
How Irish celebs celebrated All-Ireland hurling final – from sweet family snaps to rubbing shoulders with A-list stars
The nail-biting showdown between Tipperary and
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Sile Seoige watched the match with her family
Credit: Instagram
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Eric Roberts was spotted alongside Hollywood A-lister Paul Mescal
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Can you guess which RTE star shared this throwback snap?
Ahead of kick-off,
The
The mum-of-two shared the photo of her kids waving the Cork flag high from their family's garden.
Sharing the image, she wrote: "Connemara kids with a Cork Dad in Cork on All Ireland final day…not a shred of maroon to be seen. I'll let them away with it today."
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After their loss, she added: "Comhghairdeachas Tiobraid Árann!
Worthy champions. A tough day for Cork."
Elsewhere in Croke Park, Virgin Media star Eric Roberts had a prime view of the game and the celebrities in attendance as he reported from the stands for the BBC.
While doing his work, the TV star bumped into
Before the match kicked off the pair managed to grab a quick snap together.
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In one of the photos Eric shared, the star pals were joined by Little Bit Of Love singer
The trio looked delighted as they stood alongside each other for a picture from the Croke Park stands.
Liam Cahill speaks to RTE after Tipperary GAA win All-Ireland final
Sharing the images, Eric gushed: "An incredible experience! Huge thank you to @bbcsport @bbcsportni for the opportunity! Buzzing to be back again next week to watch
After Tipperary's amazing win, RTE presenter Rosanna Purcell took to her social media to share a sweet tribute to her home county.
The Clonmel native shared the cutest throwback photo of her younger self kitted out in her county gear.
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Sharing the photos with her followers Roz gushed: "No better county to be from. Up the premier."
Friends and fans of the presenter raced to her comment section to gush over the heartwarming post.
Roz's sister, Cloda remarked: "The BEST... hon the premier. UNBELIEVABLE SCENES."
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RTÉ News
8 minutes ago
- RTÉ News
Cork in a state of fragility as Liam Cahill's plan comes off
In addition to his many other attributes as a manager, we have to give Liam Cahill top marks for misdirection. A fortnight ago, when itemising his list of grievances concerning the media coverage of his difficult first two years in charge, Cahill highlighted one slight in particular. "There were other things, such as Cahill plays with a sweeper. Liam Cahill never played with a sweeper on his team in his life. Ever." That was that. Not alone did the Tipperary manager deny that he had ever played a sweeper, he sounded personally offended by the implication he would do so. All the while, the newly-crowned champions were planning to deploy a textbook sweeper in the first half to halt the supply of ball into the Cork full-forward line, a tactic which worked sensationally well. This is a tricky moment for the traditionalists. The word 'sweeper' is obviously taboo across large swathes of hurling nation, Tipperary very much included. As a result, we're hearing some degree of semantics around this. On one podcast this morning, Bryan O'Mara was described as operating as an 'extra man back'. We're not sure yet of what the precise distinction is between a sweeper and an extra man back but we're assuming it's a highly subtle one. After this, the popular notion that a team has never won an All-Ireland playing with a sweeper can be put to bed. Yesterday was a great victory for the gurus of tactics, even if there is some irony in the fact that it was supposed arch-traditionalists who delivered it. In his victorious press conference, Cahill even pre-empted the line of questioning about the use of the sweeper with a slightly sheepish laugh. "Ah look, I'm a traditionalist. I like to play 15 on 15 if I can at all," Cahill said. "But we had to cut our cloth to measure to make sure that we gave ourselves a chance of allowing us to express ourselves. "You have to move with the times. When you get to a final, you have to try and win it." As it is, the Tipperary manager has presided over one of the most stunning one-year turnarounds in modern times. From the sick man of the Munster hurling championship to the lords of all they survey in the space of 14 months. Is there anything comparable? Clare came from way back in the pack to win in 2013 and then drifted away again as soon as they'd come. Going much further into the mists of time, Cork were knocked out by Waterford in 1989 - not really the done thing back then - and won the All-Ireland the following season. It's a remarkable coup for Tipperary, all the sweeter for being so unexpected. Cahill had said at various stages of his reign that it was a three-year plan to get Tipperary back to where they were in the 2010s. The outworkings of that plan have followed a very odd trajectory. Who knew that the plan was to stink out the joint in the second year - to the point where local media were asking whether you were considering your position - and then to win the big one in the third year? Whatever about the 'extra man back', Tipp held firm to their modern tradition of never winning an All-Ireland final by a tight margin if they can at all help it. They were greatly helped by their opponents' shocking meltdown. There's a graphic quiet emanating from Cork at the minute, especially in light of what's gone on in the last month. A sense of a people processing a great shock. The music and the conspicuous hype have died down and all that's left is sorrow and pained introspection. The fear from Kingfishr's point of view is that 'Killeagh' will go the same way as 'We're all part of Ally's Army' did in Scotland after the 1978 World Cup. As usual there is a great deal of mirth and schadenfreude on whatsapp and on social media. The image of a certain North Tipperary poll topper and former county board chairman outlining Cork's second half scoring tally from his perch on the backbenches has gone everywhere at this stage. The players have understandably communicated that they can't hack a homecoming event this evening and opted to deliver their thanks to the supporters via a county board statement. One perceptive Cork fan said he saw the warning signs at half-time. They had played with a healthy breeze in the first half and were grossly flattered by the six-point margin at the break. In general play, it was clear that Tipp's tactics were working and it was only their poor shooting efficiency and the late Shane Barrett goal that produced the six-point lead. From Cork's perspective, it was a tactical failure before it was a mental one. It's what occurred in the second half that has people casting around in search of historic parallels. Inevitably, the question has been floated as to whether Cork buckled under the weight of hype and expectation that had been placed on them this summer. Modern analysts and members of the broader coaching fraternity tend not to favour this school of analysis. It's not granular or technical and smacks too much of bar-stool cod psychology. However, the second half scoreline is so abnormal, it seems to warrant a deeper explanation than the usual technical and tactical insights. The key period arrived early in the second half when Tipp rattled over five points on the trot to bring it back to a one-point game. Cork never responded to this flurry, with anxiety quickly pervading the entire team. The sense in real time was that this deepened with every shot that came back off the post. The dread increased with every thwack of the woodwork, with the Tipp defenders seizing on every rebound. That sinking feeling familiar to any county with a losing run in All-Ireland finals. The second half didn't ebb and flow. It all flowed the one way from there. There were even shades of 1984 in reverse. John McGrath's opening goal which pushed Tipp in front for the first time resembling Seanie O'Leary's late goal in the '84 provincial final, when John Sheedy stopped Tony O'Sullivan's point only for the Cork full-forward to pounce on the rebound. The second goal, which came with the double-whammy of the Eoin Downey red card, was a display of Darby-esque wiliness from McGrath. Once that happened it was dire straits for Cork. McGrath's brilliantly taken third goal, by which time we had entered the realms of the surreal, produced gasps and exclamations of shock all around us. The now infamous 0-02 haul in the second half was at least partly a consequence of their need to find goals late in the game but the substantial damage had been done at that stage. For Tipperary, they earn the historic bragging rights, in the first ever Cork-Tipp All-Ireland final. In Cork, the darkness creeps in. In both the context surrounding the game and the manner of the capitulation, it has to go down as the most galling of All-Ireland final losses.


The Irish Sun
8 minutes ago
- The Irish Sun
Rock legend Gavin Rossdale reveals dream of returning to Glasto and why he needs to be on his best behaviour
Gavin Rossdale has spent three decades in the rock 'n' roll spotlight since the release of Bush's debut album Sixteen Stone and admits he's always on his best behaviour now. 'I've been thinking about the kind of people who would pay to do me in,' Gavin laughs as I join him at the Sound Studio in London to celebrate the release of 9 Gavin was speaking exclusively to Bizarre's Ellie Henman Credit: collect 'I'm at the point where I'm a really successful working musician. 'I can never go anywhere where I'm anonymous . 'My behaviour has to be really excellent at all times because there's always someone with a camera phone — but I'm not like Kanye West.' The record, with brilliant tracks like The Land of Milk and Honey and Everyone Is Broken, is an ode, Gavin says, to Bush's fans, who have been with them since they broke into the scene in 1995. READ MORE FROM BIZARRE 'I wanted to make a record for the people who have gotten stuff from our records,' Gavin explains. 'It's about me, but I realised that I'm no different than anyone else. 'I think that everyone is just fighting different battles at all times. But it's important to have so much fun in life. Keep him grounded 'Life is beautiful, but it has its kind of moments where just out of nowhere, people will just f**k with you or life f**ks with you and things happen to you, to people you love. Most read in Bizarre 'So writing a record that spoke to that experience just seemed the most valuable thing to do.' He adds: 'Plus, I don't have any stories of holidays on yachts. So I didn't know what to write about. Gavin Rossdale's new girlfriend Xhoana Xheneti looks exactly like ex Gwen Stefani in his new photo as fans 'look twice' "Every time I look at Instagram, I go, 'Why is that not me?' Gavin is now based in the US but he returned to the UK to walk his model daughter Daisy Lowe down the aisle this month. Back in the US, it's his sons, Kingston, Zuma and Apollo, from his marriage to Gwen Stefani, who keep him grounded. 'My recording room is in the bedroom between two of my kids' rooms,' Gavin says. 'I did a remix of Machinehead, one of our earliest songs, and to be honest, I was impressed with myself. "And my 17-year-old son, who's a really good guitar player, walks in and he goes, 'You're not releasing that?' 'I was like, 'What do you mean?' He goes, 'You're taking legend and you're really destroying it.'' Recalling another grounding incident from Kingston, Gavin adds: 'We were on holiday and I was going on tour two days later. "I had guitars in the house that had been used by the kids and I didn't get a chance to practice. 'I started to play one of the songs and he walked in and he goes, 'Do you want any help with that?' 'I took the bait. I was like, 'Look at this house. This is how we got here!' 'I was super defensive. But he was right. I hadn't been playing so I was a bit fingers and thumbs. "He caught me on an upswing. I was like, 'Come to see our second night on tour and then you'll see, son.'' Bush's new album is the perfect follow-up to 2022's The Art of Survival with Scars and I'm Here to Save Your Life proof that Gavin is still a killer songwriter. 9 Gavin Rossdale says he's on his best behaviour after 30 years in the rock 'n' roll spotlight Credit: Getty He says: 'When you've made a lot of records you do think, does anyone need any more. 'But then you have people say, 'Please don't stop making records.' A girl said this to me outside the back of a gig. 'And that stuck with me.' Next in the works for Gavin and Bush is a UK tour, which will hopefully become a reality next year after they've finished supporting Volbeat. 'The idea of doing that Volbeat tour is to sort of stoke the fires,' Gavin says. 'It's a wild, competitive world. And if you don't take things personally, like for me, I haven't played enough of those festivals. 'But instead of moaning about it, it's just sort of like, get out there, make a great record, do a great show all across Europe and then see what happens.' Glastonbury 2027 could also be in the pipeline — with the festival's next date coinciding with the 25th anniversary of Bush last playing there. 'I thought we did quite well when we played there, but we never went back so it could be time,' says Gavin. 'I would love to play Glastonbury. I still remember that show. 'It's brilliant and it would be 25 years . . .' All the more reason to get Emily Eavis on the blower then, Gavin. Lott of reasons to smile 9 Pregnant pop star Pixie Lott wowed fans at We Are Wirral Festival with a wild barefoot performance of her 2009 hit Mama Do Credit: Splash Pixie Lott did the best rendition of her 2009 hit Mama Do at We Are Wirral Festival. The pop star, who is seven months pregnant, took off her shoes and danced like crazy in this chic animal print dress at the event. Cheshire , last month. She thrilled fans by revealing the news live on stage at Mighty Hoopla by grabbing her tummy and shouting: 'I'm having another baby.' Her first son, Two kids under three is a challenge for any parent, Pixie – you got this. Sophie sweet on pop album 9 Sophie Ellis-Bextor is back with new album Perimenopop Credit: Getty Sabrina Carpenter, Dua Lipa and Chappell Roan have helped make pop cool again, but She is making a spectacular return with her album Perimenopop, which will be out in September, but said she isn't capitalising on the resurgence of fun tunes, or a result of Murder on the Dancefloor becoming a viral sensation. In an exclusive chat, Sophie said: 'I was already planning to make a pop album before I released my last record, because my last record. "It was a little bit more escapist and introverted, so I thought right, it's time to bounce to the other side now, the extrovert side. 'What happened with Murder was just a lovely bit of serendipity that made me feel like my instincts were in the right space.' And it sounds like she has fulfilled all her dreams when it came to making it, after teaming up with MNEK and Cathy Dennis, who wrote Toxic for Britney Spears and Can't Get You Out of My Head for Kylie Minogue. She said: 'Do you know what, I went to the full pop sweet shop for this album and I filled up my bag with as many sweets as I could, so I think I got my fill, actually.' She worked with her husband, the Feeling's Richard Jones, on the record too, but they still have fun away from the music. Sophie added: 'Richard and I just had our 20th wedding anniversary, which is pretty cool. 'We got married in Italy , so we went back to Italy , just the two of us, for a few nights without the kids. 'To do something that was just about us and not about gigs or delegating stuff with the family was really nice .' Selena's love for Tay 9 Selena Gomez marked her 33rd birthday with unseen snaps from her pre-party bash with Taylor Swift Credit: Instagram/Selena Gomez Selena Gomez celebrates her 33rd birthday today and she's in a reflective mood. The American singer shared a series of never-before-seen snaps from a pre-birthday get-together with her pals, including Taylor Swift and her fiancé Benny Blanco. Selena said: 'This past year has truly been the most beautiful year of my life, and I owe so much of that to all of you. Thank you for your unwavering love and kindness. 'Whether you cheered me on from the sidelines, shared in my highs and lows, or simply offered a listening ear, you have made this year unforgettable. 'I am extremely humbled and insanely appreciative of all your love.' I'll be raising a pint to you tonight, Selena. Not that I ever need much of an excuse. Giggs gig hits summer groove 9 Somerset House wrapped its Summer Series in style as rapper Giggs brought the house down for the venue's 25th anniversary Credit: The Mega Agency Somerset House saved the best until last with one of my favourite rappers, Giggs, invited to close their Summer Series. Waterloo Bridge would have been shaking on Sunday night after he took to the stage in front of a massive crowd as the London venue celebrated its 25th anniversary of concerts. Last week he dropped a new song with his son ML which touches on their experience of autism. Own Motion, which was originally written and released by ML, tells his story of feeling like he didn't fit in. Giggs is now on a remix of the song and opened up about his experience of the condition – admitting his autism saw him being labelled a 'troublemaker' when he was young. He said: 'I was always getting in trouble. 'I always used to answer back, get kicked out of class every single day until I just thought: 'Well, I'm bad'.' More tearjerkers from hitmaker Capaldi 9 Lewis Capaldi's upcoming EP promises his most personal music yet, exploring his hiatus and mental health journey Credit: Getty He marked his return by topping the charts earlier this month with comeback single Survive. While his new songs will tell all about his two-year hiatus from showbiz and Speaking to a US radio station, he explained: 'I'm trying to sing different, on different songs, and I feel like the new stuff is a bit more personal. 'A lot of it is about the last two years and what I've been going through and stuff. The music is more about me than relationships and stuff. 'I'm really pleased with it. I like it. It's definitely harder. 'I got to a point where writing songs about relationships became really… I don't want to say easy, it wasn't easy, it's never easy writing songs. 'I find writing songs really difficult these days but writing songs about stuff you're still processing perhaps and the stuff you don't like talking about has been really hard.' Ellie has plenty of six appeal 9 Ellie Goulding has been teasing her new album, promising a deeply personal follow-up to her No1 record Brightest Blue Credit: Splash Ellie Goulding is preparing to bare her soul on her upcoming sixth album. She opened up to her fans as she celebrated the fifth anniversary of her No1 album Brightest Blue and said: 'If you guys liked this album I fear the next might be your new favourite . . . I've been working on it for so long. 'Guitars, bass, strings, harmonies for days, saddest words I ever wrote, best writers and musicians in the world – I am so lucky – and refusing to sound like anything else out there. 'Going to be interesting for sure.' Ellie saw her last record, Higher Than Heaven, go straight to No1 in 2023 and I've no doubt her sixth record is sure to hit the same dizzy heights. Fans of Avatar are in for a treat – as the first trailer for the next instalment, Fire and Ash, is going to be shown across cinemas from today. Film buffs heading to watch The Fantastic Four: First Steps will be the first to see the clips from the new Charli's hall date sees rise 9 Charli XCX and George Daniel's Hackney Town Hall wedding has sparked a surge in demand for such town hall venues Credit: Getty If you're getting married soon and are considering a town hall venue – you might have to get in there quick. After According to new research there has been a 156 per cent increase in Google searches for 'town hall wedding' – with a massive spike on Sunday after we revealed the details of Charli and the 1975 drummer George's very brat big day. I'm getting wed in 2027 but luckily for me, I've already booked my little village church. Unlock even more award-winning articles as The Sun launches brand new membership programme - Sun Club.


The Irish Sun
8 minutes ago
- The Irish Sun
‘Left a bad taste' – RTE pundit unhappy with DJ Carey's name being jeered at All-Ireland hurling final
JOHN Mullane has said DJ Carey's name being booed before the All-Ireland hurling final "left a bad taste in my mouth". An hour before 3 DJ Carey was not present at Croke Park on Sunday Credit: PA 3 John Mullane often serves as co-commentator for RTE Radio One Credit: @RTESport 3 Eddie Brennan was among the former Cats stars who were honoured before the game Carey, Man of the Match in that year's decider, did not turn up. When his name was read out by the PA operator Earlier this month, the Cats great One of his teammates who was present at GAA HQ on Sunday was Eddie Brennan. He appeared on the Read More On GAA Host Joe Molloy initially jokingly asked Brennan if he was booed when his name was read due to Tipp and Cork being such fierce rivals of Kilkenny's down through the years. Brennan, who is in no way associated with Carey's legal woes, was about to respond when the Waterford legend chimed in. Mullane stated: "I was up there (in Croke Park) and the thing with made a mistake and he's after admitting he made a mistake. "It's going through the procedures of the court now. And Jesus, here's me as someone who's made plenty of mistakes in life. And who hasn't made a mistake in life? Most read in GAA Hurling "But I'll be straight with you, it left a bad taste in my mouth. It's probably hard enough on the family and probably hard enough on DJ Carey that he wasn't able to turn up there yesterday. "But y'know the not about booing people on All-Ireland final day. I don't know, I can't speak for others. Ronan Maher pays tribute to Dillon Quirke after Tipperary GAA win All-Ireland final "There is probably a certain percentage that would see that it was okay to boo but it didn't sit well with me. "From a neutral's point of view it didn't sit well with that people would start booing a person on All-Ireland final day - and a person that wasn't even there on All-Ireland final day." Brennan wasn't able to shed much light on Carey's decision not to attend the Jones' Road occasion. Struggling for the words since it is such a thorny topic, he simply called it "an unfortunate situation" before the conversation was moved along. On July 2 Carey pleaded guilty to ten deception charges over the sick scams. The 54-year-old had been due to stand trial at Dublin Circuit Criminal He admitted to dishonestly, and by deception, inducing victims to make monetary payment to him after he fraudulently claimed to have cancer and needed finances to obtain treatment. The charges are under Section 6 of the Criminal Justice (Theft and Fraud Offences) Act. Carey carried out the cancer cash scam over an eight-year period, between 2014 to 2022. Billionaire Denis O'Brien His other 12 named victims include Owen and Ann Conway, Mark and Sharon Kelly, Aidan Mulligan, Tony Griffin and Christy Browne, Thomas Butler, Jeffrey Howes, Noel Tynan, Edwin Carey and Aonghus Leydon.