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Barry McCambridge hails Armagh's new killer instinct after epic Ulster semi-final win over Tyrone

Barry McCambridge hails Armagh's new killer instinct after epic Ulster semi-final win over Tyrone

The Irish Sun29-04-2025

ARMAGH defender Barry McCambridge hailed their new resolve after Saturday's e[ic Ulster semi-final against Tyrone.
The Orchard edged their ancient rivals
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Armagh saw off Tyrone in an Ulster semi-final classic last weekend
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Barry McCambridge hailed his team-mates for their newly found killer instinct
The Clann Éireann man, 25, made his SFC debut in 2021 and losing tight games haunted
They lost back to back provincial deciders against Donegal last summer on penalties, but went on to win the All-Ireland last July.
McCambridge admits they have a new belief, as they stood firm against Tyrone and Rory Grugan's free won it at the death.
And he hopes it can spark their first Ulster title since 2008 when they return to the home of Monaghan football for the showpiece next month.
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He said: 'In years gone by people would have said that 'Armagh probably wouldn't have won them games, they wouldn't have finished them out.'
'But recently we have been really calm on the ball, we have been able to get help, get ourselves over the line, get the right men on the ball, while in the past we might have rushed things.
'You want to win every game, and if you win every game, then you're going to win Ulster, so you never want to go out and lose.'
Young Footballer of the Year picked up where he left off last year and fired 0-4, but new boy Callum O'Neill starred in Saturday's win.
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He scored 0-3 from midfield after making his SFC debut against Antrim earlier this month, and is a late bloomer at 25.
Shoulder injuries hampered his progress before he finally got his chance, and McCambridge hailed his impact along with supersubs Stefan Campbell, Conor Turbitt and Jemar Hall.
Oisin McConville urges GAA to ditch big rule change mid-season after controversial ending to Championship clash
He said: 'Callum O'Neill was excellent in midfield. He won so many kick outs, got onto scores.
'Then we had the likes of Turbo (Conor Turbitt), Soupy (Stefan Campbell), Jemar (Hal) came off the bench, and brought a big impact and helped us over the line.
'Any Ulster championship game is going to be a battle, and with Tyrone, it was always going to happen.
'There's always a great rivalry there, we knew at half time when we were only a couple of points up, they had the wind, and they were going to have a big impact on the game, and they really pushed on, and went two points up.
'But it is a long game, and all that matters is that we managed to get over the line at the end, we kept a calm head, and got the right scores.'

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Conor Whelan urges Galway to take ‘massive opportunity' in Leinster final and bounce back from All-Ireland setbacks
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