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Multiple Dublin GAA All-Ireland winner joins leading Meath club

Multiple Dublin GAA All-Ireland winner joins leading Meath club

Multiple Dublin All-Ireland winner Eric Lowndes has moved to leading Meath side, St. Peter's Dunboyne.
Lowndes, who went to school in Dunboyne, will join his brothers Stuart and Craig in the senior side at the club.
Eric Lowndes is 31 now, having made his Dublin Championship debut in 2015 after a stellar underage career where he won four Leinster minor medals in hurling and football across two seasons as well as an All-Ireland under-21 football titles.
Lowndes was a regular throughout Dublin's Leinster campaign in their 2017 run to the All-Ireland, but didn't start the All-Ireland semi-final or final.
Stuart Lowndes played for both Dublin and Meath at senior level and his goal was vital as Dunboyne won the Senior Championship in 2018, their most recent victory in the competition.
The brother's parents are both Meath people.
Eric Lowndes has been training with the Dunboyne club recently and made his debut over the weekend in a Division 1 encounter with Wolfe Tones.

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Game-by-game guide after today's All-Ireland senior football draw
Game-by-game guide after today's All-Ireland senior football draw

The 42

time38 minutes ago

  • The 42

Game-by-game guide after today's All-Ireland senior football draw

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Conor McManus: Here's my ranking of the top 12 counties going into the knockouts
Conor McManus: Here's my ranking of the top 12 counties going into the knockouts

Irish Times

timean hour ago

  • Irish Times

Conor McManus: Here's my ranking of the top 12 counties going into the knockouts

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They will avoid Tyrone and Armagh if they reach the quarter-finals. They are also very hard to beat. 3. Galway Paul Conroy of Galway kicks a point. Photograph: James Lawlor/Inpho On Saturday they just looked like a team that were just maybe teetering on the edge of exit – eight points down – and it was hard to see where their response was going to come from but in the second half they decided, 'not today'. Despite missing penalties and despite the setbacks and the knock-backs in the game, they just kept coming and asking questions. They also started to get their hands on primary possession, which is something they had been struggling with in recent times for all the obvious strength of their middle third. Paul Conroy returned are looked a bit closer to his FOTY form and Shane Walsh was firing up front. I just thought their response with the season on the line was great and it looks like it could open up for them. 4. Tyrone Tyrone's Padraig Hampsey. Photograph: Ryan Byrne/inpho I don't necessarily think it's too early for them and they'll certainly not feel that themselves. Malachy O'Rourke has them motoring nicely. They were well superior to Cavan and as with their best performance, there was a nice spread of scorers, 11 and Darren McCurry in top form. They'll be quietly confident and happy with where they're at. I think being straight into the quarter-finals is a huge advantage over whoever the opposition will be. 5. Kerry Kerry's Gavin White. Photograph: Tom O'Hanlon/Inpho Losing to Meath isn't the end of the world for Kerry. It will sharpen their teeth and the extra game will do them no harm even though they'll be expected to beat Cavan at home (talk to Mayo about that!). They were missing six players, including heavyweights like Paudie Clifford, Seán O'Shea and Diarmuid O'Connor, which is no reflection on Meath but gives Jack O'Connor room to improve. 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Photograph: Leah Scholes/Inpho Cork's big test was the group match with Kerry and they were disappointing that day – all the more so when they see what a Meath team they competed with were able to do. The games where they've been written off are where you tend to see the best of them, like, last year, for example, when they beat Donegal. I just can't see them beating Dublin in Croke Park even though they could well raise a gallop. 12. Cavan Tyrone's Peter Harte and Oisin Brady of Cavan. Photograph: Ryan Byrne/Inpho The mood will hardly be great after two big defeats in the group. They're still in it because of a head-to-head with Mayo, who were really competitive with the teams that thrashed Cavan but they will lean into the display in Castlebar when heading down to Killarney to face a sore Kerry.

Dublin GAA legends welcome baby daughter and share adorable name
Dublin GAA legends welcome baby daughter and share adorable name

Irish Daily Mirror

time2 hours ago

  • Irish Daily Mirror

Dublin GAA legends welcome baby daughter and share adorable name

Dublin GAA legends Dean Rock and Niamh McEvoy have welcomed their second baby daughter into the world. Taking to social media, Niamh shared the news with her followers, revealing that baby Rose Anna Rock arrived just in time for father's day. "Our newest arrival, Rose Anna Rock is here just in time for Father's Day. Happy Father's Day, @deanorock! All your girls love you beyond measure," posted McEvoy on Instagram. The happy couple have been swarmed with well wishes following that social media post, with Dublin GAA icons Ciaran Kilkenny and Hannah Tyrrell among those to send on their congratulations. Anna Rose is the second child of the adoring couple, coming three years on from the birth of Sadie in 2022. Rock retired from Dublin duty in 2024 with a haul of eight All-Ireland titles to his name, but with two baby girls at home under the age of three, he's likely to be as busy as ever. McEvoy is a Dublin legend in her own right, winning five All-Irelands with the Dubs before hanging up her boots three seasons ago. Get the latest sports headlines straight to your inbox by signing up for free email.

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