
‘We can't make any decisions until we see the referee's report' – Cork boss Pat Ryan considers appealing Shane Barrett's red card
Cork hurling manager Pat Ryan will weigh up the contents of the referee's report before assessing whether to appeal the red card dished out to All-Star attacker Shane Barrett in last Sunday's Munster SHC draw against Clare.

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The 42
6 hours ago
- The 42
Sligo and Wexford win in Tailteann Cup, Mayo reach All-Ireland MFC semi-final
Tailteann Cup Preliminary quarter-finals Wexford 5-23 Antrim 2-21 Sligo 1-27 Carlow 2-19 Electric Ireland All-Ireland minor football championship Quarter-finals Mayo 3-13 Offaly 4-7 *** Advertisement WEXFORD AND SLIGO booked the last two spots in the quarter-finals of the Tailteann Cup today with their preliminary quarter-final victories over Antrim and Carlow respectively. Wexford saw off Antrim at home by 11 points as they hit five goals with Seán Nolan (2), Ben Brosnan, Mark Rossiter, and Robbie Brooks all raising green flags. Darragh Brooks scored 0-6 for the winners, while Dominic McEnhill (1-5), Michael Byrne (0-6), Ryan McQuillan (0-5) and Patrick Finnegan (1-0) chipped in for Antrim. Sligo prevailed by five points against Carlow in Tubbercurry, with captain Niall Murphy striking 0-8 while Alan McLoughlin scored their only goal. Paddy McDonnell found the net twice for Carlow. The draw will take place tomorrow on RTÉ Radio 1 on Morning Ireland after the news at 8.30am. In Bowl 1 will be the group stage winners – Kildare, Limerick, Fermanagh, Wicklow. In Bowl 2 will be this weekend's victors – Sligo, Westmeath, Wexford and Offaly. Fixture details will be finalised by the GAA's CCCC later tomorrow and the games will take place next weekend 14-15 June. Fixtures that can't happen due to repeat pairings are Kildare v Sligo, Limerick v Westmeath, Fermanagh v Wexford, and Wicklow v Offaly. The last of the All-Ireland minor football quarter-finals took place today with Mayo defeating Offaly 3-13 to 4-7. Conor Hession, Dara Flanagan, and Conor Coghill netted for the winners, who were ahead 3-7 to 1-4 at half-time. Tony Furey, Ruairí Woods, Dylan Dunne, and Cian McNamee grabbed the goals for Offaly.


The Irish Sun
6 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
Brian Dowling leads Kildare to Joe McDonagh Cup glory against Laois after questioning his own ability
BRIAN DOWLING said he questioned his own ability to manage Kildare at the start of this season's Joe McDonagh Cup. Now he's celebrating his greatest achievement in management after winning the competition and getting Kildare back into the Leinster SHC. 2 The Kildare team celebrate after they claimed their first ever Joe McDonagh Cup against Laois on Sunday 2 Kildare manager Brian Dowling admitted he questioned his own ability at the start of the 2025 campaign The Lilywhites produced a stunning second-half performance to see off favourites Laois and capture a first ever Joe McDonagh Cup title. Sub Jack Travers and Jack Sheridan grabbed the goals while free-taker David Qualter finished with 0-13. It was a giant collective effort from a team that appeared noticeably fitter as the game wore on. Cian Boran stood tall at the centre of a brilliant defensive effort. Kildare's immediate reward for the landmark win is an All-Ireland preliminary quarter-final clash with Dublin next weekend. read more on gaa And they will spend the winter months preparing to return to the Leinster SHC after a 22-year absence. All of which seemed highly unlikely after Kildare's Round 1 defeat to Kerry only seven weeks ago. That was the county's ninth defeat in the McDonagh Cup from nine games across three different campaigns. Kerry ended up being relegated while Kildare went on to win the title though a few 'home truths' needed to be dished out first. Most read in GAA Hurling Dowling, who previously managed Kilkenny to two All-Ireland camogie titles, said: "It's incredible, I can't describe the dressing-room after that Kerry match. "I've been in a lot of dressing-rooms down the years, losing All-Ireland finals and stuff, but that honestly was one of the worst I've ever been in. RTE GAA pundits argue over who started halftime row as Cork eventually topple Limerick in Munster epic final "I didn't know what to say to the lads. It was hard to say anything. I questioned my own ability as a manager, you know, where do you go? What do you do? "We actually met the lads on the Tuesday night and we did no video analysis, like we normally would. We just had a hard chat. "We told a few home truths between ourselves, as players and management. Then we just went back at it. "We actually trained hard afterwards that night and it was the best thing that ever happened." Five wins later - including two against 2024 runners-up Laois - Kildare have achieved one of the greatest triumphs in the county's hurling history. They were actually fortunate to be level with Laois at half-time, 0-11 to 0-11, considering all the point attempts that favourites Laois butchered. And when Ben Conroy bundled home a Laois goal seconds after the restart, leaving the 2024 runners-up three points ahead, and with momentum on their side, it all looked ominous. Kildare's response, just like that turnaround after the Kerry game, was truly impressive, outscoring Laois by 2-15 to 0-8 from there on to win by a 10-point margin. The Travers goal in the 60th minute summed up all that was good about Kildare on the day. Darragh Melville stripped a Laois defender of possession after a short puck-out and worked the ball across to Sheridan whose blocked shot was slammed home by Travers. Sheridan netted himself five minutes later, shrugging off a jersey pull as he darted by Laois defender Ryan Mullaney and shot low past Cathal Dunne. Only for goalkeeper Dunne's excellence earlier, it would have been three goals for Kildare. Dunne pulled off a brilliant double save to thwart firstly Cathal McCabe and then, somehow, Sheridan. Kildare sub Muiris Curtin punched the air in delight when he fired over in the 68th minute, sensing the job was done. Only once has a side coming from the Joe McDonagh Cup won an All-Ireland preliminary quarter-final - when Laois beat Dublin in 2019. But if Kildare can repeat this wholehearted performance in Newbridge next Saturday, they'll have a chance. Dowling said: "We'll do everything we can to be ready for it. But look, obviously six days is difficult. If you had two weeks that would be a lot better and would give lads a chance. "These lads are going to be very sore. There were a couple of them, I won't name names, but how they got on the pitch at all I don't know. "We really had to patch them up. We had serious injuries coming into this game but we got through it." Kildare 2-26 Laois 1-19 Kildare: P McKenna; R Hogan, R Boran, D O'Meara; P Dolan 0-1, C Boran, S Leacy 0-1; D Guerin, C McCabe; C Dowling, J Sheridan 1-4, D Qualter 0-13, 11f, 1 65; D Melville, J Burke 0-2, G Keegan 0-3. Subs: J Travers 1-1 for Dowling 59, M Curtin 0-1 for McCabe 64, C Kehoe for Melville 69, L O'Reilly for Dolan 69, O Lynam for Keegan 72. Laois: C Dunne; F C Fennell 0-1, J Walshe, C Comerford; P Delaney 0-2, 2f, L Cleere 0-1, D Conway; A Corby, J Keyes 0-2; P Purcell 0-2, T Keyes 0-6, 5f, D Dooley; M Dowling, J Quinlan, B Conroy 1-2. Subs: A Dunphy for T Keyes 54, P Dunne for Comerford 60, J Duggan 0-1 for Dowling 62, R Mullaney for Walsh 64, PJ Scully 0-2, 1f for Conroy 66.


Irish Examiner
6 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
Cathal Mannion left to plough lonely furrow for disappointing Galway
Cathal Mannion's scoring share stood at 31% coming into Croke Park. Significant, but not immediately suggesting an over-reliance. Skip ahead to the 59th minute of the Leinster final and Mannion found himself carrying an entire county on his back. With no Galway score from play across the preceding 37 minutes, his five frees were their sole, insufficient source of nourishment in the interim. Two of those frees he won himself. His was the sole name on the Galway scoresheet between the 17th and 59th minute. That's 42 minutes of a Leinster final where just one player is finding the target. Conor Whelan foraged and fashioned assists in the opening half, while there was the rare threatening flash from Kevin Cooney when fed early doors. But, on the whole, Galway from midfield up offered Mannion and nothing else. His 0-11 total was two greater than the 1-6 of the 14 other starters combined. Collective abjectness. 'In terms of the way we wanted to play, we just didn't from the start of the game,' said Micheál Donoghue, stating the blindingly obvious. 'They set up with maybe their six dropping off as a sweeper and we really struggled with that. When we pushed up and figured that out, then we started being a bit more dominant in our own half-back line. 'The reliance on Cathal, he showed how important he is again today to us. I think maybe in the first half, we were lorrying it from too far out and Huw Lawlor was dominant. 'The positives, and we have to take the positives out of it, are when we did get it going and working it through the lines, we were better.' Hurling for 11 minutes late on is hardly a positive. Within that, the switch of Cathal Mannion to permanent inside station, Gavin Lee to midfield, Seán Linnane to wing-back, and Cianan Fahy to centre-back might - and should - get a second runout in the All-Ireland quarter-final. A multitude of problems remain. There is no other half-forward ball-winner besides Whelan. Galway didn't win a long puckout until the 19th minute. 22 shots from play in 74 minutes is beyond unacceptable. Galway have not won a championship game at Croke Park since the 2020 Leinster semi-final. Their last nine trips delivered eight defeats and one draw. 'In the build-up, people are saying 'we're back, we're back' and that we have big opportunities. The disappointing thing is when you see what they did do for a 10-12 minute period, that's what we'll try and build on as we move forward,' Donoghue continued. 'The disappointment of today and I suppose the narrative will be that it's probably similar to previous years and previous teams. But look, we know what we have in the squad and we'll try and take the positives out of it as we move forward.' Tipp are their likely quarter-final opponents, as they were in 2020 and '23. Galway won both. 'Look, huge challenge again. We know it's going to be a big task but we still have full faith and trust in the group that we can bounce back.'