
Ireland's Girls' and Boys' chasing glory at Home Internationals in Cork
This year Brenda Craig (Roganstown) and John Carroll (Cork) will hope home comforts drive their Girls' and Boys' to glory on the Little Island course while Men's team captain Damien Coyne (Tuam) and Women's team captain Gillian O'Leary (The Island) lead their squads to the home of England Golf, aiming to defend their crown.
Boys' captain Carroll, a 35-year member of the host club, is optimistic that local knowledge could be a decisive factor in what's expected to be a highly competitive contest.
'It's brilliant for the lads to see the course and for the other countries to come and see the course. I'm obviously biased, but I think it's a great golf course,' said Carroll.
'They can't wait to represent their country. The fact that it's in Ireland, all their families, all their friends will be attending. The fact that it's at home in front of their own family and friends, the lads are super excited, they're really pumped up.'
John William Burke (Ballyhaunis), Caelan Coleman (Galway Bay), Adam Fahey (Portmarnock), Bruce MacDonald (Lisburn), John Moran (Portmarnock), Barry O'Connell (Douglas), Harry O'Hara (Clandeboye), Isaac Oliver (Glasson) and William O'Riordan (Greystones) make up the nine strong Boys' squad.
The Irish Girls' team enters with plenty of momentum following a bronze medal winning performance at last month's Girls' European Team Championships in England, where they secured a first medal in 19 years.
Captain Brenda Craig (Roganstown) retains four members from that squad, with Róisín Scanlon (Woburn), Zoe McLean-Tattan (Romford), Kate Dillon (Oughterard) and Hannah Lee-McNamara (Royal Portrush) all teeing up.
They are joined by the Tralee pairing of Ella Moynihan and Lucy Grattan and Esker Hills golfer Ella Cantwell who have all impressed domestically this season.
'It's the first medal that we've won in 19 years, so delighted for the girls, they fought really hard and were very much deserving of their bronze medals,' said Craig.
'We have three new girls joining us, Ella Moynihan who's topped the Order of Merit and Ella Cantwell and Lucy Grattan who have won three out of the four regional championships between them. Really looking forward to the experience of the four girls teaming up with the three new girls on the panel and very much looking forward to a good week in Cork.'
Meanwhile the Irish Men's and Women's team travel to Lincolnshire aiming to build on their historic 2024 victory, when a dramatic 7-7 draw against England on the final day saw the combined team secure victory at Murcar Links.
Flogas Irish Men's Amateur Open champion Stuart Grehan (Co. Louth) joins a Men's lineup that includes East of Ireland winner David Howard (Fota Island), South of Ireland champion Jonathan Keane (Lahinch), Colm Campbell (Warrenpoint), Sean Keeling (Roganstown), Keith Egan (Carton House) John Doyle (Fota Island), Thomas Higgins (Roscommon) and Gavin Tiernan (Co. Louth).
Bridgestone Order of Merit leader Aideen Walsh (Lahinch) will be part of a seven strong Irish Women's team alongside AIG Irish Women's Amateur Close champion Anna Dawson (Tramore), Olivia Costello (Roscommon), Rebekah Gardner (Clandeboye), Anna Abom (Edmondstown), Beth Coulter (Kirkistown Castle) and Emma Fleming (Elm Park).
Ireland will once again face England, Scotland and Wales with the combined team scores from the Men's and Women's matches determining the overall champions. The same format will apply at Cork, where the Boys' and Girls' squads will also contest combined honours.
Proceedings get underway at Cork Golf Club on Tuesday morning before action at Woodhall Spa begins on Wednesday.
Hashtags

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


RTÉ News
11 minutes ago
- RTÉ News
Camogie Extra Podcast: Ursula Jacob and Elaine Aylward preview All-Ireland senior final
In this week's episode of Camogie Extra, Ursula Jacob and Elaine Aylward join Jacqui Hurley and Rory O'Neill to preview another meeting of Cork and Galway in the Glen Dimplex All-Ireland senior final. Both panellists recall what it was like to play on the big day, with Ursula having memories of Wexford achieving a three in a row in 2012, the last county to do so ahead of Cork's bid for something similar on Sunday afternoon. Elaine spoke about the two-week build-up that often coincided with the Kilkenny men preparing for their big day. Cork "going all out for the three in a row" and how Galway will look to stop them was discussed, while an eye was cast towards Kerry and Offaly in the intermediate decider and the junior clash between Laois and Armagh.

The 42
an hour ago
- The 42
Premier Sports and Disney+ to show La Liga games in Ireland for next three seasons
PREMIER SPORTS WILL continue to broadcast live matches from the Spanish top flight in Ireland and the UK for the next three seasons, while the 8:30pm Saturday kick-off will be streamed exclusively on Disney+. Premier have renewed their rights deal with La Liga until the end of the 2027/28 campaign, while subscribers to Disney+ — whose parent company owns ESPN — can watch the Saturday-night game as part of the standard €9.99 monthly package. Aside from the standalone Saturday-night fixture on Disney, Premier Sports will show every match live as part of its new agreement with La Liga. Champions Barcelona will begin the defence of their title away to Mallorca at 6:30pm on Saturday, 16 August, while Real Madrid's campaign will begin at home to Osasuna at 8pm on Tuesday, 19 August. Both of those games will be shown live on Premier Sports. Advertisement Disney's first game will come straight after Barca's season opener, when Valencia host Real Sociedad at 8:30pm on Saturday, 16 August. The first Clásico of the 2025/26 season is currently set for the Bernabéu on the weekend of 25/26 October, with the exact date to be confirmed. As such, its Irish and UK broadcaster has yet to be determined.

The 42
2 hours ago
- The 42
Over 15,000 tickets already sold for Crocker and Donovan's all-Irish world-title fight
OVER 15,000 TICKETS have already been sold for next month's all-Irish world-title fight between Lewis Crocker and Paddy Donovan at Windsor Park, Matchroom Boxing have confirmed. Belfast's Crocker (21-0, 11KOs) and Limerick's Donovan (14-1, 11KOs) will rematch at the home of Northern Irish football for the IBF welterweight world title on Saturday, 13 September. Tickets went on sale last week but Matchroom chairman Eddie Hearn confirmed on Thursday morning that over 15,000 of them have already been snapped up with more than five weeks remaining, with pitchside tickets 'completely sold out'. A small number of cheaper tickets (around €52) are still available on Ticketmaster, while undercard boxers can also be contacted directly via social media for tickets. Advertisement 'Let's sell this place out for the first ever all-Irish world title fight,' Hearn said. In over a century and a half of professional boxing under the Queensberry rules, no two Irish-born fighters have ever fought each other for a world-title belt in any weight class. September's encounter will see either Crocker or Donovan join Katie Taylor as one of only two reigning Irish world champions, although Belfast's world-class super-featherweight Anthony Cacace is effectively in that same company having vacated his IBF title to avoid a mandatory challenge and instead take more lucrative fights with British rivals, which he has won. Crocker and Donovan's original bout at Belfast's SSE Arena was, in its own right, one the most significant to take place between two Irish boxers in the modern era. In what was a final eliminator for Boots Ennis' IBF title (Ennis has since vacated the belt and moved up in weight), Donovan and trainer Andy Lee were left furious when the previously unbeaten Limerick man was disqualified for knocking down Belfast's Crocker after the bell had sounded to end the eighth round. Related Reads 'This should have been Bernard Dunne 2.0... but life played out how it played out' Peerless in his own era, Oleksandr Usyk would have held his own in any of them Landmark victories are taken literally in New York, and Taylor has no more worlds to conquer Donovan had already been harshly deducted two points for head clashes by English referee Marcus McDonnell, who deemed his third punishable foul to be worthy of a DQ. To that point, Donovan had dominated a compelling contest against his rival from the north, earning a legitimate knockdown of Crocker and leading the Belfast man 69-63 x2 and 67-65 on the three judges' scorecards before being disqualified for his illegal blow. Remaining tickets for Crocker-Donovan II are available here.