
Limerick's monumental display a stark reminder of their enduring power
The Munster Championship is alive and dead.
Technically, mathematically, statistically, it has a pulse. But after a Sunday that felt clarifying in the extreme, Limerick's monumental display against Cork has left it weakened.
John Kiely's side had 16 points to spare in the Gaelic Grounds and are all but guaranteed a tilt at a seventh Munster title in a row. Is that your idea of competition?
Everyone else has to satisfy themselves with various half loaves. Tipperary's win over Waterford in Thurles guarantees them knockout hurling in June.
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Cork have Waterford at home next week and if they handle their business, they'll see Limerick again in the final. Waterford beat Cork last year so they can maybe convince themselves a repeat is possible. At this time of year, no act of self-deception should be dismissed out of hand.
That kind of thing isn't Limerick's vibe though. They gave Cork the full Ezekiel 25:17 treatment in front of a full house on the Ennis Road. Great vengeance, furious anger, the lot.
Aaron Gillane ran in 2-7 for himself, all loose-limbed panther menace. Cian Lynch was a one-man variety act, juggling knives, drumming with his knees, playing Beethoven's Fifth on the harmonica.
They scored 2-18 from 25 shots in the first half. Cork were 15 points down at the break, worse even than the 2021 All-Ireland final when the gap was 13 at half-time. The tills finally stopped ringing at 3-26 to 1-16 to Limerick. Talk about taking the good out of it for everyone else.
Tim O'Mahony looks dejected late in the game during the Munster championship defeat to Limerick at the TUS Gaelic Grounds, Limerick. Photograph: James Crombie/Inpho
'We got beaten by Cork twice last year,' said John Kiely afterwards, just in case anyone was wondering where his team's display came from.
'They are one of the top teams in the country. You're at home in the Gaelic Grounds in the championship, you only have two games here so we have to deliver on days like today. You have to deliver. You just have to. We had too much work put in.'
Thing is, so had everyone else. And at the start of the day it was still possible for every team in Munster to kid themselves that there was something to aim for. Two points separated top from bottom, leaving ample room for bargaining.
Even Clare, hobbled and winless from their first three games, weren't quite toast yet. It would take a moon shot combination of results, allied to a prevailing wind and the sum of the square on the hypotenuse for them to pull it off. But it wasn't impossible.
It is now. Tipperary's 1-30 to 1-21 victory over Waterford means that the All-Ireland champions have no route to a continued defence of Liam MacCarthy. Brian Lohan's team are the first champions not to at least make the following year's All-Ireland quarter-finals since they themselves fell in the qualifiers in 2014. It has been a wretched few months but at least the agony has ended for them now.
Tipperary's Oisín O'Donoghue celebrates scoring a goal against Waterford at FBD Semple Stadium. Photograph: Bryan Keane/Inpho
Waterford are the obvious favourites to be the next to join them. Peter Queally's side couldn't make the best of their fast start in Thurles – after they sprinted out to a 1-3 to 0-1 lead in the fourth minute, they lost the rest of the way by 14 points. So many of their players looked shrunken and listless against the more purposeful Tipperary, with maybe only Jamie Barron coming out of it with any real credit.
It means their showdown with Cork next Sunday could be a nervy affair between two teams who have spent the week getting over a hammering. The next seven days assume a vulgar simplicity for Queally and his squad. Cork will survive with a draw but anything short of a win and Waterford are gone.
'They just need to get their heads around it now,' Queally said afterwards. 'It's not over. It's the nature of the Munster championship, the nature of the round-robin. A win next week will hopefully get us through. That's what we need to be mindful of now. There's no point in dwelling on it, no point in feeling sorry for ourselves.'
That's the way of it for all of them. Get up and get on. Limerick's shadow is back hovering over the province like Gulliver doing jumping jacks so they have to bathe in the shards of light they can find.
When it was all over in Thurles, a string of Waterford players came up to Liam Cahill and congratulated their former manager on his success. All the while, his young daughter clung to his leg, resplendent in her communion dress, a magnet for almost as many well-dones as her father.
Limerick are looming, big and bad and forbidding as ever they were. But nobody needed to convince Cahill that there was good in the day for him and his county too.
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RTÉ News
32 minutes ago
- RTÉ News
Hell for Leather: How we made RTÉ's epic new GAA series
Colm O'Callaghan, RTÉ's Head of Specialist Factual Content, introduces Hell for Leather, an epic new 5-part RTÉ One series, delving into the role of Gaelic football in the sporting, cultural and social history of modern Ireland. RTÉ's history of hurling series The Game was first broadcast in May 2018. Made by Crossing the Line Productions and directed by Gerry Nelson, it was a cinematic and wide-ranging undertaking that, in its style, execution and ambition, resonated quickly. I've written previously here about why we commissioned it. As soon as the curtain came down on that series, our thoughts turned quickly to an obvious next step: a similar strand about Gaelic football. The seven years its taken to finally get that five-parter - Hell for Leather - to air, is worthy of a drama serial in itself and there were times when I felt we were never going to see it home at all. Needless to say, I'm glad we stayed the journey. As tends to be case with large-scale commissioned projects, I took many meetings and did an awful lot of talking before even formally asking RTÉ to consider supporting it. The primary issue was with what had just gone before it and with how effectively The Game had landed. Should we even bother, I asked the creative team at Crossing the Line, to attempt something similar with a sport often regarded by purists as the less aesthetic and less skilful of the family of national games? Any misgivings I had were quickly put to bed by a couple of trusted friends and regular sounding boards. Michael Moynihan and Diarmuid O'Donovan are fellow clubmen of mine from the fabled Glen Rovers on the northside of Cork city, even if Diarmuid is arguably better known for his involvement with the football side of that club, Saint Nicholas, and his work in a variety of roles at county level. Sharp, serious men both, they sketched out a provisional list of potential themes, topics, chapters and cast members for the team to chew over and flesh out. They didn't so much ease my mind as bend it in a variety of directions and, by doing so, turned much of what I'd ever thought about Gaelic football on its head. The game in Ulster, industry and All-Ireland success in the midlands, the eventual dawning of the women's game, Kerry's eternal majesty, the Jacks and the Culchies, Dulchies, Heffernan, Dwyer, the mighty men from Down, the mighty women of Cork. Seán Boylan, Mick O'Connell, the golden age of wireless, Sister Pauline Gibbons, Jim McGuinness and Jim Gavin. Bringing boardroom thinking to breeze-blocked dressing rooms. Renaissance, reformation, age of empires, true leaders and the days of our lives: it was up to director Gerry Nelson to shape the mine of history, some of it happening before him in real time, into tangible blocks. Sport is often seen as a reflection of life and, in this regard, its possible to trace the development of modern Ireland since way before independence through the prism of Gaelic football. Stitching this editorial thread into the heart of Hell for Leather was always a tall order but one that producers John Murray, Jessica McGurk and Siobhán Ward managed with typical elan. So in as much as the series tracks the evolution and history of the game as comprehensively as time allows, it also tells a story of Ireland. With The Game already under the belts of the production team – as well as 2020's one-off, Christy Ring: Man and Ball – the doors opened far more easily this time around. Jarlath Burns, who has since become the most recent Uachtarán of Cumann Lúthchleas Gael, was an enthusiastic voice from early on and helped unlock a variety of editorial lines. In every club and parish that we approached during the long gestation of this series – and there were many – the welcome was fierce and the humour was always good. So, what kept us? When we first discussed the potential for a series, I'm not sure if any of us expected the production period to endure for so long. But then neither could we have foreseen Covid, an All-Ireland final played during a lockdown and the consequences for sport, film-making and life in general during that time. Projects of this scale also require multiple funding and finance strands too and, to this end, we're grateful to Coimisiún na Meán, the Department of Finance, the Gaelic Athletic Association and to Collen, our generous sponsors, without whom the project could never have taken flight. And then there's the more mundane and practical stuff. Many of those featured in the series are proud, fabled former players for whom modesty has long prevented them from opening up about their own heroics and the scale of their achievements. The likes of Mick O'Connell, Seán O'Neill, Jimmy Gray and Seán Murphy are among many who decorate this production but for whom numerous site visits and no little persuasion was necessary. Others, despite our best and enduring efforts, just couldn't or wouldn't commit. All history is contestable, of course, and this too is the case with Hell for Leather. How can one realistically do justice to such a varied and complicated past in just 250 minutes of airtime? It is, therefore, to the credit of Gerry Nelson and series editor Andrew Hearne that the series delivers far more than the sum of its parts and still stays true to its purpose as agreed way back at the start. Gaelic football, flush with its recent re-enhancements, is enjoying a renewed sense of freedom, and talk of its latest existential crisis has abated, at least for now. As the former Kerry captain, Dara Ó Cinnéide told Nelson, "at the end of the day it's a game … but it's this bloody game we love so much". As a reminder about why Gaelic football's well-being matters, Hell for Leather is as good a starting point as any.

The 42
an hour ago
- The 42
'It was a whole new world for me': Limerick-Cork Munster final memories 50 years on
50 YEARS AGO, they met in Limerick for a Munster final. Back when Limerick were recently-deposed All-Ireland champions, back when Cork were a team of flickering promise that threatened to become more. Two goals in as many minutes just before half-time from Charlie McCarthy and Willie Walsh left Cork in a commanding position. They came as a gut-punch to a Limerick side that had only been beaten once in two and a half years, and dominated the opening 20 minutes of the Munster final. Cork went on to win 3-14 to 0-12. Their young tearaways in Jimmy Barry Murphy – the other goalscorer – and John Fenton had a lot of stuff about them. Bertie Troy was busy blooding a lot of the successful U21s he had won All-Irelands with. He also had Justin McCarthy on the line alongside him. Official records would have them as a joint management team, but it was an eventful partnership. Even now, 50 years on, when you do a fact-check with Fenton on who was the manager that season, you sense he is being expertly political by feigning that it slips his mind. Either way, it was the start of five consecutive Munster titles for Cork, franked by a Liam MacCarthy three-in-a-row from 1976 onwards. The Irish Examiner report of the 1975 Munster hurling final. Irish News Archive Irish News Archive The past is a different country indeed. That summer, Limerick beat Tipperary in the Munster semi-final in the Gaelic Grounds. Ned Rea played the game, jumped into a fast car straight after the final whistle and was spirited to Parnell Park to play for his club in Dublin, Faughs, in a county semi-final where they lost by two points to Craobh Chiaráin. It was a time of gripping paranoia in the north. That very weekend, the Portadown and District Branch of the Ulster Special Constabulary Association – the former 'B Specials', issued a statement that the Irish Army were poised to 'invade' the north in early autumn. Which certainly didn't quell any tension. Advertisement The same weekend, Celtic came over to Donegal and drew 0-0 with Finn Harps who were bolstered by the inclusion of Mick Martin of Man United and Paddy Mulligan of Crystal Palace. Celtic had Danny McGrain and Kenny Daglish, with a young Tommy Burns coming off the bench. When the players of Cork and Limerick woke up on the morning of the Munster final, they did so in their own beds, in their own homes, getting their own breakfast sorted. 'We never used buses. I never used a bus in my time,' says John Fenton now. Instead, there was a family by the name of Roche in Carrigtwohill who had the contract for Cork hurling. They would gather Fenton and his fellow Midleton clubman, Cork selector Paddy Fitzgerald, along with Seanie O'Leary, Denis Coughlan and Pat O'Connor into a taxi and off to Limerick they would go. Off to a hotel for a cup of tea and the pre-match meal of a sandwich, a quick meeting, and to war. For Richie Bennis – who hit 0-6 from frees – in the Limerick camp, there was no taxi, no sandwich and certainly no meeting. Instead, their instructions were simple; get to the Gaelic Grounds one hour before throw-in. Richie Bennis celebrates after the 2007 Munster semi-final replay that saw Limerick defeat Tipperary. Lorraine O'Sullivan / INPHO Lorraine O'Sullivan / INPHO / INPHO 'It's completely different from now. There was a group of us around there on Monday night and they were showing us some clips of the Munster final in 1974 against Clare and we scored six goals. And we scored six goals in the Munster final of 1973 as well,' says Bennis. 'That would be unheard of now. 'Now, you are going to the pitch three hours before the match to have a small warm up. Then you go for a cup of tea and a warm up on the pitch before the match. 'We gathered an hour before the game. No pre-match anything, meal or meeting or anything.' The Irish Independent report of the 1975 Munster hurling final. Irish News Archive Irish News Archive Out there on the pitch, Fenton felt, to use a modern phrase, 'seen.' As a 19-year-old, he was on the county U21s and came on as a substitute. But he didn't feel he belonged in that company. 'It was a daunting prospect to be quite honest,' he says. 'I was young and Midleton would have been intermediate, we weren't at the top table of Cork hurling at the time. There was a massive gap between intermediate and senior hurling in Cork hurling and you had to jump a massive gap between senior hurling in Cork and senior intercounty hurling. That was two big steps. 'It took me a couple of years. To get up to the speed of the game was big for me. The likes of Jimmy Barry-Murphy and Tom Cashman, they were playing the top level of hurling in Cork at the time and those Cork teams were involved in Munster club and All-Ireland club series. 'I was two steps behind them. That's the big thing I found. I remember saying to myself that I had a lot to learn in the sense that I had the basics, but I didn't have the speed to do the basics well. Cork hurler John Fenton. 'You hear a lot of talk about the first touch now, but at the time my first touch wouldn't have been up to the level required. 'It was a whole new world for me. I had looked up to these guys all my life up to now and there I was, in the same dressing room. But the lads were great and they would give you great encouragement. Once you went onto the field, you were on your own then.' He got on for the last six minutes. It was his first Munster title of many. Surely as a teenager your stock is high in the after-party? 'There was none! No celebrations!' laughs Fenton. 'We were back to the hotel. We had a meal and the lads who were having a few drinks would do that, but basically we were back into the car and drove home and the following morning we were back at our work. There were no parades of anything like that. 'It was very low-key in one sense. A lot of those Cork lads had been there before, Gerald and Charlie McCarthy had been there in '66, in '70, there in '72. So they were used to the scene and they knew the Munster championship was a stepping stone in terms of an All-Ireland.' As much as it was another world away, some similarities can always be found in hurling. Related Reads '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?' The key areas where Cork must clean up house before facing Limerick again As ever, the price of everything was a hot topic. That year there were fears that the pricing structure of the All-Ireland hurling final might be increased from £3 for the Hogan Stand and £2.50 for the Cusack Stand. The Munster final took in £28,000 in Limerick with 46,851 in attendance, the largest attendance at a Munster final since the mind-boggling 62,175 in 1961 that came also to the Gaelic Grounds to see Tipperary beat Cork. You'll be delighted to hear that the Patrickswell crew of 1975 are still hale and hearty. 'I was out with Frankie Nolan last night, he was corner-forward on that team and scored two goals, I scored two goals, and Ned Rea and Eamonn Cregan scored the other (in the 1974 Munster final),' says Bennis. 'We are very close. Sean Foley as well. Frankie is only down the road from me here in Patrickswell. And of course my brother Phil was on that team. And there are four Patrickswell men on this team as well, three outfield and the sub goalie.' The Cork lads are spread out a bit thinner, but with the return of 1977 All-Ireland winning captain Martin O'Doherty last weekend from his residence in California, they gathered for the first time since 2001 in the South County pub in Douglas. 31 players from the three-in-a-row team, as well as the next-of-kin of those who have passed on, met up with the help of Dr Con Murphy as something of an event planner. Talking hurling, the three in a row, and the day it all started for that team in July, 1975. In the 50-year period since, they have only met in the Munster final at this venue once since – 2013. None of the Limerick players will be driving themselves up to the gates an hour before throw-in. None of the east Cork men will rely on the Roche family taxis to make it on time. But the blood and thunder remains. Back then. Now. Always.


Dublin Live
2 hours ago
- Dublin Live
Irish sports star joins Love Island 2025 cast after last-minute shake-up
Our community members are treated to special offers, promotions and adverts from us and our partners. You can check out at any time. More info An Irish sports star has officially joined the Love Island 2025 cast - after a shock last-minute shake-up saw one original Islander pulled from the line-up just days before launch. Kyle Ashman was set to enter the villa in Mallorca alongside 11 other sexy singletons - but he was suddenly axed from the line-up over a previous arrest yesterday. An ITV spokesperson confirmed: "For personal reasons, Kyle will not be entering the Love Island Villa as planned". And now, in a surprise twist, 25-year-old professional rugby player Conor Phillips from Limerick has swooped in to take his place. The former Munster Academy man, who was part of Ireland's Grand Slam winning under-20 squad in 2019, made two senior appearances for the province in the 2022/23 season. He now plays in the All-Island League for Terenure, and he has also appeared for Ireland's Sevens side - much like fellow Limerick man and former Love Island winner Greg O'Shea. The confident winger says he's after "someone who is really sure of themselves, ambitious, a bit of a go-getter and good craic" - and revealed he doesn't mind "a dominant woman". But don't expect him to be clingy. "I don't like to answer to anyone else. I like to do my own thing", he admitted, adding that being "too needy" is his biggest ick. He described himself as the "class clown type vibe", and joked his love life would be called 'Still Trying' - "it's got to be a rugby pun, hasn't it?" And while he says he'd be "keeping my head above water" in the dating world, he's ready to settle down and "invest in some stocks". As for his flirting style? "I ask girls if they want to go halves on a baby… it doesn't work, but it gets them laughing." Conor becomes the second Irish contestant confirmed for this year's Love Island series, which kicks off Monday, June 9 on Virgin Media Two and Virgin Media Play. He'll be joined by Megan Forte, a 24-year-old musical theatre performer and panto star originally from Dublin. Now living in Brighton, Megan describes herself as bubbly and is looking for a man with a great sense of humour - and says she's more than happy with a "dad bod". The full 2025 cast includes Almia Gagigo, Helena Ford, Megan, Megan Moore, Shakira Khan and Sophie Lee, who will be coupling up with Conor, Ben Holbrough, Bly Chegini, Dejon Noel-Williams, Harry Cooksley and Tommy Bradley. Join our Dublin Live breaking news service on WhatsApp. Click this link to receive your daily dose of Dublin Live content. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. 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. For all the latest news from Dublin and surrounding areas visit our homepage.