Eddie Brennan gets off to winning start in charge of Laois while Westmeath footballers also prevail

Offaly 1-16 Laois 2-16 

THE LAOIS HURLERS got off to a winning start under new boss Eddie Brennan with a win over Offaly in the Walsh Cup on Sunday.

The sides traded scores throughout the opening phases, with Laois holding a slender one-point lead after 23 minutes.

Offaly then edged into the lead with a goal just before the half-hour mark but Laois struck back in the second half with a goal of their own from Stephen ‘Picky’ Maher.

Bord Na Mona Walsh Cup (2nd half, 72min) Laois 2-16 (22) Offaly 1-16 (19)
All over Great win

— Laois GAA (@CLGLaois) December 9, 2018

Offaly pushed on once more to go three points clear but a second Laois goal, scored by Aaron Bergin, leveled up proceedings.

Laois claimed the advantage from there and went on to record a solid win.

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Carlow 0-8 Westmeath 0-12 

Meanwhile, the Westmeath footballers also got off the mark with a win, defeating Carlow in their opening O’Byrne Cup game to make a positive start to life under new manager Jack Cooney.

The home side were four points up inside the opening 15 minutes and they maintained their advantage for the remainder of the tie, leading by the same margin at the half-time break.

Bord na Mona O'Byrne Cup Round 1

70 mins

Westmeath in control here looking to be a winning start for Jack Cooney@westmeath_gaa 0:12@Carlow_GAA 0:08#westmeathgaa #iarmhiabu #obyrnecup #bordnamona

— westmeathgaaofficial (@westmeath_gaa) December 9, 2018

Carlow cut the gap to two points after the restart but Westmeath stretched their advantage again with Luke Loughlin hitting three points after his introduction on the way to a four-point win.

Murray Kinsella, Gavan Casey and Andy Dunne preview a big weekend of Heineken Cup action and dissect the week’s main talking points.

Source: Heineken Rugby Weekly on The42/SoundCloud

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Wilderness to Leinster champions – Mullinalaghta story sums up magic of club game

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Shane Mulligan lifts the trophy.

Source: Oisin Keniry/INPHO

Kevin O’Brien reports from Bord na Mona O’Connor Park

THERE WON’T BE a cow milked in Mullinalaghta tonight, but that doesn’t mean the farmers are let off the hook. 

Earlier this week, centre-forward James McGivney said that no matter what happened in the Leinster final against Kilmacud Crokes, on Sunday evening he’ll have to put in a couple of hours on his beef farm at home. 

“Before the Leinster final this year, me and my brothers will probably do around two hours outside on the farm that morning, go to the game, come back home and do another two hours in the evening time,” he stated. “Go up then and enjoy a few pints or whatever.” 

There will be more than a few pints consumed in Keogh’s, the only bar in the half-parish, this week. 2018 Leinster club champions. It’s quite the achievement for the tiny Longford club that spent decades in the wilderness. 

What dreams are made of!!! #LeinsterChamps @TheLaurelsM representing @OfficialLDGAA in the @AIB_GAA Leinster final! #ClubIsFamily 🇶🇦🏆 pic.twitter.com/fZliyPXZbp

— Bláithín Brady (@BlaithinBrady1) December 9, 2018

This was billed as a David v Goliath contest. Kilmacud Crokes, with their 4,800-odd members, are sponsored with Bank of Ireland. Mullinalaghta have an entire population of around 450 and are without any jersey sponsors. 

There were 3,510 supporters in Tullamore this afternoon and the majority were shouting for the underdogs. Hopefully the last ones out of Mullinalaghta turned the lights off before they left.

Last week it was Gaoth Dobhair, from the Ghaeltacht region on the north-west tip of Donegal, who became the first club from the county to lift the Ulster title in 43 years and sparked joyous scenes in Healy Park.

“It was just surreal. It’s impossible to describe the buzz I’ve felt since last Sunday,” Eamon McGee said over the weekend. 

The Mullinalaghta giant killers will be feeling that buzz all this week – and beyond – as the magnitude of what they’ve achieved begins to kick in.

Check out the full-time highlights from the Leinster Club Football Final between Kilmacud Crokes (Dublin) and Mullinalaghta St. Columba's (Longford) here! pic.twitter.com/7VnMMMXmbh

— The GAA (@officialgaa) December 9, 2018

They’re the first club from Longford to win the provincial crown and it arrives on the 50th anniversary of the county’s sole Leinster SFC-winning campaign of 1968.

It remains to be seen if the Mullinalaghta celebrations videos this week will contain a call-out of their All-Ireland semi-final opponents Dr Crokes, similar to their counterparts in Donegal last week.

Despite the constant barrage of negativity that seems to follow the GAA, stories like Gaoth Dobhair and Mullinalaghta highlight the hugely positive impact it can have on local communities. 

In the same interview last week, McGivney stated that if it wasn’t for St Columba’s GAA club in Mullinalaghta, the vast majority of the squad would have emigrated.

“Football is the only thing keeping the community together,” he added. McGivney himself spent time working in Australia a few years ago before the GAA lured him home. 

The team’s corner-back Conan Brady has been commuting home from the UK for eight years to don the club colours. He had five years of flying back under the belt before they even won a county title – their breakthrough win in 2016 was their first since 1950.

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John Keegan and Simon Cadam celebrate with the trophy after the game.

Source: Oisin Keniry/INPHO

Other squad members travel back for training from Dublin, Galway, Limerick, Athlone and Louth without receiving a penny in expenses from the club, because they simply can’t afford it.

The club has barely 100 adult members and they’re just about able to put out a minor team thanks to their amalgamation with Abbeylara. Their squad has been pretty much the same for the last three years and the starting team yesterday featured five sets of brothers – McElligotts, McGivneys, Foxs, Rogers and Mulligans.

Each week, a different family from the area prepares the food for after training sessions and another washes the gear after games. 

Mullinalaghta went close in their last two provincial campaigns. They ran eventual champions St Vincent’s to four points in the 2016 last four meeting and threw away a sizeable lead before losing by the minimum to St Loman’s in the semi-final last year.

But the unexpected victory has left manager Mickey Graham with a daunting workload over the coming weeks. The new Cavan manager will be double-jobbing until February 16 at the earliest. 

The Breffni County begin their McKenna Cup campaign against Down on 30 December,  before further games against Queen’s University on 6 January and Donegal three days later. 

At the same time, he’ll be preparing this remarkable Mullinalaghta group for an unlikely All-Ireland semi-final tilt against Dr Crokes in the middle of February. 

Conor and Donal McElligott celebrate the victory.

Source: Oisin Keniry/INPHO

It’s an issue Anthony Cunningham had to deal with in early 2012 after the start of his reign in charge of the Galway hurlers coincided with Garrycastle claiming Leinster football honours. They went down to Crossmaglen in the All-Ireland final replay the following March. 

Pat O’Shea had a similar situation after he was appointed Kerry boss in the winter of 2006. The Dr Crokes team he managed made it all the way to the All-Ireland club final the following year. O’Shea had to combine the two high-pressure jobs until April 2007, when Crossmaglen beat Crokes after a replay in the decider.

Graham won’t worry about that tonight though. 

“This is a dream becoming a reality,” overjoyed captain Shane Mulligan said after accepting the cup. 

“This will go down in history, it’s never been done before. The scenes were incredible. People came from all over the world to see this.

“It’s well documented that we are a small rural area, with a small population. GAA is everything, so many people have committed so much time, so much of their lives to GAA. And now we are standing on top of Leinster.”

The tiny club with a huge heart. They’ll be pinching themselves for a while.

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Extra-time in All-Ireland semi-finals, club concerns, Liam Miller match and stepping down in Cork

OUTGOING CORK COUNTY board secretary Frank Murphy believes drawn All-Ireland semi-finals should go to a replay rather than have extra-time played ‘in fairness to players’.

Long-serving Cork county board secretary Frank Murphy is stepping down.

Source: Donall Farmer/INPHO

Murphy has made his remarks in his last report to Cork’s annual county convention, which will take place next Saturday, as he prepares to step down after 46 years in his current post.

While congratulating Liam MacCarthy Cup winners Limerick, who defeated Cork after an epic clash at the semi-final stage in July, Murphy wants to see the playing of extra-time in these games reviewed.

A motion from the St Ita’s club, the home of Cork captain Seamus Harnedy, to the convention in Cork is seeking to make this change and is passed there, it will go forward to GAA Congress in Wexford next February.

“The game was an intensely high scoring contest from beginning to end,” writes Murphy in relation to that Cork and Limerick match.

“Limerick led at the interval by a one point margin. Cork gained good control in the second period and led by six points with a few minutes plus injury time remaining. Limerick fought back to take the lead but a long range point from Patrick Horgan sent the game into extra-time.

Patrick Horgan won an All-Star for Cork in 2018.

Source: Tommy Dickson/INPHO

“Injury problems played a crucial role in the extra-time period and Limerick forged a four-point winning margin. A drawn All-Ireland senior semi-Final deserves, as heretofore, to go to a replay in fairness to players.

“The publicity and financial benefits to the association should also be factors of consideration. This decision should be reviewed as soon as is possible.

“We congratulate Limerick on their victory and going on to achieve All-Ireland glory. Our team have performed tremendously well over the past two championships but it will be important to build on the strength of the panel. The excellent team management under John Meyler have set this task as an early objective.”

John Kiely and John Meyler shake hands after their Croke Park clash.

Source: Oisin Keniry/INPHO

While acknowledging the success of the new round-robin format in hurling, Murphy has questioned the impact it has having on the club scene.

“While the new format of the provincial senior hurling championship was highly successful it must be asked at what expense? It seriously impacted on the club championship scheduling in this county. It was impossible to fit in a number of rounds of the championships between inter-county fixtures.

“Even though the month of May was utilised for first round county championship games, the knock-out rounds were played in too compact a period. While many counties had no difficulty in the past year or in previous years in delaying the progress of their county championships, this is not a reasonable position in this county given the number of clubs and the extensive dual involvement of clubs and players.

“Some defeats of dual clubs allowed the main championships to be concluded on schedule. However some club players had to play up to eight successive weeks and this undoubtedly took its toll in performance levels.

“We are told that this is a problem that we must ourselves resolve by either eliminating the second chance for teams defeated in the first rounds or by reducing the number of teams competing or dividing competitions.

Seamus Harnedy captained Cork to this year’s Munster hurling title win.

Source: Morgan Treacy/INPHO

“Put quite simply there has been greater consideration given to the expansion of inter-county formats and at the expense of a reasonable club championship schedule in a county the size and duality of ours.

“While the 2019 championships will be run on the same format, it is essential to make early plans for the following years. The status of the championships must be maintained and it must be borne in mind that they provide the main source of income for the county committee and there is no room for impairment in this regard if the board is to have the revenue to run its affairs.

“A previous experiment to run the initial stages of the championship on a league basis proved disastrous in terms of status and attendances and it took some years to recover from that experiment.”

Murphy also referenced the Liam Miller Tribute Match which was staged in Páirc Uí Chaoimh in September, an event that had sparked controversy after the Cork venue was initially not available to be used.

The teams observed a minute’s silence before the Liam Miller Tribute game in September.

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

“It (Páirc Uí Chaoimh) also staged the Liam Miller Tribute involving Liam’s former club colleagues. This game was authorised by our Central Council on its interpretation that the basis of the application did not conflict with the association’s rules governing the use of its grounds. It is pleasing that the event was a great success and benefited a number of deserving causes.”

Finally Murphy paid tribute to a number of people who had closely alongside him during his tenure and wished his successor Kevin O’Donovan well.

“I retire as county secretary at this convention after 46 years in office. It has been a great honour and privilege to have served this great county in this prestigious position. I served with 16 county chairpersons and some long serving treasurers.

“Four served as chairmen of the Provincial Council and two had the honour of becoming Presidents of the association. All were outstanding persons in their own right and good friends.

Frank Murphy celebrating Cork’s 2013 All-Ireland semi-final victory over Dublin with Jimmy Barry-Murphy.

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

“To all the officers and members of the county committees, divisional boards, Coiste na nÓg, players, team managements, referees, sponsors and supporters down the years, I say a sincere thank you. In a particular way I remember those who have left us. Dia trócaire orthu.

“While I thank all the personnel who have served in the county committee’s office during my time, it is particularly appropriate that generous tribute be paid to two ladies, namely Mairéad McCarthy and Barbara Hartnett. These ladies have given distinguished and unparalleled service. 

“Their extraordinary commitment was always to the fore and I will personally be eternally grateful to them for their vast contribution, loyalty and friendship.

“I appreciated too the immense opportunity that was afforded me to work in various capacities at provincial and national levels – areas that provided great experience and many enduring friendships.

“Caoimhín Ó Donnabháin of Kilmeen and Kilbree has been chosen as our new Rúnaí/CEO.

“I warmly congratulate Kevin on his appointment and wish him an abundance of happiness, job satisfaction and success.

“He will be his ‘own man’ but any assistance or advice that he may require from me as he settles in to this onerous position will be readily available. May the Gaelic Athletic Association in this proud county advance and prosper under your leadership. Go raibh fada buan thú a Chaoimhín.”

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‘There is a fear in the unknown…I’m going in as head coach, something I’ve never done before’

JIM MCGUINNESS FLIES out to North Carolina tonight as he begins the next chapter of his coaching career in the soccer world.

Former Donegal boss Jim McGuinness.

The former Donegal GAA manager is stepping into his first managerial position in his adopted sport at United Soccer League (USL) Championship side Charlotte Independence, where he has signed a three-year contract.

“I feel ready now and I’m really excited about it and looking forward to it,” McGuinness said at a press conference in Dublin this morning.

“There is a fear in the unknown and I’m going into an environment now, I’m going in as a head coach, something I’ve never done before.

But I had the exact same experience when I was going into the Donegal job, it’s the exact same feeling, you’re going in there, you’ve never managed an inter-county team before there are teams in the country winning All-Ireland’s every year and you’re… I don’t know what age I was, 36 or 37.

“Going in as a young manager and you are trying to take them on. Obviously, there is (some fear), but that becomes part of the excitement of it as well and the adrenaline of it.

“I think I would be as happy as Larry still managing Donegal had this challenge and opportunity not been presented. You’re in one environment and you are plucked from obscurity and transported into another world, another culture.

“Six years is a short period of time when you are involved in something like this, but it’s a long stretch as well in terms of the experiences that I’ve had. I think I’m out the other side of it now and I’m ready to stand on my own two feet now and move forward. I have a good coaching staff and playing staff around me and that’ll be it.”

McGuinness during his last year in charge of Donegal.

Source: James Crombie/INPHO

After leading Donegal to the All-Ireland title in 2012, the 46-year-old had stints on the coaching staff at Celtic and Beijing Sinobo Guoan. He left China after six months for family reasons and has been on the look-out for a new position since then.

It was during that spell out of the game when he realised he was ready to step up and take on a team of his own.

“There was an article I read in a magazine about Stevie Gerrard,” he said.

“He’d just taken over the underage team in Liverpool. Jurgen Klopp said to him, ‘Listen, I want you to get in and around the place (senior set-up) for a couple of weeks but that’s it, a couple of weeks. You need to get in there and start picking teams, you need to start kicking people up the backside, putting your arm around people, trying different systems, getting slapped in the face with certain things in terms of your system and learning.’

When I read that I just thought, ‘All my experiences have been in that environment of sort of observation when I went to Celtic originally, and then as an assistant.’ So that kind of resonated with me that maybe I just need to get in there and start standing on my own two feet myself.”

McGuinness confirmed there had been offers from the League of Ireland but the move to Charlotte came about after a chance meeting with Meath man Padraig Smith in Colorado.

The Glenties native visited a club in New York and then spent five days with the Colorado Rapids MLS team, who had Charlotte Independence as an affiliate team at the time.

He began speaking to the club about taking on the role “six or seven weeks ago” before meeting with the club’s board members in London.

“When I met them in London, one of the things they said as well is that, ‘You’re an outlier and we like outliers because we are a club, not with a huge budget, so we have to do things a bit differently and we have to look at things a bit left-field. We have a vision to move forward and we’re very positive about what we can do moving forward.’

“They liked that about me. That was good for myself in terms of them being a fit. They’re going in with their eyes wide open, they understand who I am, they understand what they’re getting and they’re still prepared to make that leap. All these things, feed into your decision.

“I spent a week out there and it’s just been the last couple of weeks trying to get everything over the line.

I’ve always said it’s not about getting a club, and this is a direct quote from Brendan Rodgers from a conversation we had. He said: ‘Jim it’s not about getting a club, it’s getting the right club’.

“So I had an open mind with everyone that I had spoken to and I wasn’t against coming to Ireland.

“When I met these guys and we sat down and we had started talking we started talking about the vision that we had for the club. In the short term, on the football side of things but also the long-term strategies and it seemed to make a lot of sense and that just made the decision a lot easier.”

McGuinness in his new club’s colours.

The USL Championship is officially recognised as the second tier of American soccer, sitting a level below Major League Soccer (MLS), although there is no promotion or relegation between the two leagues.

The professional game is growing in the country and USA, Mexico and Canada will jointly host the 2026 World Cup.

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Charlotte Independence finished 11th last season, seven points outside a playoff place. The club, with their 5,000 capacity stadium, will begin the new season in March. The USL Championship contains 36 clubs that are split into two 18-team conferences.

Welcome to all of our new friends and followers from #Ireland 🇮🇪 ⚽️👍🏼 #WeAreCLT

— Charlotte Independence (@CLTIndependence) December 8, 2018

The club plans on moving into a new stadium located in the city’s downtown area by 2021 – prior to the final season of McGuinness’s contract.

“That’s obviously the club trying to lay down a marker that they would like to be considered for an MLS position,” he says. “There’s a lot of energy within the club and a lot of motivation in the club to move forward and develop. That was one of the things that caught my eye.

The location at the moment is about 15 or 20 minutes outside of the city and the new stadium will be downtown, walking distance for all the supporters and stuff.

“That will be exciting moving forward but obviously the short term for me is to try and build a team that can be competitive in the league and hopefully get ready for a move if that can happen down the line.”

McGuinness said Celtic owner Dermot Desmond has been a sounding board for him throughout his journey into soccer coaching, as have Mick and Paul McGinley.

“They’ve been people that have been really, really important to me. Personally, I’ve gone on this journey and they’ve helped facilitate and mentored me along the way.

Their support is really important to me and I continue to receive their support and every decision that I’ve made to this point, including this one and the last one to go to China, all those people would be really important points of counsel for me in terms of which direction to move in next.

“I think everyday is a school day and wherever you go, you will learn things, and I think if you get out there and meet people and see people coaching and see how they work, you will have own opinion and philosophy about how the game is, but you will always take something away from that environment that you feel will add value, or put a twist on it and tweak it to make sense of it to yourself.”

McGuinness at Celtic Park before a Champions League qualifier against Malmo FF.

Source: Jeff Holmes

In terms of his philosophy and the style of play he wants to employ, McGuinness will draw on his experiences from Donegal, Celtic and China.

“It was the same with Donegal – you’ve got to be good on the ball, you’ve got to be good using the ball. That is Celtic to a tee, their capacity to play really good quality possession football. I would characterise it, to answer your question, this capacity to play the game and to force the game.

“In China we forced the game really aggressively. I think it’s the emerging of both those aspects in terms of soccer and then everything I brought from home in terms of intensity and pressing and overwhelming the opposition and playing the game on the transition.

“Forcing the game and forcing the game in certain areas of the field where maybe it’s not as high risk, and creating as many chances as possible with the protection that everybody has bought into the system and thus you can actually do that. If I was to describe it in a few sentences I would say the capacity to play the game through the thirds but also always looking to be aggressive and dynamic and direct as part of that.

I think to an extent, Liverpool play that type of game. They can play ball, there’s no doubt about that. They can build the play and play it through the thirds. But you’d have to say they’re very dynamic and they like to play in the transition and in behind. They’ve got pace, they’re not afraid to play a vertical pass.

“Everybody will have their own take on it. (Maurizio) Sarri has come into Chelsea and has created a twist on the possession type of football. I think you’ll take experiences and influences from everywhere but ultimately you have to work out what’s best for you and then also what’s best for the players you have at your disposal.

“I’d like to play a high intensity and aggressive game. For that to happen you need a certain type of individual and athlete, not just the physical characteristics but also the physicality to go with that.

“I think that’s important as well and that’s where recruitment comes in and the type of players we want to bring in. Hopefully they will fit the system and the type of athlete we want to bring in. It’s one thing saying, ‘This is what we want to do’ but it’s another thing if they can or cannot do it.

“So it’s unfair to employ a system when your players haven’t got the capacity. With Donegal we had to build that capacity through the training. So hopefully with the transfer market, you can get players in that have those attributes at their disposal right now.”

McGuinness worked closely with Roger Schmidt at Beijing Guoan FC.

Source: Xinhua News Agency/PA Images

He will be involved in player recruitment with the team’s General Manager Mike Jeffries, who was the manager of the side last season. Jeffries will primarily be responsible for managing the club’s finances and the transfer budget.

With the new season beginning in March, McGuinness has a relatively short time-frame to implement his ideas on the squad, but he’s not feeling under pressure to achieve immediate results.

“I don’t think it’s pressure. I’ve never gone down that road of ‘pressure’ from a coaching point of view ever. I think the reason for that is I’ve got a very clear vision in my mind as to what the thing is and also how to train it.

We’ll be looking to have a considerable pre-season. It’ll not all be there by the end of pre-season but I think we’ll get a lot of work done and I’ve a lot of work done on that already in terms of the phases of play that we’re speaking about and how that breaks down on the daily and weekly cycles running into the start of the season.

“There’s a saying in psychology that ‘fear lies in the unknown’. That’s why, from a coaching point of view and a philosophical point of view, if you know exactly what you want to do and how you want to do it, you could potentially eliminate that fear for the players.

“Because they understand all the different variables that can happen within a game and they have a game plan in their head for that, so you don’t get this ‘rabbit in the headlights’ moment and that for me is coaching.”

McGuinness during a training session with Donegal in 2014.

Source: Cathal Noonan/INPHO

What is it about soccer coaching that has made McGuinness determined to build a career in the game?

“I think it’s the challenge of it, you know. It’s just the challenge of it and to see where it takes you. Can it be done? I’m big believer in people. Your work environment, my work environment, the players will now come into work in our environment.

“If there’s a sense of self-value and self-worth and they’ve got a voice and they can contribute and they’re adding value to the overall process.

I don’t really believe in really big squads. A focused squad, everybody knows they have a part to play, everybody will be involved in this picture. When they slip in and they slip out, they all know that it’s for a period time because everyone knows that they’re really important and everyone needs to be used.

“Then, developing players, on the back of that, stretch out the numbers. They don’t need the same exposure but if they’re making strides, you’ve got to be fair to them and true to them to give them the chance.

“For me, that’s really important. A group of people that know and understand how much they’re valued and they want to be there. Hopefully, you get the best out of them as people.

I also believe that people want to be pushed and they want to be stretched. A lot of the time, people are in a comfort zone and players are in a comfort zone, it’s only when you move out of that comfort zone that you start making really big strides.

“You look back and you do, ‘Woah, we’ve moved to far in the last couple of months.’ I think if players experience that, you can get this feeling of, ‘This is special’ and that they want to be there. Then, when the offers come in, they’re reluctant to go.

“When we were with Donegal, very few people wanted to leave the group. Very few people retired because they were pushing hard and the harder we pushed, the fitter they got, the tougher the defenders are, the harder it is for the forwards to break it down,the better they become.

“These are all the things, that are important to be, anyway. That’s what I’ll be focusing on.”

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Member of famous Offaly hurling family to take over four-time All-Ireland club hurling champions

A MEMBER OF the Whelehan family will be back in charge of four-time All-Ireland winning club Birr next season with Barry Whelehan having being appointed as the Offaly club’s new senior hurling boss.

The Whelahan brothers celebrating their 2001 Leinster club final victory.

Source: INPHO

Congratulations and best of luck to Barry Whelehan who has been announced as our new senior hurling manager for 2019 💚❤️ pic.twitter.com/AJzP4pxPnY

— Birr GAA (@BirrCLG) December 9, 2018

Source: Birr GAA/Twitter

The former Offaly senior takes over at the helm of a club where he was a player at the heart of some of their best triumphs alongside his brothers Brian and Simon, with their father Pad Joe the highly successful manager. 

Birr won four All-Ireland and seven Leinster senior club titles between 1991 and 2007. Barry was wing-back on the team that defeated Galway’s Sarsfields in the All-Ireland final in 1998, and midfield on the victories in the deciders in 2002 against Galway’s Clarinbridge and in 2003 against Antrim’s Dunloy.

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Brian, Simon, Pad-Joe and Barry Whelehan

Source: INPHO

In recent times he has been involved in coaching with Birr underage teams and St Brendan’s CS sides, while also taking charge in camogie of the Offaly senior team and local club Shinrone.

Birr last won the Offaly senior hurling title in 2008 when Pad Joe Whelehan was in charge and since then have lost out in deciders in 2011, 2013 and 2016, with their new manager lining out at midfield in that last final loss. They were defeated at the quarter-final stage of this year’s championship against Belmont.

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Dummy solos, both feet, what a finish – we’ll never tire of watching this incredible goal

WHAT A GOAL.

It was a huge weekend of ladies football action as new champions were crowned in the All-Ireland senior, intermediate and junior club competitions.

Mourneabbey ended five years of hurt and heartbreak as they finally got their hands on the Dolores Tyrrell Memorial Cup on Saturday night while it was two out of three for Cork as Glanmire lifted the junior title with a win over Sligo’s Tourlestrane yesterday.

It finished 1-22 to 3-11 at Duggan Park, but Katie Walsh was most definitely a shining light for the losing side. The Sligo county star finished with 1-8 and was the sole scorer in Tourlestrane’s 1-5 first-half tally.

Video: Think Mugsy. What a goal by Katie Walsh today for Tourlestrane in the All Ireland JFC Final.. @LadiesFootball Not sure about the commentator though.. pic.twitter.com/1Vvo0bDxfL

— Jerome Quinn (@JeromeQuinn) December 9, 2018

Her 14th-minute goal was something special. Walsh soloed off both feet, produced some incredible sidesteps and dummies to send Glanmire defenders on their way before firing the ball into the roof of the net.

Some going.

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Katie Walsh lining out for Sligo in 2016.

Source: Lorraine O’Sullivan/INPHO

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Meanwhile, Clontarf ran out intermediate champions in Parnell Park under Saturday Night Lights, putting Monaghan’s Emmett Óg to the sword.

And while they lost out, Laura Boylan chipped in with a huge score for the Ulster side; flicking the ball up with her toe out wide, soloing off both feet before turning onto her left and splitting the posts.

Have a look.

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‘Anything is possible’ – Mullinalaghta give hope to small clubs all over Ireland

MULLINALAGHTA HAD FIVE starters on the Longford team that went down by 19 points to Dublin in this year’s Leinster semi-final – Patrick Fox, Donal McElligott, David and James McGivney, and Rian Brady.

Kilmacud’s Cian O’Sullivan and Paul Mannion were key members of the Dublin outfit that day in June and would go on to land a fourth All-Ireland title in succession in front of 80,000 at Croke Park.

But O’Sullivan and Mannion – who boast 11 senior All-Irelands and five All-Stars between them – found themselves on the losing side to the champions of Longford on Sunday afternoon in front of 3,510 spectators in Tullamore.

Mullinalaghta’s victory as 5/1 outsiders over the south side ‘superclub’ was fairytale stuff and gave a lift to every small club in the country. And while their county has little chance of ever achieving a victory like it over Dublin in the Leinster SFC, Mullinalaghta showed that such giant killings are still very much possible on the club scene.

“To be honest that didn’t come into our mindset at all,” said Brady about the gulf between Longford and Dublin at inter-county level.

“You don’t think about that really. County scene, I suppose, is a little bit different. Club football is different. We always knew they had players like Paul Mannion, very strong players, and other players on the Dublin panel. But we believed in ourselves.”

The full-forward posted four points, three from play, and was a menace in the Mullinalaghta attack throughout.

“We knew we had good players there,” continued Brady. “We have lots of players on the Longford county team. We believed in ourselves – and thank God we got the result.”

Cian O’Sullivan tackles Aidan McElligott resulting in a penalty late in the game.

Source: Oisin Keniry/INPHO

O’Sullivan performed well in the Kilmacud half-back line but hauled down Aidan McElligot for the all-important penalty that Gary Rogers drilled home in the dying minutes.

He was dismissed on a second yellow card and spent the final few agonising minutes prowling the sideline as his team-mates desperately tried to pull the game out of the fire.

Mannion made less of an impact and after showing well for possession early on, he was kept under lock and key by the excellent Fox, who was later awarded man of the match.

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Three wides – two in the first-half – seemed to dent the forward’s confidence and he was held scoreless from play by the tigerish defender Fox. 

“You had lots of help there as well,” said Fox shortly after the final whistle.

In fairness to the boys, especially the half-back line, any time a ball came in….you probably saw a couple of times that he was out in front of me but Gary Rogers was behind me, Donie McElligott was behind me, they were doubling up.

“I knew it and that helped. But Paul is a super footballer. Mickey (Graham) just said to me, ‘Go out and do your best’. I knew he was going to get on ball and kick a couple of scores. It’s just down to it being a team shift, everyone goes out and tries to do their best in their individual battles. If we won nine or 10 of those individual battles we’d probably win the game and I think we did that.

When Paul was in the full-forward line I took him, when he went out to half-forward line, Donie took him. He spent most of his time in the full-forward line, we didn’t go out to change our game plan.

“You can get too hung up on what the other team are doing and take away from yourself. Myself and Donie had a word between ourselves and we said, ‘When he’s in the full-forward line it falls to me, when he goes out to the half-forward line, I pass him off to Donie’. We kept our shape and just played as we always played.”

They wouldn’t have believed it when they started back training last March, but Mullinalaghta are one of the four club teams left in the championship. Dr Crokes stand between them and a place in the All-Ireland final on St Patrick’s Day.

“Look, we’re not thinking about that,” said Brady. “We’ll probably go back and celebrate this for a while and we’ve Christmas then to come as well. 

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Anything is possible. It’s club football at the end of the day and there’s always big upsets in club football but we won’t think about that for a while. We’ll enjoy this and then we’ll get back into it whenever we’re back training.”

Fox took a similar tone: “I didn’t even realise that until I went over to the screen with the TG4 boys, I hadn’t a clue who we were playing.

“They’re unbelievable, they have All-Irelands behind them those boys, they have an unbelievable panel. It’s something to look forward to. We’re going to take this week anyway I’d say and we’re going to celebrate and enjoy the Christmas and knuckle down. Look, we’ll see what happens, we’ll give it a cut and see where it takes us.

“It’s unbelievable, we never even dreamed of winning this, we dreamed of winning the Longford championship. We never dreamed of winning the Leinster. When we got here we said we’d give it a rattle and we believed in ourselves but it’s just amazing.”

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Tyrone GAA keeper to line out in Irish League Cup semi-final against Linfield

TYRONE GOALKEEPER NIALL Morgan will line out for Dungannon Swifts in a League Cup semi-final tonight after getting permission from manager Mickey Harte.

Morgan, who has recently played for Dungannon, has been drafted into the starting line-up for the clash with Linfield at Stangmore Park due to a goalkeeper crisis in the Swifts.

The42 understands however, that he will be back with the Tyrone footballers for their opening Dr McKenna Cup game next week.

Dungannon’s first-choice shot stopper Alex Moore — who is on loan from the Blues — is ineligible to face his parent club, while their back-up keeper Stuart Addis is injured.

Morgan will therefore be stepping in for the Swifts, having already played five games for the Dungannon outfit since the end of October before he subsequently resumed his Gaelic football commitments in December.

Niall will play – it’s a one-off and we are grateful to Mickey Harte and Tyrone for releasing him for this game,” Dungannon boss Kris Lindsay is quoted by the Belfast Telegraph as saying.

Twenty-seven-year-old Morgan previously played for Dungannon between 2011 and 2013 before leaving to focus on playing for the Tyrone footballers. 

“He has obviously played in a few games this season and Mickey has thankfully allowed him to play on Tuesday night,” Lindsay added.

“It’s a huge game – we are 90 minutes from a final and you want to play in those big games.”

Tyrone will take on Derry at Celtic Park in the opening round of their Dr McKenna Cup campaign on Thursday 20 December. 

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18-time All-Ireland winner Corkery commits to Cork camogie for 2019

EIGHTEEN-TIME ALL-IRELAND winner Briege Corkery has committed to the Cork camogie team for the 2019 season.

Corkery returned to the squad ahead of their All-Ireland semi-final against Tipperary in August after an almost two-year absence which included giving birth to her son Tadhg at the end of March.

She was introduced from the bench in the 58th minute of that tie but didn’t feature in the All-Ireland final as Cork retained their title in Croke Park.

The Cloughduv player had previously taken a break from inter-county camogie for the 2017 season, but has confirmed to The42 that she will be playing with Cork when they begin training for 2019.

I’m going to go back to camogie,” she said. “I suppose I was disappointed I didn’t get a game [in the All-Ireland final] and understandably, I know why I didn’t.

“I’d have preferred to have gone on a losing note and played [rather] than not play at all. It’s just I’d like to try and get back on the team and see.

“If I’m not good enough to get back on, I’m not good enough, that’d be ok too but at least I can say I gave it another year and I tried.”

Cork’s thrilling victory over Kilkenny saw Corkery collect her 18th All-Ireland medal across camogie and football.

She now shares that record with Cork legend Rena Buckley who announced her inter-county retirement from both codes earlier this year.

Corkery stepped away from inter-county football and camogie after lining out in the respective All-Ireland finals in 2016.

She helped the footballers to win a sixth successive senior crown while the camogie side lost out to Kilkenny in the other decider that year.

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Corkery plays her club camogie with Cloughduv and also plays club football for St Vals’.

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RTÉ confirm nominees for 2018 Team of the Year and Young Sportsperson of the Year

FOLLOWING A YEAR of unprecedented success in Irish sport at home and on the international stage, RTÉ have confirmed their respective shortlists for Team of the Year and Young Sportsperson of the Year.

Last week the broadcaster released its 13-person shortlist for Sportsperson of the Year, with tonight’s announcement completing the lineup for this week’s award ceremony, which will be held on Saturday in Dublin.

The Irish Women’s hockey team, the Irish men’s rugby team, the Irish Paralympic Athletics Team, the Limerick hurlers and the Dublin footballers are amongst the nominees for Team of the Year, with 2018 proving successful across a host of different sports for Irish teams at home and abroad.

Following her sensational double gold at the European Athletics Under-18 Championships Sarah Healy is named amongst the nominees for Young Sportsperson of the Year.

Also featured are Kerry footballer David Clifford, who scored 4-13 in the Championship, gymnast Rhys McClenaghan, who secured European gold on the pommel horse and cyclist Lara Gillespie, who added gold in the Junior Women’s Points Race at the UEC European Track Championships to the silver she won in the Individual Pursuit.

The winner of RTÉ Team of the Year will be decided by a public vote during the awards ceremony, which will take place this Saturday at 9.20pm on RTÉ One, while the winner of Young Sportsperson will be chosen by senior members of RTÉ Sport.

11 Nominees for RTÉ Team of the Year:

  • Cork Camogie
  • Dundalk FC
  • Ireland Eventing
  • Dublin Football
  • Limerick Hurling
  • Dublin Ladies Football
  • Irish Paralympic Athletics Team
  • Paul and Gary O’Donovan
  • Ireland Rugby Team
  • Leinster Rugby Team
  • Ireland Women’s Hockey Team

13 Nominees for RTÉ Young Sportsperson of the Year:

  • Rhasidat Adeleke
  • David Clifford
  • Niamh Coyne
  • Seán McCarthy Crean
  • Lara Gillespie
  • Kyle Hayes
  • Sarah Healy
  • Sommer Lecky
  • Rhys McClenaghan
  • Daina Moorhouse 
  • Donnacha O’Brien
  • Nicole Turner 
  • Dearbhla Rooney

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