logo
Kieran McGeeney: Kerry spell "turned the tide"

Kieran McGeeney: Kerry spell "turned the tide"

Irish Daily Mirror16 hours ago

Armagh boss Kieran McGeeney bemoaned a flat 15-minute period where Kerry got on top of his side in the All-Ireland quarter-final.
The Orchard County were blitzed by the Kingdom in a second half spell where they conceded fourteen points without reply.
On that spell, McGeeney said: "It was probably a disappointing 15 minutes. That's what turned the tide. I think they hit 13 points on the trot, maybe 15.
"Yeah it was disappointing. They played well. Even at the end they kept on going, Shane had to pull off three saves off the line. They never stopped fighting. You have to give them credit.
"It was just the 15 minute period where Kerry were devastating and we couldn't get our hands on the ball."
"We probably made life difficult for ourselves on top of that, but listen that's sport, you have to take your hat off when somebody is scoring like that. It was just one of those days, you make mistakes and you get punished for them."
When asked if Kerry were out for revenge after last year's semi-final, McGeeney said: "Listen, everybody will make something. For the first 45 minutes we were very well on top. The only time to be on top really is at the end. It's just one of those days."
The Armagh boss felt the new rules added jeopardy to the kickouts but lauded them for making the game exciting.
"Listen, that's what we want. We just want to be able to kick the ball out and make it 50/50.
"People find that more exciting, that's the game and Kerry were better at it today than us."
He singled out Sean O'Shea for his contribution against his side.
"Ah, we have probably had spells like that, maybe not punished enough. We had I think 11 out of our 13 kickouts we lost. If you are going to do that in this game, because you have then to commit and you are leaving holes behind us.
"Listen, it was just one of those days, Seanie [O'Shea], no matter what he hit, was putting them over and everybody else was joining in.
"As I say it's a 15 minutes you'd like to forget. It happens in sport. We've done it ourselves to other teams. You just have to take it on the chin and move on."
When asked about Jack O'Connor's comments on Kerry being written off pre-match, McGeeney said "It was the Kerry boys that were talking them down so we wouldn't pass much remarks to that. That's what Kerry do. My in-laws are form there, I would hear direct, everybody's saying they weren't the team, National League champions, Munster champions, highest scoring forwards, highest scoring team going into it, like, I know Eamonn and the boys will write that stuff but nobody really believes it."
He said Kerry did nothing specific to nullify Ethan Rafferty's kickout.
"Not really. I suppose we kept kicking it to the wings. Three or four things, it's just sometimes like it happens in sport. I'd love to give you….if I could pinpoint the reason for you we could have stopped it.
"We were too tight onto the sidelines, getting sideline balls and they were quicker on the breaks than us probably at that stage. Again, it was their ability to punish. Seanie just had one of those days, he couldn't miss.
"So, that's what happens. You have a forward of that calibre. Like, again, as I say, three or four goals chances on our side missing them. You might have been able to keep it closer. It's frustrating.
"We've been all around sport a long time and outside of the Dubs and Kerry we lose a lot more than we win."
He said that outside of Dublin and Kerry, teams have to make use of their time at the top table.
"Listen, they have won an All-Ireland. They are only one of two teams in 140 odd years that have won it. They can hold their heads up high surely.
"They have been one of the most consistent teams over the last three or four years. You seen today, Galway and ourselves, you get a few years to push at the top and you have to make the best of it for most counties outside of those two.
"It's one of those things. Between Dublin and Kerry they have 80% participation in All-Ireland finals and won 50% of them.
"You are up against a huge thing, but they have held their own. It's going to be disappointing for them today but they've got an All-Ireland medal in their back pocket and I'm sure those younger fellas there, most of that squad, will want to push on and try and get another one."
When asked on his Armagh agreement and his future, he quipped; "I didn't know you had agreements with GAA (laughs). Ah, it's hard to know. I sit down every year. My thing is always about players. It's all about the players. First and foremost and what they want and how much they want to push on.
"My appetite for football has always been the same. I love it. I enjoy it, despite the abuse. It's just one of those things. I don't know. Maybe it's an addiction. I haven't even thought about that."
When asked if it was an abuse-free season after winning the All-Ireland title last term, he said: "Not really like. Whether it's the GAA themselves or the supporters, the GAA manager is the person that gets blamed for everything.
"I always find it amusing sitting from the outside looking it at people doing their jobs and how they are graded and nobody ever looks in the mirror too much.
"I know as a manager I've made a s***load of mistakes. Things like that there, but it's amazing how everybody else tends to have a mirror that only tends to go out the way rather than looking back at themselves. Is that cryptic enough for you?"

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

RTÉ GAA Podcast: Kerry haven't gone away, you know
RTÉ GAA Podcast: Kerry haven't gone away, you know

RTÉ News​

timean hour ago

  • RTÉ News​

RTÉ GAA Podcast: Kerry haven't gone away, you know

Éamonn Fitzmaurice and Lee Keegan join special guest presenter Marty Morrissey and Rory O'Neill to look back on the weekend when eight became four in the All-Ireland football championship. Kerry looked incredibly impressive as they dethroned Armagh, while Meath surprised everyone but themselves as they saw off Galway. Donegal and Tyrone kept up hopes of an all-Ulster final as they saw off Monaghan and Dublin respectively, with the latter defeat spelling the end of the Dessie Farrell era. Watch the All-Ireland Camogie Championship quarter-finals with RTÉ Sport. Waterford v Clare on Saturday from 2.15pm on RTÉ2 and RTÉ Player and Tipperary v Kilkenny on Sunday from 1.15pm on RTÉ2 and RTÉ Player Watch the All-Ireland Hurling Championship semi-finals with RTÉ Sport. Cork v Dublin on Saturday from 4.30pm on RTÉ2 and RTÉ Player and Kilkenny v Tipperary on Sunday from 3.30pm on RTÉ2 and RTÉ Player. Follow live blogs on and the RTÉ News app. Listen to commentaries on RTÉ Radio 1. Watch highlights on The Sunday Game at 10.15pm on RTÉ2 and RTÉ Player

‘The Beatles didn't get as much attention' – Watch David Clifford get mobbed by Kerry fans while leaving Croke Park
‘The Beatles didn't get as much attention' – Watch David Clifford get mobbed by Kerry fans while leaving Croke Park

The Irish Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Irish Sun

‘The Beatles didn't get as much attention' – Watch David Clifford get mobbed by Kerry fans while leaving Croke Park

AS per usual David Clifford was in hot demand among fans after Kerry ended Armagh's reign as All-Ireland champions. Like the entire team, he really kicked into gear in the second half as his haul of 0-7 was Advertisement 2 The clamour for Clifford was something to behold Credit: @johnjoemoortown 2 Kerry walloped Armagh by 0-32 to 1-21 Credit: @johnjoemoortown After booking their spot Former county player John Joe O'Neill captioned his cheery video: "The Beatles did not get as much attention as this KID." Among the replies one Cork fan hailed: "Deserves it all, great role model for the GAA and its youth." Meanwhile Darren quipped: "The Beatles were good but you would never see John Lennon kicking a two-pointer in Croker when the game is there to be won!" Advertisement Read More On GAA On a similarly comedic note, Con added: "And there was four of them JJ. Top top player." On a day when pundits who labelled Kerry a one-man band were given cause to change their tune, Armagh were the ones left to face the music. The Kingdom hit all the right notes during a blistering second half that saw them dump the Orchard out. Trailing by five points after 40 minutes, Kerry hit an unanswered 14 points over the following 15 minutes to end the game as a contest. Advertisement Most read in GAA Football It was sweet revenge for Kerry following last year's semi-final defeat. But 'Lots of fight' - RTE GAA pundits react to Sean O'Shea's 'very interesting' interview after Kerry dethrone Armagh O'Connor said: 'A Kerry team written off in Croke Park are dangerous because it just takes a bit of the heat off. 'It allows them to play with a kind of freedom and abandon. That's what you saw there. Advertisement "Our mantra this morning was we have to flip the script. The script has been written that Armagh have this game won and we have to flip that script. 'Every breaking ball you win, every turnover you win, every score is a chip off the block and it's a way of flipping that script. We did it block by block.' ABSENT STARS No part was played at Croker by Paul Geaney, Mike Breen, Tadhg Morley, Diarmuid O'Connor, Tony Brosnan or Barry Dan O'Sullivan. Tom O'Sullivan limped off in the first half and Paudie Clifford was only fit enough to be subbed on at the break. Advertisement Still, O'Connor acknowledged that his introduction 'gave everybody a lift' and the Fossa man had a big impact as the Munster champions seized control. In his post-match press briefing, the Kerry gaffer also referenced a mention of Clifford's younger brother David in an article penned by Joe Brolly. He underlined: 'One of the great motivators in life is trying to prove people wrong. We were being portrayed as a one-man team. 'I saw somebody writing this morning that said the only Kerry player worthy of being called a Kerry player was David Clifford. Advertisement "Now, David is a great player but David will tell you that there was a fair supporting cast there today.'

Colm Boyle: O'Shea masterclass as Kerry produce stunning second half performance
Colm Boyle: O'Shea masterclass as Kerry produce stunning second half performance

Irish Daily Mirror

time2 hours ago

  • Irish Daily Mirror

Colm Boyle: O'Shea masterclass as Kerry produce stunning second half performance

I wrote off Kerry last week and said David Clifford was the only chance they had of winning this game, but as it turned out we got a Sean O'Shea masterclass. O'Shea hit 12 points from play and set the tone right from the start with a couple of incredible scores that lifted his team. Kerry's second half was the best 35 minute performance by any team in this year's Championship. It was almost total football, not just in how good they were with the ball in hand, but the way they out fought Armagh and outwitted them on their own kickouts. While most of the focus will be on Sean O'Shea and David Clifford, who really kicked into gear in the second half, Kerry had very unlikely heroes in the midfield pair of Sean O'Brien and Mark O'Shea. They both put in huge shifts, as did Joe O'Connor around the middle third and Gavin White, who delivered one of his best performances in a Kerry jersey. When Armagh went five points up early in the second half, I thought Kerry were done. It looked like Armagh were going to cruise home in the second half but what Kerry produced after that was absolutely sensational, to score 14 points without reply. Armagh's kick out losses in the second half was into double digits. When they came under serious pressure, their decision making on their kickouts seemed very one dimensional and quite poor at times, which shows that even the best teams can collapse under pressure with the new kickout rule. Despite trailing by a point at half-time, I thought Kerry looked the better team with that man Sean O'Shea really leading the charge. For Kerry to win the game, I felt they needed to start well and be in the game at half-time and O'Shea was a huge reason why they were. Their response to conceding a very soft goal was also hugely impressive. They had it wiped out in two minutes with Sean O'Shea getting a two pointer and a one. That showed a steeliness and a resolve that probably I and others throughout the country had doubted leading into this game. Armagh just didn't seem to cope well with the expectancy of coming into this game as All-Ireland champions against the Kerry underdog. The most surprising aspect was how they lost control of that game and an area everyone thought they were so strong in, that middle eight. Both their midfielders were removed in the second half - Niall Grimley and Ben Crealey. And at times it was Oisin Conaty almost forging a furrow up front alone as he continued his almost Player of the Year form. He was absolutely brilliant. For Kerry to win this game without a fully fit Paudie Clifford, Paul Geaney not seeing game time, Diarmuid O'Connor out with injury, Tom O'Sullivan hobbling off after 20 minutes - and also missing Mike Breen, Tadhg Morely and Tony Brosnan - is a serious testament to them. If they can get a couple of them back for the semi-final against Tyrone, they are going to be in a really good place. Meath produced the shock of the round against Galway. This was a result I just didn't see as possible, even though they'd beaten both Dublin and Kerry in this year's Championship I thought the road Galway have been on over the last couple of weeks in particular, and the last couple of years, would have stood to them coming into yesterday's game. Padraic Joyce will be shocked at how poor his team was and some of the basic errors they made in the game. This was a very strange match. The first half was of a shockingly poor standard and Galway probably undeservedly went in at half-time one point up. I felt at half time that Galway would come out and blow Meath away in the second half, but it just never materialised and the longer Meath were in the game, the more they grew in confidence. In Jordan Morris they had the outstanding footballer on the pitch. When Conor Gray goaled in the 52nd minute, which was followed quickly by a Morris point to put Meath six up, that shocked Galway into life. And in the space of seven minutes, Galway went from six down to three up after goals from Cillian McDaid and Liam Silke. It looked like Galway were going to survive, like they did in Celtic Park against Derry and in Breffni Park against Armagh. But an incredible turnover by Morris on Johnny McGrath a couple of minutes later led to Morris palming the ball to the back of the net and Meath all of a sudden gained control again. Padraic Joyce will be really disappointed with his team, that they could not see this game out after Silke's goal. But the story of this game is Meath and what a performance it was by them in the last 20 minutes. A dramatic ending to the game did have a slightly farcical side to it with Meath slowing down the play and wasting enough time for Eoghan Frayne to kick the ball out over the endline, while they were waiting for the hooter. I hope they get rid of the hooter next year. I think it's just too easy for players to run down the cloak and play keep ball for the last two minutes. At least in injury time you are not sure if it's the last play of the game if it's in the referee's control. Anyway, Meath shouldn't have any fear whatsoever of Donegal, but Jim McGuinness will be absolutely delighted to avoid Kerry in what has been an unpredictable championship so far, so who knows what could happen from here on it? Dublin's All-Ireland quarter final defeat by Galway last year shocked the country, but this year's quarter final loss to Tyrone wouldn't have surprised too many. While I did fancy the Dubs to just about get the job done, the loss of Con O'Callaghan for most of the game proved decisive. I was surprised how much the O'Callaghan no-show against Cork was played down by various media outlets during the week. Dessie Farrell played it down in the aftermath of the Cork win, stating that he didn't feel the game needed O'Callaghan's introduction, despite it being level with 10 minutes to go. In hindsight it was a huge signal that he was struggling badly. I'd imagine Malachy O'Rourke would have been expecting O'Callaghan in from the off, but the fact he didn't even take part in the Dublin warm up would have been a huge boost from his Tyrone team. All of a sudden there was very little to fear for his team. That said, I thought Dublin played some great football in the first half playing into a tricky breeze into the hill. They went in at half time a point down but actually outscored Tyrone 10 score to 7. Crucially, Tyrone hit four brilliant two pointers in the first half, something which has been an Achilles heel for Dublin in this year's Championship. Dublin had the lowest number of orange flags of all eight teams going into this weekend - and again failed to raise an orange flag on Saturday. The second half was almost a replica of the Armagh game a couple of weeks ago. Dublin's radar was completely off. In total they had 16 scores from 35 shots, which ironically was the exact same as Monaghan had against Donegal in the earlier game. When Eoin McElholm lined up Ciaran Kilkenny and breezed past him to put Tyrone two points up coming down the stretch it felt like a huge moment. For a young player to show so much confidence in a critical moment was incredible. Tyrone smelt blood after that, kicked on for home and outscored Dublin by six points to one in this period. For Tyrone it's a brilliant win but I think O'Rourke will feel there's another gear in his team ahead of the All-Ireland semi-final, which is an ideal scenario for his team to be in. Dessie Farrell didn't hang around in announcing his departure as Dublin manager in the aftermath, which wasn't a surprise after six years in charge. Who will replace him will be interesting but there is no doubt there will be an uncomfortable few weeks ahead for Louth as I expect Ger Brennan to be heavily linked to the job. Whoever the next Dublin manager is, he'll face big questions straight away about his veterans. If Stephen Cluxton does finally call a day, it will be off the back of an incredible season for him. He was completely written off after the defeat to Meath in the Leinster semi-final. We all thought that at his age the new kick out rule was one step too far for him. But he returned to have a brilliant game in Dublin's victory in Salthill against Galway and had an incredible 90percent retention rate back to back against Derry and Cork, before signing off for this season with 77percent retention against Tyrone An interesting few months await for Dublin. From looking like they were in serious trouble at half-time, Donegal went on to produce their best 35 minutes of football in Croke Park since Jim McGuinness returned at the helm. They wiped out Monaghan's seven point lead in the space of 17 minutes and once Michael Murphy drew them level with a free in the 52nd minute, there was only ever going to be one winner. Monaghan will look at some very poor decisions in front of goal, especially in the second half and it sucked the life out of their general play. The more Monaghan suffered in front of the posts, the more energy Donegal seemed to have and their direct, hard running at Monaghan in the second half often from turnovers or shots that dropped short had the Farney men in all sorts of trouble. Ryan McAnespie's injury at the start of the second half was a huge blow to Monaghan after a monster of a first half from him. The sight of Conor McCarthy hopping off at a time when Donegal had serious momentum was a clear sign it was going to be Donegal's day. Jason McGee and Paddy McBrearty in particular gave Donegal a huge impact off the bench and both were hugely influential in the closing stages.

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