Park, we now know our 2018 TG4 All-Ireland senior championship semi-finalists — Cork and Dublin.

Dublin and Cork are back in the All-Ireland final.

Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO

The two forces will go head-to-head once again on the biggest day in the ladies football calendar as they lock horns for the Brendan Martin Cup in Croke Park on Sunday, 16 September.

They met in the showpiece in 2014, 2015 and 2016 with the Rebels coming out on top by the narrowest of margins on each occasion. With that elusive crown firmly in their grip after they beat Mayo in the 2017 decider, Dublin will be hoping that they can finally exact sweet, sweet revenge on Cork on the biggest stage after years of heartbreak.

Ephie Fitzgerald’s side on the other hand, will be gunning for glory after their absence on last years big day, as they bid for their 12th All-Ireland title in 14 years.

2. Goals win games

Dublin fired four goals past Galway, while Cork hit two on their way to knocking Donegal out of the 2018 championship. The Tribeswomen raised just one green flag — and it was almost just a consolation at that stage — while fellow losing side Donegal failed to rattle the net.

Action from Cork-Donegal earlier.

Source: Eóin Noonan/SPORTSFILE

It is a cliché but goals do win games and that was evident today in Roscommon. When Orla Finn palmed the ball into the net in the 18th minute, it sent Cork into a 1-3 to 0-3 lead and from there, they never looked back. The difference from there was never less than three.

In the second semi-final, Nicole Owens set the tone early on with an absolutely superb individual effort. With every goal Dublin fired home — Sinead Aherne added a first-half penalty and another from play, while Lyndsey Davey palmed home a fourth — they took more and more confidence from them, upped the ante and Galway heads dropped further.

3. Galway and Donegal fall just short again

So close but yet so far. Ailbhe Davoren told The42‘s Ladies Football Show this week that Galway were sick of being a ‘nearly team’ but they’ll have to wait until 2019 to try and cross that line again.

Looking at last year, they beat Mayo in the Connacht final but they were hammered out of the All-Ireland quarter-final by Cork while Mayo reached the decider. This year, they were the only side to have beaten Dublin in a competitive fixture, but they were pipped at the death in the league semi-final — then there was today.

Galway’s Tracey Leonard dejected.

Source: Oisin Keniry/INPHO

Donegal likewise. Last year, Cork edged them in the league final. They crashed out of the All-Ireland championship quarter finals that season too and today was their first-ever All-Ireland senior semi-final. Falling just short once again.

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4. Dublin’s first-half storm

The half-time score was 3-5 to 0-3. Sinead Aherne was the leading light in Dublin’s massive first half and finished with an individual tally of 2-4 as the interval whistle sounded.

As Mick Bohan alluded to afterwards, Galway started brightest in their two encounters this year and the Sky Blues knew that they needed a strong opening few minutes to get a foothold on the game.

The opening exchanges were very intense and Owens’ fifth-minute finish was exactly what the reigning champions needed to settle themselves and lay down a marker. From there, they just blew Galway away as they built up an 11-point half-time lead.

And although Stephen Glennon’s side reacted well on the restart and perhaps dominated for parts, Dublin had the groundwork done and the result was pretty much settled.

5. Cork’s strength all over 

Over the last two years, there has been a lot of talk about transition surrounding Ephie Fitzgerald’s charges. Yes, they lost some stalwarts and yes, they failed to reach the All-Ireland final last year after what felt like a lifetime at the top table — but younger players have well and truly matured and helped established Cork as serious contenders again.

Hannah Looney celebrates at the final whistle.

Source: Piaras Ó Mídheach/SPORTSFILE

The Rebels’ forward line fired home their 24th and 25th goals in six championship outings earlier today as they racked up a tally of 2-11. Doireann O’Sullivan must be singled out for her huge performance, immense running and three influential points to spur her side on. Eimear Scally was another to find scintillating form while Saoirse Noonan’s impact from the bench was hugely effective once again.

But while their attacking display may grab the headlines, their defensive one was probably most impressive. Full-back Róisín Phelan showed real leadership as she marshalled her troops and they shut down one of the most prolific inside forward lines in the country.

– Updated 22.32

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‘Sinead any day could score 2-4, 2-6, 2-8 – she’s one of the game’s top players’

DUBLIN MANAGER MICK Bohan was well aware that his reigning All-Ireland champions needed to start extremely well to overcome Galway yesterday.

And that they did on their way to booking a fifth successive decider date.

Nicole Owens rattled the net with just five minutes on the clock, and captain fantastic Sinead Aherne added a remarkable 2-4 in a scintillating first-half display.

“We were thrilled,” he told The42 afterwards, referring back to their loss and narrow win against the same opposition in this year’s league campaign.

“In the National League, Galway got a foothold in the game very early against us. We were very aware of the fact if that happened that they’d grow in confidence so we had to make sure that didn’t happen.”

The Clontarf clubman was full of praise for his skippers’ exploits but then again, didn’t get too carried away by their early dominance.

“Sinead, any day could score 2-4, 2-6, 2-8. She’s one of the game’s top players,” he continued.

“We probably left a little behind us in that period as well. There was certainly one (chance) coming into half time, there was goal written all over it and the final pass was a poor decision.

“Look, that’s the stuff you go away and work on. Constantly trying to make better. Obviously they scored a goal. I think they turned us over on a kick-out and it ended up in the back of the net. We’ll go away and look at that.

Dublin manager Mick Bohan.

Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO

“But defensively, I thought we were rock solid. Great defensive performance but like everything, it’s a game under your belt. You go away, look at it — what things do you improve on.

“We’re going into the penultimate stage and the showpiece game so we look forward to the preparation for the next three weeks.”

And that mouth-watering All-Ireland final against Cork in Croke Park on Sunday, 16 September. There’s no doubt about it that there’s plenty at stake.

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The sides met in the 2014, 2015 and 2016 showpieces and each occasion ended in the narrowest of defeats and heartbreak for the Dubs.

Last year, Cork failed to reach the decider and the Sky Blues finally got their hands on the Brendan Martin Cup. And now, the tables turn as they look to defend their title and Ephie Fitzgerald’s Rebels chase a 12th crown in 14 years.

Dublin players celebrate at the final whistle.

Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO

Maybe it’s the final that everyone wants?

“It may be,” Bohan grins.

“Absolutely. Ultimately, Donegal or Cork: I wouldn’t have actually picked a winner from that. Lots of people would have said the same today with ourselves or Galway, that you wouldn’t have picked a winner but it’ll be a fantastic game.

“Obviously, Cork come with huge history and they’re obviously one of the shining lights of the game. We’d have massive respect for them.

“We’re looking forward to the challenge, we can’t wait.”

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All-Ireland winners Canty and Counihan part of sub-committee set-up to tackle Cork’s football failings

CORK COUNTY BOARD have formed a sub-committee featuring Graham Canty, Brian Cuthbert and Conor Counihan seeking to improve the long-term future of Cork football.

Conor Counihan and Graham Canty

County board chairperson Tracey Kennedy will chair the committee which aims  to “develop a long-term plan for Cork football.”

It features former manager and player Counihan, who led the county to All-Ireland glory as manager in 2010 and as a player in 1989 and 1990.

Cuthbert was in charge of Cork from 2014-15, while Canty was one of Cork’s greatest players and skippered them to the 2010 All-Ireland success.

Brian Cuthbert

Source: Donall Farmer/INPHO

Kennedy announced at last month’s county board meeting that the three-man committee would feature people who are familiar of all facets of Cork football.

Aspects such as strength and conditioning, coaching structures, the role of secondary schools and the structures of the county championships are all likely to be looked at.

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Breaffy duo to join Rochford’s Mayo management team for 2019

FORMER MAYO CAPTAIN Peter Ford and Shane Conway, who are currently working together as joint managers of the Breaffy senior club football team, have agreed to join Stephen Rochford’s Mayo management set-up as selectors.

A meeting of the executive officers of the Mayo GAA Board is due to be held this evening to discuss the make-up of Rochford’s proposed management team for 2019.

It’s expected that they will recommend that it be officially ratified at a meeting of the County Board next week.

Ford and Conway will join Joe Keane — the only selector remaining from last season after the departures of Donie Buckley, Peter Burke and Tony McEntee — on the sideline with Rochford next year.

Ford as manager of Ballintibber in 2014.

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

The experienced Ford, who served as a selector under John Maughan when Mayo reached All-Ireland Finals in both 1996 and 1997, has also managed both the Sligo and Galway senior football teams.

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The Ballinrobe native led the Tribesmen to the 2005 Connacht title as well as the All-Ireland Under-21 championship that same year.

Ford, 56 was the Mayo captain when they won the 1992 Connacht senior football championship title, and also played on the county’s All-Ireland winning under-21 team in 1983.

He also managed Ballintubber to win the Mayo SFC title in 2014 and has worked with many of the current Mayo squad, including the O’Connor brothers, O’Shea brothers and Rob Hennelly.

Meanwhile, Shane Conway is well-known for his training, coaching and management work with a number of club teams in Mayo, including Kilmeena, Westport and Castlebar Mitchels.

He was part of Pat Holmes’ management team in 2013 when Mitchels won the Mayo SFC title, before going to on to lose the All-Ireland club final to St Vincent’s in March of 2014.

A secondary school teacher in Westport, Conway has carved out a very impressive reputation over the last ten years at club and colleges level.

He was the joint-manager of the Rice College Westport team that qualified for the All-Ireland Post-Primary Schools Senior ‘A’ football championship final earlier this year.

The Mayo side were beaten by St Ronan’s, Lurgan in that Hogan Cup Final by a point at Croke Park.

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Keeper saves penalty with last puck as Lixnaw crowned Kerry hurling champions

LIXNAW LIFTED THE Kerry senior hurling title after a 1-16 to 2-11 win over Kilmoyley in a game that finished in controversial circumstances.

Lixnaw were leading by two points when Kilmoyley were dramatically awarded a penalty in the fifth minute of stoppage-time at the end of the second-half.

Daniel Collins stepped up but had his strike on goal saved by goalkeeper Martin Stackpoole. Kilmoyley managed to turn the ball in from the rebound, but the referee had already blown the full-time whistle and Lixnaw were crowned champions.

Collins hit an early goal for Kilmoyley, but they went in four behind at the interval after John Griffin found the back of the net for Lixnaw.

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Maurice O’Connor raised a green flag for Kilmoyley in the third quarter but last year’s beaten finalists stayed in front through scores from county star Shane Conway. Stackpoole proved the hero with his penalty save at the death with what turned out to be the last puck of the game.

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Cork’s Cahalane scorches through Tipp defence to score wonder goal in All-Ireland U21 final

CORK’S CONOR CAHALANE scored a sensational goal for his side in the All-Ireland U21 hurling final against Tipperary on Sunday.

Cahalane — who was a late inclusion in the Cork team before throw-in — gathered the ball at midfield towards the end of the first half and proceeded to go on a solo-run through the Tipp cover.

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Heading straight for the Tipperary goals, nobody was able to disrupt his run as he took the ball out wide and crashed his shot past goalkeeper Barry Hogan and into the back of the net.

It was a superb individual effort which left the scoreline reading 1-7 to 1-5 in favour of Cork.

Conor Cahalane scores a brilliant goal for Cork after an incredible run. pic.twitter.com/JrYB2I3MWZ

— The GAA (@officialgaa) August 26, 2018

Jake Morris scored Tipperary’s goal in the first half from the penalty spot.

Mark Kehoe was fouled by Cork defender Mark Coleman after 13 minutes, which allowed Morris to step up and convert the opportunity with a fine strike.

Goal for Tipperary. Jake Morris drills home a penalty. pic.twitter.com/BxE9lZ5QxT

— The GAA (@officialgaa) August 26, 2018

Cahalane comes from a distinguished sporting family in Cork.

His brother Damien plays with the Cork senior hurlers and was lining out at full-back in their All-Ireland SHC semi-final defeat to Limerick.

His sister Meabh has played on All-Ireland camogie winning teams for the county while his younger sibling Jack was involved with the Cork minors this year.

Meanwhile, Cahalane’s father Niall has won All-Ireland SFC medals for the rebels.

You can follow all the live action from the All-Ireland U21 hurling final here.

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Late scoring show hands Tipp dramatic All-Ireland U21 final win over Cork

Tipperary 3-13
Cork 1-16

Fintan O’Toole reports from Gaelic Grounds

A DRAMATIC FINALE propelled Tipperary into the winners’ enclosure as they pounced for a late spree of scores to snatch the Bord Gáis Energy All-Ireland U21 hurling title from Cork’s grasp this evening.

Tipperary captain Colin English lifts the trophy.

After being soundly beaten in the Munster decider, Tipperary exacted revenge when substitutes Conor Stakelum and David Gleeson grabbed the crucial late scores for Liam Cahill’s men.

Stakelum seized on a mistake in the Cork defence to rob possession, cut through and manage to scramble home a goal that put Tipperary in front by two. Gleeson tapped over an insurance point soon after and fetching a long delivery with their rearguard repelling Cork’s advances at the other end to seal a famous underage success.

The opening half was divided into two separate sections of dominance, underpinned by both teams hitting the net. Tipperary set the terms of engagement early on and were full value for the 1-5 to 0-1 lead they had established by the 15th minute.

Jake Morris fires home a goal from a penalty for Tipperary.

Source: Ryan Byrne/INPHO

That included a scoring spree of 1-4 without reply, Jake Morris knocking home a penalty in the 15th minute after Mark Kehoe’s run was halted by a foul from Mark Coleman.

But despite hurling against a fierce breeze and being outplayed in various sectors, Cork turned the match around before half-time. They amassed 1-6 between the 16th and 25th minutes, while simultaneously holding Tipperary scoreless in that time frame.

The goal was a gem, Conor Cahalane latching onto a break and accelerating through the Tipperary defence, swerving past challengers and holding his nerve to finish off his left past goalkeeper Barry Hogan.

Conor Cahalane celebrates his first-half goal for Cork.

By the break Cork were in front 1-9 to 1-7 with the tallies from Cahalane (1-2) and Robbie O’Flynn (0-3) responsible in shaping that position. Tipperary remained in the hunt as Morris and Jerome Cahill spearheaded their scoring drive.

And it was the Premier outfit who looked energised upon the resumption as they picked off four of the first five points of the second half. They were still in the ascendancy at 1-12 to 1-10 by the 48th minute before Cork rallied with a pair of points from Darragh Fitzgibbon and Cahalane.

Then it appeared as if Tipperary had struck a decisive blow with midfielder Stephen Nolan finding a route down the heart of the defence and he finished clinically to the net in the 54th minute.

Cork countered to enjoy one of their best scoring spells of the game. Declan Dalton, Brian Turnbull, Dalton again and then Tim O’Mahony in the 62nd minute nudged them in front.

It placed them in a winning position but Tipperary’s spirit and resilience surfaced as they battled on to claim the spoils.

Scorers for Tipperary: Jake Morris 1-4 (1-0 pen, 0-3f), Conor Stakelum, Stephen Nolan 1-0 each, Jerome Cahill 0-3, Cian Darcy 0-2, Ger Browne, Colin English, Paudie Feehan, David Gleeson 0-1 each.

Scorers for Cork: Conor Cahalane 1-3, Declan Dalton 0-5 (0-5f), Robbie O’Flynn 0-3, Darragh Fitzgibbon, Shane Kinston, Tim O’Mahony, Jack O’Connor, Brian Turnbull 0-1 each.

Tipperary

1. Barry Hogan (Kiladangan)

2. Eoghan Connolly (Cashel King Cormacs)
3. Brian McGrath (Loughmore-Castleiney)
4. Killian O’Dwyer (Killenaule)

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5. Podge Campion (Drom-Inch)
6. Robert Byrne (Portroe)
7. Dillon Quirke (Clonoulty-Rossmore)

8. Stephen Nolan (Drom-Inch)
9. Ger Browne (Knockavilla-Donaskeigh Kickhams)

10. Colin English (Fr Sheehy’s — captain)
11. Jerome Cahill (Kilruane MacDonaghs)
12. Paudie Feehan (Killenaule)

13. Jake Morris (Nenagh Éire Óg)
14. Mark Kehoe (Kilsheelan-Kilcash)
15. Cian Darcy (Kilruane MacDonaghs)

Subs

17. Conor Stakelum (Thurles Sarsfields) for Feehan (29)
20. David Gleeson (Ballinahinch) for Darcy (41)
22. Craig Morgan (Kilruane McDonaghs) for O’Dwyer (49)
19. Paddy Cadell (JK Brackens) for Campion (52)
18. Lyndon Fairbrother (JK Brackens) for English (61)

Cork

1. Ger Collins (Ballinhassig)

2. David Lowney (Clonakilty)
3. David Griffin (Carrigaline)
4. Niall O’Leary (Castlelyons)

5. Eoghan Murphy (Sarsfields)
6. Mark Coleman (Blarney)
7. Billy Hennessy (St Finbarrs)

21. Conor Cahalane (St Finbarr’s)
9. Darragh Fitzgibbon (Charleville)

10. Robbie O’Flynn (Erins Own)
11. Declan Dalton (Fr O’Neills)
12. Shane Kingston (Douglas — captain)

13. Liam Healy (Sarsfields)
14. Tim O’Mahony (Newtownshandrum)
15. Jack O’Connor (Sarsfields)

Subs

22. Brian Turnbull (Douglas) for Healy (39)
8. Ger Millerick (Fr O’Neill’s) for O’Connor (56)

Referee: John Keenan (Wicklow)

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