
Skort survivor McCartan just happy everyone has choice
The issue was the subject of much controversy in the springtime. And this week Camogie President Brian Molloy urged the multitude of people who rowed in on the debate to come out and back up their words by supporting the women on the biggest stage of all.
The Down-now-Cork forward appreciates having the option to wear a skort or shorts.
'The vote was for choice,' she says. 'I think the skorts are just more comfortable, they flatter me a bit more and give me a bit more coverage. I like the look of them and the feel of them a bit more than shorts.
'The choice was brilliant and that is what players wanted. I don't like to be superstitious but that is a part of it as well. I've always worn a skort in matches. I wear shorts at training.'
The former Mourne star, who will come up against her old teammate and now Galway leading light Niamh Mallon in GAA headquarters, is daughter of 1994 All-Ireland football medallist Greg.
Read More
Watch: Meabh Cahalane carrying on the family tradition of captaining Cork
She relocated south four seasons ago on an UUJ placement to MTU and upon the completion of her studies is currently enjoying downtime by working at Sam's Coffee (Sam Ryan) in Togher.
She scored 1-1 in the 2023 All-Ireland decider against Waterford and following her second-half introduction against Galway in 2024, the impact sub fired a pair of crucial points.
Competition for places meant she wasn't in from the start, and even though her contribution was pivotal in a tight game, it's only natural the Castlewellan native felt it was a missed opportunity.
'Last year was hugely disappointing for me and that drove me when I came on in the final. I had a bit of grit between my teeth and I wanted to prove myself.
'I took that into the club season (won a county championship with St Finbarr's) and then Ger (Manley) rang me at the start of the year and told me he could see a place for me if I would be willing to put in the work.
'I did put in the work and I got a bit of an injury (a leg fracture in the league final) but I got myself back and thankfully he's given me the jersey back.
'But look, Orlaith Mullins came on and made such an impact against Waterford, I'll definitely be training hard right up to the final and see how I get on.'
She mentions coach Liam Cronin - now part of John Kiely's backroom team with the Limerick senior hurlers - as somebody who had a positive influence on her career after manager Matthew Twomey invited her to join the senior panel in 2022.
Two years previous she secured an All-Ireland intermediate medal with Down, but the move up the ranks would prove to be a formidable challenge.
'I never expected to be asked to join the Cork set-up. I was just testing how good I could get or how I fared out amongst the Cork players. What got me through it for the first two or three years was sort of ignorance. I was just throwing myself into training.
'Liam Cronin coached me properly and he taught me how to play. It wasn't just winning a ball and fling it over your shoulder, it was using your brain and movement and stuff. So I feel like I've come on coaching wise since I've moved down to Cork.'
As the game evolves, the physical exchanges do too and they have become more intense. As a result, her role, she believes, can be self-sacrificing at times.
'To be fair, I give it as good as I get so I can't complain about that,' she laughs. 'I throw my body anywhere and sometimes I would pick up a bit more of the niggles and stuff. I think I use it as my strength. It makes me different from the Amy O'Connors. Katrina Mackeys and the Orlaith Cahalanes that I can use a bit of physicality in a positive way. I suppose that is what management sees.
'It is a bit of a selfless one as well when you hold the ball up and you are not the one getting the scores or the fancy stuff. But I don't mind as long as I do the job for the team. Sometimes it is about getting the job done.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Examiner
17 minutes ago
- Irish Examiner
McMahon underlines handball dominance, McConnell shocks McCarthy
Martina McMahon once again underlined her dominance when she overcame Kilkenny's Amy Brennan to win the All-Ireland Ladies Senior Softball Singles title in Abbeylara, Co Longford. Limerick's McMahon has battled adversity in recent years – after a freak soccer injury, she required an L5 S1 spinal fusion on her back and she revealed after her win over Amy Brennan that she was playing with a broken finger. 'Handball, like anything in life, is kind of a mental game and I suppose if you believe you can do something, nine times out of 10 you'll achieve it,' she remarked. 'Not to take away from Amy's performance today but I actually broke a finger on my right hand during the week. I just think when you're inside these four walls and adrenaline is kicking in, you don't feel anything. You'll feel it afterwards but I just think for as long as I can play and as long as I can give back to the game of handball, I'll continue to do so.' McMahon produced another clinical performance in the decider, her powerful serves and relentless accuracy setting the tone as she raced into commanding leads in both games. Brennan (21), a member of the Kilkenny U23 camogie panel, showed her quality in spells but McMahon was always in control, winning 21-8, 21-11. The victory extends McMahon's unbeaten run, which stretches back to last August, during which time she has captured a string of major titles across handball's three main codes. 'Softball is our traditional game and my favourite code. Big kudos to Amy Brennan, she put it up to me there today. I have no doubt she will be back again.' While McMahon's success maintained her remarkable streak, the men's final produced a seismic shock. Meath's Gary McConnell in action at the GAA Handball All Ireland Championship final at Abbeylara, Longford. Photo by Stephen Marken Meath's Gary McConnell defeated 11-time champion Robbie McCarthy of Westmeath to get his hands on the Ducksy Walsh Cup for the first time. McConnell controlled the opening game with superb fly kills and tactical dominance, running out a 21-8 winner. McCarthy raced into a 6-0 lead in the second but McConnell fought back to edge ahead 8-7. At that point, the 38-year-old Mullingar man was forced to retire injured, an anti-climactic finish to what was an enjoyable contest. McCarthy, who had been unbeaten in softball since 2019, announced his retirement immediately afterwards, bringing the curtain down on one of the great careers in Irish handball history. For McConnell, though, this was a career-defining triumph. The 35-year-old Kells man has enjoyed major success in doubles but this was his maiden senior singles crown. 'A fella said to me a couple of years ago, and it really annoyed me, 'you're like Andy Murray's brother in tennis, you only win in doubles'. It really bugged me,' he revealed. 'I was wondering if everybody thought that and it was definitely one of the things that pushed me on this year.' He admitted he spent the early exchanges probing for weaknesses before asserting control. 'It was all about me, being in the right frame of mind. I'm a firm believer that if I show up on my game, nobody can touch me, especially in the big court,' he said.


RTÉ News
2 hours ago
- RTÉ News
Mullan strike not enough as Ireland beaten by England
England 2-1 Ireland It was defeat for Ireland at the hands of England in their final outing in Monchengladbach. Having gone a goal down thanks to a fortuitous Tess Howard goal, Ireland drew level soon after through a smart Katie Mullan finish. England however, scored the decisive goal early in the second half to run out as 2-1 victors. An even opening quarter saw both sides enjoy possession, with the majority of the battling occurring in midfield. Ireland, however, looked positive in possession as they attempted to unpick the English defence, but they produced answers. England were quick out of the blocks in quarter two, immediately attacking Ireland with Howard finding the net. Ireland responded well and almost pulled a goal back when Charlotte Beggs squeezed the ball through to Mikayla Power in the circle. Power's shot squeezed through England goalkeeper Sabbie Heesh but hit the body of Mullan on its way goalward. Ireland would get their goal just a few minutes later. Niamh Carey turned well at the top of the circle and found Mullan free in the circle with work still to do. She eliminated her opposite number and lifted the ball deftly over Heesh to level the scoring. 𝗜𝘁'𝘀 𝘁𝗵𝗲𝗿𝗲! Katie Mullan ducks, dives and delivers. Ireland are level... ENG 1-1 IRL #RTEhockey — RTÉ Sport (@RTEsport) August 17, 2025 England's Howard had the final chance of the half as she saw her reverse shot go wide of the post. The sides went into the half-time break locked at 1-1. A difficult start to the second half saw Ireland concede early following a rare defensive mistake which forced Holly Micklem to come out of her goal and make an early save, but Darcy Bourne was quickest to the loose ball to fire into an empty net. Once again, Ireland responded to going a goal down positively, immediately attacking the English circle with a chance going just wide of the back post. Ireland had a shot on goal soon after, with Emily Keely's shot bobbling just behind Sarah Torrans and the back post as England narrowly held onto their lead. Sarah Hawkshaw saw a chance also go wide as Ireland won the ball in the press inside the final three minutes of the third quarter. Ireland had to defend early in the final quarter. A card for Ellen Curran saw the side reduced to 10 with England using the player advantage to penetrate the Irish circle and test Micklem. England won their first penalty corner of the match soon after, Micklem saving the effort on goal. Kealy intercepted well with seven minutes remaining and drove up the pitch. She drew a foul from Elizabeth Neal resulting in a yellow card for the England player. Ireland substituted Micklem to increase their outfield player advantage as they looked to equalise. Ireland couldn't create the chance on goal to draw level and England emerged as 2-1 victors.


The Irish Sun
2 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
Brian O'Driscoll aims cheeky dig at fellow Ireland rugby legend during Oasis concert as sports stars flock to Croke Park
Another sports star left his duty as a TV pundit to make a flight to Dublin ROLL WITH IT Brian O'Driscoll aims cheeky dig at fellow Ireland rugby legend during Oasis concert as sports stars flock to Croke Park BRIAN O'DRISCOLL aimed a cheeky dig at a former Ireland rugby teammate during Oasis' concert at Croke Park. The ex-Ireland and Leinster centre was amongst the legions of fans who turned out to watch Noel and Liam Gallagher in Dublin. 2 Rob Kearney went to see Oasis with wife Jess 2 Brian O'Driscoll poked fun at his former teammate He was joined by fellow rugby legend Rob Kearney, who went to the historic show alongside wife Jess Redden. Not only that, but they were seated alongside one another, with Kearney clearly enjoying the acclaimed performance. O'Driscoll shared one pic of his friend to his Instagram Story alongside a cheeky dig at the 39-year-old. He said: "Definitely Maybe was still s****ng his pants when this album came out!" Saturday night's show was the first of two concerts to be held in Dublin, with the second being on Sunday night. And Kearney's wife Jess whetted the appetite of those lucky enough to have secured tickets for the show. She said: "What a night. If you're going tonight, have the best time - iconic show!" Kearney and O'Driscoll were far from the only sports star who turned out to Croke Park on Saturday night. Former Liverpool and England striker Peter Crouch was another one of those. He posed for pics with several people during the show, including a budding musician. Oasis lights up Dublin sky Jack Schiavo plays alongside Liam Gallagher's son, Gene, in the band Villanelle, and was "humbled" to be snapped alongside the Premier League pundit. The 44-year-old had made headlines when he left his duty as pundit for TNT Sport DURING their live TV broadcast of a Premier League opener. The former England striker was alongside Joe Cole for Saturday's early game as Aston Villa drew 0-0 with Newcastle. At the end of TNT Sports' live coverage, Crouch could not wait to get off screen and make his way to the airport. He was teased by presenter Lynsey Hipgrave, who said: "That's about all we have got time for, oh sorry, I have just been told we have got more time all of a sudden. We can carry on talking for a bit." Crouch replied: "No, Lynsey, I am going to Oasis tonight, that's not happening. I've got a flight to catch." Joe Cole interjected: "Let the man leave. He's done his job. He's done enough." Crouch then dropped the microphone and hilariously sprinted off camera. Cole responded: "I am so jealous." And Hipgrave then brilliantly added: "Pete, don't look back in anger."