
Liam Sheedy ‘gets to the point' as he cuts across fellow RTE pundit Donal Og Cusack with brutal verdict of Cork collapse
Donal Óg spent most of the post match analysis trying to find a reason for
Advertisement
2
The RTE panel got a small bit heated at full time
Credit: @thesundaygame
2
Despite being red-hot favourites Cork fell to a second half annihilation by Tipp
The All-Ireland final was well and truly a game of two halves as Cork led
The three-time All-Ireland winner with
"But in that second half once the momentum swung it just felt as if there was nothing that Cork could do to get back into the game."
Sheedy butted in ahead of Donal Óg to give his blunt view on the Cork second half performance.
Advertisement
Read more on GAA
The
"That level of performance is not something you'd expect from that Cork team from what we witnessed all year.
"So whether it was the pressure of the All-Ireland final or what, they were a shell of themselves."
Donal Óg tried to get back to his reasoning of the scalping saying: "I don't think it was the pressure like we said the points it was 2/15."
Advertisement
Most read in GAA Hurling
Comment
But the Portroe man wasn't finished making his point asking the former Cork goalkeeper: "Can you remember a performance that was as bad over a 35 minute period over the last two years?"
Donal Óg answered no to the question adding: "Cork have been consistent over the last few years, they've won the league, they've won the Munster Championship.
Ronan Maher pays tribute to Dillon Quirke after Tipperary GAA win All-Ireland final
"The whole view was being obscured by Dublin were so bad. Limerick were so bad they gave the opportunity to Dublin.
"We all want Dublin to be back, I don't want to take anything from them. But it was like as if everyone's views were obscured.
Advertisement
"And I said it Friday morning, that was the lens that we were viewing Cork on.
"There was a huge difference between what Cork faced a couple weeks ago and here and it definitely didn't do Cork any value now looking back at it."
Hashtags

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


RTÉ News
2 minutes ago
- RTÉ News
'No qualms' for Jim McGuinness after Donegal fall short in All-Ireland final
Jim McGuinness admitted he had no complaints in the wake of his Donegal side's All-Ireland SFC final defeat to Kerry. The Ulster men fell short by a 1-26 to 0-19 margin at Croke Park as the Kingdom ran out relatively comfortable winners and denied Donegal the chance to get their hands on Sam Maguire for just the third time in their history. Speaking to RTÉ Sport, McGuinness who was player and manager respectively for Donegal's two previous All-Ireland triumphs, admitted that Kerry were the better team on the day. "Hard one to take. Felt very good going into the game and it didn't turn out that way. Hats off to Kerry, very good performance," he said. "We struggled with wee bits and pieces in the game and paid heavy prices. I suppose, a bigger analysis will probably be first half, I thought both teams were tracking scores well in the first half but Kerry seemed to go after the twos and kicked a lot of them. "David Clifford, I suppose some of them were absolutely exceptional so we have no qualms. We've no qualms at all. "Disappointed for the boys, disappointed for our supporters. They were there with us. They were waiting for things to happen and it didn't happen. Listen, some days, you just have to take it on the chin. "It's just the bottom line. You have to take your medicine and that's what we're going to have to do today." 'No qualms' - Donegal boss Jim McGuinness admits Kerry were rightful winners of today's All-Ireland Football Championship final as his team came up short. #sundaygame — The Sunday Game (@TheSundayGame) July 27, 2025 Donegal did manage to get back to within four points of Kerry in the second half but ultimately that was as close as the gap would get between then and the hooter. "One of the times we got it back to four, we had three wides in a row at that stage," McGuinness said. "So even one point there might have made the difference in terms of momentum shift and would have kept you in the game, particularly with the new rules. "There's always that opportunity then. But once them things are sort of drifting on the wrong side of it, then Kerry are always going to respond anyway at certain times. "And then it got away again at the end. As I said earlier, hats off to Kerry. They've come in, they've done the business and we'll have to go home and think about it."

The 42
10 minutes ago
- The 42
Jim Gavin rules out intercounty return and gives update on new rule changes
FORMER DUBLIN MANAGER Jim Gavin has said he will not return to manage a county side again under the new rules that he has helped to introduce to Gaelic football. The chairman of the Football Review Committee told RTÉ's Joanne Cantwell before today's All-Ireland final that 'intercounty is finished for me'. Advertisement 'I had a great time. I did 13 years, six with the 21s and seven with the senior team. I've got a very busy job. I had a great time and great players to work with. So intercounty, no, at club level absolutely, with my son's teams I still want to be involved as long as he wants me involved.' Gavin also said further rule tweaks are being considered. These include another look at the four-point goal which was shelved earlier this year. He also raised the possibility of a rule similar to basketball's backcourt violation, which could curtail lateral play and make ball retention by a winning side late in a game more challenging. More from Jim Gavin with some fascinating updates on the rule changes 📺 📱 📻 — The Sunday Game (@TheSundayGame) July 27, 2025 Gavin said a sandbox will take place on Wednesday night at 7.30pm at Abbotstown between his own club, Round Towers of Clondalkin and Fingallians from Swords. On the backcourt violation, Gavin said: 'Some suggestions have been that if a team crosses the halfway line that they can't go back. So, look at Louth [late] in the Leinster final against Meath where they brought the ball back into their own half. Some suggestions are that it might encourage teams to push out if a team can't go back into its own half.'


RTÉ News
33 minutes ago
- RTÉ News
Non-committal Jack O'Connor ponders management future after guiding Kerry to another All-Ireland title
Jack O'Connor hinted that he might be bringing his management term to an end after guiding Kerry to a fifth All-Ireland title in three different terms. It's a third treble, following on from successes in 2004 and 2022, after National League and Munster Championship victories earlier in the year. "I'm a long time at it, and I might be passing the baton onto somebody else," he said on RTÉ's Sunday Sport. Pushed as to whether that was the end of his third spell in charge, he added: "That was the plan anyway, so we'll see." Asked again in his post-match press conference, the five-time All-Ireland winner seemed non-committal. "I'm on record as saying it's my last hurrah... But there's no hurry." While O'Connor considers his future, he can reflect on All-Ireland number 39 for the game's most successful county. It's a second in four seasons, and with a cohort of players in their 20s in the panel, there's no reason why the current crop can't add more titles in the years to come. "You can't beat panel spirit. We said what happened to Cork last week wouldn't happen to us." Kerry boss Jack O'Connor looks back on winning the final #sundaygame — The Sunday Game (@TheSundayGame) July 27, 2025 Kerry burst out of the blocks to take the lead after 13 seconds with a point from Dylan Geaney, with David Clifford's haul of seven points pushing them into a seven-point lead at the break. They always had Donegal at arm's length with Joe O'Connor capping another sensational performance with a goal at the death. And for the manager, it was a performance built on massive spirit within the camp. "If you take the year as a whole, we had a lot of adversity," O'Connor told RTÉ Sport after the game. "We had a lot of injuries, we lost a lot of good men but we had a tremendous panel spirit. "We had men like Mark O'Shea and Seán O'Brien, lads like that that didn't think they'd be near the team, starting midfield in an All-Ireland final for Kerry. "It's the stuff of dreams so I'm delighted for them all. A massive team effort, panel effort, backroom team effort, so I'm thrilled for them all. "We'd two big performances here against Armagh and Tyrone. We felt that we were well tested coming into the game. Maybe the hammering that Donegal gave Meath two weeks ago mightn't have done them the same amount of good that our game with Tyrone did. "We felt we were well tested, we were in great shape leaving the hotel this morning. There was a great atmosphere in the room, just a great anticipation, ready for battle. "The boys fought on their backs out there." Donegal did have periods of momentum in the game but they couldn't get closer than four points in the second half. The gap would have been five at the break only for David Clifford to land a two-pointer with the last kick of the half. "There were times when Donegal looked like they were coming back," O'Connor acknowledged. "I think that two-pointer before half-time was a massive score by David. It was a massive fillip going in at half-time. "We said in the dressing room that what happened Cork last week wasn't going to happen us. We were going to come out and play and we were going to try and win the second half. We did win the second half by three points so overall it was two good halves. "We needed to get our hands on the ball, use up the clock and get a good shot off. Near the end we were able to enjoy the last three or four minutes after Joe got the goal. "I'm thrilled for them all, this was a tough auld year. There were times when we were well tested this year but I'm delighted that it finished like it did."