logo
Seán Óg Ó hAilpín: 'Player-driven' Cork have enough to win 'ugly' Dublin contest

Seán Óg Ó hAilpín: 'Player-driven' Cork have enough to win 'ugly' Dublin contest

Irish Examiner10 hours ago
Seán Óg Ó hAilpín is the last Cork hurling captain to climb the steps of the Hogan and lift the Liam MacCarthy Cup. That was on September 11, 2005. Not far off 20 years ago. That was the Rebels' 30th All-Ireland title.
Pat Ryan's modern-day Cork senior hurlers know the expectation at this juncture. Bridge that gap.
Four teams remain: Cork, Dublin, Kilkenny and Tipperary. Cork's last-four pairing with Dublin was a surprising one, given Niall Ó Ceallacháin's men were forced to go toe-to-toe with Limerick with 14 men for the majority of that mad quarter-final two weeks ago.
The underdogs on the day answered every question asked of them. Now, they head back to Croker, having given us the story of the championship thus far.
But can they back it up? The suspended Chris Crummey is a huge loss, but for Ó hAilpín, there is a mammoth task awaiting Cork on Saturday evening at HQ.
"I'm unbelievably wary about this game on Saturday," said Ó hAilpín, speaking at the All-Star Hurling Legends event at the Imperial Hotel, in the company of Tomás Mulcahy, Jimmy Barry-Murphy, Liam Sheedy and Eddie Brennan. "Everyone on the street thinks we're in the final already, that's the narrative going around (among the public).
"But what gives me a bit of belief is, I think the culture is driven by the players, not the manager.
"Yes, the manager helps drive it, but we have players now, the leaders like (Rob) Downey, Mark Coleman, Darragh Fitz, that (can tell) any young fella that has come in the last couple of years thinking that you can get to All-Ireland finals willy-nilly, semi-finals are hard won.
"This game on Saturday is going to be won ugly; it's not going to be free-flowing."
Na Piarsaigh stalwart Ó hAilpín weariness of Dublin surrounds their growth in certain aspects of play; their short-game, their scoring ability are two such points of improvement.
"Dubin are going to ask questions of Cork from a management point of view. We're going to have to break down Dublin's resilience.
"They could arguably play six backs, two guys floating inside, pack it inside and then, they have the skillset now when they're breaking out, their short-game is much better now.
"They can score as well, you look at the scores they've clocked up in the Leinster championship."
The mindset - and ability - within the Cork dressing room gives the three-time All-Ireland winner enough belief that Ryan and his players will get a chance to redeem last year's All-Ireland defeat to Clare.
"Cork, but not without a struggle," Ó hAilpín concluded.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ireland under-20s suffer hammer blow in world championship bid with defeat to Italy
Ireland under-20s suffer hammer blow in world championship bid with defeat to Italy

Irish Times

time31 minutes ago

  • Irish Times

Ireland under-20s suffer hammer blow in world championship bid with defeat to Italy

World Rugby Under-20 Championship Pool C: Italy 18 Ireland 16 Ireland suffered a hammer blow in their bid to reach the semi-final stage of the World Rugby under-20 Championship after they fell to an agonising defeat at the hands of Italy in Stadio Luigi Zaffanella, Viadana last night. Added to the bench after Bobby Power was drafted into the starting line-up to replace Michael Foy at the 11th hour, Oisin Minogue crashed over the Italian whitewash in second half stoppage-time to leave Ireland with a last-gasp opportunity to claim a hard-earned draw against the tournament hosts. However, Sam Wisniewski's resulting conversion was wide of the target and while Ireland remain second in Pool C, the pressure is now on ahead of their meeting with pacesetters New Zealand in Calvisano next Wednesday. Ireland were seeking to make amends for a 15-12 defeat to Italy at Treviso in the final round of this year's under-20 Six Nations and they displayed early defensive grit by holding out their opponents as they attempted to cross over from a lineout maul. Ireland looked set to receive a let-off when opposition outhalf Roberto Fasti couldn't find touch off an 11th minute penalty, only for errors from both Charlie Molony and Paidi Farrell to immediately provide Italy with another platform inside the '22'. The hosts were able to go a step further on this occasion as the ensuing set-piece move found its way into the hands of bustling number 8 Nelson Casartelli, who proceeded to burst over the line in clinical style. READ MORE Ireland's Ciarán Mangan on the ball. Photograph: Sebastiano Pessina/Inpho This powerful finish was followed by a badly miscued bonus strike from Fasti and when outhalf Tom Wood (son of legendary former Irish international Keith Wood) was presented with a kickable opportunity on 25 minutes, the Munster prospect drilled the ball between the posts to reduce his side's deficit to two points. Try-scoring chances were few and far between in the opening period, but after winning the penalty himself thanks to superb work at the breakdown, Italian fullback Edoardo Todaro was successful off the kicking tee in the 36th minute. This ensured the Azzurri brought an 8-3 cushion into the second period, but Ireland were back within two on 52 minutes as a result of Wood splitting the uprights off a penalty that was positioned to the right of the posts. This kept the Eanna McCarthy-led Irish within touching distance, but Italy subsequently put themselves in the driving seat when second row Piero Gritti rounded off a ferocious attacking maul with a converted try. However, just when it looked like the game was drifting away from Ireland, they were given a lifeline when Casartelli was yellow-carded for a head high tackle on Molony. The 14-man Italians were placed on the back foot straight away and after Billy Corrigan had gathered a lineout delivery, McCarthy and Will Wootton combined to good effect before replacement hooker Mikey Yarr dived over in the right-corner for an unconverted effort. Momentum appeared to be with Ireland at this stage, but Corrigan was sent to the sinbin on 71 minutes – just as Casartelli was preparing himself for a return to the field of play. This paved the way for Todaro to slot over his second penalty of the contest and though Minogue bagged a five-pointer at the end of a relentless attacking spell, Wisniewski couldn't find the range from a right-hand angle as Ireland came up just short. Scorers – Italy: N Casartelli, P Gritti try each, E Todaro 2 pens, con. Ireland: M Yarr, O Minogue try each, T Wood 2 pen. ITALY: E Todaro; A Drago, F Zanandrea, R Casarin, J Ducros; R Fasti, N Beni; S Pelliccioli, N Corvasce, N Bolognini; M Midena, P Gritti; G Milano, C Bianchi, N Casartelli. Replacements: L Trevisan for Bolognini, E Opoku Gyamfi for Midena, A Caiolo-Serra for Corvasce, S Mistrulli for Pelliccioli all 54 mins; A Miranda for Bianchi, 57 mins; R Ioannucci for Drago, 62 mins; G Pietramala for Ducros, 68 mins; M Bellotto for Beni, 74 mins. IRELAND: C Molony; P Farrell, C Mangan, E Smyth, D Moloney; T Wood, W Wootton; A Usanov, H Walker, A Mullan; M Ronan, B Corrigan; B Power, E McCarthy, L Murphy. Replacements: C Kennelly for Ronan, 49 mins; M Yarr for Walker, B Bohan for Usanov, T McAllister for Mullan, all 53 mins; S Wisniewski for Wood, 60 mins; O Minogue for Power, 62 mins; C Logan for Wootton, 64 mins; Walker for Yarr, 79 mins. Referee: B Breakspear (Wales).

Bohs and St Pat's play out stalemate to leave Stephen Kenny winless in six matches
Bohs and St Pat's play out stalemate to leave Stephen Kenny winless in six matches

Irish Times

time31 minutes ago

  • Irish Times

Bohs and St Pat's play out stalemate to leave Stephen Kenny winless in six matches

Premier Division: St Patrick's Athletic 0 Bohemians 0 Park life. St Patrick's Athletic turn their attention to European football without a win in six matches. The 4,919 crowd inside Richmond Park were served everything but a goal to decide in this engrossing Dublin derby. Dayle Rooney and Ross Tierney went close for Bohemians but far too many St Pat's players missed the target. As Richard Ashcroft finished his set in Cardiff with Bitter Sweet Sympathy, Bohs were peacocking their new FAI Cup strip and the iconic Oasis logo around Dublin 8. READ MORE The Verve lead singer was opening for the seismic return of Noel and Liam Gallagher at The Principality stadium, the first gig of a lucrative second coming for the Manchester band. This was no cup match though. Bohs made an exception to show off their latest piece of innovative marketing. The sky-blue Oasis gear should help fill the club's coffers when Dalymount Park is under construction. Besides the stadium DJ playing Blur tunes at every opportunity, the Brit Pop revival was never going to overshadow the football. Not around Inchicore, where there was plenty at stake for Stephen Kenny's men coming off a winless June. 'We cannot believe ourselves that we have had such a poor two weeks,' wrote Kenny in his programme notes after St Pat's missed an 'inordinately high number of chances' to leave them in a comparable situation to last season when the former Republic of Ireland manager was recruited midseason. Kenny turned the tide in July 2024 as his team embarked on a run to the precipice of the Uefa Conference League group stages. That journey begins again on Thursday with the visit of Hegelmann from Lithuania. St Pat's created the better chances in the opening half-hour only for Bohs centre half Rob Cornwall to deny Aidan Keena and Simon Power. However, the visitors should have taken the lead in the 38th minute when new signing Douglas James-Taylor blazed over a cut back by James Clarke. James-Taylor arrived from Drogheda United this week to replace French striker Lys Mousset, who was unceremoniously released by Bohemians. St Pat's should have led at the break only Power's effort missed the target before Jason McClelland slammed a shot off the crossbar. Half-time welcomed dozens of kids on to the Richmond grass to the sound of Blur's Song 2. Kenny benched teenager Mason Melia and winger Zach Elbouzedi following last week's scoreless draw in Cork while their creative force, Chris Forrester, continues to return from injury. All three eventually arrived but the sight of Jake Mulraney limping off, holding his hamstring, is not what Kenny needs before a European campaign. The excellent Power put the ball in the Bohs net early in the second-half only for a premature linesman's flag for offside. Replays confirmed the match official's error. With Dawson Devoy being smothered by Barry Baggley in midfield, The Saints seemed certain to break the deadlock. Somehow Jordan Flores cleared Kian Leavy's toe poke off the goal line. That did it for Kenny. Melia arrived on the hour for Keena. The under-21 international showed for every ball, mostly supplied by Leavy, but Cornwall held firm. Ultimately, the poor quality of St Pat's final pass summed up their season so far. Elsewhere, with Shamrock Rovers facing Sligo Rovers at The Showgrounds on Saturday night, Derry City closed the gap at the top to eight points with an emphatic 7-2 defeat of Waterford while the post-Damien Duff era at Tolka Park formally began as Joey O'Brien's Shelbourne beat Cork City 3-1. St Patrick's Athletic: Anang; McLaughlin (Kavanagh 75), Redmond, Grivosti, McClelland; Lennon, Baggley (Forrester 80); Power, Leavy (Sjoberg 75), Mulraney (Elbouzedi 80); Keena (Melia 61). Bohemians: Chorazka; Smith (Mountney 71), Cornwall, Flores, Morahan; Devoy, McDonnell (Buckley 71); Tierney, Clarke, Rooney; James-Taylor (Whelan 71). Referee: Rob Hennessy.

Seventh heaven for Derry as Waterford are swatted aside
Seventh heaven for Derry as Waterford are swatted aside

RTÉ News​

timean hour ago

  • RTÉ News​

Seventh heaven for Derry as Waterford are swatted aside

Derry City produced a magnificent seven-goal display to swat aside a shell-shocked Waterford side at the Ryan McBride Brandywell Stadium. While Liam Boyce will rightfully grab all the headlines with a hat-trick, it was Michael Duffy who stole the show. The 30-year-old scored one and set-up four of Derry's goals, as he rolled back the years with a fantastic all round performance. Derry, who lost twice to Waterford this season, started like a team wanting to put things right. The Brandywell men produced a sensational first half performance and in truth should probably have been further ahead at the break, but they put the record straight after the break and continued to pile on the goals. City started on the front foot and took the lead on five minutes following a flowing move which saw Mark Connolly found Ronan Boyce, he in turn found Gavin Whyte, who fed Boyce and the striker made no mistake blasting high past Bradley Wade. The woodwork came to Waterford's rescue minutes later as Duffy's outswinging corner from the right found Connolly, but the centre-back's header, which had Wade beaten, clipped the top of the bar. Soon after Waterford missed a super chance to equalise but Padraig Amond's tame effort from 20 yards was easily saved by Brian Maher. Derry doubled their lead on 24 minutes when another flowing move ended with Boyce releasing Duffy down the left, he in turn cut the ball back for the ex-Cliftonville man to fire home his second on the night, despite Wade's best attempts at trying to keep it out. The home side netted their third goal in stunning fashion as Sadou Diallo's 25-yard thunderbolt flew past Wade off the underside of the crossbar. Wade had to make a top save minutes later when he spread himself well to deny Duffy and Boyce was inches away from completing his hat-trick as his close range header was kept out by the Waterford net-minder. Derry incredibly scored their fourth on 41 minutes as Duffy's left wing corner found Connolly and his glancing header nestled in the bottom right hand corner. A defensive mistake by the home side on 49 minutes resulted in Amond getting in behind the back-line and the ex-Ireland striker made no mistake slotting the ball home past Maher. Normal service was resumed on 52 minutes as Whyte's delightful cross field pass released Duffy, who calmly cut in on his left foot, before blasting home past Wade. Boyce completed his hat-trick just before the hour mark as Whyte's fantastic right-wing centre found the City marksman and he slid the ball home at the near post. Whyte got himself amongst the goals on 74 minutes when he coolly slotted the ball low into Wade's bottom left hand corner, after that man Duffy picked him out on the edge of the box. The Blues scored another consolation goal five minutes later as Amond finished well when getting in behind the Derry defence. In the closing stages Derry should have grabbed an eighth goal but substitute Danny Mullen was denied as Wade kept his close range shot out. Derry City: Brian Maher, Hayden Cann, Mark Connolly, Kevin Holt (Shane Ferguson 75); Ronan Boyce, Carl Winchester (Adam O'Reilly 75), Sadou Diallo, Gavin Whyte, Michael Duffy (Robbie Benson 76), Sam Todd; Liam Boyce (Daniel Mullen 64).

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store