
Kerry crown campaign with 39th All-Ireland title
Written off by many after a shaky start to the campaign — including a group-stage defeat to Meath — the Kingdom saved their best football for when it mattered most. In front of a sell-out crowd of 82,300, they produced a clinical, fast-paced display that left Donegal chasing shadows for much of the match.
The tone was set from the throw-in. Gavin White, inspirational throughout, burst onto the break and tore into Donegal's half before laying off for Dylan Geaney to clip over the opening score. It was the first of 13 Kerry points in the opening 20 minutes, during which they completely dominated midfield and exposed Donegal's much-vaunted zonal defence.
By the 15-minute mark, Kerry were 0-12 to 0-4 ahead, helped by two-point frees from Seán O'Shea and a brace of long-range efforts from David Clifford, who would finish the day with 0-9. White ended with 0-3 himself, while Joe O'Connor — indestructible in midfield — was central to Kerry's engine room.
Donegal, meanwhile, looked a pale imitation of the efficient, tactically disciplined outfit that had reached the final. While Michael Murphy and Caolan McGonagle chipped in with scores to stem the early tide, Kerry continued to carve them open at will. The Clifford brothers — Paudie and David — orchestrated play with telepathic understanding, and Sean O'Brien's fisted point pushed Kerry nine clear approaching the interval.
A fourth two-pointer — again via David Clifford — capped off a devastating first-half showing. Kerry led 0-17 to 0-10 at the break.
Despite a spirited second-half rally — featuring five frees from Murphy and scores from Conor O'Donnell and Shane O'Donnell — they never got closer than four points. A missed chance from Conor O'Donnell on 58 minutes to reduce the gap to one proved pivotal. Moments later, O'Shea nailed another two-point free to restore daylight.
With the result slipping away, Donegal were reduced to chasing goals. But Kerry were ruthless in closing it out. A Paudie Clifford fisted point, followed by another David Clifford score, set up a euphoric finish.
And it was Joe O'Connor who sealed it in style, hammering the ball into the roof of Shaun Patton's net with under a minute to play — atoning for his earlier misses in the semi-final against Tyrone and bringing the curtain down on Kerry's championship campaign with emphasis.
As the hooter sounded, O'Shea booted the ball into the stands and the green and gold erupted. For Jack O'Connor, it marked his fifth All-Ireland title as manager — across three different stints in charge.
For Jim McGuinness, meanwhile, it was another final heartbreak. Having led Donegal to glory in 2012, this was his second final defeat to Kerry, following their 2014 loss. Despite coaxing Murphy out of retirement to lead this year's charge, Donegal's dream of a third Sam Maguire ended in frustration.
Kerry's path to the title — overcoming Cavan, Armagh, Tyrone, and Donegal in succession — amounts to a clean sweep of Ulster, making this one of their sweetest All-Ireland triumphs of the modern era.
TEAM SHEETS
Kerry: Shane Ryan; Paul Murphy, Jason Foley, Dylan Casey; Brian O Beaglaoich, Mike Breen, Gavin White (capt); Sean O'Brien, Mark O'Shea; Joe O'Connor, Sean O'Shea, Graham O'Sullivan; Paudie Clifford, David Clifford, Dylan Geaney.
Subs: Diarmuid O'Connor for O'Brien (50), Killian Spillane for Geaney (54), Evan Looney for O Beaglaoich (63), Tadhg Morley for Breen (65), Michael Burns for O'Sullivan (69), Tom Leo O'Sullivan for Casey (70).
Donegal: Shaun Patton; Finnbarr Roarty, Brendan McCole, Peadar Mogan; Ryan McHugh, Eoghan Ban Gallagher, Caolan McColgan; Caolan McGonagle, Michael Langan; Shane O'Donnell, Ciaran Thompson, Ciaran Moore; Conor O'Donnell, Michael Murphy, Oisin Gallen.
Subs: Daire O Baoill for Thompson (23), Hugh McFadden for McColgan half-time, Jason McGee for McHugh (41), Patrick McBrearty (capt) for Gallen (50), Jamie Brennan for Gallagher (59).
Referee: Brendan Cawley (Kildare)
See More: All-Ireland, GAA, Gaelic Football
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Independent
2 minutes ago
- Irish Independent
‘Incredible' Ava Canning stars in Ireland's opening T20 success against Pakistan
The Girls in Green were bowled out for 142 and after a solid powerplay from the visitors the momentum swung to the home side as Leinster medium-pacer Canning and leg-spinner Cara Murray turned the screw. Canning bowled her four overs off the reel, including a maiden, and Pakistan had no answer to her stock ball which is delivered from wide of the crease and swings into the batter, with a packed off-side field. Orla Prendergast took wickets at the top and bottom of the innings for figures of 3-28 which allied to 29 runs with the bat won her the player-of-the-match award. 'Ava's was an incredible spell,' Prendergast said. 'Four overs on the trot and one of those at the end of the powerplay – which is always the trickiest to bowl. 'She gave them very little width and really attacked the stumps which is what she was asked to do. 'Clontarf is a hard ground to defend a score on because shots run away to the boundary that wouldn't on other grounds.' Amy Hunter top-scored with 37 from 30 balls, including five boundaries, but Leah Paul was the pick of the batters, playing a gloriously impudent reverse sweep in her 28 off 19, while Laura Delany hit the only six of the innings. The victory stretched Ireland's winning streak in T20 internationals to eight and skipper Gaby Lewis is targeting another clean sweep with matches to follow at Castle Avenue on Friday and on Sunday. 'We can't get complacent, we have to keep improving,' Lewis said. 'Yeah, we got the win but we're looking to take a 3-0 here and we're very confident we can do that.'


Irish Daily Mirror
31 minutes ago
- Irish Daily Mirror
Ole Gunnar Solskjaer says he could have been Ireland manager after Stephen Kenny
Ole Gunnar Solskjaer has revealed that he could have succeeded Stephen Kenny as Ireland boss. The two managers go head-to-head at Tallaght Stadium on Thursday night when St Pat's host Turkish giants Besiktas in the Europa Conference League third qualifying round. Manchester United legend Solskjaer was briefly linked with the vacant Ireland job last year, following Kenny's departure. At the time, the Norwegian played down the links and the FAI ended up appointing Heimir Hallgrimsson as Kenny's successor in July 2024. But on Wednesday evening, Solskjaer confirmed he was in talks about the job. Besiktas boss Solskjaer said: "Yeah, I had some good conversations. But in the end it didn't turn out that way and I'm happy where I am now.' Click this link or scan the QR code to receive the latest League of Ireland news and top stories from the Irish Mirror. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. If you're curious, you can read our Privacy Notice . Asked how far the discussions went with the FAI, he said: 'That would be confidential. We had some good chats. After him (Kenny), the Irish FA asked me if I wanted to be their coach.' Ole Gunnar Solskjær at Tallaght Stadium ahead of St Pat's v Besiktas (Image: ©INPHO/Ryan Byrne) Solskjaer took charge of Besiktas in January this year, but he is under fire following the recent 6-2 aggregate Europa League defeat to Shakhtar Donetsk. 'Pressure is a privilege, it's something we thrive on,' said Solskjaer ahead of Thursday's game with 7,000 tickets sold as of Wednesday evening, and heading towards a sellout. 'We need it to play at our best. When results go against you, you don't enjoy that period but it's a chance to show character, show individual character. 'It's a bumpy road football, and you have to manoeuvre it and accept it. If you don't get results, there will be criticism, if you win every day you are still not perfect. 'We're in all these competitions to win every single game and we want to go as far in this one, to the final, that is our dream.' St Pat's boss Stephen Kenny knows his side are big outsiders to progress over two legs and reach the playoffs. Today, ex-Ireland boss Kenny said: 'It would be one of the great victories in Irish football history if we could do it. But obviously it's a big challenge and Beşiktaş have a tremendous tradition and are an institution in Turkey, a big club.' Yet Solskjaer is just as wary of St Pat's, and not least having held their Turkish league rivals Istanbul Basaksehir to a scoreless draw here in Europe last summer. 'If you think we think we are better than them, you're wrong,' he said in Tallaght last night. 'We respect absolutely every opponent, I'm sure they want to win, expect to win. 'Last year they got one step further than this, so I wouldn't call anything a free hit in football anymore.' And former Red Devils striker Solskjaer is up to speed on the threat that teenage striker Mason Melia - who is joining Tottenham in January - possesses. 'When you perform at that level at 17, of course (you notice). We see his movement, his goal against Waterford, the way he spun off a centre back and timed his run,' he added. 'I don't want to put pressure on him, but I always follow young players. I've got a few decent players from Ireland that I played with, so I'm fond of Irish players. 'But he reminds me of a proper No. 9. He can play off the shoulder, he likes to come short as well and he's a good finisher. He's got the world ahead of ahead of him and I wish him all the best, but after the next eight or nine days!.' Get the latest sports headlines straight to your inbox by signing up for free email .


Irish Independent
32 minutes ago
- Irish Independent
Declan Darcy the frontrunner to become Dublin's new senior football manager
Speculation has intensified this week that Declan Darcy is the frontrunner to become Dublin's next senior football manager. The former Leitrim and Dublin footballer was a key backroom figure during the Jim Gavin era, serving as selector and defensive coach in a glittering seven-year period that yielded six All-Ireland SFC titles between 2013 and '19.