logo
Impressive Waterford beat Derry to end losing streak

Impressive Waterford beat Derry to end losing streak

RTÉ News​25-04-2025

The message from the Waterford FC fans was loud and clear before kick-off as they held a banner aloft to the players, 'Step Up or Step Out' and on the field, they got the response.
The Blues ended their run of seven straight league defeats in style as they beat Derry City in the SSE Airtricity Men's Premier Division at the RSC.
It was a fine performance from the hosts as goals from Darragh Leahy and a deflected effort from Padraig Amond helped interim head coach Matt Lawlor's side to a deserved victory. They moved a place above Cork City, who play bottom side Sligo Rovers on Saturday.
After defender Kevin Holt superbly cleared a goalbound Ryan Burke header off the line on 17 minutes and Amond volleyed a Grant Horton 33rd-minute cross inches over, the hosts struck for the lead goal five minutes before the break.
Conan Noonan whipped in a right-wing corner to the back post that saw Kacper Radkowski and Andy Boyle knock the ball forward, and it was Leahy who got the vital touch to bundle home for his first goal of the season.
Waterford doubled their advantage with 65 minutes on the clock when Noonan sent in a free-kick from the halfway line that saw Lonergan knock the ball down for Amond, and his right-footed deflected off Holt before nestling into the bottom far corner to send the home side wild.
Derry City did try to get back into the game, only to find keeper Stephen McMullan in great form as he kept out Michael Duffy's stinging effort on 71 minutes before producing a top save eight minutes later to deny Sean Patton.
When it looked as if Waterford were going to hold out for their first clean sheet of the season, the visitors pulled one back four minutes into added time when Sam Todd sent over a left-wing cross that saw substitute Liam Boyce get in front of Kyle White to head home.
But it was too little too late, Waterford holding on for a sweet victory.
Waterford FC: McMullan; Horton, Radkowski, Boyle (White 46), Leahy, Burke; Olayinka, Glenfield (McCormack 85), Noonan; Lonergan, Amond.
Derry City: Maher; Todd, Connolly, R Boyce (Ferguson 62), Holt; Winchester (O'Reilly 46), Duffy, Thomas (Boyce 46), Benson (Harkin 62), Whyte; Mullen (Patton 70).

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Shane Lowry continues surge during second-round of RBC Canadian Open as Rory McIlroy faces battle to make cut in Toronto
Shane Lowry continues surge during second-round of RBC Canadian Open as Rory McIlroy faces battle to make cut in Toronto

The Irish Sun

time12 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

Shane Lowry continues surge during second-round of RBC Canadian Open as Rory McIlroy faces battle to make cut in Toronto

SHANE Lowry continued his fine form in Canada this week as he shot a second round 68 at TPC Toronto. 2 Shane Lowry fired a second-round 68 at TPC Toronto - and just four back from the lead 2 Rory McIlroy must get motoring if he's to make the cut in Canada Clara star Lowry made the turn in one under par before tallying the same on the back-nine in Canada. Yesterday, the 2019 runner-up, posted seven birdies, with his only dropped shot of the day coming on 13. He's four-strokes behind overnight leader Cameron Champ, who fired a second-round 66 to continued his fire form with a total of -12. Two-time Canadian open champion Rory read more on golf Starting on the back nine at TPC Toronto, the Grand Slam winner began with a couple of pars but made bogey on 12. The world number two then dropped another on 17 as he failed to hole a 20-foot put for par. His response was to make birdies at the next three holes, which included rolling in an 11-foot putt at the second. McIlroy then followed a run of five pars with bogeys on the closing two holes. Most read in Golf He must now aim to go low in the second round as he's one of the evening starters in Canada. The Down ace gets his round underway at 5:55pm Irish time on Friday. Amanda Balionis accused by Scottie Scheffler of 'trying to get him emotional' during live TV interview Currently the cut-line is at -2, the course nearly played 1.5 strokes better for afternoon starters on Thursday. Waterford ace Seamus Power withdrew from the event after nine holes.

Nicky English: Opportunity for redemption smaller for Cork than Galway
Nicky English: Opportunity for redemption smaller for Cork than Galway

Irish Times

time17 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Nicky English: Opportunity for redemption smaller for Cork than Galway

One of the trickiest challenges a team can face is having to play opponents whom you beat comprehensively just a few weeks previously. That is the task for both provincial champions going into this year's Munster and Leinster finals. Galway and Cork are in the other boat, having had their heads handed to them by Kilkenny and Limerick only a few weeks ago. The imperative for both if they are to have any chance going forward is to close the gap and, with that improvement, gather some momentum. It is obviously more acute for Cork, who, unlike Galway don't look to me as if they're picking up form. They couldn't really have been happy with the mixed performance against Waterford, which provided little reassurance after the mauling in Limerick. Cork have gone from being favourites for the championship to nearly an unknown package in terms of their real worth. READ MORE To re-establish themselves as realistic contenders after losing by 15 points, they need to compete and knock about 10 off that deficit. That's not going to be easy. Limerick were outstanding the last day and although they fell back against Clare, I'm inclined to discount that result. They made plenty of changes but the key men will all be back on Saturday. They blew Cork out the last day, in all areas of the field from Nickie Quaid's puck-outs up to the full forward line. In the end, Cork were looking for the final whistle, just to get out of there. How much weight should be attached to the incentive to do better and potential complacency in the champions' camp? Probably not enough to overturn all known form. Leaving aside the Limerick match, which was a disaster, Cork have been inconsistent, looking very good at times but then in the same games, ineffective. There have been poor second-halves against Clare and Tipperary – twice – and a very mixed bag against Waterford. Defence has been an issue and they are badly hit by injury. Ger Millerick was one of the better performers the last day and he's out but the man he replaced, Niall O'Leary, who had been playing quite well at corner back, is back. Rob Downey has been played when he didn't look fit and didn't line out against Waterford but is named this weekend. On the last trip to the Gaelic Grounds, he was switched with Ciarán Joyce, who was detailed to pick up Cian Lynch – except he didn't. Playing loose at centre back allowed Lynch to pull the strings, which he did to mesmerising effect. Opponents, like fans, are often mesmerised by Limerick's Cian Lynch. Photograph: Tom Maher/Inpho What happens this time? I said from the start that John Kiely's biggest concern would be to get all his players fit and on the field and that's what has happened. Lynch is a barometer of their wellbeing and his form has been back to its best. In general, they look better than last year. Adam English has become an exceptional midfielder. Cathal O'Neill, one of their best players a year ago, is coming back. Kyle Hayes has strengthened centre back and Barry Nash, who didn't play in last year's semi-final, has slotted in outstandingly well on the left wing. Cork's main platform in the wins over Limerick last year was quick puck-outs and getting the half backs turned. Séamus Harnedy and Declan Dalton caused huge disruption but the last day, Dalton had to go off injured and there's still no sign of him. Harnedy came on and improved things a bit but in the first half against the elements, the likes of Hayes were just unmanageable with the ball in the air, held up in a gusting wind. It really is hard to see anything apart from a Limerick win. Galway also have ground to make up at Croke Park but they certainly have improved since losing in Kilkenny and have found more of a team dynamic. They've become more balanced. There was a lot of experimentation during the league but Micheál Donoghue has put together a team with a lot of the experienced players slotted into place. Their half-back line has become pretty solid. Cianan Fahey, Gavin Lee and TJ Brennan have become quite forceful in that zone. Cathal Mannion has been scoring freely and Conor Whelan, playing a deeper role, and Brian Concannon are picking up form nicely. I felt Dublin would beat them but they were comfortable, scored fluently and never looked in trouble. Kilkenny have been playing quietly off-Broadway, as I've said before. They lost to Wexford in what has nearly become an annual event but they were safely in the final by then. I don't really subscribe to the idea that they are dark horses for the All-Ireland but we'll learn more about them this weekend because it won't surprise me if Galway bring their best display of the year to date. If they do, it will be a significant test. The easy call is Kilkenny but they're still depending on TJ Reid, and Eoin Cody is out with a hamstring injury. Martin Keoghan and John Donnelly have stepped up in recent times and, under Derek Lyng, they always add up to the sum of their parts and often exceed it, but I'm still not convinced. On a final point, we have just had the June bank holiday but there are only seven matches left in the entire championship for the rest of the summer. I know the die has been cast on this but to me, it makes no sense whatsoever.

Waterford captain reveals ‘important' message the squad received following LGFA Munster final loss
Waterford captain reveals ‘important' message the squad received following LGFA Munster final loss

The Irish Sun

time20 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

Waterford captain reveals ‘important' message the squad received following LGFA Munster final loss

DEVELOPING the staying power required to go the distance will be essential if Waterford are to maintain their upward trajectory. That is the assessment of skipper Emma Murray ahead of this weekend's TG4 All-Ireland Ladies SFC opener against Dublin. Advertisement Murray and her team-mates were on course to deliver Waterford's first Munster title in 23 years in the recent final against The Déise held a 0-10 to 0-6 lead entering the closing stages but had their hearts broken as Danielle O'Leary and Mary O'Connell netted late goals. Murray told SunSport: 'Obviously you're a bit raw after losing a game like that when you know you've left a bit of silverware behind you. "But you eventually see positives from the performance over 40, 50 minutes. Advertisement Read more on the GAA 'We'll certainly have to take huge learnings from it and bring them into our All-Ireland campaign. I suppose it's about closing out games. "The momentum shifted to Kerry in that last ten minutes and we struggled to get it back. 'The key message within the panel is the importance of making sure you're performing for 60-plus minutes. "The game isn't over until that whistle goes. You have to sustain your performance until you get there.' Advertisement Most read in GAA Football Comment Despite that disappointment, Waterford are a team on the rise. Wins over Mayo, Tyrone, Kildare and defending champions Armagh helped Tomás Mac an tSaoir's side to a third-place finish in NFL Division 1. Tipperary GAA star 'had to do live apology on RTE' the day after cursing during All-Ireland interview - They also advanced to the provincial decider by getting the better of a Cork team who eliminated them from Brendan Martin Cup contention last year with a ten-point win at the quarter-final stage. Murray acknowledged: 'We finished fourth in Munster last year so getting to a Munster final was huge progress for us. Advertisement 'For there to only be two points in it against Kerry, and in the round-robin series it was only a point. "Competing like that with the All-Ireland champions is absolutely where we want to be.' 1 It's a big campaign ahead for Waterford who have Leitrim and Dublin in the group stages

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store