logo
Darragh Ó Sé: Galway won't be down after Dubs defeat - now is the time to get battle-hardened

Darragh Ó Sé: Galway won't be down after Dubs defeat - now is the time to get battle-hardened

Irish Times21-05-2025

In the end, I'd say Pádraic Joyce was happy enough with how the weekend went. Whatever about
Galway
losing to
Dublin
on Saturday, he surely had his opening line ready for the next time his panel got together: 'It could be worse, lads – we could be
Mayo
!'
Hard games stand to good teams. Galway have had two on the trot now and they've played some great stuff at times and made loads of mistakes at other times. They won one by the kick of a ball and lost the other by the kick of a ball. My feeling is that losing to Dublin will do them more good in the long run than beating Mayo.
This is the time of the year to get battle-hardened. The All-Ireland will be decided by three games in four weeks between the end of June and the end of July. You can't fake it at that point. It's not like cramming for an exam the night before. Especially in a year like this when there are so many teams at such a similar level.
When the Dubs were in their pomp, it was a different story. They only needed to be at full pelt for a couple of games a season. There were two reasons for this: one, they were so far ahead of everyone, with the deepest squad. Two, they had eight weeks between the All-Ireland quarter-final and the final, giving them plenty of space to play hot and heavy A v B games.
READ MORE
That used to suit us with
Kerry
too. I remember one year we brought Brian White down to
Páirc Uí Chaoimh
to referee an A v B game and I'm fairly sure he was more or less told to leave his whistle in the car. We tore into each other, with barely a free given in the whole evening and we walked off the pitch knowing that we had sharpened each other up no end. I'd say Brian went back up the road thinking these lads hate each other, there's no way they're winning any All-Ireland.
Galway's Paul Conroy scores the first goal of the game against Donegal in last year's All-Ireland semi-final. Photograph: Ryan Byrne/Inpho
I don't think any team has the luxury of being able to rely on those kinds of games now. When you get to the latter stages of the championship this year, you have no time for clipping the lugs off each other in A v B games. If you win your quarter-final, you have a couple of days of recovery, a couple of tactical sessions and walk-throughs and that's about it.
Go back to last year's semi-finals. Both of them were dead level coming down the stretch but
Kerry
and
Donegal
faded out of it and
Armagh
and Galway powered on to the final. I don't think it was any coincidence that the two teams who came through were the ones who'd had the toughest road.
Donegal had gone six weeks without being involved in a close game by the time they met Galway. Kerry hardly broke sweat in the championship at all – you'd call the quarter-final against
Derry
sticky rather than anything more ferocious. When it came to the crunch, they both ran out of gas.
I went to Kerry's game against
Roscommon
on Saturday and to me, it nearly looked like the Rossies had decided to keep their powder dry for the games against Cork and Meath. The word around Kerry was that they had been very good against Tyrone in a challenge match, but I was sitting watching them and asking: 'Says who? I'd love to meet the fellah who said that. Get the CIA or the KGB on this thing because if this crowd were very good against Tyrone, then Tyrone are in trouble.'
They put up no sort of fight in Killarney. Ultimately, this isn't going to be any good to Kerry. I know that's going to sound like a Kerryman being cute but that's genuinely how I see it. Kerry have won one of the past 10 All-Irelands – there's nothing cute about that kind of record. In reality, Kerry keep getting found out when it matters most.
Kerry's David Clifford and David Murray of Roscommon during their match in Killarney at the weekend. Photograph: Laszlo Geczo/Inpho
You need these tough games and you need them now. You need to have your cracks exposed and to find out where your weaknesses are so you can go and work on them. Kerry's two toughest games have been a league final against Mayo in Croke Park and a big test below in Cork. But the league final was in March and the Cork game was in the middle of April. If Kerry are in the last 10 minutes of an All-Ireland semi-final in early July, a wet night in Páirc Uí Chaoimh in April isn't going to be much good to them.
So when you hear fellas saying Kerry must be laughing at all these other counties killing each other, I honestly think it might be the other way around. Obviously, you don't want to be going full-bore every day but some of these games are worth their weight in gold.
Galway, Dublin, Armagh, Donegal – these teams have all been stress-tested in high-pressure situations in the past few weekends. They know where they stand. They know who's up to it when the heat really comes on. More to the point, they know who isn't. Kerry have a fair idea but they don't know for sure. And by the time they find out, it might be too late.
[
Conor McManus: The West's awake but it's resurrection time for Dublin
Opens in new window
]
It's a first-world problem, as they say. And I know that if you were a Dublin or Galway player with your hands on your knees and your tongue hanging out in Salthill last Saturday, you'd be thinking that a nice stroll around Killarney against the Rossies would be very welcome just at that moment.
But when it comes right down to it in the heat of an All-Ireland semi-final or final, I know which one I'd be happier to have in the bank.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Debut delight for Niamh Gowing as Ireland draw with USA in first tie of two-leg series
Debut delight for Niamh Gowing as Ireland draw with USA in first tie of two-leg series

RTÉ News​

time44 minutes ago

  • RTÉ News​

Debut delight for Niamh Gowing as Ireland draw with USA in first tie of two-leg series

USA 1-1 Ireland Ireland and USA both had a share of the spoils in the first tie of the two-game series in Charlotte, North Carolina. A quarter-two goal from debutant Niamh Gowing gave Ireland the lead before the USA responded to level the game less than five minutes later. Ireland began the first quarter well, early passages of possession eventually materialised into chances. Sarah Torrans attacked down the left baseline and pulled the ball back, but USA cleared. The chance was followed up by a second effort on goal for Ireland, with Siofra O'Brien driving from her own half into the USA circle and getting a shot away which Kealsy Reeb managed to save in the USA net. The USA did eventually get a foothold in the game, creating a few chances of their own, but failed to test Irish netminder Elizabeth Murphy as both were wide of the goal, resulting in the sides finishing the opening quarter on level terms. Ireland were quick to assert themselves in the second quarter, with Torrans testing the goalkeeper no more than a minute after the restart. Ireland were rewarded for their pressure not long after. Hannah McLoughlin, fired a ball towards the circle which debutant Gowing latched on to and fired into the USA net on her reverse to open the scoring. USA responded quickly, creating scoring chances, that again went wide, before working the ball well into the Irish circle and finding Riley Heck on the penalty spot to draw level. Mikayla Power created the next chance of the game creating an inch of space to test the keeper, before Charlotte Beggs found a foot but opted to play on, striking wide with her effort. A late penalty corner gave the USA a chance to take the lead, but the variation was well defended by Ireland. After a challenging third quarter, Ireland settled well early in the fourth, with Sarah Hawkshaw working the ball well down the left to give Sarah Torrans a chance from a tight angle. A few minutes later, Ireland won their first corner of the game with Roisin Upton flicking low at goal forcing a save from Kealsy Reeb. A yellow card just outside the final five minutes for USA meant they would have to see out the majority of the time remaining a player down. Sustained pressure from Ireland eventually resulted in a penalty corner with a minute remaining but a mis-trap at the top of the circle left the chance going a-begging meaning the sides shared the spoils in the first match-up of the series. Ireland will play the second leg game against the USA on Sunday, 8 June.

Live GAA updates: Cork look to halt Limerick's drive for seventh consecutive Munster title
Live GAA updates: Cork look to halt Limerick's drive for seventh consecutive Munster title

Irish Times

timean hour ago

  • Irish Times

Live GAA updates: Cork look to halt Limerick's drive for seventh consecutive Munster title

Saturday's fixtures Munster Senior Hurling Final: Limerick v Cork, Gaelic Grouds, 6pm Tailteann Cup: Offaly v New York, O'Connor Park, 2pm Westmeath v Laois, Cusack Park, Mullingar, 5pm 3 minutes ago Here is how Seán Moran has called today's Munster SHC final: 'If the intrigue surrounding the counties' earlier meeting centred on how convincingly Limerick could regain their form of old and how successfully their opponents could iron out troubling inconsistencies in their performances to date, the resolution made tough viewing for Cork.' [ Munster SHC final: Limerick look too far ahead to be caught on this occasion Opens in new window ] 10 minutes ago Good afternoon and welcome to our live blog for today's eagerly awaited Munster senior hurling final between Limerick and Cork at the Gaelic Grounds. This one has all the ingredients to serve up a classic. It's Gordon Manning here and I'll be keeping you updated on all the action from Limerick. Seán Moran and Denis Walsh are both in place at the stadium so we'll be getting their thoughts and all the latest team news from the Gaelic Grounds. So put the kettle on, open the good biscuits and get ready for an evening of high entertainment and drama.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store