
Brian Flanagan admits Kildare feared another Croke Park collapse before late surge sinks Fermanagh
Brian Flanagan says even he was starting to wonder if the Croke Park curse was a real thing for Kildare.
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Kildare saw off Fermanagh in the Tailteann Cup semi-finals
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Kildare manager Brian Flanagan he was starting to wonder if the Croke Park curse was a real thing for his side
Sub Brian McLoughlin changed the game when he came on early in the second-half, blasting five crucial points.
And James McGrath set the seal on a slightly flattering seven-point win with his third goal in a row late on.
The scores were tied at 0-8 apiece after 55 minutes and no Kildare fan in the 13,960 crowd was taking anything for granted at that stage.
The Leinster semi-finalists had lost their previous five games at Croke Park - and have a poor record generally there over the last 15 years.
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They created 32 scoring chances overall but wasted four goal opportunities and drilled 14 wides - leaving Flanagan wondering if another Croker choker was occurring.
He said: "I said after the quarter-final win that every team has their challenges and, look, there was a bit made out of our recent history in Croke Park.
"The reality is you don't talk about those things when you're developing a new group because in many ways it's irrelevant to us.
"But as that game went on, 15 or 20 minutes in, you were thinking, 'Maybe there is something in this, I don't know'.
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"So winning became even more important than at that point, so you could throw the shackles off in the future when we come back here."
Kildare will be favourites for next month's final and will receive a golden ticket to the 2026 All-Ireland SFC if they can win again at Croker.
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Flanagan will have a selection headache because McLoughlin, who struck 1-2 at Croke Park in the 2018 All-Ireland U-20 final win, will feel he has done enough to start.
McLoughlin was named Man of the Match despite being on the pitch less than 30 minutes.
Attacker Neil Flynn is back in the squad too while versatile half-forward Callum Bolton should be fit again and Jimmy Hyland could yet make it too after calf/Achilles trouble.
Flanagan said: "When Brian is in his stride, he's a very good striker of the ball. That's what we were bringing him in to do.
"We spoke a lot during the week about our bench having an impact, not just coming in to see a game out but actually impacting the game and he certainly did that."
It was a forgettable first 50 minutes or so with Kildare 0-7 to 0-6 up at half-time.
Spells of torrential rain left both sets of players soaked and contributed to an error prone spectacle.
That explained a lot of the wides and handling errors, while neither side really got their kicking games going.
Colm Dalton, Kevin Feely, Tommy Gill and Daniel Flynn all failed to convert decent Kildare goal chances - leaving Flanagan fearing the worst.
But McLoughlin was a game changer when he came on and the goal Fermanagh needed in response never arrived.
Fermanagh manager Kieran Donnelly said: "Conditions were hard on the players. With us being a mobile team and a young team, it didn't help us on a day like that. We haven't played in those conditions all year."
Kildare 1-13
Fermanagh 0-9
Kildare: C Burke; H O'Neill, M Dempsey, K Flynn; B Byrne, D Hyland, J McGrath 1-0; K Feely 0-2, tp, B Gibbons; T Gill, A Beirne 0-1, C Dalton 0-2; R Sinkey, D Kirwan 0-1, D Flynn 0-2.
Subs: B McLoughlin 0-5, 1tp for Sinkey 44, J McKevitt for K Flynn 55, N Kelly for Kirwan 63, A Masterson for Gibbons 66.
Fermanagh: S McNally; L Flanagan, L Cullen, O Smyth; S McGullion, D McCusker 0-1, J Cassidy; J McDade 0-1, D McGurn 0-1; F O'Brien, R Lyons 0-1, R McCaffrey; Josh Largo Ellis 0-2, G Jones, C Love 0-2.
Subs: S Cassidy 0-1 for Jones h/t, C McGee for McCaffrey 50, A Kelm for McCusker 56, Jack Largo Ellis for O'Brien 66, C Cullen for McGullion 68.
Ref: K Eannetta (Tyrone).
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Irish Examiner
38 minutes ago
- Irish Examiner
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Tailteann Cup semi-final: Limerick 2-18 (2-2-14) Wicklow 1-17 (1-2-13) When Dean Healy boomed over his second two-pointer of the day for Wicklow in the 49th minute, putting his team six points up, he raised both hands aloft. It was hard to work out whether it was a celebration or a two-point signal to the umpire to raise his orange flag. Either way, he looked happy. A minute later, Oisin McGraynor definitely was celebrating when he struck another point for Wicklow and punched the air in delight. It felt like a coming of age moment for this Wicklow team who, with 20 minutes left, were seven points up and, apparently, home and hosed. The Tailteann Cup final on July 12 beckoned. Remarkably, they didn't score again until time was almost up and, in that intervening period, Limerick didn't so much reel them in as throw a lasso around their necks and yank hard on it. By the time Limerick's scoring blitz was over, they'd struck 1-9 without response, amassing in just 16 minutes what they'd managed for the previous 50 or so. Substitutes Rob Childs, who struck the goal that ignited their revival, Barry Coleman and Darragh Murray contributed 1-3 between them. "Basically at that stage all we wanted was to get on the ball, calm things down," said Limerick manager Jimmy Lee. "We knew there was more in them, and there was. They showed real leadership out there. It's well known, the cliches, that semi-finals are just there to be won and to be fair, those young lads out there showed real leadership and character. Hats off to them." By the time that Limerick whipped up their storm, James Naughton, who'd rifled 0-27 in his previous four games, and pretty much hasn't stopped scoring all season, was off the pitch with a knock. "That's it, you look at the injuries we had; Cormac Woulfe, Fiachra Cotter, Darragh O Siochru, you could keep listing them," said Lee. "But then, as I said, you have young lads that stepped up to the plate." Lee namechecked the more experienced players too. Iain Corbett is still there doing his thing at centre-back. Danny Neville, fresh off scoring 2-2 against Wexford last weekend, added another 1-2 and scored the first-half goal that left Limerick just about ahead at half-time, 1-7 to 0-9. Lee mentioned Paul Maher and Killian Ryan too. The impact of goalkeeper Josh Ryan was huge as well. He nailed two two-point frees in that late siege of scoring, the second of which was converted from all of 60 metres. "When Josh knocked over that two-pointer, we were home and hosed at that stage realistically, the clock was running down," said Lee. And yet it looked as if his opposite number, Mark Jackson, was going to be the hero. The former NFL hopeful has been kicking scores for fun throughout the competition and converted two single points from frees for Wicklow in the first-half. But it was his error that later opened the door for Limerick. Mark McCarthy's 52nd minute ball into the danger area was gathered up by Jackson but Childs tackled him hard and the ball popped out, allowing him to tap into an empty net. Earlier in the week, during an analysis session, Lee had pointed out to the players that Jackson is vulnerable to a dispossession when carrying the ball out. "He (Childs) must have been the only one that listened," smiled Lee. "He listened and he got his reward!" Neville's earlier goal was more pleasing on the eye. His solo run started on the 45m line, took him beyond Malachy Stone and ended with a composed, curled finish past Jackson at his near post. It remained anyone's game at half-time though and with Healy once again driving Wicklow, they took off in the third quarter. Between half-time and the 50th minute, Wicklow outscored Limerick by 1-7 to 0-2 and appeared destined for next month's final themselves. Even with the deluge of Limerick scores that followed, they still had a great chance to wrestle back momentum. Kevin Quinn was fouled for a 57th minute penalty but McGraynor's shot was parried onto the post by the increasingly influential Ryan who clawed it away to safety. Jack Kirwan did snipe a late point for Wicklow but, as Lee said, Limerick were home and hosed at that stage. Scorers for Limerick: D Neville 1-2; J Ryan 0-4 (2 tpf); R Childs 1-0; P Nash 0-3 (3 frees); J Naughton, T McCarthy, B Coleman 0-2 each; E Rigter, C Fahy, D Murray 0-1 each. Scorers for Wicklow: D Healy 0-5 (2 tp); M Stone 1-0; M Jackson (2 frees), J Prendergast, E Darcy, K Quinn 0-2 each; C O'Brien, M Kenny, O McGraynor, J Kirwan 0-1 each. LIMERICK: J Ryan; J Hassett, M McCarthy, D O'Doherty; K Ryan, I Corbett, T McCarthy; T Childs, D O'Hagan; J Naughton, E Rigter, P Maher; P Nash, D Neville, C Fahy. 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Irish Examiner
an hour ago
- Irish Examiner
'We'll take the positives': Donegal blow Louth away in second half
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Irish Independent
2 hours ago
- Irish Independent
Early night for Louth as captain Sam Mulroy admits, ‘Donegal got a run on us and put us to bed'
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