
Limerick captain Cillian Fahy hopes to make history in Tailteann Cup final against Kildare
The Treaty are gearing up for Saturday's Tailteann Cup final against Kildare at Croke Park — as they chase down their first Championship silverware since the 1896 All-Ireland.
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The Limerick captain will be hoping to make Limerick Gaelic football history at the weekend
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The Shannonsiders overcame Wicklow in the semi-final in Croke Park
The hurling lovers in the county are well used to glory after John Kiely's men won five All-Irelands between 2018 and 2023.
Their
Living in hurling's shadow has not been easy but their
Limerick took Westmeath's scalp to top their Tailteann Cup group and
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And Fahy hopes their latest run to Croker can spark a new love for the big ball in the county.
He said: 'It's massive. You go into the city and in parts of the city we could be No 4 behind hurling, rugby, soccer . . . I was only thinking as well the other day, the league final was probably the first time a lot of kids in Limerick actually saw us play.
'We don't have a big following, so to actually get on TV on the league final day was probably the first time a lot of people had seen us this year.
'So to get this far, to stay in the shop window as long as we have, to be on RTÉ two weeks ago and again this weekend is massive.
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'It's really important for children to see, kids to see that there's a competitive team in Limerick and that there is a chance to get up to Croke Park and there is a chance to be competing for silverware.'
Rathkeale, Newcastle-West and Adare have always been football strongholds. But the bulk of the county gives hurling most of the love.
Watch RTE pair Morrissey & Mullane lose their minds commentating on Tipperary wonder goal
Billy Lee, and men like him, have kept football's flames burning. In 2022, he led the county to promotion to Division 2 and a first Munster final appearance in 12 years.
His brother, Jimmy picked up the baton after a disastrous 2023 saw Ray Dempsey quit after five league games following a meeting with the players.
But the only way was up under the Newcastle-West native.
And Fahy has hailed Limerick's brothers in arms for their dedication to the Treaty cause.
He explained: 'Billy and Jimmy are two incredible individuals. Similar in ways but massively different in other ways.
'I suppose they're both similar in terms of they're well able to put an arm around a fella. They've great people skills. But they're both well able to, if you're not doing what you're supposed to be doing, to let you know about it.
'I suppose they're more similar than different. But look, they're two great characters and they're two massively important people in terms of Limerick football and the good things that have gone on in the last ten years.
'But, look, what Jimmy has done in terms of picking lads up off the ground last year and putting together, I suppose, a group this year that's able to compete . . . Massive credit has to go to him for that.'
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Fahy turns 30 later this month. Climbing the Hogan Stand steps again would be the ultimate present — for him and those who have kept Limerick football alive.
He said: 'Look, I suppose Limerick football is a small community. There are pockets all over the county that would be football.
'They have been there with us all the way throughout the league from January, all the way through and the years gone by.
'You see those people week in and week out at games. We might get a few extra now at the weekend. But look, that's the people who are doing it for us.'
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Sunday World
an hour ago
- Sunday World
Tipperary crowned All-Ireland hurling champions after stunning Cork
All-Ireland SHC final: Tipperary 3-27 Cork 1-18 If you were told there would be 15-point winners you could think back to Supervalu Páirc Ui Chaoimh and the Munster Championship in April when that was exactly the margin that Cork won by. Why wouldn't it happen again? Or something like it. If you thought at half-time, when Cork waltzed off on the back of a stunning Shane Barrett goal to give them a six-point lead, that the path ahead was forged for them to bridge a 20-year gap, you'd have been playing safe. It looked like the coronation was in hand. And yet Tipperary are All-Ireland hurling champions for a 29th time, not just champions but dominant champions. The very margin that they lost by in April they won by here, an amazing reversal that said everything about a second half in which there was only one team in it There will be plenty of recriminations in Cork as to how the wheels came off after taking such a dominant position in at half-time. But to score just two points really must register as a shocking collapse for a team of their talents. Tipperary boxed them into that corner however, forced them into mistakes they have rarely made all summer and left them with a bad case of Murphy's Law. Whatever could go wrong for them after the break, did go wrong. Tipp's backs dominated. Ronan Maher on Brian Hayes, Robert Doyle on Alan Connolly and Michael Breen on Patrick Horgan never gave an inch. Horgan came off in the 58th minute, replaced by Conor Lehane, and we may not see him again. Cork lost Eoin Downey to a red card, a second yellow, when he took down John McGrath in the 54th minute. McGrath got away with a nudge but already on a red card as they chased an Eoghan Connolly delivery, Downey was always vulnerable. Darragh McCarthy slotted the penalty for a 2-20 to 1-17 lead and really, there was no way back for Cork then. For McCarthy it was an amazing redemption story and a real act of faith from manager Liam Cahill after his second red card of the championship against Kilkenny in the semi-final. The young Toomevara man finished with 1-13 from 15 shots. A star has truly been born. McGrath had got the first Tipperary goal in the 46th minute when he hunted a rebound from a Jake Morris point attempt that came off an upright. Typical McGrath he looked in a time zone of his own as he botched the initial ground shot but picked up to calmly push a shot past Patrick Collins for Tipp to hit the front, 1-18 to 1-16. They had begun the second half with vigour and Cork only scored the first of their two points just after that, through Barrett. By then momentum was all with Tipp and every mistake possible was invented by a Cork team being drained of confidence. Willie Connors was a revelation throughout in a half-back role as Tipp opted to leave Bryan O'Mara as sweeper. It worked as they stemmed the tide of Cork goals that had been flowing all summer. Every battle was won by blue and gold as the second half progressed and their confidence soared. McGrath got a third Tipp goal, his second, on 60 minutes when he got the touch to a Connolly clearance to beat Collins and at 3-22 to 1-17 Tipp were in ecstasy. Cork's Shane Barrett in action against Craig Morgan of Tipperary during the GAA Hurling All-Ireland Senior Championship final at Croke Park. Photo: Piaras Ó Mídheach/Sportsfile Fittingly the game concluded with Noel McGrath, on the cusp of a fourth All-Ireland medal, swinging over a point from midfield. Early on both sides looked nervy and felt unsettled and by the 14th minute Tipperary had more wides (six) than points (four). Cork got ahead by 0-13 to 0-8 at one stage but Tipperary were persistent and kept their nerve when Cork looked to push on. Everything appeared to change in the closing few minutes before half-time however. Tipp looked to have closed the gap when Jason Forde ghosted into the Cork goalmouth to get a touch on a Connolly free that had held up in the air. But Forde was adjudged by referee Liam Gordon to have been in the square before the ball and the goal didn't stand. Cork looked a little jittery in this period, panicked almost as Declan Dalton scooped a wide from a good position after Maher had thwarted Hayes once more. John McGrath celebrates after scoring his second and Tipperary's third goal in their All-Ireland SHC final win. Photo: Daire Brennan/Sportsfile Fans react as Tipperary crowned All-Ireland hurling champions McCarthy clipped a point to reduce the gap to three after Breen had beaten Horgan at the other end. But then came what felt like a pivotal moment. With great control Rob Downey and Mark Coleman combined to put Barrett away and making a better angle for himself Barrett offloaded on his left to beat Rhys Shelly. Gordon and his officials at Davin End consulted but the goal stood and as they made their way off at half-time there were exchanges in the tunnel that didn't appear to come to anything. Few could have envisaged what was to come however. But then Tipp had picked themselves up off the floor last year after a championship campaign in which they could only muster a draw against Waterford and a somewhat fortunate one at that. For Cahill to be able to turn this around as he has done represents one of the great managerial achievements. And there'll be more to come. Afterwards there was a rich tribute paid from the Hogan Stand podium by Tipp captain Maher to the late Dillon Quirke, once a teammate of so many of these players, who died almost three years ago. Cork: Patrick Collins; Niall O'Leary (0-01), Eoin Downey, Sean O'Donoghue; Ciarán Joyce, Rob Downey (capt), Mark Coleman; Tim O'Mahony, Darragh Fitzgibbon (0-02); Diarmuid Healy (0-03), Shane Barrett (1-04), Declan Dalton (0-01f); Patrick Horgan (0-04, 3fs), Alan Connolly (0-01), Brian Hayes (0-01). Subs: Séamus Harnedy (0-01)for Dalton (44), Damien Cahalane for Healy (56), , Conor Lehane for Horgan (58), Shane Kingston for Connolly 64), Tommy O'Connell for O'Mahony (67). Tipperary: Rhys Shelly (0-01); Robert Doyle (0-01), Eoghan Connolly (0-01), Michael Breen; Craig Morgan, Ronan Maher (capt), Bryan O'Mara; Willie Connors (0-01), Conor Stakelum (0-01); Jake Morris (0-01), Andrew Ormond (0-01), Sam O'Farrell; Darragh McCarthy (1-13, 0-09fs), John McGrath (2-02), Jason Forde (0-02). Subs: Seamus Kennedy for O'Mara (50), Alan Tynan for Morgan (56), Noel McGrath for O'Farrell (60), Oisin O'Donoghue for Ormond (66), Darragh Stakelum for C Stakelum (66). Referee: Liam Gordon (Galway) More to follow….


Irish Examiner
2 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
From day one this season, Bevans saw something 'different' about Tipperary
Tipperary coach Mikey Bevans believes the effort which players made to become "more connected" this season was a key factor in their All-Ireland winning campaign. "People were asking about what was different this year," Bevans said on The Sunday Game. "I think the effort the players made to get more connected to each other, to help each other out; we got that sense the very day we went back training, that there was something different about them. They made a huge effort to bond with each other a lot better." That connection was exemplified by the support which Darragh McCarthy received after he was sent off against Cork in the Munster SHC and against Kilkenny in the All-Ireland semi-final. "Even after the first sending off against Cork, I'd say that the 40 men on the panel texted me to after," McCarthy said after the game, "meeting up with Jake Morris, he texted me the following morning, 'Here, we'll go for a coffee', just to get back around the lads again. They're all just so good. "What they've done for me there the last day again, they looked after me there. Oisín (O'Donoghue), one of my good friends, looked after me there as well with that goal. I have no words for him." Bevans said it wasn't just McCarthy who received that type of support. "Mikey Corcoran got a bad injury during the week and everybody had his back," he said, "just so many examples of it that they just came together off the pitch. When you're doing that off the pitch then it just transfers to the game you're playing." Bryan O'Mara playing as a sweeper was another key to Tipp's victory. Bevans thought his side played their own version of that plus one tune. "We were speaking about that during the week," said Bevans, "it's really just about numbers, whether you have an extra player at the back or whether you have a player running forward it doesn't really matter. It's just the way you play the game after that so we'd like to think we just put our own stamp on it, especially in the second half the players just kind of let it flow and came up with their own style of a plus one if you like. "They really just showed what good hurlers they are first of all, how connected they are to each other. They were supporting each other all the time which is a sign of a really good hurling team."


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