
Down power to victory over lethargic hosts Clare
Down made a sensational return to the All-Ireland Senior Football Championship in Zimmer Biomet Páirc Chiosóg when brushing aside the challenge of hosts Clare in front of just 1,556.
Soaring to last year's Tailteann Cup honours, Conor Laverty's side clearly carried that momentum to Ennis as they physically bullied the home side into submission long before the final whistle.
Indeed, with the aid of the conditions, the Ulster side effectively had the job done by half-time as timely goals from John McGeough and Daniel Guinness were accentuated by two-point braces for Pat Havern and Danny Magill to soar unassailably 2-17 to 1-06 clear by the break.
With nothing to lose, Clare did finally bounce off the ropes in the third quarter but a five-point blitz from Mark McInerney could only lessened the arrears to ten at 2-20 to 1-13 by the three-quarters mark.
That home rally only seemed to anger the visitors though as with eight minutes, Down had stretched the gap to 17, highlighted by a well-worked goal from substitute Caolan Mooney.
The goal of the game unquestionably came in the opening half though as after John McGeough had ignited Down's challenge with a flicked major from close range in only the sixth minute, the visitors would complete the half with an even better strike.
It stemmed from a Clare error that was intercepted by midfielder Daniel Guinness to pick up possession in his own half and burst forward, playing a one-two with Odhran Murdock before striking to the left corner of Eamon Tubridy's net at 2-13 to 0-05.
A motivated Clare did pull back an equally eye-catching goal a minute later when Brian McNamara, Eoin Cleary, Mark McInerney and Alan Sweeney combined to play in Aaron Griffin to finish. However, it would be cancelled out by Pat Havern's three point haul including his 19th two-pointer of 2025 to ease 14 in front by half-time.
Despite the wind to come, there would be no reprieve of any real note for Peter Keane's side who now face an arduous journey of their own to Monaghan in a fortnight's time while Down have a potential group decider to come with neighbours Louth in Newry.
Down: Ronan Burns; Patrick McCarthy, Pierce Laverty, Ryan Magill; Miceal Rooney (0-01), Peter Fegan, Ceilum Doherty; Daniel Guinness (1-01), Danny Magill (0-07, 2tp); James Guinness (0-02), Odhran Murdock (0-02, 1f), Ryan McEvoy (0-01); John McGeough (1-01), Pat Havern (0-09, 1tp, 1tpf, 3f), Adam Crimmins (0-03)
Subs: Caolan Mooney (1-00) for Doherty (35+2, inj), Patrick Brooks for R. Magill (45), Shay Millar for McEvoy (54), Finn Murdock for J. Guinness (60), Conor McCrickard for McGeough (62), Donal Scullion for O. Murdock (67)
Clare: Eamon Tubridy; Ronan Lanigan, Cillian Brennan, Manus Doherty; Cillian Rouine, Ikem Ugwueru, Connor Meaney; Brian McNamara, Emmet McMahon (0-05, 1tp, 2f); Gavin Murray, Eoin Cleary (0-01), Dermot Coughlan (0-02); Mark McInerney (0-06, 1tp, 1f, 1'45), Keelan Sexton, Aaron Griffin (1-01)
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Irish Examiner
17 minutes ago
- Irish Examiner
Short turn around for Dowling and Kildare are tough McDonagh Cup final victory
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They will then spend the winter months preparing for a first Leinster SHC tie in 2026 since they were beaten by Westmeath in 2004. All of which seemed highly unlikely after the defeat to Kerry back in mid-April. That was the county's ninth defeat in the McDonagh Cup from nine games across three different campaigns. Kerry ended up being relegated while Kildare, who only won the Christy Ring Cup last year, went on to win the title though a few 'home truths' needed to be dished out first. "It's incredible, I can't describe the dressing-room after that Kerry match," said Dowling who previously managed Kilkenny camogie and St Kieran's College hurling teams to All-Ireland successes. "I've been in a lot of dressing-rooms down the years, losing All-Ireland finals and stuff, but that honestly was one of the worst I've ever been in. I didn't know what to say to the lads. It was hard to say anything. I questioned my own ability as a manager, you know, where do you go? What do you do? "We actually met the lads on the Tuesday night and we did no video analysis, like we normally would. We just had a hard chat. We told a few home truths between ourselves, as players and management. Then we just went back at it. "We actually trained hard afterwards that night and it was the best thing that ever happened." Five wins later - including two against Laois - Kildare have achieved one of the greatest triumphs in the county's hurling history. They were actually fortunate to be level with Laois at half-time, 0-11 to 0-11, considering all the point attempts that favourites Laois butchered. When Ben Conroy bundled home a Laois goal seconds after the restart, leaving the 2024 runners-up three points ahead, and with momentum on their side, it all looked ominous. Kildare's response, just like that turnaround after the Kerry game, was truly impressive, outscoring Laois by 2-15 to 0-8 from there on to win by a 10-point margin. 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Scorers for Laois: T Keyes 0-6 (5 frees); B Conroy 1-2; P Delaney (2 frees), J Keyes, P Purcell, PJ Scully (1 free) 0-2 each; L Cleere, FC Fennell, J Duggan 0-1 each. KILDARE: P McKenna; R Hogan, R Boran, D O'Meara; P Dolan, C Boran, S Leacy; D Guerin, C McCabe; C Dowling, J Sheridan, D Qualter; D Melville, J Burke, G Keegan. Subs: J Travers for Dowling (59); M Curtin for McCabe (64); C Kehoe for Melville & L O'Reilly for Dolan (69); O Lynam for Keegan (72). LAOIS: C Dunne; F C Fennell, J Walshe, C Comerford; P Delaney, L Cleere, D Conway; A Corby, J Keyes; P Purcell, T Keyes, D Dooley; M Dowling, J Quinlan, B Conroy. Subs: A Dunphy for T Keyes (54); P Dunne for Comerford (60); J Duggan for Dowling (62); R Mullaney for Walsh (64); PJ Scully for Conroy (66). Referee: M Kennedy (Tipperary).


Irish Examiner
17 minutes ago
- Irish Examiner
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The Irish Sun
26 minutes ago
- The Irish Sun
John Kiely praises his Limerick heroes after heartbreaking Munster final shootout loss to Cork
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