
Football prelims had a whiff of predictability, but it's anyone's guess from here to the final
Eight teams left, seven games to decide the summer's
football
. The weekend was like Willy Wonka's Everlasting Gobstopper machine, rocking and groaning and steaming away, only for the result to somehow be both underwhelming and exciting at the same time.
The four teams that were supposed to win their preliminary quarter-finals got the job done. The quarter-final octet is who you said it would be.
Kerry
,
Dublin
,
Galway
and
Donegal
expelled varying levels of sweat in their toiling. After
Kerry (easily)
and the
Dubs (doggedly)
disposed of Cavan and Cork on Saturday, Sunday saw Donegal (in a stroll) and Galway (in a dogfight) get past Louth and Down. The Monday morning draw will decide things from here, if it hasn't happened by the time you read this. The only thing we know for sure is that Armagh will play Kerry.
Whatever next weekend throws up, the games will have a job on their hands living up to
Galway's win over Down in Newry
. Pádraic Joyce's side came through by 2-26 to 3-21, capping a run of three games in four weeks on the road against Ulster teams without defeat. However ready the other seven teams are for Croke Park next week, nobody will feel more battle-hardened.
READ MORE
Galway manager Pádraic Joyce with his Down counterpart, Conor Laverty, after Sunday's absorbing All-Ireland SFC preliminary quarter-final at Páirc Esler. Photograph: James Lawlor/Inpho
'A lot of aspects we'd be really happy with,' Joyce said afterwards. 'Obviously a lot of aspects we wouldn't be happy with and the amount of scores we conceded. But it was that kind of game anyway; it was going to be open. We couldn't have it every way. Happy to get out of here with the win, to be honest.
'People are saying we don't play for 70 minutes. I think we got a good performance there for the full 70 minutes overall. You're never going to get things your own way. There was two [teams] knocked out yesterday and two knocked out today, so we're down to the last eight. That's where we're at.
'We know where we are, we're happy enough to be there. We've work to do and we just can't perform like that next week, whoever we are playing in the quarter-finals. If we concede that kind of score, we're going to be in trouble.'
That they did was as much a function of Down's attitude as any shortcoming on Galway's part. Carried on the back of a stunning display from Odhran Murdock, Conor Laverty's team contributed to another stunning game. They will play in Division Three next year but they're no third-tier team.
'I would have a vision of where I want Down to go,' Laverty said afterwards. 'We don't talk about winning Sam Maguires; we talk about [how] we want to get to the top bracket of teams. I think the top six teams in Ireland . . . probably even maybe top eight at the moment, could all feel that they could win Sam Maguire.'
That's where this thing is at. Of the eight teams remaining, six have been in the last four finals. Monaghan and Meath are the odd pair out but neither will feel any foreboding at whoever comes out of the draw.
QF Draw
— Stats and Solos (@StatsAndSolos)
Donegal were the last men in, on the back of a 2-22 to 0-12 win over Louth in Ballybofey. Oisin Gallen found his form after a rocky start to the championship and they were able to call Michael Murphy and Ryan McHugh ashore long before the end to save them for next weekend.
Ciarán Thompson celebrates a goal during Donegal's comprehensive All-Ireland SFC preliminary quarter-final win against Louth in Ballybofey, Co Donegal. Photograph: Lorcan Doherty/Inpho
But when it comes right down to it, Donegal have already lost to Tyrone, they've been taken to the last minute of extra-time by Armagh and they only had a kick of a ball to spare over Monaghan. They're no big bad wolf. Nobody is.
'We had a lot of mistakes in the first half,' Jim McGuinness told GAA+ afterwards. 'We made a lot of mistakes, we made it difficult for ourselves at times, dropped an awful lot of balls short. Once you start doing that it becomes like basketball, you're up and down the pitch and playing under fatigue. So we've a good few things to look at and work on but obviously very, very happy to get over the line.
'It's been the case since the first throw-in of the first game of the league, everybody's been saying how competitive Division One was. It was incredibly competitive and everybody could beat everybody on a given day.
'Obviously the way Down have progressed through the championship, the way Monaghan have progressed, how Meath have progressed – they're playing like Division One teams. So it's very, very competitive. We know that. But at the same time, we just wanted to be in that draw and we're where we want to be.'
Same as all the others.
Hashtags

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

The Journal
43 minutes ago
- The Journal
Galway edge Down as Donegal overcome Louth
The 42 The 42 is the home of quality journalism for passionate Irish sports fans, bringing you closer to the stories that matter through insightful analysis and sharp sportswriting. Galway 2-5-16 (32) Down 3-4-13 (30) GALWAY EARNED a thrilling two-point victory over Down in today's All-Ireland SFC preliminary quarter-final in Newry. Advertisement Shane Walsh was the game's standout player as he registered an individual tally of 1-7. Donegal 2-22 Louth 0-12 Donegal sealed their place in the last eight with a 2-22 to 0-12 win against Louth at MacCumhaill Park, Ballybofey, this afternoon. Jim McGuinness's side had a narrow 1-6 to 0-7 lead at half-time, but pulled away to earn a comfortable victory after the break. The 42 Subscribers can read the full match reports here and here (€) The 42′s award-winning team produces original content that you won't find anywhere else: on GAA, League of Ireland, women's sport and boxing, as well as our game-changing rugby coverage, all with an Irish eye.

The 42
an hour ago
- The 42
Kildare and Limerick progress in Tailteann Cup semi-finals
Tailteann Cup semi-finals Kildare 1-13 Fermanagh 0-9 Limerick 2-18 Wicklow 1-17 KILDARE AND Limerick, the only two unbeaten teams left in the Tailteann Cup, will place their perfect records on the line when they meet in the final on 12 July. With almost matching final quarter performances in their respective semi-finals this afternoon, both teams finished strongly at Croke Park to keep alive their hopes of a golden ticket to the 2026 All-Ireland SFC. Limerick's four-point defeat of Wicklow was by far the more entertaining, with the Division 4 league champions looking down and out with less than 20 minutes to go. They trailed by seven points at that stage to an Oisin McConville-led Wicklow that had dominated the third quarter. Three Dean Healy points for Wicklow in that third quarter, along with a goal from Malachy Stone, had propelled the Garden County into a 1-16 to 1-9 lead. Oisin McGraynor punched the air in delight after his 50th-minute point left seven between them. Advertisement But Limerick's response was emphatic and decisive, a blistering 16-minute burst of scoring that yielded 1-9 in total. Rob Childs got the blitzkrieg underway with a Limerick fortuitous goal — or a victory for never giving up, depending on your attitude — as he dispossessed Wicklow goalkeeper Mark Jackson after a routine catch and kicked to an empty net. Limerick goalkeeper Josh Ryan then took centre stage with two brilliant long-range free-kick conversions, amounting to 0-4 for his team, while Danny Neville added a point to bring his tally to 1-2 for the day. It was an unlikely scoring burst from a Limerick side that took off prolific forward James Naughton due to an apparent knock early in the second half. Wicklow's agony was compounded by a wasted penalty kick in the 57th minute, goalkeeper Ryan turning McGraynor's kick onto the post and away to safety. It was Limerick's fifth win in a row in the competition, though they will still go into the final as underdogs against a Kildare side that started the summer as tier two favourites. They too lived on their wits for three quarters of their semi-final against Fermanagh, and the scores were tied at 0-8 apiece with just 15 minutes to go. At that stage, it looked as if Kildare might extend their terrible Croke Park record having lost their previous five games there. But substitute Brian Flanagan made a huge impact, reeling off four points in a row to give his team a vital cushion in a low-scoring game affected by long spells of torrential rain. McLoughlin's third score was a two-pointer, and he drilled over another single late on to bring his tally to 0-5, enough to claim the Man of the Match award. There was a late cameo too from James McGrath, who got forward to score a goal for the third game in a row. The seven-point win flattered Kildare as they'd only led by 0-7 to 0-6 at half-time and added just a single point in the first 20 minutes of the second half. But with 14 wides overall, and four decent goal chances created aside from the one that McGrath converted, they were full value for the win.


Irish Independent
an hour ago
- Irish Independent
Explainer: How the pairings for All-Ireland football championship quarter-finals will be decided
Twelve counties remain in the race for Sam Maguire, with the All-Ireland preliminary quarter-finals and quarter-finals taking place over the next two weekends.