logo
Quillinan not buying Tyrone hex, lauds Ulster stuctures

Quillinan not buying Tyrone hex, lauds Ulster stuctures

Irish Examiner04-07-2025
Kerry minor manager Wayne Quillinan doesn't believe in a Tyrone underage hex on the Kingdom, but he does feel Ulster teams have an advantage due to their provincial structures.
Quillinan wants his young guns to approach Sunday's MFC final at St Conleth's Park (1:30pm) like any other game.
'There's always going to be pressure. There's pressure in club games. There's a bit more magnitude to this, but the way we're approaching it is to just play the game. It's another game. That's what it is.
'The occasion is for supporters, for families, for the public. We're trying to just talk to them, from a mindset thing, that it's another game. It's no different.
'We're not asking much more out of the lads than we would have for the Mayo game, the Cavan game, or all the way along, the five games that we played. We're not asking more, much more, out of them.
"Play the game that you've played all along, and try and just focus on what you need to do, your role within the team, and the job you're doing for the team.
'If you can focus on that role, and just play the game, because they'll always be nervous. I mean David Clifford was going out in Croke Park, and I'm sure he was going to be nervous.
'So we try and play it down, as much as you possibly can, and manage it as much as you possibly can. Try and get their energy to the spaces and the areas where they know and they're familiar with, rather than going into spaces where they're unfamiliar with.'
Asked about the indian sign Tyrone have had over Kerry at minor and U20 level over the past four or five years, Quillinan maintains that Kerry are disadvantaged by the system.
'Number one is I rate Tyrone extremely highly. They've been favourites to win the All-Ireland since day one. This whole thing with the northern teams and stuff, I don't buy into it at all. You got to look at it at minor level, and I'm just going to go with minor level, it's run the right way in my eyes.
"They're going in now to their 13th competitive game. We're going into our sixth game. So that amount of preparation — you're talking about nerves in championship games — they're way more adapted to playing championship games than we are.
"Now I'm not saying anything about it, that's just the way it is, we can't control that, and we just have to manage that.'
He likes the Ulster system 'It's just run in a really good way that there are opportunities given to their players, to be together, to get that championship feel. But there's also the development side of things.
"I have probably 10 guys there that haven't played championship football, because we have just six games to play. If we played for two years, we'd have the same amount of games as Tyrone would play."
It also affords Kerry plenty of opportunity to study their opposition, but that will be just a small part of the pre-match prep.
"My whole focus is 90% of what we do is going to be about ourselves.
"Obviously, you have to tactically delve into Tyrone and the way they play and matchups and all that, but that'll be 10% to 15% of our work. The rest is simply getting better at what we need to do, compacting the middle, breaks around the middle, and all that kind of stuff.
"That's our message to the lads. It's just another game. We're simply asking you to get 10% better than we were against Mayo in key areas. I think we don't look at the outcome. We don't look at the winning or losing. We kind of look at the process.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Brian O'Driscoll's verdict on Johnny Sexton missing the Women's Rugby World Cup
Brian O'Driscoll's verdict on Johnny Sexton missing the Women's Rugby World Cup

Irish Daily Mirror

time21 minutes ago

  • Irish Daily Mirror

Brian O'Driscoll's verdict on Johnny Sexton missing the Women's Rugby World Cup

Brian O'Driscoll insists it was the right move for Johnny Sexton not to link up with Ireland for the Women's Rugby World Cup. In April, Sexton agreed to come on board with the IRFU in a full-time coaching capacity from August 1 in an expanded role that would involve working with the national men's and women's teams up to senior level. The Dubliner was part of Andy Farrell's British and Irish Lions backroom team for the successful Australia tour and it has been questioned why the former Leinster and Ireland great won't be in England with Scott Bemand's staff to pass on his expertise at the finals. Ireland will get their bid underway in their first group stage game against Japan at Franklin's Gardens in Northampton on Sunday. "I think he's probably still finding his feet and trying to work out where he can add value," said Sexton's ex-colleague O'Driscoll. Brian O'Driscoll and Lynne Cantwell have teamed up to celebrate Defender as Principal Partner for the Women's Rugby World Cup 2025 "And the thing about him is his relationship with the coaching staff that we've seen. And so that is a huge component of his integration. "Listen, if he doesn't have a relationship with Scott, you can't force that. You need that trust level. You do, and you can't have that thrust upon them. That dynamic is all important." Bemand has said that ex-Ulster and Exeter No.10 Gareth Steenson will continue to take on the kicking coach duties for the finals, as Ireland chase a semi-final berth for the first time since 2013. O'Driscoll added: "Johnny knows he's got a lot to learn from a coaching point of view, but I'm sure he's taken a huge amount on board from his experience over the last couple of months with the Lions and that he'll be better for it. "And also he's finding out what type of coach he is going to be. I think he's probably got an idea, but it's about relationships, about connection, and that doesn't happen just overnight. "I think it's probably easier with players that he knows rather than coming into the unknown." Brian O'Driscoll and Lynne Cantwell have teamed up to celebrate Defender as Principal Partner for the Women's Rugby World Cup 2025

Munster GAA football seeding 'stinks' as more details of funding model emerge
Munster GAA football seeding 'stinks' as more details of funding model emerge

Irish Daily Mirror

timean hour ago

  • Irish Daily Mirror

Munster GAA football seeding 'stinks' as more details of funding model emerge

Colm Collins says the Munster Football Championship seeding decision 'stinks to high heavens.' Collins comments on Clare FM came as more details of the full funding mechanism attached to the seeding arrangement emerged. The Munster GAA decision to seed the draw based on the previous year's league placings has been widely criticised. Football Review Committee (FRC) member and former Clare boss Collins, who was in the role for a decade, is among those to hit out at the move. Munster GAA chiefs have denied that the move is financially motivated and say that any increase in gate receipts from the new arrangements will be split between Waterford, Tipperary, Clare and Limerick - and will have to be spent on football development. However, not only is the move being viewed as unfair on the lesser lights of Munster football, but the sequence of events has also been widely slammed. The seedings for the 2026 Munster Championship will be determined by final 2025 league placings, even though the 2026 league will have taken place in the meantime. This is to facilitate the GAA Championship draws, which take place in Autumn time to allow counties and clubs to plan their schedule for the following year. As things currently stand Kerry and Cork will be the seeded teams for 2026 and placed on opposite sides of the draw. Sources have indicated that far more than the initial €25,000 apiece promised to Waterford, Tipperary, Limerick and Clare to develop football in their counties will potentially be available. Gate receipts for the entire Munster Football Championship this year were in the region of €500,000, compared to between €8-9 million for the hurling equivalent. Some critics have argued that with Munster Hurling Championship gate receipts rising by €1.4 million in 2024, and likely to rise by well over €1 million in 2025, an additional chunk of that revenue should be ring-fenced for developing football. Any hike in income from next year's football series - potentially arising out of a Kerry/Cork Munster Final - is due to be split equally between Clare, Tipperary, Waterford and Limerick. This is miniscule compared to hurling gate receipts, but not insignificant. And it could see the €25,000 figure awarded to counties double, treble or even quadruple if there was a sellout Munster Final, which is most likely to be the case in Killarney. This year's Cork/Kerry Munster semi-final attracted 14,358 fans to Pairc Ui Chaoimh, with tickets priced at €20, while the Clare/Kerry Munster Final in Killarney was attended by 13,181. A Cork/Kerry final could well see that crowd double, and with ticket prices €30 for the final this year, that would see gate receipts soar by in the region of €250,000. This would mean Clare, Waterford, Limerick and Tipperary each receiving over €60,000 when the additional revenue is split. Throw in the initial €25,000 and the figure would rise to €85,000. Obviously this is dependent on a Cork/Kerry Munster Final and a big crowd showing up. Munster chiefs have also moved to allay fears that the additional revenue boost would be hoovered up by hurling, with the game stronger in all four counties. A fully costed plan on how the money will be spent on football will have to be presented to the Munster Council before the money can be drawn down. It is likely to include funding for schools amalgamations to enter at higher grades in the Munster series and the potential employment of a Games Development Officer in the counties. Munster chiefs insist that the seeding move is not financially motivated and that they had to act in the face of an ailing football competition. There are fears in some quarters in the province that with declining attendances and a lack of interest that RTE may move away from screening the Munster Football Final in the next broadcast rights deal, damaging it further. The entire attendance figure for this year's Munster Football Championship was 33,491 as fans voted with their feet. This is less than attended the drawn Munster Final in Killarney's Fitzgerald Stadium back in 2015. The additional games in the All-Ireland round robin format and the lack of competitiveness in Munster in the face of a declining Cork, appear to have hit crowds and gate receipts. Cork haven't been in Division 1 of the National Football League for a decade now. They are currently in Division 2, with Clare and Limerick in Division 3 and Waterford and Tipperary in Division 4. The Rebels were relegated out of Division 1 in 2016, having lost the 2015 final to Dublin, and haven't been back since. Former Clare boss Colm Collins told Clare FM that it was 'hilarious' that Limerick didn't appear to know the full figure and that 'the real truth will eventually come out and I'm dying to hear it.' The Gaelic Players' Association (GPA) are already on the case and this is a decision that could yet be appealed and go all the way to the Disputes Resolution Authority (DRA). Limerick GAA have been heavily criticised for voting in favour of the proposal despite Jimmy Lee's management and their players being against the move. Treaty chiefs had initially requested that the vote be postponed, but when that was rejected they voted to give the new plan the green light. County Chairman Seamus McNamara has since acknowledged that they should have held a County Committee meeting on the matter before the vote took place. Limerick won this year's Division 4 title, earning promotion to Division 3, and were beaten in the Tailteann Cup Final. It's surprising that they would vote for the proposal. While it doesn't close the door for them to make the All-Ireland through the provincials, it makes it a lot more difficult, as they will now certainly have to beat Kerry or Cork, and more than likely both. The seeding move is significant as it makes it much more difficult for Clare, Tipperary, Limerick and Waterford to make a Munster Final. A Munster Final place guarantees not only one of the 16 All-Ireland spots on offer, but also a first or second seeding for the AAll-Ireland. By avoiding Cork and Kerry in Munster in recent years, Clare have benefitted from an imbalanced provincial system as they qualified for the All-Ireland group stages for three years in a row. In two of those seasons they were a Division 3 side. This year they got to the Munster Final by defeating Tipperary, before shipping an 11 point loss to Kerry. For Donegal or Derry to secure one of the top two seedings in Ulster this year, as it emerged, they would have had to beat each other, Monaghan and Down.

Kerry GAA chiefs increasingly confident Jack O'Connor will remain as manager
Kerry GAA chiefs increasingly confident Jack O'Connor will remain as manager

Irish Examiner

time2 hours ago

  • Irish Examiner

Kerry GAA chiefs increasingly confident Jack O'Connor will remain as manager

Kerry GAA decision-makers are becoming increasingly confident that Jack O'Connor will remain as the Kingdom's senior football manager. A county board meeting will take place next Tuesday with the expectation being that a new two-year term for O'Connor will be announced. It is also expected that the Dromid man's current management team of Cian O'Neill, Aodán Mac Gearailt, James Costello, and Pa McCarthy will remain in situ. That team was put together last September after Micheál Quirke and Diarmuid Murphy left in quick succession. Following Kerry's All-Ireland final victory over Donegal last month, O'Connor suggested that the fourth year of what is his third stint as Kerry manager would be his last. He described the win as a "last hurrah" after what had been a "tough" year, adding that he wasn't sure if he could put himself through it once again. However, he added that the immediate aftermath of an All-Ireland final was not the right time to make such a decision and that he would "leave it settle for a couple of weeks". The retired schoolteacher undoubtedly has the support of the Kerry players. David Clifford said this week that the panel would "love" for O'Connor to stay on as manager, adding that he is the "man for the job". Agreeing the deal would give O'Connor the opportunity to achieve a new feat in his time as Kerry manager: winning back-to-back All-Ireland titles. It's 21 years since he won his first against Mayo. Kerry lost the following year's decider to Tyrone before defeating Mayo again in 2006. O'Connor stepped away after that victory with Pat O'Shea leading Kerry to the 2007 title. O'Connor returned to win again in 2009 but Kerry's 2010 championship ended at the quarter-final stage with defeat to Down. He returned for his third spell ahead of the 2022 season, leading the Kingdom to victory over Galway in the final but they lost the 2023 decider to Dublin.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store