
Paddy McCormack bags two goals against Kilkenny as Tipperary win All-Ireland U-20 hurling crown
After the heartbreak of missing their All-Ireland U-20 hurling final defeat last year, Paddy McCormack was Tipperary's goal-scoring hero to bring silverware back from Kilkenny.

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Irish Examiner
21 minutes ago
- Irish Examiner
Christy O'Connor: Two-pointers came to the fore across All-Ireland SFC and Tailteann Cup games
This weekend has been a turning point for 2-point shots and scores When Rian O'Neill returned to the Armagh squad for their match against Derry last weekend, his comeback signalled more than just a boost to Armagh's ambitions to retain the All-Ireland; it also added a significant weapon to Armagh's arsenal, especially in the context of 2-pointers. This is exclusive subscriber content. Already a subscriber? Sign in Subscribe to access all of the Irish Examiner. Annual €120€60 Best value Monthly €10€4 / month Unlimited access. Subscriber content. Daily ePaper. Additional benefits.


Irish Examiner
21 minutes ago
- Irish Examiner
Kieran McGeeney: 'They were told they would never get out of the group of death – they topped the group of death'
All-Ireland SFC Group 4: Dublin 0-19 (0-3-13) Armagh 0-24 (0-5-14) "They were told they would never get out of the group of death – they topped the group of death,' Kieran McGeeney rallied supporters at Armagh's All-Ireland SFC homecoming in the Athletic Grounds last July. After just two rounds, Armagh have again ensured they will finish best out of a viper's nest with a quarter-final on June 28/29 to anticipate. The pangs of another Ulster final loss have once more been parked and this time the champions are wearing the crown well. Plenty will be made of Con O'Callaghan not being available and Dublin's comedy of errors (18 wides, three shots that dropped short and one that struck the post aside) but Armagh looked assured from the moment they went ahead for the first time in the 26th minute. They will point to be without some of their stars too, the likes of All-Star and captain Aidan Forker, Aaron McKay and Oisín O'Neill, who had been providing regular two-pointers up to the Ulster final. Here, his brother Rian took over that mantle, kicking three of them. O'Neill is what Michael Murphy should be to Donegal – the icing on the cake. His team don't see him as a crutch but when he raises orange flags like his floating first effort here, he is a weapon of destruction. Kieran McGeeney was pleased if not satisfied with his charges's display. 'I thought we missed a hell of a bit, I think we had four or five goal chances and missed a lot. They had 17 wides, but at least, I would say, 10 of those were well within their range. 'You could argue the bit out, it would be closer or not, the conversion rates are important. Their wides would look bigger, but I think there are four or five goal chances, actually Dublin scored three or four points off them. 'Good saves, but you still want to be at least converting one or two of those if we're at this level. Definitely a mix of the good and the bad, but listen with the way the other results went, you take it every day of the week. To be able to top the group is a testament to the way the boys put their shoulders to the wheel.' Watched by a slightly disappointing crowd of 38,763, Armagh led by 0-13 to 0-9 at half-time and capitalised on three consecutive three up/four back transgressions by an insipid Dublin to extend their lead to seven by the 45th minute. The frequency of the infractions was a bad look for Dublin who compensated with a couple of two-pointers to draw within five points with 17 minutes remaining. Seán Bugler kicked the second of them only to then kick a couple of wides, the second from a relatively easy position. Read More Farrell will have a serious talk with players about technical fouls Armagh were simply a more clued-in side. In the second half, Ben Crealey and Darragh McMullan gave them a platform in the middle and the latter put them seven up in the 50th minute and the game seemed to be over when O'Neill thumped over his third two-pointer, the first from a free, in the 59th minute and Armagh were eight to the good. A desperate Dublin searched for two-pointers and bagged a third via Paddy Small but the wide count kept ticking and the total of 18 told plenty about their day. There wasn't much efficiency in the first half either. Armagh had two goal shots kept out by Stephen Cluxton and missed another six attempts at goal but Dublin were guilty of more erratic finishing. Cormac Costello ended the half with his side's seventh wide and 10th miss for the opening half. Ironically, Costello had been his team's best player in that period, scoring three points from play and winning a free he converted. Colm Basquel struck two wides inside the first 15 minutes and was withdrawn five minutes later. Dublin looked the part in the opening 11 minutes when they pushed 0-6 to 0-3 playing into Hill 16, but were hauled back courtesy of a Rory Grugan two-pointer and Jarlath Óg Burns's second point from play. Cluxton made his first save in the 19th minute from Oisín Conaty and Dublin made plenty of the let-off with the next couple of points to go two up. There was pace in their football and their inside line were enjoying the duels that came off it. However, what followed was an Armagh blitz, seven points in six minutes, two of them two-point scores, an enduring kick from O'Neill, which followed an equivalent score from a Grugan free outside the arc. Dublin were being walloped on their kick-out, the frenzied efforts of their half-forward preventing Cluxton from finding pockets and forcing him long where the likes of Crealey and Ross McQuillan were breaking ball. Conor Turbitt sent over his second score courtesy of the restart that came after O'Neill's kick and Conaty also brought his total to two points on the half-hour mark to stretch Armagh's lead to five points. Costello did sent over a free, Dublin's first point in 12 minutes, in the 34th minute but the wide he added over a minute later typified his team's performance if not his own. 'I think in the first quarter we were quite clinical but then lost our way for some reason,' reviewed Dessie Farrell. 'And we never really regained our composure, struggled to get momentum maybe outside of a period in the second half where we got at the Armagh kick-out. That gave us a very good platform but we failed to convert and execute from that platform, so that was very disappointing. 'And then perhaps some decision-making around shot selection, chasing the game, chasing two-pointers. That potentially we would regret now looking back on that at this point.' Scorers for Dublin: C. Costello (0-8, 1tp, 3 frees); P. Small (0-4, 1tp); S. Bugler (0-3, 1tp); L. Gannon (0-2); L. O'Dell, B. Howard (0-1 each). Scorers for Armagh: R. Grugan (0-8, 1tp, 1tpf, 4 frees); R. O'Neill (0-6, 2 tps, 1tpf); J. Burns, O. Conaty, C. Turbitt (0-2 each); E. Rafferty, D. McMullan, S. Campbell, J. McElroy (0-1 each). DUBLIN: S. Cluxton; D. Byrne, T. Clancy, A. Gavin; N. Scully, B. Howard. S. MacMahon; P. Ó Cofaigh-Byrne, C. Kilkenny (c); K. McGinnis, S. Bugler, C. Basquel; P. Small, C. Costello, L. O'Dell. Subs: L. Gannon for C. Basquel (20); J. Small for A. Gavin (h-t); T. Lahiff for K. McGinnis, L. Breathnach for L. O'Dell (both 48); E. O'Donnell for N. Scully (61). ARMAGH: E. Rafferty; B. McCambridge, P. Burns, P. McGrane; R. McQuillan, T. Kelly, J. Burns; J. Duffy, B. Crealey; D. McMullan, O. Conaty, A. Murnin; R. Grugan (c), R. O'Neill, C. Turbitt. Subs: S. Campbell for C. Turbitt (53); J. McElroy for J. Duffy (64); T. McCormack for R. Grugan (67); N. Grimley for R. O'Neill (68). Referee: J. McQuillan (Cavan).


Irish Times
34 minutes ago
- Irish Times
Proven course performer Deressa out to secure valuable prize in €200k Gowran Classic
Beware of bookies bearing gifts is normally sound advice, but not at Gowran Park's bank holiday Monday fixture where free entry to the track is being sponsored by the Irish National Professional Bookmakers Association. It coincides with a second running of the €200,000 Irish Stallion Farms Gowran Classic, the richest race of the year at the Co Kilkenny course. The winner will receive free entry into the Dubai Duty Free Irish Derby later this month or into the Juddmonte Irish Oaks if a filly is successful. That proved the case a year ago as Fleur De Chine was successful for Jessica Harrington . The Moone trainer has two of the 11 runners lining up at Gowran Park this time for a race designed to try to boost opportunities for middle-distance bred horses in Ireland. Harrington's number one jockey Shane Foley has opted for Nancy J. READ MORE Top-rated is the Ballydoyle filly Heavens Gate, who landed a valuable sales race as well as a Group Three last year. However, she has failed to fire in a pair of starts this season and beat only two home in the French 1,000 Guineas. This trip of almost 10 furlongs could stretch her stamina. Joseph O'Brien has four shots, with And So To Bed the apparent first choice. But it is Deressa that could prove a solution. She has won twice already this season at Gowran to reach a rating of 93. Of all the runners, the filly bred by the late Aga Khan shapes perhaps as the one most open to progress. A stall one draw is no impediment to her chances either. The other bank holiday fixture is in Listowel, Co Kerry, where champion jumps jockey Paul Townend will fancy his chances of winning on both his mounts. La Note Verte is a course bumper winner from last year who goes in the opening hurdle, while Blood Destiny's rating makes him a standout in a later chase. In other news, Monday will also see an important latest forfeit stage for next weekend's Betfred Epsom Derby and it is set to see the unbeaten Aga Khan colt Midak supplemented into the 'Blue Riband' at a cost of £75,000 (about €89,000). Epsom's authorities have titled this year's Derby in honour of the late Aga Khan, who died in February. Shergar was the first of five Derby winners to carry his famous green silks. Midak won the Prix Greffulhe at Saint-Cloud on his last start, after which his trainer Francis-Henri Graffard recommended a tilt at Epsom. 'He's unbeaten in three starts, we know he gets the trip, he's got the right kind of character to be able to handle Tattenham Corner and all the noise that comes with the Epsom Derby,' Zahra Aga Khan, daughter of the late Aga Khan, said. 'It's nice to have a runner this year because the race is being run in honour of my father, and [Midak's] done everything he should to be a valid runner in the Epsom Derby.' Another potential supplementary entry into the Derby from France is the Juddmonte-owned colt New Ground. Pour Moi, in 2011, was the last of 10 French-trained Epsom Derby winners.