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Lee Costello: Why winning the Ulster final could come down to who has the better goalkeeper on the day

Lee Costello: Why winning the Ulster final could come down to who has the better goalkeeper on the day

Sitting in the press box in Clones at the Ulster Semi-Final between Armagh and Tyrone, there was so much to take in that it is almost impossible to pick a single reason why the Orchard County won that game.

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Dessie Farrell reaches his breaking point
Dessie Farrell reaches his breaking point

Extra.ie​

time8 hours ago

  • Extra.ie​

Dessie Farrell reaches his breaking point

Sideline cool has been the hallmark of Dublin leaders in the years of plenty. Pat Gilroy was animated in starting the revolution, but Jim Gavin, whatever his demeanour behind the walls of the training ground, was in public the Zen face of the greatest team in Irish sport. This was most famously shown during a League game in Tralee in early 2019. Pat Gilroy. Pic: Seb Daly/Sportsfile At the half-time whistle, there was an outbreak of shaping, pulling and dragging between the Kerry and Dublin players. As the TV cameras zoomed in, Gavin walked into shot, making his way across the pitch to the dressing rooms. And he didn't break stride as he approached the rows breaking out all around him, instead stepping briskly past them and continuing on his way. Dessie Farrell brought a similar steadiness in public on succeeding Gavin. Like his old team-mate, he is measured and not given to histrionics on the line. Dublin manager Dessie Farrell. Pic: David Fitzgerald/Sportsfile But every man has his breaking point, and Farrell reached his on Sunday in Croke Park. As he watched his team concede five points to technical breaches in their bleak defeat to Armagh, Farrell took off his baseball cap at one point and threw it to the ground. He quickly picked it up and put it back on, but his reaction was as eloquent a commentary on Dublin's performance as the grim statistic of 17 wides. Dublin vs Armagh, June 1, 2025. Pic: Ray McManus/Sportsfile Little wonder that Farrell talked of 'sloppy' play, and he was, understandably, exercised by those needless rule breaches. Three of them were for breaking the 4v3 rule, which handed Armagh three simple second-half points, while an infraction on an Armagh mark in the first half gave Rory Grugan the chance to land a two-point free, which he duly did. Almost as bad were the wild two-point attempts in the second half as Dublin chased the game. Armagh had taken control of the match thanks to two-pointers, with Grugan landing a rallying score when his team trailed by three early on. Rian O'Neill. Pic: ©INPHO/Laszlo Geczo Then Rian O'Neill brought a dazzling edge to his return, scoring three booming two-pointers, one from a free, one from what seemed near the middle of the field, and one shortly after half-time that appeared to have a demoralising effect on Dublin. It looked as if Dublin players saw what the opposition were doing and tried to ape it, but to muddled effect. They managed three two-pointers but only by squandering a host of other chances; teams rarely thrive on a tactic of throwing everything at the wall and hoping enough of it sticks. With a return to characteristic understatement, Farrell suggested after the match that players might 'regret' some of their shooting choices. The live danger is that Dublin's regret is only beginning. Dublin manager Dessie Farrell. Pic: INPHO/Ryan Byrne The draw for the final round of group matches obliges them to play Derry in Páirc Esler on Saturday week. It looks a winnable match for Farrell's team, who are second in Group 4 on two points. However, Derry showed enough in their rip-roaring draw with Galway in Celtic Park to encourage the belief that they haven't been far away from a win this season, undone by a wretched run of tough fixtures, and the degenerative effect loss after loss has on players' belief. That latter problem became particularly obvious when allowing Galway back into a contest that should have been well beyond them. But there is quality still in the team, from the inspirational Brendan Rogers and Conor Glass to, significantly, a marked uptick in the performance of Shane McGuigan at the weekend. A venue that will be alien territory for Dublin but well known to Derry could also be a factor, but last Sunday's performance, in front of a half-full crowd, suggested that the importance of Croke Park is declining as Dublin becomes diminished, too. There will be consolation for Farrell and Dublin supporters in the memory of the team producing their best performance of the year in Salthill in round one of the group series. That match, crucially, featured a fit Con O'Callaghan, for 45 minutes, anyway. He departed early with an injury that kept him out for the Armagh match. O'Callaghan offers a luxurious spread of services, from ball-winning to point-scoring, from two-pointers to focal point. It seems crucial to get him fit for Saturday week. Even then, though, Dublin's reliance on so many facets of O'Callaghan's game is also a reflection on the thin spread of quality elsewhere in the attack. The exception to that is Ciarán Kilkenny, but, like O'Callaghan, he fulfils many roles. There is only so much a veteran can do, though, and Kilkenny looked worn out by the end of Sunday's game. His frustrated attempt at a two-pointer was the last action of the game, which was an apt conShackled: clusion ? Cofaig,h given the team-wide carelessness, if not fairly capturing how hard the player himself had tried. What Farrell needs is for support players to become leaders, but if experienced picks haven't done it by now, they're unlikely to discover their inner James McCarthy in the next fortnight. And in the case of others, they don't yet have the experience to inspire a team struggling with a transition between one era and the next one. Beating a winless Derry isn't beyond this side, as there is enough talent and application in the team to follow a clever plan to a happy conclusion. But Armagh's superiority was at times painfully obvious in Croke Park. Donegal also looks a standard above, as potentially do Kerry and Tyrone. This makes a stark contrast with the hysteria around Dublin dominance when they were winning six in a row. They were better than the rest of the country then, but fears about an unending age of blue rule were silly, based on little evidence. The bruising reality of today makes that doom-mongering seem even dafter. Dublin are back among the pack, not so far behind that they give up hope, but with the gap between them and the best more pronounced than it's been in almost two decades.

Derry display the perfect riposte to Gavin Devlin 'sulking' jibe says McKaigue
Derry display the perfect riposte to Gavin Devlin 'sulking' jibe says McKaigue

Irish Daily Mirror

time14 hours ago

  • Irish Daily Mirror

Derry display the perfect riposte to Gavin Devlin 'sulking' jibe says McKaigue

Chrissy McKaigue has said that Derry's performance against Galway disproves Gavin Devlin's 'sulking' theory. Speaking after Derry had been dumped out of Ulster Championship by Donegal this year, Devlin said that current boss Paddy Tally 'should have run a million miles away' from the job as the players still pined for former manager Rory Gallagher. Devlin was part of Mickey Harte's management team in Derry last year and though it started well as they won the Allianz League, things went south in the Championship and the duo departed after the All-Ireland quarter-final loss to Kerry. He added that he felt they were 'sulking' in the closing 20 minutes against Donegal and that if Gallagher didn't return 'you are better just putting that team in the bin and building a new team'. McKaigue retired after last year's Championship, though his association with Devlin goes back way before 2024, with the Tyrone man having managed his club, Slaughtneil, while the pair also coached together in Ardboe. Last Sunday, Derry played out a rip-roaring draw with Galway in what was their best championship performance since the narrow defeat to Kerry in the 2023 All-Ireland semi-final. McKaigue said: 'Gavin's a very affable character, I'm very friendly with him. At times he wouldn't pull any punches, as that interview showed. 'I suppose what I would go back and say to that comment is, watching Derry at the weekend, it was a really strong performance from Derry in terms of their attitude, their application, their intensity. 'It was frightening the intensity Derry brought to that game. Sitting in Celtic Park in the stand watching the intensity they brought was probably a chip off the old block. 'But now for Derry it's the consistency in that, that they can back that up like the best teams do, week in week out or game in game out. 'So Gavin's comments, he obviously made that comment, we all heard that comment but if you were at the game at the weekend you would say to yourself, 'Hopefully this is the real turning point for that Derry group' because no one really gives them a chance against Galway, let's be honest. 'I think Galway themselves were taken back by the intensity, the physicality that Derry brought. But I tell you what from a Derry supporter's point of view and just from knowing the lads it was a performance to warm the heart and to be honest with you, nine times out of 10, they get the result.'

Armagh All-Ireland winner Mark Shields says coming out as gay was a 'daunting task'
Armagh All-Ireland winner Mark Shields says coming out as gay was a 'daunting task'

Irish Examiner

timea day ago

  • Irish Examiner

Armagh All-Ireland winner Mark Shields says coming out as gay was a 'daunting task'

Mark Shields hopes speaking about being a gay inter-county footballer will be of benefit to young Gaelic games players struggling to express their sexuality. At the GPA's annual Pride Brunch, the 2024 All-Ireland winner with Armagh spoke openly in front of an audience for the first time about being gay. He is the first active male inter-county player to speak about being gay since Cork hurler Donal Óg Cusack. "I feel it's just important to tell my own story of 12 - 15 years playing inter-county, my experience of coming through the ranks, being a senior inter-county player in the male GAA environment," Shields said in a video published on the GPA's social media accounts. "It was a daunting task coming out, whenever it was, about 10 - 12 years. The culture has changed within society, within the group in Armagh. I feel that I can express myself more. The group are more accepting. "The language used around the group is changing. There's people standing up for people, for myself in the group, whereas maybe that didn't happen that much before. I think the culture is changing within the GAA itself." Shields said that some of the language used in changing rooms in the past would have been "hurtful". He added that having the type of support he feels is now available would have made his situation much easier a decade ago. "It's been excellent to have allyships and people advocating for it in social media, and around GAA set-ups, and the GPA," he said. "I hope speaking out and telling my story will help that younger player, be it male or female, non-binary to express themselves in the GAA environment." Shields advised anyone struggling with their sexuality to find someone they can trust. "For me, it was process," he said "I had to find someone I trusted in, that was my sister; I spoke to my sister a lot, and would have a close relationship with her, my partner as well. It's finding that someone you trust and you want to express yourself to them. "I found that very helpful whenever I was trying to tell my story and trying to come out. They were the ones that stood by me throughout and supported me whenever I felt down or low in the dumps or in a dark place. "It doesn't have to be in front of a group; it can be a one-to-one conversation with someone. That's how I found it easier, to have that walk on the beach, in a forest or just chatting to someone over a coffee. That was the easiest way for myself."

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