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Munster final tactical analysis: Cork must be sharper with puckouts against Limerick

Munster final tactical analysis: Cork must be sharper with puckouts against Limerick

Irish Times4 days ago

A Rivalry Renewed
The Limerick-Cork rivalry has grown fierce, with both sides trading wins in recent seasons. Limerick's recent display highlighted their clinical edge, while
Cork
's two wins last year keep the rivalry burning. The passing network reveals
Limerick
's familiar attacking shape, with O'Brien and Gillane inside and David Reidy playing a selfless role behind the opposition number 6, creating space on both inside flanks.
Passing Network Snapshot
Limerick's passing network
The graphic shows Limerick's structured build-up, with Nicky Quaid linking frequently with Gearoid Hegarty on puckouts. Central players like O'Donoghue, English and Lynch drive the link play, while David Reidy connects midfield to inside forwards O'Brien and Gillane. The spread reflects Limerick's balance, width, depth and tactical cohesion.
Primary Distribution Hub
The graphic highlights Limerick's structured build-up, with Nicky Quaid central to restarts and frequently targeting Gearóid Hegarty – 13 times against Cork – to exploit his aerial strength. Midfielders like O'Donoghue and Lynch link play, while David Reidy connects the middle third to inside forwards O'Brien and Gillane. Cork's man-to-man puckout set-up below in picture left exploitable space, as seen when Tom Morrissey switched wings, dragging Mark Coleman across and freeing Hegarty to attack the open channel.
On the Limerick puckout, Tom Morrissey creates space for Hegarty to run into
Midfield Engine
Cian Lynch, Adam English and Will O'Donoghue are central cogs in transition play. Their network links connect both flanks and drive Limerick's ball progression into attack. Adam English supports this pattern, with multiple interactions through the centre channel, particularly linking with Lynch. In the previous round, below we see Adam English support run which leads to Limerick's second goal.
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Lynch's dummy pass has Cork's defence in trouble
Half-Back Line Influence and Barry Nash's Role
Limerick's half-back line continues to be the bedrock of their structured build-up, with Barry Nash playing a critical dual role – acting as both key focus in terms of distribution and transition from defence to attack. The passing network illustrates his positioning just behind the midfield line, where he receives and recycles possession efficiently. Nash's lateral passing and calm under pressure help maintain Limerick's shape, and his link play with Mike Casey and Tom Morrissey on the left channel allows Limerick to switch the point of attack fluidly.
Injury Concerns and Squad Depth
Cork face key injury concerns, with Ger Millerick ruled out and doubts over Niall O'Leary, Declan Dalton, and captain Rob Downey, raising questions about their defensive stability. In contrast, Limerick have a clean bill of health and a deeper bench – with Declan Hannon and Colin Coughlan in defence, Darragh O'Donovan in midfield, and impact forwards like Cathal O'Neill, Peter Casey, and Aidan O'Connor all contributing strongly off the bench.
Limerick's Masterclass
Limerick's performance was a showcase in structured aggression and controlled execution. The foundation was laid from deep, where Nicky Quaid once again proved pivotal in orchestrating restarts with precision and adaptability. Retaining 57 per cent of their own puckouts, Limerick controlled the rhythm of the contest from the outset.
What made their puckout strategy so effective was its variation. When Cork pressed high, Limerick opted for short, sharp deliveries to players like Barry Nash or Dan Morrissey, allowing them to build through the lines. When space opened further out, Quaid had the vision and accuracy to target aerial runners like Gearóid Hegarty or O'Neill, both of whom are elite in contesting and winning primary possession.
This dual-threat approach created constant uncertainty for Cork's defence and severely limited their ability to establish any sort of press. A telling example came in the second half: Mark Coleman, having drifted across the pitch to take a sideline ball, sent it wide – a wasted opportunity.
Mark Coleman takes the sideline cut wide; O'Neill tracks him and stays facing the sideline
From the resulting puckout, Cathal O'Neill loses Coleman in the middle third, gathered possession, and within seconds Limerick had turned that moment into a point. It was a passage that encapsulated Limerick's ruthless ability to punish even minor lapses – turning defensive restarts into scoring chances with minimal fuss.
Quaid takes a quick puckout to O'Neill, Coleman has lost him and the move ends in a score
Once in possession, Limerick were measured and efficient, converting 74 per cent of their shots – including 82 per cent from play – thanks to smart decision-making and shot selection. Aaron Gillane led the way with 2-7 (1-0 pen, 0-6 frees), while Tom Morrissey added 0-5 and Adam English struck 1-2. Impressively, 11 players scored from play, reflecting a team in full synchrony, with sharp link-up play and effective switching to break Cork's defensive shape.
Cork's Collapse
In contrast, Cork was overwhelmed in key areas. The most telling indicator was their puckout retention – just 47 per cent, meaning more than half of their restarts were either turned over or fiercely contested. Without clean possession, Cork struggled to establish rhythm or field position, and their defence was constantly under siege.
Offensively, it was disjointed. Cork managed just 0-8 from play, a stark indicator of their struggles to create space or sustained attacking phases. Their 54 per cent shot conversion rate painted a picture of rushed, low-percentage attempts – many coming under pressure or from poor angles as the game began to slip away.
Brian Hayes, who had been a key figure in Cork's earlier championship games, was completely nullified by Dan Morrissey, who dominated the aerial battle and repeatedly broke up Cork's attacking flow. With Hayes out of the picture, Cork lacked a focal point and failed to adjust, often resorting to speculative efforts from distance.
What it means for the rematch
Saturday's Munster final offers Cork a shot at redemption, but they'll need sharper puckout execution, stronger midfield link play, and more cutting edge up front. Limerick, re-energised and tactically sharp, will look to replicate their blend of control and ruthlessness. Last time, Cork was out-thought and outclassed – now they must respond with structure, leadership, and clinical execution.

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'It was crazy to be out on the pitch': Liverpool title celebrations and Limerick hurling glories
'It was crazy to be out on the pitch': Liverpool title celebrations and Limerick hurling glories

The 42

time35 minutes ago

  • The 42

'It was crazy to be out on the pitch': Liverpool title celebrations and Limerick hurling glories

DAVID BREEN MAPS out his recent tour of sporting arenas. Last night was at the Aviva Stadium, a chance to catch up on the progress of the Ireland soccer side he worked with as a physio last year, his time overlapping the interim reign of John O'Shea and the start of the Heimir Hallgrímsson era. Tonight he'll be at the Gaelic Grounds, the pitch he was acquainted with in his Limerick hurling days, just a kilometre away from his club base in Caherdavin with Na Piarsaigh. Rewind back two weeks to another venue. Anfield on Premier League trophy presentation day. The first time Liverpool got to share title celebrations with their fans in 35 years after the Covid-disruption of 2020. Breen linked up with the club last November, starting a role as first team rehabilitation physio. The outburst of vivid colour and deafening noise and wild joy a fortnight ago set him back. Having a front-row view on the pitch for those couple of hours after the draw with Crystal Palace, created memories that will always linger. Liverpool players celebrate their Premier League title win. Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo 'The atmosphere at Anfield is is pretty special regardless, but when you're there when they win the league and lift the trophy, you're just seeing the energy around the place and the emotion. 'It was crazy to be out on the pitch and celebrating. It's something that you'd watch on TV and then you're in the middle of it. It's surreal. 'The way in which the league was won against Spurs, with four games left, it was a real long build up to lifting the trophy after the Palace game. 'So it almost felt like the excitement built even more. 'When you experience it, you're pretty sure you'll never ever experience anything like this again.' Breen was mainly a Celtic fans growing up, a connection that hardened when he spent time studying in Scotland. Stepping into the working world as a physio afforded him opportunities with an array of sporting sides, rugby a dominant theme. He worked with the Leinster Academy for a couple of years, Tadhg Furlong a housemate for a while. By April 2017 he was in England with Wasps and returning home to face Leinster in a Champions Cup quarter-final. Different roles followed since the summer of 2020, time in the Manchester City academy, a couple of years back in Limerick with the Munster rugby setup, a year with Harlequins in the English Premiership, and then Liverpool. His latest sporting adventure commands more interest from friends back home. Advertisement 'I've plenty of mates that are Liverpool fans and let's just say a lot more people got in touch since I've been with Liverpool than getting tickets to some of the rugby clubs I worked for! 'Obviously the club is global and the support back in Ireland for Liverpool is crazy. You do get a sense of walking into the place that it's such a historic club, all the players that have played there, they're on the wall. You're looking at the trophies that have been won and you can just tell it's a winning club that that goes about its business in the right way.' David Breen with the Premier League trophy. Breen's day to day is spent with those stuck on the treatment table for extended periods of time. He's dealing with players operating at a stratosphere of fame, but their application remains laser-focused. 'Like any any top team players, they set their own standards and are role models in the squad. Younger players will look up to older players that have achieved a lot in their careers and they see their prep and good habits, and that spreads throughout the throughout the squad. 'The physio group is split between the rehab side, dealing with the players that have short or long term injuries, and then guys that are on the medical performance side and they travel to most of the games. 'So I tend to do a lot of the rehab with the longer term injuries, that's been my role in a few different clubs. You work around the team schedule, so whenever the team is playing, if it's playing on a Monday or if it's playing on a Sunday, you kind of map out your week from there.' It's a different world but there have been enough Irish connections dotted around Anfield and Melwood to help him settle in. 'Caoimhin (Kelleher) and Conor (Bradley), I got on well with with those two lads in particular, so it was nice to suppose celebrate with boys that you're close to in the squad. Conor Bradley is is a really, really top fella, like he's a great lad. 'I would have known Caoimhin from from the Republic of Ireland squad before coming into the club. Caoimh has moved on now this week to Brentford. He's an immensely talented player and he's a huge character as well. He's a fella that was very much loved by staff and players, whatever dressing room he goes into, he'll bring that with him, and I'd just wish him all the best with it. 'Then we've got some staff as well like Conall Murtagh (head of physical performance) is Northern Ireland, Chris Black's (lead S&C coach) from Northern Ireland, Clare Farrell (lead performance nutritionist) is from Longford. I would have worked with Clare in Munster. 'You do definitely get the sense that there's a strong kind of Irish connection in the club there and there's a lot of love for Irish people I think in Liverpool.' David Breen with Conor Bradley and Caomihin Kelleher afer Liverpool's title win. In a past life his focus was on the pitch rather than the physio table. Years hurling at the elite level of county and club games with Limerick and Na Piarsaigh. When Breen joined the club, Kelleher spread word of that sporting prowess in the dressing room. 'Caoimhin had told a couple of the lads, and then Andy Robertson was one guy in particular that really jumped onto the whole kind of hurling thing. He's always had plenty interest in it. 'Guys would be aware of hurling without majority of them haven't actually probably seen a game. We brought in the in the hurleys one day, myself and Caoimhin, and and had a few pucks and a few of the other staff had a go as well after training.' There is a contrast between the time Breen spent hurling for Limerick and the current Shannonside crew. When he takes his seat this evening, his mind will wander back to the last Limerick-Cork Munster hurling final at the venue. Breen started wing-forward on the 2013 afternoon when Limerick closed a 17-year spell of hurt and frustration. 'It was very different for us. It really just felt like a watershed moment, you were able to just get over the line and and it was it was like our All-Ireland in many ways.' Limerick's Donal O'Grady lifts the cup after the 2013 Munster hurling final. Lorraine O'Sullivan / INPHO Lorraine O'Sullivan / INPHO / INPHO Memories of that showdown? 'Probably missing a goal in the first half,' laughs Breen. 'The other memories were just how hot it was. 'It was just intensely hot and we were doing our warm up and people were packed into the stadium. 'I know that that's the norm now that there's no empty seats left anywhere, but I think in 2012, 13, there wasn't many games where every seat was taken. So just the energy and the intensity from the crowd just in the buildup to the game stands out. 'In the warm up we couldn't get more vaseline on the forehead or the eyebrows and just towels out trying to rinse the sweat off the grip. 'And then just obviously the noise of the place. That's probably the first game where where you're screaming at a guy that's 15 metres away and he can't hear you. 'It felt like we were on it from early doors againt Cork that day. The biggest thing for us and for the crowd and for everyone is that we were able to see it through. There's plenty of times prior to 2013 where you've been on it and you just can't get over the line. 'It was all moral victories and all nearly stories but that day we did see it through. Fellas came off the bench and finished the job. The pitch invasion then was pretty legendary stuff.' Stephen Walsh, Seanie Tobin, David Breen and Thomas Ryan in the dressing room after the 2013 Munster final. James Crombie / INPHO James Crombie / INPHO / INPHO If that achievement was isolated, the relentlessness of the present Limerick group in gobbling up trophies stands out. He has some insight to the group through four Na Piarsaigh club-mates, players he combined with for 2016 All-Ireland club glory in Croke Park – Shane Dowling, Mike and Peter Casey, and William O'Donoghue. Wear his physio and hurling hats, he is struck by the resilience of the Casey brothers who have persisted after a series of shattering injury setbacks. 'I think that's the modern day GAA player now. They have to take big injuries on the chin and like they're so professional too that there's no reason (not to come back). I mean, you get a big injury, you have surgery, you rehab it, you might have to write it off that season, but you look to the next season. It's very much a professional mindset in terms of how guys deal with injuries now and how they deal with setbacks. 'That was a really big injury that that Peter picked up, probably in the most public of forums really, but, he's done his ACL, he did his ankle last year, he'll have that kind of confidence that he can deal with big injuries like that and he can get back. Same with his with his older brother Mike. 'I think all of that Limerick squad seem seemed pretty mentally strong, they're able to handle handle big injuries and hats off to the medical team inside there. They've had their fair share of big one big injuries like that over the last few years and they've dealt with them very admirably.' On the sideline is another familiar figure. His link with Paul Kinnerk stretches back years to their school days. He has watched his friend become one of the greatest coaches operating in Irish sport over the last 15 years. Read Next Related Reads 'It was a whole new world for me': Limerick-Cork Munster final memories 50 years on 'That narrative has been debunked now' - Limerick boss hits back at end of an era talk Pat Ryan: 'Some of our own people writing off Limerick. Are they off their game?' ***** Paul Kinnerk Coaching Honours List All-Ireland senior – 2013, 2018, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023. – 2013, 2018, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023. All-Ireland U21 – 2012, 2013, 2014. – 2012, 2013, 2014. Munster senior – 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024. – 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024. Munster U21 – 2012, 2013, 2014. – 2012, 2013, 2014. Munster minor – 2010, 2011. – 2010, 2011. National League – 2016, 2019, 2020, 2023. ***** 'It just goes to show his quality and talent. My close group of friends would know Paul just from growing up with him and being a close friend, but we know how intense he is, about anything really that he puts his mind to. 'Obviously since since finishing his own kind of playing days in football, he's really just gone all in around his PhD and and his coaching, as well as obviously his family, but he is really passionate about the coaching and he's a fierce competitor as well. Limerick head coach Paul Kinnerk. Tom Maher / INPHO Tom Maher / INPHO / INPHO 'He does not like to lose. I think you have to be that way if you're going to be put your mind to anything and if you're going to be passionate about something. We've been with Paul through thick and thin, those experiences of winning and having big highs, but also he's had had games that they've lost as well, where they haven't won championships and and and he's absolutely devastated. 'He really goes all in on it and I think any player that's worked with him or being coached by him would be the first to say that. He gives everything to it.' The energy and effort has blended together to power Limerick to the cusp of seven-in-a-row in Munster. Breen saw enough demoralising days to appreciate the uncharted waters they now sail in. And yet he's grateful to have sampled a Munster final day in the winners' enclosure. There'll be reminders in tonight's participants. Horgan, Harnedy and Lehane still in the attacking mix for Cork, while Dowling, Hannon and Quaid endure in Limerick colours. And there's an appreciation as well for the Cork man guiding the Limerick fortunes 11 years ago. 'John Allen was a real standout manager for me in my years of playing county. He went against the grain on a lot of things. He had the courage of his own convictions. I was just delighted on that day, in that year, his approach towards training, his approach towards team selection and things paid off for him. 'It would have been easy to come under pressure or feel that you have to toe the line with people's thoughts are that you should play a different team or players shouldn't play in this position. 'I was delighted for John Allen that day as much as anything else.' ***** * Check out the latest episode of The42′s GAA Weekly podcast here

Kerry aim to end Ulster opposition inferiority complex, Cork look for underage crumbs of encouragement
Kerry aim to end Ulster opposition inferiority complex, Cork look for underage crumbs of encouragement

Irish Examiner

timean hour ago

  • Irish Examiner

Kerry aim to end Ulster opposition inferiority complex, Cork look for underage crumbs of encouragement

Two very different agendas for Cork and Kerry at O'Moore Park this afternoon. Let's throw in with Kerry seeing as their All-Ireland MFC quarter-final is the first of the Portlaoise double-header. Kerry's opposition is Cavan. Kerry's opposition is Ulster and so the hour's fare provides the latest opportunity to see how an underage Kingdom crop fares against a leading northern outfit. Not to throw in with hyperbolic statements but Kerry minor and U20 teams of late have developed something of an inferiority complex when stood opposite northern opposition. The results and the evidence speaks for itself. In the 2023 and '24 campaigns, Kerry's minor interest ended at the hands of Ulster opposition - Derry and Monaghan - at the All-Ireland semi-final stage. The year previous, the then Kerry management were visibly ecstatic on the Portlaoise sideline at scoring a one-point All-Ireland quarter-final win over Tyrone. The same management, the summer before, had suffered defeat to Derry in the delayed 2020 decider. So that's Kerry coming off second best in three of their last four minor outings against an Ulster team. At U20, Tyrone bettered them this year and last. Mercy Mounthawk suffered the same fate in the All-Ireland post-primary semi-finals of this year and last. The approach minor manager Wayne Quillinan outlined midweek is one, as results attest to, that Kerry underage teams of all hues have floundered against in recent years. 'Cavan are going to be ultra defensive. In fairness, they're really, really well coached. They're really hard to break down. Obviously with the numbers back, they're looking for turnovers. They're looking to break at pace.' For Cork, the challenge is a little less nuanced and rather more straightforward; that is to successfully negotiate the All-Ireland minor quarter-final hurdle. Derry, Dublin, and Mayo, by very different margins, have shown Cork the exit door at this stage of the championship over the past three years. The most recent of those was last June's worrying 3-14 to 0-6 beating by Mayo. Arriving as it did off the back of a 15-point Munster final whacking, the conversation and concern surrounding the health of the county's underage set-up had its volume turned up. Lamentably, the results did not spark any meaningful introspection by those in power. Following 10 and nine-point defeats at the hands of Kerry in recent weeks, Cork football and the current minor students could badly do with a performance and scoreline that provides crumbs of encouragement going forward. Encouragement, on the whole, has been in short supply for Cork football this summer. Across minor, U20, and senior, there have been 11 championship outings. The four victories are split into two categories. Two comfortable wins over Clare and Limerick at U20 and senior. And two incredibly near escapes against Tipperary at minor and U20. In short, Cork have not bettered a county at or above their station. Does that change here? KERRY: R Kennedy (Kerins O'Rahillys); R Sheridan (Duagh), E Joy (Ballymacelligott), T Ó Slatara (Churchill); D Murphy (Listry), D Sargent (John Mitchels), M Clifford (Fossa); M Ó Sé (An Ghaeltacht), J Curtin (Ballyduff); M O'Carroll (Dr Crokes), G White (John Mitchels), A Tuohy (Austin Stacks); N Lacey (Kerins O'Rahillys), K Griffin (St Michael's/Foilmore), B Kelliher (Dr Crokes). CAVAN: C McConnell (Butlersbridge); D Brady (Laragh), C Bough (Munterconnaught), M Duffy (Mountnugent); M Smith (Crosserlough), H McMullen (Cootehill Celtic), J Donohoe (Mullahoran); S Maguire (Templeport), F Graham (Butlersbridge); D Lynch (Cuchulainns), J Brady (Gowna), C Smith (Lavey); M Reilly (Denn), N Quigley (Denn), J Graham (Lavey). CORK: R Twohig (Kilmeen); B Coffey (Clonakilty), A Keane (Kinsale), M Kiernan (Carrigaline); J O'Leary (Ballinascarthy), C McCarthy (St Colum's), B Cronin (Ballincollig); S Kelleher Leavy (Macroom), R Hayes (Carbery Rangers); L O'Mahony (Ballincollig), D Flynn (Argideen Rangers), S Long (Newcestown); J Byerley (Clonakilty), B Corkery Delaney (Carrigaline), E Maguire (Castlehaven).

Swashbuckling giant Kyle Hayes divides opinion like no other GAA star
Swashbuckling giant Kyle Hayes divides opinion like no other GAA star

Irish Daily Mirror

timean hour ago

  • Irish Daily Mirror

Swashbuckling giant Kyle Hayes divides opinion like no other GAA star

Of all the high-profile residents holding deeds to one of those prized condos on hurling's Main Street, none comes close to Kyle Hayes in their ability to ignite a wildfire. On or off the pitch, Hayes is the preferred accelerant for social media arsonists seeking to set the online world ablaze. Drop his name — his genius as a sportsman trailed by his deeply unsavoury past — into a conversation and, typically, it has the effect of a Molotov cocktail. Neither the game's alley fighters nor its most dementedly combative figures, not even Ireland's dean of the perpetually highly-strung, the hyper-emotional Davy Fitzgerald, can set summer so instantly aflame as Limerick's skyscraping five-time Allstar. That he was back in court less than 24 hours after last month's Man of the Match masterclass against today's Munster final opponents Cork reconfigured the entire All-Ireland debate, was a reminder of how the threads of his two lives have become so inextricably knotted. And of how seeking to disentangle one from the other will remain an exercise in futility for as long as the Kildimo Pallaskenry leviathan remains a lead player on championship Broadway. The swashbuckling giant who led the shattering undressing of the Rebels, whose blistering impact on the long days has exhausted the pundits' store of superlatives, co-habits with the author of an infinitely more sinister off-field backstory. A five time All-Ireland winner; a young man who avoided jail after receiving a two-year suspended sentence on two counts of violent disorder inside and outside a nightclub in Limerick in 2019. He was later ordered to do 180 hours community service. Ironically, the more successful Hayes is at invading the vital moments in Limerick's mission to reclaim their status as the alpha males on the hurling landscape, the higher the volume is turned up on the chorus of outrage. When he is awarded a Man of the Match or, as he was last season, an Allstar (the awards entirely justified by on-field displays, the lone criteria the judging panels are empowered to assess), the condemnation screeches to a deafening crescendo. There are two constituencies feeding the frenzy. The first and the loudest are the social media attack dogs who instantly scramble for the high moral ground every time a controversy arises, their arguments shrill and one-dimensional and lacking nuance or perspective. But there are others, often compassionate, empathetic individuals, who are nonetheless alarmed that an individual found guilty of violent disorder, who has never expressed remorse and who received just 180 hours community service even after breaching the terms of his original sentence, retains a starring role in one of Ireland's most high-profile cultural celebrations. Their reasoning is more subtle, more heartfelt and not so easily dismissed. Some commentators in a counter-argument believe it irrational to hold athletes up as moral exemplars, that once the courts have spoken, life must go on. Even if it is an entirely logical assertion, it ignores the extreme emotions involved. That Hayes is able to shut out all the white noise each time he plays, that he shows no sign of surrendering his place at the centre of the hurling world even while finding himself surrounded by such ceaseless tumult, is, of itself, quite remarkable. At 6'5', his physique as muscular and streamlined and carrying the same sense of majesty as the thoroughbreds who will contest today's Epsom Derby, he is the Platonic ideal of an athlete so often imagined by ancient Greek sculptors. He has maybe the greatest arsenal of gifts - the pulverising power and torque of an Airbus A330, an Apache helicopter's lift and nimble manoeuvrability, a B-52 bomber's deadly payload of obliterating missiles — of anybody who has played the game. Cork, propelled into that recent round-robin tie on a tide of anticipation, departed less than two hours later nursing the kind of traumas that must have invaded their night time imaginings ever since. With Hayes rampant, Limerick were again a force of invincible self-belief, a reborn team delivering perhaps the magnum opus of John Kiely's star-spangled reign. In full flight and fizzing like a well-fletched arrow across a rectangle of grass, their number six offered a jolting reminder of why he rates among sport's most arresting and magnificent vistas. Watching again the footage of his wonder goal against Tipp in the 2021 Munster final, different elements of his jinking, jaw-dropping solo gallop — a run at once thunderous and balletic — evoke Lamine Yamal, Rudolph Nureyev, Roger Federer, the Road Runner confounding Wile E Coyote, a Lamborghini Aventador and an 18-wheel juggernaut. Tipp's defence appear as helpless as traffic cops trying to stop a runaway buffalo from breaking a red light. The fever of excitement surrounding Hayes that afternoon, his capacity to deliver such irresistible moments, was a key component in Limerick's four-in-a-row champions announcing their separation from the rest of the field. His success in combining demonic intensity with flourishes of artistic beauty in the most recent meeting with Cork — the player exhibiting what one Joe DiMaggio biographer describes as a 'glint of godhood' — strengthens the arguments of those who are happy to declare the 26-year-old the greatest hurler in the country. He is unquestionably the most divisive. If Hayes has one or two rivals for the title of Ireland's most influential hurler — led by his Limerick teammate, the lyrical master conductor Cian Lynch — he is unrivalled as the most contentious. Ahead of tonight's rematch, there will be discussion of a sporting life bejewelled by achievement, a freakish talent who combines an engraver's touch with the kind of physical dimensions that might eclipse the sun. As he swatted the Rebels aside 20 days ago, a rampaging Hayes had Dónal Óg Cusack flicking through the history books in search of a meaningful reference point. 'This Limerick we ever seen a better team than them? What a machine they looked, so well engineered, resilient, strong, every part is working and up for the fight everywhere.' Anthony Daly was just as effusive: 'Hayes is like a gazelle. It's not just his breaking out, it's the tackling, it's the handling at the last second, it's the whole package he gives you there at six.' 'Hayes is the leader of this Limerick team,' was the unequivocal verdict of Ger Loughnane's one-time sideline Sancho Panza, Tony Considine. Many, horrified by the court case that put Hayes on the front pages, look at his story from a different angle, declining to see beyond the self-inflicted wounds of his past. His suspended sentence on two charges of violent disorder inside and outside the Icon nightclub in 2019 — charges he denied at the 2023 trial — sits like an ugly, distinguishing visible-to-the-world birthmark. The evidence heard in court was authentically shocking. Many took issue with John Kiely's courthouse character reference, particularly the suggestion that Hayes 'accepts his part in that very disappointing night' and was 'very sorry'. How could that be, how could he have accepted his part and be sorry, went the counter argument, when he had pleaded not guilty? The feelings of his harshest critics are perhaps evoked in a memorable line from the political writer and former Clinton adviser, Sidney Blumenthal, in discussing Donald Trump's serial refusal to embrace the negative consequences of his actions. 'Trump's psychological equilibrium requires the constant rejection of his responsibility for the abrasive reality he churns up,' wrote Blumenthal. Whether or not Hayes is entangled by his conscience or is armoured against self-examination only he can truly say. What is certain is that he will race onto a Shannonside meadow this evening and the arena will rise to a fever pitch. Some to acclaim a phenomenal player, one they believe has advanced into the territory of competitive excellence accessible only to the all time greats. Others to toss their disgust like a Molotov cocktail onto the wildfire triggered every time Kyle Hayes steps onto one of summer's great stages.

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