
Camogie round-up: Waterford skin Cats to make championship history
Camogie history was made at UPMC Nowlan Park today, as Waterford recorded their first-ever senior championship victory over Kilkenny, the 0-17 to 0-10 win blowing Group 2 of the Glen Dimplex All-Ireland series wide open.

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


Irish Independent
an hour ago
- Irish Independent
Ireland go down battling to India in thrilling second game of two-match series
The Olympic bronze medalists and world number five ranked nation managed to hold onto their 2-1 lead as Ireland fought to draw level in the closing minutes. Ireland's second encounter against India on home soil saw them come out of the blocks quickly as they looked to improve on the performance from the previous day. Early periods of possession allowed Ireland to settle into the game and produce chances. India did, however, managed to work themselves into the game eventually producing a number of circle entries late in the opening quarter, but Ireland defended soundly to keep the scoreline level. The first penalty corner of the game would go the way of India in quarter two, with Harmanpreet Singh's drag-flick deflected wide by the Irish defensive penalty corner team. Ireland responded, winning a penalty corner of their own which was well saved off Luke Madeley. The resulting long corner saw India steal the ball and break quickly, eventually breaking the deadlock when Lakra Shilanand finished off the smooth counter attacking move. Ireland's intensity continued into the second half as they looked to find a route back into the game. Sustained pressure and good counter-pressing kept India pegged back deep in their own half for long periods as Ireland looked to break their way into the Indian circle. A rare India attack gave them an opportunity at goal which they didn't squander, Dulpreet deflecting home on the back post to double their lead. ADVERTISEMENT The home side responded almost immediately, however. An attacking move down the left almost straight from tip-off saw an inviting ball into the circle reach Louis Rowe, the Banbridge forward did well to find an inch of space and flick goalwards, squeezing the ball into the side-netting to grab Ireland's first goal and half the deficit. It was almost exclusively one-way traffic in the final quarter, with Ireland throwing every remaining ounce of energy at India as they searched for an equaliser. An incisive run from Mark McNellis and clever piece of skill won Ireland a late penalty corner and a golden opportunity to equalise with just seconds remaining. Luke Madeley's effort from the corner looked destined to end up in the back of the net, but the attempt was parried wide thanks to a textbook save from the India keeper. India walked away as 2-1 victors. Both Ireland and India will now travel to Amstelveen to face the Netherlands in their next stage of the FIH Pro League. Ireland will face the Dutch on June 11 and 12 at 7pm Irish time, with both games available to watch on the TG4 player.


RTÉ News
an hour ago
- RTÉ News
Peter Canavan: Galway still capable of tearing teams apart
They have yet to scale the heights that saw them reach last year's All-Ireland final, but Peter Canavan has no doubt that Galway can emerge from their "flat spot" and have a say where Sam Maguire will reside later in the summer. After losing to Dublin in their opening game in the All-Ireland series, Pádraic Joyce's men looked in trouble for most of their subsequent clash with Derry at Celtic Park on Sunday. They trailed by eight shortly after the break. Joyce made the decision to withdraw key names such as Paul Conroy and Shane Walsh. Others had to step up. Matthew Tierney's 69th-minute goal - Galway's fourth of an absorbing game - looked to have completed a magnificent comeback. Derry would have the final say, however, with Conor Doherty's point at the death ensuring parity in the Maiden City. As a result, both sides stand on one point in the so-called 'Group of Death' ahead of Derry's date with Dublin and Galway, for the third year running, facing Armagh in their final round-robin clash. So what of the Tribes then? Clearly not at the level they reached when accounting for Dublin and Donegal at the height of last summer's championship. Peter Canavan, speaking on the latest edition of the RTÉ GAA Podcast, when asked as to whether Galway can rediscover their zip, replied: "They have the potential to be every bit as good as they were last year". In assessing Tribes' showing at Celtic Park, Canavan also took into account the desire shown by Derry, who were similarly in need of points after losing their opener against Armagh. He said: "There are two ways of looking at Galway's performance against Derry. They were flat and struggled to get to the pitch of the game in terms of their intensity. Derry were well up for it and were motivated. They were thinking that this was their last game in Celtic Park this year and they were going to go for it. They weren't going to be passive and took Galway on physically, and Galway struggled with that." Canavan, though, was impressed by how Galway clawed their way back, and still believes they have the personnel to really trouble other contenders. "Key leaders were taken off and they were brilliant in the last ten to 15 minutes; they easily could have thrown in the towel. Pádraic Joyce has a lot to take out of it from that point of view, they have a chance to reset and there is no doubting in terms of their physique and their size around the middle quarter, they have the players to dominate teams in terms of kickouts. "Up front, if you have Comer, Finnerty and Walsh and if they hit form, I don't care, they can tear anybody apart. Tierney and Thompson are also playing brilliant football "They still have the personnel, the size, and there is no reason they can't turn it around. "They have to win [against Armagh]. They have hit a flat spot and are more than capable of bouncing back."


Irish Examiner
an hour ago
- Irish Examiner
'We need a Carla Ward team on the ball and an Irish mentality off it' says Ireland WNT boss
Uefa Women's Nations League B2 IRELAND 1 (Saoirse Noonan 19) SLOVENIA 0 Play-offs hold fond memories for Irish women's football. Attention between the generation led by Emma Byrne losing their Euro one in 2008 until Hampden Park in 2022 offered a generational breakthrough. Amber Barrett and her big toe will be forever renowned for slaying the Scots to end a qualification famine and begin the journey to Australia. Ireland's route to the next World Cup, the 2027 version in Brazil, will be shaped by the outcome of another play-off in October. Whereas the Celtic clash was considered a meeting of similar standard, Ireland are up against it for this one. Uefa's preference for established nations dictates nations finishing third in League A can preserve their status by beating a runner-up from League B. That's where Ireland find themselves following relegation from League A and failure to bounce straight back. Denmark, Iceland, Belgium or Austria await in Friday's draw. Only the latter have not qualified for next month's Euros. Best case scenario is being paired with Austrians, contrasted with a duel against Denmark. Granted, they trundle into the playoffs off a 6-1 hammering by a slick Sweden side but this will be their seventh straight Euros, the peak being a runners-up finish in 2017. Ireland must navigate the playoffs to be among the top 16 European teams competing for World Cup qualification – with it a playoff assured – because they were always playing catch-up since their second game of the campaign resulted in a shock 4-0 defeat to the Slovenians. 'All four teams are tough but I believe that we can go and beat anyone,' stressed Ward about the next competitive step, after a double-header summer friendly against USA. 'Players that have played for me at club and country often laugh at me because I'm somebody that believes that we can do anything if we really want to.' Despite being 12 places behind Ireland in Fifa's rankings, the team from the Balkans are a structured unit and prepared for what Ireland produced in both games. They were entitled to prioritise elevation over defeat when the three minutes of stoppage time elapsed, thrilled to upset the script Uefa favour abiding by. Saoirse Noonan's winner on her Cork homecoming registered a fifth victory in six for Ireland but not by sufficient margin to dislodge the table-toppers. Just under 10,000 were at Pairc Uí Chaoimh to see Noonan add a second international goal to the first she scored in 2021 but Ireland required another three to salvage top spot in a group they were favourites for. Performances for Ireland have been erratic since Carla Ward's first window in charge went awry. Emily Murphy was the gleeful recipient of a present to salvage victory in Turkey on Friday and her goalscoring impact earned a start in Ward's reshuffled side. This was Ireland's turn to bat and clocking up goals rather than runs was their objective. Defenders were in the thick of the aerial barrage, with Anna Patten first to threaten with a fifth minute poked volley straight into the goalkeeper's hands. Abbie Larkin was next to test Zala Mersnik by cutting in from the left and drilling a shot which the stopper stooped low to repel. Pressure was building and the breakthrough soon arrived after 19 minutes. When Denise O'Sullivan and Murphy collided in attempting to connect with Katie McCabe's left-wing cross, it seemed the chance was lost but the latter dashed to retrieve the ball. Once she prevented it rolling out of play, the ball was teed up for defender Jessie Stapleton to loft a high cross into the box. Her delivery hung long enough in the air for Noonan to elude her marker and plant a thumping header from 10 yards that flew beyond the reach of Mersnik. Hordes of green shirts flooded into the final third in the hope of using that opener as a stimulus and while Patten jabbed a volley wide Ireland still had to be wary of the counter. Lara Prašnikar, who'd scored a brace in Koper, almost exposed Ireland's high line by nipping in behind but Courtney Brosnan did well to bat her shot away. It was a similar pattern for the second half with Ireland overloading the wings without peppering the goal. With a bit more conviction, Ireland might have neared their target. Stapleton's header from McCabe's cross five minutes after the interval was more of a glance, as was another from Caitlin Hayes with 17 minutes left. Murphy's shot was parried and the introduction of Megan Campbell added the throw-in dimension Ireland have become increasingly dependent on. Just once did it threaten with a scud towards fellow substitute Marissa Sheva but the goalkeeper smothered well. Also on towards the end was Louise Quinn for her 122nd cap. The towering centre-back had rescued Ireland in the past, up from the back Shane Duffy-style, but the chase was too steep even for her legendary powers. Frustration boiled into Patten incurring a booking to rule her out of the play-off, one of five players walking a suspension tightrope, and they will require all their nous to emerge from the two-leg assignment. 'We've seen from game one to game six the improvement in our team,' added Ward. 'The way I'd put it is we need a Carla Ward team on the ball and an Irish mentality off the ball. 'If we want to play in an exciting way going forward, and that's the way I like my teams to play, we have to be better out of possession. 'We are still building. Throughout this campaign, we have had five training sessions with the entire squad so to build the way we are and to finish the way we did against Slovenia. 'I could not ask for more. A couple of more goals yes, but we got to be proud of that performance. That was an Irish performance." IRELAND: C Brosnan; J Stapleton (M Campbell 62), C Hayes, A Patten; E Murphy, M Connolly, D O'Sullivan, K McCabe, A Larkin (Louise Quinn 80); K Carusa (M Sheva 80), S Noonan (A Barrett 62). SLOVENIA: Z Mersnik; K Erzen, L Golob, D Conc, S Agrez; S Makovec, L Prasnikar, K Korosec, S Kolbi, Z Kramzar (M Zver 88); M Sternad (N Kajzba 68). Referee: Miriama Bockova (Slovakia). Attendance: 9,433.