
John Kiely doesn't want jeopardy of Munster championship lost
John Kiely insists the jeopardy of the current format of the All-Ireland senior hurling championship has to be retained.
The Limerick manager sympathised with his Waterford counterpart Peter Queally whose county's season ended last Sunday and have yet to qualify from the provincial round-robin structure.
However, he disagreed with Queally's call for the championship to be reviewed along the lines of the All-Ireland SFC format and the idea four teams from Munster and Leinster could qualify for the knock-out stages.
At a press briefing in TUS Gaelic Grounds on Friday ahead of Saturday week's provincial final against Cork, Kiely supported the feature of two teams in Munster exiting the competition at the provincial stage.
'It is tough, they haven't come out yet so it's going to be tough on them, they've made great progress this year, Peter has done really well. I suppose you just have to keep going back and eventually you'll get the breakthrough. Look at Tipperary last year where they were at the bottom of the group and this year they've turned it around, they've got five points on the board.
'Do I think putting four teams out (into the All-Ireland series) is going to improve it? I don't, I think it will actually diminish the importance of the games. There's great jeopardy there. It is tough but it's a good tough.
'When you love sport, you want to be involved in a competition that has incredible standards, incredible competition and real jeopardy and that's what the Munster Championship has and that's why it's so special and that's why the crowds are turning out, so we have to embrace the jeopardy with the desire to get out.'
However, Kiely believes the scheduling of the championship is worth debating in the context of the costs associated with going to games and the Munster final tickets going up by €5.
'It's a big commitment to be a supporter in the first place,' said Kiely of following teams. 'They're going to league matches, they're going to all the championship matches. There's a lot of those matches in a short period of time. That's the biggest piece, really.
'It's the fact that we're coming off the back of four round-robin games, and now we're into a Munster final, and it's all happened in the space of seven weeks. It's a lot of expense in a short period of time. People are looking towards summer holidays, kids going away on summer camps, all those types of things.
'If the season was more stretched out, the expense is spread out as well with it, and that's maybe something that needs to be taken into consideration, that it's a big hit for families all at the one time.
'I think people haven't been giving out about tickets too much. I think it's more about getting your hands on them what is the biggest problem at the moment. I think we're going to have a fantastic occasion here.'
Kiely said the Munster Council 'need to make it visibly clear to everybody' where the additional revenue from the ticket price increases is going.
'I think that would be something that would be very much appreciated by the paying public, to know that that money is being put to very good use right across the Association.'
Kiely reported no fresh injury concerns although he pointed out Limerick have three training sessions before the game. 'We've got a session tomorrow (Saturday) morning, session Tuesday night, session Thursday night, so we've a bit of work to get through yet.'

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RTÉ News
18 minutes ago
- RTÉ News
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Irish Examiner
19 minutes ago
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Brendan Cummins praises Tipperary 'bravery' in All-Ireland U20 triumph
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Irish Examiner
19 minutes ago
- Irish Examiner
Second half blitz carries Clifford and Kerry to impressive victory over Cork
All-Ireland SFC: Kerry 1-28 (1-7-14) Cork 0-20 (0-3-14) A rare deluge of orange flags from the men in green and gold. A not-so-rare victory for the green and gold over the neighbours. Kerry remain in pole position for direct progress to the All-Ireland quarter-finals. Cork have 70 minutes against Roscommon to rescue their summer. The third quarter was the busiest and arguably the defining quarter of this second championship instalment between Cork and Kerry. The third quarter was busy before it ever began. A bout of digging and pushing on the way back to the dressing-rooms at half-time was dealt with as both sides emerged from their respective dressing-rooms for the second period. Jack O'Connor first sought to make his views known to referee Derek O'Mahoney. He was yellow-carded for his views. Yellow also for Brian Hurley and David Clifford, black for Joe O'Connor and Paul Walsh. Referee O'Mahoney moved himself more and more centre stage as the third quarter played out. 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Cork must beat Roscommon next time out in an attempt to progress off the same total. An intense spotlight was fixed on the Cork restart. Micheál Aodh Martin's first punt of the afternoon was collected by a Cork teammate and finished with Mark Cronin converting from the placed ball. A reassuring start, even if it was only the first kickout of a long afternoon and had the breeze for support. Cork actually lost only two of their nine first-half restarts. The two lost, though, came at a significant price. The two lost cost them 1-1. Five minutes in, and following David Clifford's opening point to nudge the visitors 0-2 to 0-1 in front, Martin kicked to the edge of the arc. The intention was to find Brian O'Driscoll. Clifford read the intention and intercepted. Goal Kerry. The irony was that after a week in which his long kickouts to an overloaded left flank were heavily criticised and branded utterly predictable, it was the short restart that undid Martin and Cork. Playing into a minor gale, the buffer of the giveaway goal sustained Kerry for most of the half. A second Clifford point, after Seán McDonnell dallied at the far end, and another from the Fossa wonder following a second lost Cork restart, pushed Jack's lads into a 1-4 to 0-2 advantage. For all Cork's possession dominance thereafter, there were still 26 minutes run on the clock before Cork crept ahead for the opening time. The Kerry kickout was the kickout under pressure and being savaged. In the middle of the half, five consecutive Shane Ryan restarts were not retained. Cork's problem was they failed to punish. Three goal chances were not taken. Ryan denied Cronin and Mattie Taylor. The third and final green flag opening saw Taylor foiled as the trigger was pulled back. Maurice Shanley drew a boot at the breaking ball, but no net was found. Colm O'Callaghan, with his second of the half, swung Cork back in front approaching the hooter. Brian Hurley, after the hooter, landed a crowd lifting two-pointer. 0-13 to 1-7 at the break. A three-point lead, such were the elements, was never going to be sufficient. And so that point of view was quickly proven right. In front of 13,072, Kerry remain unbeaten. For Cork, just one win now from their last five championship outings. Scorers for Kerry: D Clifford (1-8, tp, tp free, 0-2 frees); S O'Shea (0-9, 3 tp frees, 0-3 frees); T O'Sullivan (tp), P Geaney, T Brosnan (tp), M O'Shea (0-2 each); G O'Sullivan, P Clifford, D Geaney (0-1 each). Scorers for Cork: B Hurley (0-7, tp, tp free, 0-2 frees); M Cronin (0-5, 0-4 frees); P Walsh (0-3, tp); C Óg Jones (0-1 free), C O'Callaghan (0-2 each); R Deane (0-1). KERRY: S Ryan; T O'Sullivan, J Foley, D Casey; B Ó Beaglaoich, M Breen, G White; J O'Connor, BD O'Sullivan; G O'Sullivan, P Clifford, S O'Shea; D Clifford, P Geaney, M Burns. SUBS: M O'Shea for BD O'Sullivan (21 mins); D Geaney for P Clifford (31); K Spillane for Geaney (inj, HT); T Brosnan for Burns (59); T Morley for Ó Beaglaoich (66). CORK: MA Martin; S Brady, S Meehan, D O'Mahony; B O'Driscoll, M Shanley, M Taylor; I Maguire, C O'Callaghan; S Walsh, P Walsh, S McDonnell; C Óg Jones, B Hurley, M Cronin. SUBS: S Powter for Meehan (43); R Deane for McDonnell (50); C O'Mahony for B Hurley (60); L Fahy for Taylor (65); E McSweeney for P Walsh (66). REFEREE: D O'Mahoney (Tipperary).