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Sligo hurling manager Stephen Shiel disappointed as side bow out of Nickey Rackard

Sligo hurling manager Stephen Shiel disappointed as side bow out of Nickey Rackard

Nickey Rackard Cup
Sligo manager Stephen Shiel said he was clearly disappointed by the result and his side knew that Armagh were a big, physical team.

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Tony McEntee stepped down as manager of the Sligo footballers following their defeat to Fermanagh in the Tailteann Cup quarter-finals on Saturday. The Armagh man had spent five seasons at the helm. 'My time as Sligo manager has come to an end," McEntee told reporters after the game. 'We have had five years now at this stage and my trainer Joe Keane has seven years in there so I think it is time for a bit of freshness in the camp. It has been a wonderful five years.' McEntee said the "darkest days" were those around the death of Red Óg Murphy, "but every other day is a good day". He took charge of the county on 58 occasions, winning 34 games. "There must be at least 75 - 80 players who have come through that changing room, that we've looked at and played at different stages throughout those five years," he said. "I've grown with a lot of those players. There's a chap at home, he no longer plays football, but he used to say 'I love the bones of ya' and that's the case with these players - I love the bones of them."

Pádraic Joyce: Damien Comer unlikely to be fit for Galway's preliminary quarter-final
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Pádraic Joyce says Damien Comer is unlikely to be available for Galway's All-Ireland SFC preliminary quarter-final next weekend as a result of the knock that kept him out of their victory over Armagh on Saturday. Joyce had originally named Comer in the matchday panel submitted ahead of this weekend's crucial final group clash but shortly before throw-in at Kingspan Breffni Park against the reigning All-Ireland champions, news filtered through that Comer would not ultimately be involved. Galway did eventually edge past Armagh, who were already assured of a place in the last-eight to book their own place in the championship knockout stages but manager Joyce all but ruled Comer out of contention for the Tribesmen's preliminary quarter-final due to injury sustained in midweek. "Poor old Damien again, he's picked up a nick there on Thursday night in training and just wasn't fit to come today," he told RTÉ Sport. "Probably won't be available either next week as well I'd say." On the much-needed win over Armagh, Joyce was particularly pleased with how his side finished the game, capped by Shane Walsh's last-gasp free. "I thought it was really good of the lads. We got caught in the last two games in the last play whereas we learned the lesson from it this time," he said. "We got our kickout to Céin Darcy and it was a great catch and Paul (Conroy) won the free eventually and then Shane (Walsh) was a brilliant kick. "It was a special kick from Shane. They're hard kicks, the ones that are right in front of the goal. If there's a bit of an angle, it's not too bad. "It was probably three or four yards to the right of the right post. But super kick. He was kicking well all day in fairness so great to get out of it." However, the manager still feels his side have gears to go up if they are to get back into another All-Ireland final, with the opposition in the next round not determined until the draw is made on Monday. "I still think we're not where we should be to be honest. We're struggling to get over the line to win games at times," said Joyce. "But I'm happy to still be in the last 12. Obviously, whoever gets us (in the preliminary quarter-final round) won't want to get us because of where we're coming from. "But we'll just have to keep going, get the head down. The final is on in six weeks, so our aim is to still be there. But we've three tough games to get over the line to get there." Meanwhile, Armagh counterpart Kieran McGeeney remained upbeat after what he termed a "cracking game" between both teams in Cavan. The Sam Maguire holders topping their group means they skip the preliminary quarter-finals and have a two-week cushion before they return to action in the last-eight. And McGeeney feels his team have plenty to work on despite decent form. "We'd be disappointed that we gave the ball away so much, (Galway) upped the aggression stakes and the frees seemed to fall their way then and we just got caught doing silly stuff," he said. "We got ourselves back in a good position again and gave it away, so probably a bit annoying, and then with the (Walsh) free at the end, so loads to work on."

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