
Belief the big difference as Meath come from nowhere to make semi-final
The sweat is still colonising Robbie Brennan's forehead as he sits and surveys Meath's All-Ireland quarter-final victory over Galway. Hands up anyone who saw that coming at the start of this most unpredictable and historic of Championships.
Brennan started his summation by describing all this as 'part of the plan', and reiterating the one training sessions and one game at a time mantra that has seen them take down the Dubs and Kerry and make a first All-Ireland semi since 2009.
But these things don't just happen.
Ruari Kinsella is sat beside the boss. The strain of the previous 70-plus minutes is hardly visible. He looks good to go again there and then as he answers the question everyone should be asking: where did youse boys come from?
'The main thing is belief, really,' said the Dunshaughlin man. 'The boys who've come in have just instilled that belief into us. I feel like over the years we've had the quality, we've had the players, but the belief just wasn't there.
'We didn't have the confidence to think, 'oh, yeah, we can beat these,' whereas this year it's a completely different story. We've gone into every game thinking, 'yeah, why can't we win this game?' So, yeah, we've showed that so far in the Championship this year.
'Hopefully we keep that going.' Well, we'd be mad to bet against it now, wouldn't we? No Leinster county other than Dublin has contested an All-Ireland decider since Meath were beaten by Galway back in 2001. This is the sort of territory we have stumbled into it now.
Brennan vowed to keep the province's flag flying after a game backdropped by the sights and sounds of Meath fans reclaiming Hill 16 from their city brethren after so much pain and disappointment in the last two decades.
The funny thing is that it was their big loss this year – the Leinster final shortfall against Louth – that seems to have fuelled the desire and the belief that saw them withstand a seismic comeback from Galway late in this second-half.
Jack Glynn of Galway in action against Meath players, left to right, Seán Coffey, Keith Curtis, and Eoghan Frayne. Picture: Daire Brennan/Sportsfile
'I think the Leinster final probably stood to us,' Brennan explained. 'We said in that dressing room that we'd be back here this year. No matter what we had to do with it, we'd get back here. And we knew then we were back and this was our opportunity.
'Like, you know, we're probably lucky. Is that what everyone says? We keep getting lucky. We were lucky against Dublin. We were lucky against Kerry. And I guess we were lucky again today. So, we'll see who we get in the semi now. And we'll have to be lucky again, I suppose.' Some individuals need highlighting.
Meath conceded 2-3 in the few short minutes where Sean Rafferty was on the sideline. His departure was, according to Brennan, due to a touch of miscommunication. His return to the fray coincided with a settling of the ship after that Galway salvo.
'Listen, in my opinion, he's the best full-back in the country. I hear other managers bigging up their players for all-stars. If he isn't an All-Star, and if [Kinsella] isn't an All-Star, whoever picks him is not doing their job' There were other heroes, but we'll go with just one more: Jordan Morris. All bar a point of his 1-6 came in that second-half when a game that started at a crawl burst into life. The Kingscourt man was simply electric.
'As I keep saying, there's a touch of genius about Jordan, and I've referenced before the likes of Walshie [Shane Walsh], who was out there, and maybe Paul Mannion having worked with these kind of guys. But Jordan is absolutely in that category.
'He is impossible to mark at times, literally impossible to mark, and other times you can have a little turnover, but they're what we call creative turnovers, aren't they? You're allowed to have them when you're that type of player.'
Nothing won yet, but the good times are back in Meath, just two years after winning the Tailteann Cup under Colm O'Rourke. Brennan beamed when he thought of the garda escort down the Navan Road and the cars beeping and fans cheering.
'So, look, if anyone's holidays booked, please, God, just change them, and we'll see you in a couple of weeks with a bit of luck.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Times
12 minutes ago
- Irish Times
Dessie Farrell played a diminishing hand well, but Dublin will continue to struggle at the top table
It was probably surprising because it was so straightforward. After Dublin's defeat on Saturday, manager Dessie Farrell dropped the curtain on six years of management, the culmination, as he put it, of nearly 40 years of involvement with his county teams. There was no, 'this isn't the time, lads' equivocation. He had already let it be known to county officials that this year would be his last. 'The time has come,' he said. 'It has come to a natural end. It has been one of the greatest privileges in my life to be involved with this group and the other group of senior teams over the last number of years. Some special people involved, not just players, but in the backroom team, the coaches, and not just at senior level, but in my own career as a coach.' His tenure in charge of Dublin was immensely challenging: the ultimate 'follow that' task of taking over from the management of Jim Gavin, which had landed six All-Irelands in seven years, including the historic and no longer mythical five-in-a-row. READ MORE Farrell must have known that extending that sequence to six would be a thankless achievement. He would either have won Sam Maguire with someone else's team or squandered the opportunity. He became the third guiding figure in Dublin's resurgent decade after the foundational Pat Gilroy and the unprecedented gold rush of the Jim Gavin years. Curiously, Farrell is actually the oldest of the three, who were all born in 1971 but who took charge in reverse chronological order, having been born in November, July and June respectively. Farrell's achievements at under-age made him an obvious candidate to take on the senior job. Not only was in charge for the county's most recent All-Irelands at minor (2012) and under-21 (2017) – so far, nothing at under-20 – but his work with the 1993 cohort gave him a critical role in developing players who would have key roles in the successes of the 2010s. So, the idea that he found himself in charge of an All-Ireland winning machine needs to be tempered by reflecting on where the players came from. Nobody could have foreseen the weird circumstances in which that All-Ireland was won: an empty Croke Park in the Covid-ridden winter championship of 2020. This was still going to be a transitional process – and not a rewarding one, as a gifted generation took its leave on an incrementally annual basis. Farrell shouldered the burden, introducing new players to replenish the team but given the impossibility of replacing the departing cohort, he was effectively managing decline. He did the state some service, performing the last squeeze on a generation he had helped to produce, the 1993s, and winning an All-Ireland as prized as any, in 2023, in a pure enactment of Paradise Regained. In that he was helped by the re-commitment of Paul Mannion and Jack McCaffrey, who he had lost sequentially in 2020 and '21. Dublin's Jack McCaffrey and Paul Mannion take in the celebrations after winning the All-Ireland title in 2018. Photograph: Ryan Byrne/Inpho In a characteristically deadpan interview on Dubs TV after a county championship match in September 2022, Farrell announced – towards the end – that the pair had indicated an intention to rejoin the panel. Months later, Stephen Cluxton also returned. It was a rare splash of good fortune in his management and 2023 became a crusade to win back the All-Ireland and to get captain James McCarthy up the steps of the Hogan to accept Sam Maguire. In filmic parlance, it was getting the old gang together for one last job. Delivering hugely anticipated All-Ireland titles is not easily done and comes with intense pressure but Farrell managed to do it twice. In the down years of 2021 and '22, the team lost focus. The notorious Covid breach in that first year didn't help and resulted in a pre-emptive 12-week suspension handed down by Dublin GAA. There was a strong sense that Farrell was literally taking one for the team, even allowing for the GAA policy of penalising managers if teams broke public health rules to train collectively. One recurring misfortune was the fitness of Con O'Callaghan, joint-captain of the 2017 under-21 champions and later senior captain but always the torch bearer for the youngest generation feeding into the team. Had he not been injured in 2022, might a one-point defeat by Kerry in that year's All-Ireland semi-final have been overturned? Dessie Farrell was unlucky to lose Con O'Callaghan through injury at vital times. Photograph: Tom Maher/Inpho This year was always going to be challenging for Dublin. It started promisingly with an All-Ireland club title for Cuala in January and the excitement of the new FRC rules – an ambient irony with Farrell facing his taxing final season, as Hosannas rang out for his predecessor as the saviour of football. Last year the team ran out of steam in the All-Ireland quarter-finals, losing a championship match to Galway for the first time in 90 years. Farrell then had the reverse experience of 2022, as Mannion and McCaffrey ended their intercounty careers, as did two of the record-holding nine-time All-Ireland medallists, James McCarthy and Michael Fitzsimons, albeit at an age when they owed Dublin nothing. There was also the fifth loss of Brian Fenton, another of the '93s and still more than young enough to continue but he had put in an intense 10 years, not losing a championship match until the seventh season of his career and winning seven All-Irelands, six All Stars and two FOTY awards. Farrell had to process that scale of departure – the oldest of the lot, the 43-year-old Cluxton, has remained but the odds must be on him following the manager and removing another chunk of intellectual capital from the dressingroom. 'I know there's challenges with underage in the county at the minute or over the last number of years,' said Farrell on Saturday, 'but there's a great crop after coming in there and I'd be very optimistic for how they go about their business in the seasons ahead.' Dublin's Jim Gavin and Stephen Cluxton celebrate winning the All-Ireland title in 2019 after a replay against Kerry. Photograph: Tom Honan Arguably, the supply line came to a halt in 2019 and it was noted at the time that Jim Gavin, who had a terrific knack of adding a new player every year to freshen up the team and none of his anointed choices failed to become regular first-teamers, had been unable that year to find an up-and-coming footballer to supplement the side. Under-age titles aren't everything and a swathe of players from the last decade did not have those medals but those who followed had been part of both Gavin's and Farrell's winners at under-21 and minor. The next team from the capital to lift Sam Maguire may well feature nobody with an All-Ireland medal. Dubliners haven't been unreasonable about all of this. There's a current generation in their 20s who have seen the county contest nine All-Ireland finals and win all of them. To have watched the previous nine, a follower would have to have been in their 80s. It has been a joyous decade and a half but now is the time for hard work to maintain the tradition.


RTÉ News
16 minutes ago
- RTÉ News
All-Ireland Football Championship semi-final details confirmed by GAA
Fixture details for the All-Ireland Football Championship semi-finals have been confirmed by the GAA, with Kerry v Tyrone to take place after the Tailteann Cup final. The semi-final with throw-in at 5pm on Saturday 12 July with the Kildare v Limerick match beginning at 2.30pm. The second semi is scheduled for Sunday 13 July at 4pm as Donegal meet Meath in Croke Park. The All-Ireland Junior Championship final will be at 2.30pm as a curtain-raiser. New York, Warwickshire, London and Kilkenny are vying for a place in the decider. The two All-Ireland football semi-finals and the Tailteann Cup clash will be live on RTÉ2, RTÉ Player and RTE Radio 1. All-Ireland Senior Football Championship semi-final fixtures: Saturday 12 July Tyrone v Kerry, Croke Park, 5pm. Sunday 13 July Meath v Donegal, Croke Park, 4pm. Watch the All-Ireland Camogie Championship quarter-finals with RTÉ Sport. Waterford v Clare on Saturday from 2.15pm on RTÉ2 and RTÉ Player and Tipperary v Kilkenny on Sunday from 1.15pm on RTÉ2 and RTÉ Player Watch the All-Ireland Hurling Championship semi-finals with RTÉ Sport. Cork v Dublin on Saturday from 4.30pm on RTÉ2 and RTÉ Player and Kilkenny v Tipperary on Sunday from 3.30pm on RTÉ2 and RTÉ Player. Follow live blogs on and the RTÉ News app. Listen to commentaries on RTÉ Radio 1. Watch highlights on The Sunday Game at 10.15pm on RTÉ2 and RTÉ Player


The Irish Sun
25 minutes ago
- The Irish Sun
Millwall slapped with fine and put on ‘extended action plan' after homophobic chants towards Ben Chilwell
MILLWALL have been fined £15,000 by the FA after their fans made homophobic chants towards Chelsea star Ben Chilwell. Lions supporters were heard shouting a homophobic slur during their FA Cup clash at Selhurst Park in March while the left-back was on loan at 3 Chilwell was at the receiving end of homophobic chants from Millwall fans Credit: Getty 3 Millwall fans were slammed by the FA for their behaviour Credit: Getty 3 A section of Millwall fans during the game Credit: Rex FA big-wigs have also put the Championship club on an 'extended action plan' which requires them to do more work to eradicate all forms of discrimination. The chants were directed at Chilwell in the fifth and 20th minutes of a fiery fifth-round tie that Palace ran out 3-1 winners. Matata needed 10 minutes of treatment before being taken to hospital with a nasty gash on his head that required 25 stitches. READ MORE FOOTBALL NEWS The While the South London club were condemned by the FA for their fans' behaviour at Selhurst Park, they did praise and accept their efforts in tackling discrimination. In a written statement the FA said the Lions 'exceed the requirements' set out for clubs to be anti-discriminatory and said they should be encouraged to continue this work. The FA's extended action plan for Millwall covers communication ahead of games about their stance on anti-discrimination, sending their own stewards to high-risk games and ensuring they have an equality, diversity and inclusion committee. Most read in Football BEST ONLINE CASINOS - TOP SITES IN THE UK They also want the Lions to put together an article each month to summarise their community and EDI work. A Lions spokesman said: 'Millwall FC condemns all forms of discrimination and acknowledges the FA's decision. Eberechi Eze to Tottenham LATEST | Transfers Exposed 'The club will continue to do all it can to tackle discriminatory abuse through its equality steering committee and dedicated anti-discrimination campaign All 'Wall. 'The term 'Chelsea rent boy' is officially recognised as a homophobic slur and is condemned by the club. 'Since January 2022 the chant has been classified as a prosecutable offence by the Crown Prosecution Service for anyone found using it. Anyone identified in doing so will be banned. 'The club reaffirms its zero-tolerance policy towards all forms of discrimination. Such behaviour has no place in society and is entirely at odds with the values Millwall stands for.