
Déise record historic Kilkenny victory
Camogie history was made at UPMC Nowlan Park today, as Waterford recorded their first ever senior championship victory over Kilkenny since their introduction to the senior competition in 2015.
The 0-17-to-0-10 win blows Group 2 of the Glen Dimplex All-Ireland series wide open.
Since gaining promotion back to senior in 2015, the record between the two counties made for grim reading for Déise supporters and players, with eight defeats and one draw in nine games in all competition.
An early 0-04 to 0-01 lead for Tommy Shefflin's home side suggested that another similar encounter was in store here, but Waterford completely took control, with Niamh Rockett and Beth Carton quickly establishing themselves as the key players that would dictate the flow of the game.
Eimear O'Neill also got on the scoresheet as Waterford rattled off seven points in a row, while Aoife Norris was just about keeping Kilkenny afloat with some incredible saves to deny Lorraine Bray, Annie Fitzgerald and Maggie Gostl goal attempts.
Midway through the second half Kilkenny briefly got the deficit back to two points, but on an afternoon when they mustered a mere three points from play, Laura Murphy's free taking wasn't enough to get them the scores they needed.
Carton finished with 0-04 while Rockett, who has taken over placed ball duties from the former player of the year, shot the last three points of the game to bring her tally to 0-09, ensuring that Mick Boland's charges powered over the finish line to give themselves a dream start to the championship, having had a bye in week one.
At The Ragg, in the big game in Group 1, it took Amy O'Connor a mere 14 seconds to open the scoring for Cork against Tipperary, and the All-Ireland champions didn't let up from there as they ran out 3-21 to 1-09 winners in a real statement victory.
The Rebels had the aid a tricky diagonal breeze in the opening half and Tipperary had some positive aspects, including a strong showing from their half-back line. However, once the ball got in behind, they struggled to contain a classy Cork attack and three green flags in the first ten minutes ensured that the home side always had a huge lead to chase.
Katrina Mackey broke a tackle to set up Clodagh Finn for a close-range goal in the eighth minute of the game, O'Connor scored the second on the back of great work from Orlaith Cahalane and Saoirse McCarthy, with Finn repaying the favour to Mackey by setting up her inside forward colleague for goal number three.
Mary Burke goaled in response for Tipp but seven points in a row from Ger Manley's crew made it 3-13 to 1-02 at the break, with no way back for the blue and gold. O'Connor continued to be a constant threat for Cork, ending the game with 1-13 in total, 1-05 from play, in a superb individual display. Ashling Thompson and Hannah Looney also played leading roles in controlling midfield, and Cork already look like they have a firm grip on top spot in the group and the automatic semi-final berth that comes with that.
The battle between Limerick and Wexford at Rathkeale looked on paper like a vital contest in the battle for the last knockout spot alongside the two traditional Munster powers, and all roads now lead to Ennis for the meeting of Limerick and Clare next week, after the Treaty County secured a crucial 1-10 to 0-10 win today.
Caoimhe Costelloe hit three first-half points but a pair each for Anais Curran and Joanne Dillon meant Wexford took an 0-06 to 0-04 advantage into the dressing room at the interval, though that looked inadequate given the strength of the breeze that blew down Mick Neville Park.
Sarah Gillane's excellent save just before the break was to prove crucial, all the more so when Laura Southern hit the game's only goal five minutes into the second half.
Limerick were heavily dependent on Costelloe for scores, with 0-8 coming from the stick of the Adare camog, but that proved to be just about enough as they bounced back well from their heavy defeat against Cork last weekend.
In the other game in Group 2, Galway had things all their own way in Owenbeg as they ran out 4-25 to 0-05 winners on the back of a dominant attacking display against Derry.
Mairéad Dillon's goal in the 15th minute and another from Aoife Donohue three minutes later left Derry on the back foot, and when Sabina Rabbitte added a third shortly before half-time, the hosts were shipping water all over the field.
Orlaith Hull was the only scorer for the Oak Leaf County in the opening half, while Galway had nine scorers overall, with seven different players raising flags as they built up a 3-16 to 0-03 interval lead. Caoimhe Kelly got their fourth goal while Carrie Dolan (0-08) and Niamh Mallon (0-07) continued to do the bulk of the scoring damage.

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Irish Examiner
29 minutes ago
- Irish Examiner
Despite distractions and defeats, Mayo do what Mayo do
All-Ireland SFC: Mayo: 2-0-17 (23) Tyrone: 1-2-9 (16) How did this happen? To explain this shock result, you first need to consider the current landscape of Gaelic football contenders. Then remember: this is Mayo. Over the past few weeks, we've been served periodic reminders that the margin between the Sam Maguire chasing pack is minimal. There are a whole host of quality sides and they all have obvious flaws. Mayo have bared them all in recent weeks. On the pitch, they suffered devastating losses against rivals Galway in the Connacht final and Cavan in their opening group stages game. Off it, their manager stepped back to deal with personal health issues, their county board hosted an explosive meeting and their support was dwindling. They were against an outfit that downed Ulster champions Donegal at home and buoyed by another U20 title midweek. So Mayo came to Omagh and mauled them. 1-9 to 0-4 up at half-time, the home side closed the gap to one midway through the second half yet Mayo surged again. 'You saw Tyrone last week, they went to Ballybofey,' said Stephen Rochford post-match. 'Who wins in Ballybofey in championship games? Not too many I can remember anyway. They responded. We knew it was going to be tight going down the final quarter. The energy that came off the bench, the support play they gave each other was really commendable. But there is always a but. There is always a but. We must do it again in two weeks.' Mayo's first green flag was fortunate. They worked the clock just before half-time and eventually freed up Bob Tuohy for a shot. He dropped it short, Niall Morgan failed to deal with it and Darren McHale took advantage. Even still, they were full value for the lead. Paddy Durcan was immense, finishing with three points and the Man of the Match award. Jack Carney moved to the inside line and found some form. Conall Dawson came into the half-forward line and brought unsurpassed energy. David McBrien was a rock in the middle. What happened to Tyrone? They scored just 1-6 from play. Their kick-out was destroyed, winning three of 11 long. The final shot tally was 29 to 17. 'It is hard to know,' said a frustrated Malachy O'Rourke. 'Sometimes when you get a bad performance, the next one there is a lot of soul searching in between and boys come back with a point to prove. Having said that, we were just looking for consistency. We got a good performance last week. 'We knew you had to go out and earn the next day. We just didn't do that. Overall we were disappointed with our play. Many aspects, we were flat and hadn't the energy we had last week. We thought we fought our way back into it. We thought we may be able to forge ahead. It wasn't to be.' Consistency. That preciously-sought commodity. As Stephen Coen said afterwards, if every team wants to be consistent, everyone has to be inconsistent. To their credit, Tyrone did respond after the turnaround. They hit 1-2 without reply, including a sweet Darragh Canavan goal. A Morgan two-point free cut Mayo's lead to a point. Davitt Neary came off the bench and hit back. He stole short kickouts, he won frees, he took off and was felled by Liam Gray for a Ryan O'Donoghue penalty. He missed a huge kick against the same opposition in the 2021 All-Ireland final. This time, he slotted it. They still need a result in the final round, but the benefit is profound. A host of young prospects showed what they are about. After a momentous low, they lifted it. 'Why was it different? We just did not perform against Cavan,' said Rochford. 'Our opening 12 minutes was just lacklustre. We tried to do a lot of things well, when you are just a bit off and a team come against you, you look really mediocre. 'I think we are better than a mediocre team. But you just can't be at that. There is no way of getting into the psychology of it. We just backed each other up today. We supported each other. 'We got scores and also left scores behind. That was not anywhere near a complete performance. We will go after that because we know we need to be better when we got to play Donegal.' Scorers for Tyrone: D. Canavan 1-3 (2 frees); N. Morgan 0-4 (2 tpf); D. McCurry 0-2 (1 free); M. Donnelly, B. McDonnell, M. McKernan, K. McGeary 0-1 each. Scorers for Mayo: R. O'Donoghue 1-6 (1-0 pen, 0-5 frees); D. McHale 1-0; P. Durcan 0-3; R. Brickenden, C. Dawson 0-2 each; A. O'Shea, C. Reape (45) J. Carney, J. Coyne 0-1 each. Tyrone: N. Morgan; C. Quinn, P. Teague, N. Devlin; M. McKernan, R. Brennan, K. McGeary; B. McDonnell, C. Kilpatrick; S. O'Donnell, M. Donnelly, C. Daly; D. McCurry, M. Bradley, D. Canavan. Subs: S. O'Hare for O'Donnell, L. Gray for Brennan (both half-time); P. Harte for Bradley, R. Canavan for Daly (both 47); A. Donaghy for McDonnell (61). Mayo: C. Reape; J. Coyne, S. Morahan, E. Hession; R. Brickenden, S. Coen, P. Durcan; D. McBrien, M. Ruane; C. Dawson, D. McHale, B. Tuohy; J. Carney, A. O'Shea, R. O'Donoghue. Subs: D. Neary for McHale, J. Flynn for Tuohy (both 52); F. Kelly for Dawson (55); F. Boland for Ruane (64), S. Callinan for Durcan (67). Referee: D. Coldrick (Meath).


RTÉ News
an hour ago
- RTÉ News
Kieran McGeeney rues missed goal chances but happy that Armagh topped group
Kieran McGeeney felt both his Armagh side and Dublin failed to hit the heights in their clash at Croke Park, while also lamenting the number of goal chances spurned by the All-Ireland SFC champions. A five-point win at GAA HQ ensured the Ulster county's progression through to the quarter-finals of this year's race for Sam Maguire, with the Dubs now needing to avoid defeat in their final-round encounter against Derry to ensure that they remain involved. It was a deserved win for Armagh, this despite the 17 wides that Dessie Farrell's side chalked up and their 4/3 breaches. For McGeeney, he felt his side could have made a greater indent on the scoreboard by way of raising green flags. Speaking to RTÉ Sport, he summed up the clash by saying: "Both teams weren't at their best." On the failure to put the ball past Stephen Cluxton, he said: "We missed a lot of goal chances in the first half and they missed a lot of chances overall. "There wouldn't have been much in it if they had their shooting boots on. We had four one-on-ones with Stephen and got nothing out of it and I think they got three points from our 12-point chances. Look, it was great to win the game and we top the group, so that's a big thing for us." That said, the Orchard County boss was less than impressed by what he witnessed. Armagh boss Kieran McGeeney sees plenty of room for improvement with his side's performance, despite their five point victory over Dublin at Croke Park, a win that sends them into the to All-Ireland quarter-finals. #RTEGAA #TheSundayGame — The Sunday Game (@TheSundayGame) June 1, 2025 He added: "You can see the pace of Dublin when they go on the attack and they are frightening when they go through that middle part. We were happy with some parts but if we are to progress any further we will need a big improvement. "We did a lot of good stuff but at this level you have to take those chances. Cluxton is a top keeper but we made it easy for them and I'm sure Dessie is in there giving them loads for missing those point chances." His opposite number also lamented his side's accuracy in front of the posts, Farrell commenting: "It was disappointing in that I thought we prepared well but we were sloppy out there. Shooting efficiency cost us dearly and we had a couple of those technical breaches as well, which was very unlike us. "That cost us five points and you won't get way with that against a team like Armagh. At this stage we have to stay on script and keep driving on; it's about development, growth, taking the lessons, and continuing to build for ourselves. There are ups and downs along the way. Today wasn't a good day and we're into knockout football now." Dublin boss Dessie Farrell was left to rue wayward shooting and technical infringements as his side suffered a five point defeat to Armagh at Croke Park. #RTEGAA #TheSundayGame — The Sunday Game (@TheSundayGame) June 1, 2025 What will frustrate Farrell even more was that his troops started brightly but could not regain the initiative when Armagh got on top after the 20-minute mark in the opening half. "The first quarter was really good and we looked very sharp and very clinical. We then lost our way and we'll try and unpack that from a mental perspective as well as everything else. "That second quarter before half-time was costly, we were constantly chasing and though at times were getting a foothold, getting at their kickout which was very difficult to do. "That was giving us a bit of momentum but we could not convert off that and had a lot of bad wides, coupled with poor decision-making. "Shot selection in the last quarter could have had us closer but ultimately it didn't happen for us because we didn't perform the way we would have wanted to."


Irish Examiner
an hour ago
- Irish Examiner
Undercooked? Understrength? What shape will Kerry be in come knockout fare?
All-Ireland SFC Group 2: Kerry 1-28 (1-7-14) Cork 0-20 (0-3-14) The concern for Kerry is no longer the extent to which they'll be undercooked and insufficiently scrutinised when pitching up at Croke Park for an All-Ireland quarter-final. The concern now for Kerry is who'll be available when they pitch up at Croke Park. Diarmuid O'Connor's return lasted one game. A groin issue that flared up during the win over Roscommon sidelined him on Saturday and will keep him sidelined for the Meath fixture. Beyond that, who knows. What is known is how shy of championship minutes the midfielder will be whenever his second return materialises. Paudie Clifford's return lasted 31 minutes. After kicking possession into Paul Geaney on the half-hour, Clifford turned to the sideline and raised his hand. He was whipped a minute later. A hamstring problem, we were informed after. Having sat out the Roscommon win because of injury, you'd have to question why he was risked here if not fully right coming back in. Paul Geaney (shoulder) wasn't long out to the line after him, Barry Dan O'Sullivan (knee) already there since the 21st minute after departing very gingerly. Mark O'Shea replaced O'Sullivan and deputised impressively. He won an early second-half Kerry kickout that ended in a Killian Spillane point. He won a Cork kickout that ended with David Clifford converting from outside the arc. He forced Ian Maguire to overcarry for a free Seán O'Shea converted from outside the arc. The problem for Kerry is that they are now threadbare on midfield options and heading in that direction where the half-forward line is concerned. Say that injuries mean Joe O'Connor and Mark O'Shea are the midfield pairing for the Meath game. Read More As it happened: Kerry blow Cork away with impressive second half display Seán O'Brien is then the last remaining bench option behind them and he hasn't seen action since being introduced late in the second half of the Munster semi-final six weeks ago. One wonders if at any point between now and the end of this championship Jack O'Connor will have the opportunity to put out a half-forward line of Joe O'Connor, Paudie Clifford, and Seán O'Shea. Of course, the manager is choosing to view the injury situation as glass half full. 'Mark O'Shea came on and gave us a great platform in the middle, caught some great ball. You lose one man, another man comes in and grows. That's great for the morale of the panel,' said Jack. 'Killian [Spillane] came on at half-time, kicked two great scores. Tony [Brosnan] came on and kicked a great two-pointer. Dylan [Geaney] showed his class when he came on. We needed all them lads.' David Clifford of Kerry celebrates after scoring his side's first goal. Pic: David Fitzgerald/Sportsfile The first half was a gut check in places for the visitors. Of course, it would have been far more of a gut check if they hadn't been gifted the buffer of an early goal. The irony that after a week in which Micheál Aodh Martin's long kickouts to an overloaded left flank were heavily criticised, it was a short restart to Brian O'Driscoll, intercepted and finished by David Clifford, that undid Martin and Cork. A Clifford point, from another lost Cork restart, assisted in pushing them 1-4 to 0-2 clear on 12 minutes. Playing into a near gale, that was a significant cushion to have constructed. As the half wore on, the Cork restart stabilised. Its Kerry counterpart, meanwhile, wobbled. Five consecutive Shane Ryan restarts were lost. They were not punished, though. Mark Cronin and Mattie Taylor drilled goal chances straight at Ryan. Taylor was later foiled by a Jason Foley hand as he went to pull the trigger. Colm O'Callaghan swung Cork back in front approaching the hooter. Brian Hurley, after the hooter, landed a crowd lifting two-pointer. 0-13 to 1-7 at the break. A three-point lead, such were the elements, was never going to be sufficient. And so that point of view was quickly proven right. The third quarter began with yellow cards to Jack O'Connor, David Clifford, and Brian Hurley, and black to Joe O'Connor and Paul Walsh. The latter four cards were for an unseemly episode that broke out on the way back to the dressing-rooms at half-time. Kerry were back out long before Cork, learned of Joe's black and so had more time to redraw their shape. The third quarter was then taken over by referee Derek O'Mahoney and orange flags. Kerry had kicked seven two-pointers in their six games before Saturday. They kicked seven here in the second half alone. Five of them came in a third quarter that saw an 11-point swing. O'Shea and Clifford swung over frees from outside the arc for Cork breaches of the three-up rule, the kickout mark, and dissent following the awarding of a Kerry free. The latter two, the same as the Cork free brought forward 50 metres following a Seán Walsh kickout mark, were questionable and completely lacking in common sense. Their resources further thinned and a third consecutive double-digit victory recorded, Kerry remain in pole position for direct progress to the last eight. Cork, winless since April 5 and winless in five of their last six championship outings, have 70 minutes against Roscommon to rescue their summer. Scorers for Kerry: D Clifford (1-8, tp, tp free, 0-2 frees); S O'Shea (0-9, 3 tp frees, 0-3 frees); T O'Sullivan (tp), P Geaney, T Brosnan (tp), K Spillane (0-2 each); G O'Sullivan, P Clifford, D Geaney (0-1 each). Scorers for Cork: B Hurley (0-7, tp, tp free, 0-2 frees); M Cronin (0-5, 0-4 frees); P Walsh (0-3, tp); C Óg Jones (0-1 free), C O'Callaghan (0-2 each); R Deane (0-1). KERRY: S Ryan; T O'Sullivan, J Foley, D Casey; B Ó Beaglaoich, M Breen, G White; J O'Connor, BD O'Sullivan; G O'Sullivan, P Clifford, S O'Shea; D Clifford, P Geaney, M Burns. Subs: M O'Shea for BD O'Sullivan (21 mins, inj); D Geaney for P Clifford (31, inj); K Spillane for P Geaney (HT, inj); T Brosnan for Burns (59); T Morley for Ó Beaglaoich (66). CORK: MA Martin; S Brady, S Meehan, D O'Mahony; B O'Driscoll, M Shanley, M Taylor; I Maguire, C O'Callaghan; S Walsh, P Walsh, S McDonnell; C Óg Jones, B Hurley, M Cronin. Subs: S Powter for Meehan (43); R Deane for McDonnell (50); C O'Mahony for B Hurley (60); L Fahy for Taylor (65); E McSweeney for P Walsh (66). Referee: D O'Mahoney (Tipperary).