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Some discomfort but no squirming this time as McIlroy survives first day at Portrush

Some discomfort but no squirming this time as McIlroy survives first day at Portrush

Irish Examiner4 days ago
Paul McGinley is voicing a diddly-eye ad for Irish tourism this week. Padraig Harrington, a man who seems to know his ice cream, has been bragging that the 99s at this 'Irish' Open are better than anywhere else on the Championship rota.
There's times when all this stuff, all this back-patting, can feel a bit corny. A bit much. Then you stand beside the first tee at Royal Portrush's Dunluce links just after three o'clock on Thursday and you're blown away by the scene stretching out before you.
Ireland really does do golf well. On both sides of the ropes.
To see that sea of people, four and five deep, all the way down the 420-yard hole known as 'Hughie's' was to imagine what the Circus Maximus must have looked like when Rome was at its peak and charioteers were risking lives and limbs.
Rory McIlroy wasn't in any physical danger when he stood over his first shot at the 153rd Open, but this didn't lack any for drama given the torture that unfolded here in 2019 when he hooked his first ball left and out of bounds and signed for a quadruple bogey.
Do we have to bother adding that he went and missed the cut?
His entire first round six years ago was an exercise in squirming discomfort: for him and for the rest of us. There was discomfort this time but no squirming. Armed with that breakthrough Masters title and career Grand Slam since April, McIlroy rode this one out.
Though his drive found rough down the left, it stayed in bounds. And if a missed tiddler that landed him with an opening bogey wasn't great then it was no disaster. The worst of it was over. He could look the rest of the course in the eye again, on equal terms.
'Absolutely incredible,' he said. 'Look, I feel the support of an entire country out there, which is a wonderful position to be in. But at the same time, you don't want to let them down. So there's that little bit of added pressure.
'I felt like I dealt with it really well today. Certainly dealt with it better than I did six years ago,' he added with a knowing laugh. 'I was just happy to get off to a good start and get myself into the tournament.
'I was sort of surprised: there's a few guys at four-under, but I'm surprised four-under is leading. I thought someone might have gone out there and shot six or seven today. Only three back with 54 holes to go, I'm really happy with where I am.'
By the 10th he had found four birdies, avoided any more bogeys and sat just one shot off the lead on three-under. Much more like it from the man who was still very much a boy when he took just 61 strokes to set a course record here back in 2006.
It wasn't nearly as smooth as that sounds. His driving was all over the place and, while his chipping and putting was standing up to the test, an aversion to fairways that left him ranked third-last in the field off the tee was always likely to demand payment.
He had to dig deep into his pocket eventually.
Three bogeys in four holes, from 11 to 14, dragged him back to level par, and into doubt. He needed a huge putt from 12 feet on 15 and an up-and-down on Calamity's par-three 16th to avoid slipping in to over-par status as the day pushed into a 15th hour of play.
That save on the 15th felt pivotal at the time. Like one of those sliding door moments that are highlighted and discussed with great solemnity on those retrospective interviews and documentaries when people turn a corner and sink to their knees on a Sunday.
'Yeah, it was important. It was a big putt, especially having bogeyed three of the last four at that point. That was important. It was a huge putt to keep whatever momentum I had. Then after that, playing those last three holes at one-under was great.'
It was a brilliant approach from deep rough at the 17th that set up the 12-footer for birdie, and he flirted with another on the 18th hole to leave him with a one-under par 70 despite all that trouble off the tee. It could have been better, it could have been worse.
Never a dull moment with McIlroy.
'I had it going [at] three-under through 10 and let a few slip there around the middle of the round. I steadied the ship well, played the last four at one-under, and it was nice to shoot under par.
'I felt like once we turned for home, played 10 and turned back [away from the clubhouse] and played 11, the wind picked up a little bit and it just became that little bit more difficult.
'Yeah, it was a tough enough day, especially either chopping out of the rough or out of the fairway bunkers most of the time. So to shoot under-par was a good effort.'
Not too shabby at all, given all that and the ghosts of 2019.
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Red hot Tom Curry and Tadhg Beirne set out Lions stall leaving Wallabies an uphill task
Red hot Tom Curry and Tadhg Beirne set out Lions stall leaving Wallabies an uphill task

RTÉ News​

time18 minutes ago

  • RTÉ News​

Red hot Tom Curry and Tadhg Beirne set out Lions stall leaving Wallabies an uphill task

A dominant first half led the Lions to a straightforward victory in the first Test match against Australia. Some notable performance justified Andy Farrell's selection, particularly in the back row, showing that there's a lot more to team selection. Public focus was on most recent form, whereas Farrell proved why he's the man in charge with his selection of Tadhg Beirne and Tom Curry. The Beirne selection was less surprising. He's one of the head coach's go-to guys in the Irish team and there are much clearer intangible attributes to Beirne. The Kildare man is a captain and leader while being a dominant setpiece player. It wasn't a case of whether Beirne would start, it was more about whether he would play in the second row or back row. While accepting his player of the match award after the 27-19 win, Beirne discussed his recent form being poorer than he would have liked, yet unsurprisingly, he stepped up when the challenge was at its highest and he put in a standout performance. Beirne won a penalty in the breakdown within 20 seconds, giving the Lions an immediate 3-0 lead, which meant that Australia were under pressure from the beginning. Aside from his leading tackle count, Beirne had two breakdown turnovers and a crucial maul turnover when Australia were beginning to find some momentum. As Farrell said, Beirne is a Test-match animal, and he justified his selection after receiving some criticism during the week. The more surprising selection was Curry, considering the form and quality of other players in the back row. While the Sale forward won't give you the same volume of match moments as Beirne, or the other back-row options for that matter, everything that Curry does is of the highest intensity. Not only did he set the physical tone for the Lions from his very first tackle, Curry was clever in his work rate and impacted the game at crucial times. He certainly strikes me as a guy that thinks his way through the game, and prepares himself both mentally and physically behind the scenes. Australia's Tom Lynagh made his starting debut on Saturday. His timing was pretty poor in attack, contributing to a lot of clunky play from the home side. However, Curry was a thorn in his side and disrupted any chance that Lynagh had of leading a cohesive attack. Joe Schmidt had clearly set Australia up for a clever move off their first scrum launch play. Teams often use a dummy play down the short side of a ruck or scrum to force the opposition back field to move across to that side. They then throw the ball back in the other direction to a more vulnerable defence because the backfield are out of position from chasing hard on the initial side. The Wallabies tried that in the first play, but when the ball was flashed back across the scrum to Lynagh running flat, Curry was aware and rushed the young out-half. It meant that centre Len Ikitau's timing off Lynagh was poor and the Australian out-half's kick to the manipulated back field didn't hit its mark. It's a small thing and might not be caught upon your first watch of the game, but small, sharp moments like this is what makes Curry shine in Test matches. He stayed up field and alive in the defensive line, despite the ball being thrown in the other direction. It might sound basic, but top internationals do the basics consistently and effectively. Club players switch off in that moment, Curry didn't. He had another standout moment from an Australian lineout overthrow move. The England international cut out the throw, offloaded to Finn Russell who sent Huw Jones into space. Curry didn't stop and admire his contribution. He raced around in support and when Jones faded onto a Russell pass to create a 3 v 2 situation on the right-hand touchline, Curry was on hand to finish the 2 v 1 after receiving the pass from Russell and Dan Sheehan (below) finished in the corner. They're small moments that make big impacts. These are moments that don't show up on the stats sheet. Curry won't have the same volume of actions as Jac Morgan or Josh van der Flier, something that was used as evidence against his selection during last week. However, when you notice the impact of the moments that he has, he more than justified the chance that Farrell gave him, in an unbelievably competitive position. International rugby doesn't rely on the same volume of efforts as club rugby. The ball-in-play time is often lower and players contribute equally. At club level you get top players doing the work of others. At international level that's rarely needed. Curry fit into a system and when called upon, he gave everything in the moment. He played on the edge, and might have been penalised or even carded at times, but good players can play on the edge and find a way to stay out of trouble. Curry did that for the Lions last weekend and he had a huge part to play in the dominant parts of their victory. It's not to say that Van der Flier, Morgan or Henry Pollock wouldn't have contributed very positively to a Lions win, they probably would have. Curry certainly did. Farrell can enjoy the first victory, knowing that when his selection was questioned, the players that he showed loyalty to, paid him back in spades. He'll have to prove his value as a coach once more next week in what is arguably the most difficult game. Win and the series is over as a contest, with a freebie to finish off the tour. Lose and it's a draw with all the momentum against the Lions. There'll be a few impactful players returning to the wounded Wallabies. I'm not sure they'll have enough impact to turn this Test series around. The hosts were pretty poor for large parts of the game. The Lions indiscipline left the Wallabies back into the game. With their replacement half-backs, Australia showed that they have something to build on. You'd expect Tate McDermott and Ben Donaldson to take control from the start on Saturday and give Schmidt's side a better chance of competing in the opening quarter, instead of playing for pride in the closing one. The Lions will make some changes too. Their bench didn't provide the punch that Farrell would have expected. McCarthy's injury might force at least one change, otherwise I think the starting pack will be the same, with a greater chance of changes coming onto the bench and potentially a back-three player. It's still all to play for and Australia could pull off a surprise this weekend. However, they didn't have enough punch across the pitch last week, and I don't think the return of Rob Valetini, Will Skelton and even a few others are going to tame this Lions tour.

Noel McGrath savours fourth All-Ireland with son in his arms as Tipperary legend reflects on epic 17-season journey
Noel McGrath savours fourth All-Ireland with son in his arms as Tipperary legend reflects on epic 17-season journey

The Irish Sun

time33 minutes ago

  • The Irish Sun

Noel McGrath savours fourth All-Ireland with son in his arms as Tipperary legend reflects on epic 17-season journey

HIS second child is due in October, yet Tipperary's Noel McGrath continues to outrun Father Time. A senior debutant with In 2019, McGrath landed his third All-Ireland SHC medal. Advertisement 2 Noel McGrath and his son celebrate with the Liam MacCarthy cup on Sunday 2 Tipp saw off Cork in Sunday's decider at Croke Park in Dublin Tipp failed to win a Championship game last season, which caused his chances of adding a fourth to appear slim. But, accompanied by his two-year-old son Sam, McGrath made his way back up the steps of the Hogan Stand again on Sunday after the He said: 'I never thought in my wildest dreams that I'd be able to bring him to Croke Park. To win an All-Ireland with him is unreal. 'That will be something that I'll remember forever and that I have forever. Advertisement read more on gaa 'In time, I suppose he'll see all the pictures from it, he won't remember it but he'll have the memories and all those pictures. It's special for me to be able to do that with him.' McGrath became an All-Ireland winner for the first time when Tipperary foiled Kilkenny's five-in-a-row bid in 2010. He also bagged his second All-Star award on the spin. Not bad for a teenager. Speaking at the Grand Hotel in Malahide on the morning after the Premier were crowned champions for the 29th time, the Loughmore-Castleiney stalwart said: 'I was 19 in 2010, just starting college in UCD. 'I suppose it's a long way from college in UCD, it's a different story. But it's great and I love it. Advertisement Most read in GAA Hurling 'And to be able to have my son there yesterday was probably one of the greatest things I could have done and I lifted the Liam MacCarthy with him in my arms.' On a day when his younger brother John played a starring role by firing 2-2, McGrath came off the bench and put the icing on the sweet victory by hitting the Premier County's last point. Liam Cahill speaks to RTE after Tipperary GAA win All-Ireland final He reflected: 'To get on the field and to get involved was unreal. To be able to get that score at the end was a great feeling. It was just nice to be part of it. As I said after the semi-final, it never gets old. 'As long as you're able to do it and to have days like this, it would keep anyone in good form and looking to do it again. It's great, it's unreal, it's unbelievable.' Advertisement After regrouping following a woeful 2024 season, Tipperary also had to atone for a pair of heavy defeats to Cork in this year's Munster SHC and National League final. With that in mind, Sunday's may have been the most satisfying win to date. McGrath said: 'It's hard to know. I'll sit down in a couple of weeks and think it out. Right now it is, because it's in the moment and it's such a great feeling. 'Who knows which is the best one? It's hard to decide which is the best or how one is better than the other. Advertisement 'They're all great. They all have their own different stories and their own different meanings. Yesterday was no different.' McGrath has now been on the go at senior inter-county level for 17 seasons. According to him, if the mind is willing, the body will follow. He explained: 'With the way the thing has gone nowadays with S&C, if you're willing to put in the work, you'll get your body right. "It's the head more than anything. You have to be willing to get yourself up and go training every week. Advertisement That's probably the hardest part — if you're able to do that and if you're mentally able to do it. 'Because physically, with the way everything has gone, people are keeping themselves fit going to the gym, even if you're not playing sport. 'But mentally, I've been really, really enjoying it. I never really had that evening where you're dragging yourself out to training. You'd be looking forward to it and that for me is the part that really keeps you going, that you're not feeling it as a drag. 'I enjoyed every minute of it. And when you have an ending like this, it's hard not to enjoy it as well.' Advertisement The crucial win in Ennis that effectively ended Clare's reign as All-Ireland champions was the only game that McGrath started in this victorious campaign. But on his role as an impact sub, he said: 'Everyone wants to play and I'm no different. "I'd love to be starting. But there are 38 lads on our panel that would love to start and you have to trust the management that what they're deciding is the right thing for the team. "I go in training and burst myself every night to be trying to get on that 15. And if you're not on it, you want to be one of the ones that come on. Advertisement 'I'm no different to anyone else and when I'm 50 years of age, I'll still want to play. 'That's just the nature of it. You just accept that the management make their decisions and that's what you have to go with.' ROLE CALL On Tipp's roll of honour, McGrath has now overtaken many of his contemporaries who were key contributors to his county's success of 2019. Greats such as Séamus Callanan and Pádraic Maher signed off as three-time All-Ireland winners. Advertisement McGrath said: 'There's no point in saying I didn't know that if we won yesterday, getting to four I'd say was the first time since 1965 or '71 that someone has done it. 'I live hurling and I know a lot about the history of Tipperary so I would have been aware of that and now that's happened, it's a great feeling and I'm delighted to be one with four. 'There are a lot of lads with three, a few with two and more with their first now so to be in that category is unreal.'

RTE doc shines a light on League of Ireland academies and the need to fund them
RTE doc shines a light on League of Ireland academies and the need to fund them

Irish Daily Mirror

time33 minutes ago

  • Irish Daily Mirror

RTE doc shines a light on League of Ireland academies and the need to fund them

Far away from the glamour of Champions League football, on a wet and windy day at the AUL, Dan Ring knocks home his 43rd goal of an incredible season. Shelbourne's Under-17s are well on their way to a 5-2 win against Cork City, a result that sends the 2024 league title to the Tolka Park club. Not long after that, Ring makes the first-team bench in a 3-2 defeat at home to St Patrick's Athletic. A week later, as their game away to Shamrock Rovers heads into injury-time, the young striker is finally rewarded for his prolific campaign with a senior debut. It's a 2-0 defeat and Shelbourne's Premier Division title bid is on the rocks. But, in dramatic fashion, they win their final three games and Ring, a huge player in the 17s league triumph, can boast a tiny role in the club returning to the top of Irish football. Fast forward to the present and Ring now has an FAI Cup appearance under his belt. After appearing on the bench last week at Windsor Park against Linfield, along with his pal from the Under-17s, goalkeeper Ali Topcu, the teenager is sprung from the bench for the final 11 minutes of Shels' 4-0 win away to Fairview Rangers. He is likely to be on the teamsheet again tomorrow night when the Reds host Azerbaijani football royalty Qarabag, regulars in the group stages of the Champions League and Europa League. Another step on a long road for the youngster who features in a brand new RTÉ documentary called 'Football Families', a three-parter beginning on July 31. The focus in episode one is on Shelbourne's academy. The show provides a timely reminder of the need for serious investment in the underage structures here, with warnings popping up all over the place that Ring's story is the exception, not the norm. 'The industry in the UK and across Europe is much bigger,' warns Colm Barron, Shelbourne's academy director. 'They go into practically a full-time training environment from the age of 16, whereas we don't, we can't offer that. 'We are trying, so we can then start to get it closer to a level playing field. But those two years of development between the ages of 16 and 18 are drastic. 'We cannot compete with what the other clubs can offer from a development perspective at those ages.' Click this link or scan the QR code to receive the latest League of Ireland news and top stories from the Irish Mirror. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. If you're curious, you can read our Privacy Notice . In the post-Brexit era, UK clubs can only sign Irish players after their 18th birthday. This puts the onus on Irish football to finally get its house in order. But it cannot do it alone. Academy coach John Moore warns: 'Some of the players, and in particular their parents, start thinking they've made it. 'Not everybody playing on Shels' Under-14s will play on Shels' Under-18s. It's just a fact of life. We don't make them any false promises. 'Our ultimate ambition is to get players good enough to play in Damien Duff's first-team, but very few will reach that final stage.' And Duff, who features in the documentary, which is shot before his shock decision earlier this summer to quit, adds that the outlook for Irish football's production line is grim as long as the status quo exists. 'Do I see enough, which ties in with training hours in the country, do I see enough players that take my breath away that maybe would have happened 10, 15, 20 years ago? No, I don't,' he says. 'We have a lot of sayings at Shelbourne - enough is never enough. Footballers now across the board, and it's not just our academy, they think they are doing enough, but they're not.' Football Families (Image: RTE) With the government kicking the can down the road, in terms of committing to academy funding, Barron, Moore and Duff are banging a well-beaten drum. As are the countless other volunteers and part-time staff up and down the land who, to their credit, put in as much time as they can on the training pitch. FAI academy chief Will Clarke now provides an annual update on the state of Irish football's underage structures compared to those across Europe, and the stats are jarring. Barron and Moore work in an industry that employs just 10 full-time staff. Not at Shelbourne, but nationwide. Take Croatia, a country with a similar population, and that figure is at 190. There are 200 teenagers in the Shels academy and they all share one dream. 'So many players think they want to be a footballer,' says Barron. 'They see the glitz and glamour of what's on TV and what's on Sky Sports News. They see those elements and they think, that's football. But they don't see the hardship, the dedication towards it. 'These players want to be professional players. If you are not doing everything you possibly can, you 100 percent will not have a chance of making it at the top.' Episode one of Football Families also follows Fettercairn native Jayden Marshall, a centre-back who makes his Ireland Under-15 debut, and 15-year-old midfielder Cillian O'Sullivan from Howth. But it's Topcu and Ring who have found themselves in the middle of Shelbourne's Champions League adventure, which continues tomorrow night at Tolka Park. Both have ambitions to play at the highest level. 'The goals do get you recognition. People hear your name, your name gets put out on social media or whatever,' says Ring. 'But it's not about just doing it at academy level. I would love to eventually play in England. That's my end goal. I still have a long way to go.' So too does Irish football. But it is in need of serious backing. 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