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Kerry boss says Munster final display won't be good enough to beat Ulster champions in All-Ireland semi-final

Kerry boss says Munster final display won't be good enough to beat Ulster champions in All-Ireland semi-final

Tomás Ó Sé: 'It probably leaves a sour taste in your mouth how sloppy we actually got [towards the end] but I do take the point that we did very well for long periods of that game'
Kerryman
There were probably a range of emotions floating through Tomás Ó Sé's mind at Páirc Uí Chaoimh on Monday evening. Undoubtedly satisfaction was one of them, after his Kerry side lifted the Munster Under-20 football title for the third year of his three years in charge, and making it a fourth successive provincial title for the Kingdom.
At the same time, however, Kerry's fade-out in the last ten minutes or so, allowing Cork to turn a 15-point deficit into an eight-point defeat, certainly annoyed the An Ghaeltacht man. As did the sobering realisation that the All-Ireland semi-final will provide the ultimate gut-check in a fortnight.

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Evan Ferguson given reality check after Newcastle and Everton transfer links
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Evan Ferguson given reality check after Newcastle and Everton transfer links

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'There's a buzz around the county' - Joe McDonagh success and Kildare's hurling rise
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'There's a buzz around the county' - Joe McDonagh success and Kildare's hurling rise

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Bergin grew up hurling for Clough-Ballacolla in Laois, but life eventually brought him to Naas. An urban centre off the M7 motorway, its population is 26,180, as per the April 2022 census. The GAA club has almost 3,000 members and fields up to 100 teams in hurling, football, camogie and ladies football. Advertisement The Naas senior hurling team pictured in 2022. Ryan Byrne / INPHO Ryan Byrne / INPHO / INPHO But that hasn't always been the case. 'What the hell is going on in Naas?' was a question at one county board meeting years back as they struggled for numbers. Hurling would be viewed as the fourth sport in in the town behind Gaelic football, rugby and soccer, with the football/hurling split broadly 70/30 to this day. Similar to Kildare in its entirety. 'Blow ins' from hurling strongholds getting involved helped through Naas' hurling resurgence, while the nursery and juvenile section of the club came into sharp focus. 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