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21 stitches in Croke Park - and the curse of ironically cheering a 15-point beating for Kerry

21 stitches in Croke Park - and the curse of ironically cheering a 15-point beating for Kerry

The 4215 hours ago

JOHN MCDERMOTT CAN still hear the ironic cheers. Twenty-four years have passed but the sound remains locked in his memory, marring everything they achieved that day. He regrets that he didn't do something at the time. A gesture, a signal – anything to implore the fans to stop.
What should be a highlight of his football career is forever entangled with the roars of disrespect for what was otherwise a great Kerry team. It was a rare win for Meath and an even rarer day of poor form for the Kingdom, a world away from this weekend's final All-Ireland series meeting between the two counties.
Kerry's 15-point beating in an All-Ireland semi-final was humiliation enough. The jeering from Meath fans that came with it in Croke Park was needless, and it certainly wasn't appreciated by the team they were supposedly there to support.
In the final five minutes, McDermott, a two-time All-Ireland winner with Meath, turned to his teammate Trevor Giles. They both agreed that they should slip into neutral gear from here. No further trashing required. Their place in the 2001 All-Ireland final was assured. Not even Kerry, the reigning All-Ireland champions, could conjure a comeback from here.
But still, the jibes continued to pour down from the stands, inviting bad karma before the All-Ireland final against Galway. And karma never forgets an address.
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'If I had my time over again,' McDermott recalls, 'I would have got the ball, kicked it into the Hogan Stand and said, 'Stop that bloody rubbish.'
'It did us no good in the final.'
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Players contesting for a ball in the 2001 All-Ireland semi-final. INPHO INPHO
McDermott was supposed to be retired at this point. At 31, and with a decade of service banked, he felt it was time to make way for the younger pups. Three All-Stars along with his two Celtic Crosses felt sufficient at the time. But by June of 2001, reports of the midfielder's return were starting to circulate. He was back in the number nine shirt in time for their Leinster final victory over Dublin.
There were a few strides left in his system. The longing wouldn't go away either.
'Probably missed it,' McDermott explains about his retirement u-turn. 'The first year, you miss it terribly. And after that, not at all. I was still going well with the club. I thought I could contribute.'
Interestingly, both Meath and Kerry played in All-Ireland quarter-final replays that year.
Seán Boylan's side were fortunate to get a second bite against Westmeath after a bizarre drawn game which saw Meath concede three first-half goals. They were nine points down after 21 minutes. Ollie Murphy rescued the draw with a late goal and the replay produced a 2-10 to 0-11 win for Meath.
Kerry accounted for Dublin after a quarter-final odyssey in Thurles. The drawn clash is the one that is best remembered for its dramatic conclusion, and a beautifully struck sideline kick from Maurice Fitzgerald in the face of a testing wind, and the close attention of then-Dublin manager Tommy Carr.
Between them, Meath and Kerry had won the last two All-Ireland titles, but Kerry were hotly tipped to win this semi-final even without key defender Tomás Ó Sé who was ruled out through suspension.
'There weren't too many flat tyres,' as McDermott recalls of that Kerry team which was still packed with All-Ireland winners and generational talents across every line.
Séamus Moynihan was their resident full-back and standing just in front him in the six jersey was Éamonn Fitzmaurice. Darragh Ó Sé and Donal Daly were a powerful force at midfield while their forward line included Aodán Mac Gearailt, Dara Ó Cinnéide, Mike Frank Russell and Johnny Crowley.
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Páidí Ó Sé and Jack O'Connor at the 2001 All-Ireland semi-final. INPHO INPHO
Of course, the iconic Páidí Ó Sé was their manager while current Kerry boss Jack O'Connor was a selector at the time.
What puzzled McDermott about that Kerry team, though, was the omission of Maurice Fitzgerald. And even though he wasn't in the starting line-up, Meath still had a plan for his introduction.
'Probably the best forward in my generation, and he wasn't starting the game.
'Before the game, we said, 'He's going to come on. And nobody touch him. Don't shoulder him. Just shake his hand and say you're a big admirer of his.' Kill him with kindness.

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Shane Walsh the hero as Galway rise from the dead to stun Armagh and save summer
Shane Walsh the hero as Galway rise from the dead to stun Armagh and save summer

The Irish Sun

time39 minutes ago

  • The Irish Sun

Shane Walsh the hero as Galway rise from the dead to stun Armagh and save summer

COMETH THE hour, cometh Shane Walsh. 2 Shane Walsh starred for Galway in a classic clash on Saturday evening 2 Galway scored a last-gasp winner to beat the reigning All-Ireland champions The Tribes came back from the dead to stun Kieran McGeeney's men in Cavan - and rallied to steal third spot in the group of death despite missing TWO first half penalties. Second half goals from the superb John Maher and Rob Finnerty set them alight as McGeeney's men wilted coming the stretch - before Walsh's dramatic winning free after the hooter sealed it. Maher was sublime and led the charge, while Sean Fitzgerald had a game for the ages and totally nullified Armagh hitman Andrew Murnin. But Galway were hanging by a thread at the break. A disastrous opening half saw Matthew Tierney and Finnerty both miss from the spot as the Orchard ran riot. read more on gaa Armagh were already through to the last eight, but approached the game otherwise. 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Dublin dump Derry out of the championship with narrow win in Newry
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Irish Times

time42 minutes ago

  • Irish Times

Dublin dump Derry out of the championship with narrow win in Newry

All-Ireland SFC: Dublin 0-22 Derry 0-20 The Dublin and Derry players remained on the Páirc Esler pitch with supporters long after the final whistle of this All-Ireland SFC round-robin fixture. For Dublin, it was a case of job done. For Derry, it marked the end of the road. The sides served up a thrilling encounter in Newry but ultimately Dublin just had a little more class, a little more desire. Nobody exemplified that more than Ciarán Kilkenny. Just four weeks after delivering a masterclass against Galway, the Castleknock man heaved Dublin up on his shoulders on Saturday evening and carried them back to Croke Park next weekend. Peadar Ó Cofaigh Byrne shouldered some of that burden with Kilkenny, the Cuala midfielder producing his best ever performance in a Dublin jersey. The duo were immense on kick-outs, the ball seemingly drawn to them like a magnet to a fridge. 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However, he lined out from the start and came through the entire 70 minutes. 'You're never sure, you know, and we toyed with the idea maybe of holding him and keeping him for impact,' admitted Farrell on whether to start his captain. 'But the risk with a player who's been injured and keeping him is that you use a sub and then he goes down and you have to use another sub, so we said we'd go with Con from the start and we're just delighted he was able to get through the game. 'We weren't in a position to take him off and give him some time and rest at the end unfortunately but he got through it and seems to be out the other side of it which is great.' The first half was a titanic battle. Dublin tore through Derry in a whirlwind start that left the 12,342 in attendance fearing a one-sided affair. They led 0-4 to no score after only two minutes and 23 seconds of play. 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