
2002 nostalgia, Brogan vs McNulty and Cosgrove's red-hot summer
Alan reflects on being marked by Enda in that All-Ireland semi-final, Ray remembers his red-hot goal-scoring summer and the panel discuss the fiery rematch the following year that saw Stephen Cluxton sent off.
Before the all-star panel, Ronan and Will join Conan to reminisce about '02 championship summer - when football was football!
If you'd like to get in touch with the show, email us at indosportpodcast@independent.ie.
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Irish Times
22 minutes ago
- Irish Times
Mayo prove they've still got it in win over subdued Tyrone
All-Ireland SFC: Tyrone 1-13 Mayo 2-17 Mayo gonna Mayo. The vibes were terrible, the manager was laid up, the noise off the pitch was turned up to 11. And so of course they came to Omagh and beat Tyrone up a stick. What else did you expect? They showed a side of themselves here that most of us, in our innocence, presumed was gone for the year. They were full of running and purpose, tackling like dervishes, emptying themselves in every position. Paddy Durcan made his first championship start in 14 months and went back down the road with three points and the Man of the Match award. Davitt Neary came off the bench to leave scorch marks in the grass. Aidan O'Shea was the fulcrum for everything. For Tyrone, this was largely a non-performance. Other than 20 minutes of resistance after half-time, they looked like a team that had left their gallop behind them in Ballybofey last week. They played against a strong breeze in the first half but that didn't look like reason enough for their troubles. It was more of a demeanour problem – too passive, too meh, too inclined to wait for the half-time turnaround. READ MORE By contrast, Mayo were snappier in the tackle and more forceful in their attempts to break up the field. The visitors didn't always look fluid in attack but this was the sort of night where sweat was worth more than swagger. Tyrone's Ciaran Daly and Mayo's Paddy Durcan. Photograph: James Crombie/Inpho They carried the ball with purpose and even tried a few kick passes into the full-forward line, in a notable departure from what they've been doing all year. They won breaking ball and frequently burst through the first line of Tyrone's defence, butchering two goal chances before finally cashing in on the stroke of half-time. That goal from Darren McHale was a lotto win. Mayo had the ball with two minutes to go until the hooter and played it around among themselves – another sign of Tyrone's curious lack of bite. When, in the end, Bob Tuohy tried to kick a point to end the half, it dropped well short and Niall Morgan came to claim. Maybe the sun got in his eyes but even so, it was quite a howler from the Tyrone stopper – McHale will never score a handier one. It left them eight points up at the break, 1-9 to 0-4. Even though the goal was jammier than a lock-in at a Chivers factory, it gave Mayo a cushion they probably just about deserved. They had been braver and more cohesive than the home side and got their reward in spurts. Rory Brickenden scored the first two points of his championship career, Conal Dawson curled a beauty in on the wind. Everybody threw into the kitty. All of it was needed to. Mayo had plenty of the ball at the start of the second half but couldn't convert it to scores. They left 1-4 behind them in the first seven minutes, with Ryan O'Donoghue hitting the post after a deflection off Conn Kilpatrick. When O'Donoghue missed a kickable free on 43 minutes, it looked a crucial error. Mayo's Ryan O'Donoghue scores a penalty. Photograph: James Crombie/Inpho All the more so when Darragh Canavan had the ball in the net a minute later. Durcan made his only mistake of the night, backing off the Tyrone magician and basically inviting him to have a go if he thought he was good enough. He did and he was. That made it 1-9 to 1-6, with all but three points of Mayo's half-time advantage wiped out. They sucked it up and went again. O'Donoghue pointed a free, Drucan notched another from play. Even when Niall Morgan landed his second two-point free of the night to bring the gap back to one, Mayo didn't quail. Durcan and O'Donoghue went again and by now Neary was off the bench and causing wreck. When he was fouled by Liam Gray for a penalty seven minutes from time, O'Donoghue stepped up and did the needful. So after everything, Mayo went back down the road with their best championship win since beating Galway in 2023. You couldn't be up to them. TYRONE: N Morgan (0-2-0, 2tpf); C Quinn, P Teague, N Devlin; M McKernan (0-0-1), R Brennan, K McGeary (0-0-1); B McDonnell (0-0-2), C Kilpatrick; S O'Donnell, M Donnelly, C Daly; D McCurry (0-0-2, 1f), M Bradley, D Canavan (1-0-3, 2f). Subs: S O'Hare for Brennan, L Gray for O'Donnell (both ht); P Harte for Bradley, R Canavan for Daly (both 47 mins); A Donaghy for McDonnell (62). MAYO: C Reape (0-0-1, 1 '45); J Coyne (0-0-1), S Morahan, R Brickenden (0-0-2); S Coen, D McBrien, E Hession; P Durcan (0-0-3), M Ruane; C Dawson (0-0-2), D McHale (1-0-0), B Tuohy; J Carney (0-0-1), A O'Shea (0-0-1), R O'Donoghue (1-0-6, 1-0 pen, 5f). Subs: D Neary for McHale, J Flynn for Tuohy (both 52 mins); F Kelly for Dawson (55); F Boland for Ruane (64); S Callinan for Durcan (68). Referee: D Coldrick (Meath).

The 42
26 minutes ago
- The 42
Cork rue missed chances in 11-point defeat to Kerry
Cork 0-20 Kerry 1-28 Paul Brennan reports from Páirc Uí Chaoimh NOT QUITE THE Munster semi-final classic of six weeks ago, but perhaps not quite as one-sided as the 11-point margin suggests. Kerry certainly ran out comfortable winners at the end, winning the second half by 21 points to seven, but Cork will rue a plethora of missed goal chances – three in the first half – and a late penalty that was saved, as their championship lives comes down to a meeting with Roscommon in a fortnight. Kerry will be just happy to have got out of Pairc Ui Chaoimh a second time with a win, but they will wonder at what cost. Barry Dan O'Sullivan and Paudie Clifford didn't make it to half time with injuries, and Paul Geaney didn't come back out for the second half, adding to the concern over Diarmuid O'Connor, who didn't make the match day squad. And then there were those goal chances given up that Jack O'Connor will know a more ruthless team that Cork will punish. Cork made a hero out of goalkeeper Shane Ryan who saved brilliantly from Mark Cronin and Matty Taylor, while Taylor was through again late in the first half but was thwarted from getting a shot off. Advertisement Indeed, the game's only goal came from Cork shooting themselves in the foot when David Clifford intercepted Micheal Aodh Martin's kick-out to roll the ball past the goalkeeper and put Kerry 1-12 to 0-1 ahead after six minutes. Kerry were 1-4 to 0-2 ahead by the 12th minute and then Cork found some form with Brian Hurley posting two points, Paul Walsh kicking a two-pointer, and those goal chances being made but not converted. Points from Colm O'Callaghan and Chris Og Jones evened it up, 0-8 to 1-5, and Cork finished the half well, with Hurley's orange flag after the hooter giving the home side a 0-13 to 1-7 lead at the interval. Playing with a strong wind it hardly seemed enough of a lead, and so it proved. Cronin's free stretched Cork's lead, but David Clifford raked over a huge two-pointer from play, Sean O'Shea converted a free from outside the arc after a three-up breach, and Kerry pulled away after that. Killian Spillane came on and kicked two from play, Clifford nailed a two-pointer and a point before Sean O'Shea converted two two-pointers and a regular free. That had Kerry 1-21 to 0-16 ahead after 53 minutes, and Cork's woes and inability to be ruthless was summed up with Cronin's penalty miss – or rather another Ryan save. Cork head for a neutral venue to face Roscommon in a must win game for them; Kerry are all but headed straight to the All-Ireland quarter-finals again. Scorers for Cork: B Hurley 0-7 (0-2f, 2p, 2pf), M Cronin 0-6 (5f), P Walsh 0-3 (2p), C O'Callaghan 0-2, C Og Jones 0-1, R Deane 0-1 Kerry: D Clifford 1-8 (0-2f, 2p, 2pf), S O'Shea 0-9 (3 2pf), P Geaney 0-2, K Spillane 0-2, T Brosnan 0-2 (2p), T O'Sullivan 0-2, P Clifford 0-1, G O'Sullivan 0-1, D Geaney 0-1 CORK: Micheál Aodh Martin, Seán Meehan, Daniel O'Mahony, Maurice Shanley, Brian O'Driscoll, Seán Brady, Matty Taylor, Ian Maguire, Colm O'Callaghan, Paul Walsh, Seán Walsh, Seán McDonnell, Mark Cronin, Brian Hurley, Chris Óg Jones Subs: Sean Powter for S Meehan (43), Ruairi Deane for S McDonnell (50), Cathail O'Mahony for B Hurley (60), Luke Fahy for M Taylor (65), Eoghan McSweeney for P Walsh (66). KERRY: Shane Ryan; Dylan Casey, Jason Foley, Tom O'Sullivan; Brian Ó Beaglaoich, Mike Breen, Gavin White; Joe O'Connor, Barry Dan O'Sullivan; Graham O'Sullivan, Paudie Clifford, Sean O'Shea; David Clifford, Paul Geaney, Micheal Burns. Subs: Mark O'Shea for B D O'Sullivan (inj, 21), Dylan Geaney for P Clifford (31), Killian Spillane for P Geaney (ht), Tony Brosnan for M Burns (59), Tadhg Morley for B O Beaglaoich (66) Referee: D O'Mahoney (Tipperary)


Irish Times
35 minutes ago
- Irish Times
Second-half Roscommon revival salvages a draw against Meath
All-Ireland SFC: Roscommon 2-15 Meath 0-21 Enda Smith spearheaded Roscommon's revival as Davy Burke's men overturned a five-point interval deficit to keep their chances of progression from Group 2 alive. A pulsating game between two evenly-matched teams saw both sides spurn chances to win it after Ruairí Kinsella brought the sides level with six minutes remaining. All of Roscommon's five second-half scores with the wind at their backs came from two-pointers, with Smith kicking three of them, while top scorer Diarmuid Murtagh added another brace. James Conlon was superb for the visitors in the opening half with 0-6, including a two-pointer, but Smith was his side's hero after the break. READ MORE Ruairí Kinsella raised his side's first orange flag with the outside of his right boot in the fifth minute before Eoghan Frayne opened up a three-point gap after the visitors capitalised on a Roscommon turnover But Roscommon wiped out that deficit when Senan Lambe set up Diarmuid Murtagh for a well-taken goal after seven minutes. Dylan Ruane nudged his side in front after Roscommon worked the ball upfield from goalkeeper Conor Carroll but the excellent James Conlon – who scored 0-5 from play during a productive opening 35 minutes – got off the mark to bring the sides level. Meath's Jordan Morris and Roscommon's Senan Lambe. Photograph: Evan Logan/Inpho In the 15th minute, Roscommon struck for a second goal when Shane Cunnane found Ben O'Carroll raiding in behind the Meath rearguard, and the St Brigid's forward produced an assured finish past Billy Hogan. Meath began to win the midfield battle, and Roscommon's cause wasn't helped by the loss of Niall Higgins to injury. Conlon added a couple of rapid-fire points before Daire Cregg replied for the Rossies after Lambe grabbed primary possession in the middle of the park. But Meath began to flex their muscles, mostly off Roscommon turnovers and their dominance around the middle. Conlon and Conor Duke sent over a couple of two-pointers in jig time, while Jordan Morris also found the range to open up a 0-12 to 2-3 gap. Menton arced over the Royals' fourth two-pointer of the half, and Conlon soon added to his tally to stretch his side's buffer to six points. Cregg grabbed a much-needed score for Roscommon before Morris and Ciaráin Murtagh – a free on the hooter – left it 0-16 to 2-5 in favour of Meath at the change of ends. Meath's Bryan Menton and Roscommon's Pearse Frost. Photograph: Evan Logan/Inpho The second half was laden with drama as Smith put a missed 41st-minute penalty behind him to lead his side's charge. Billy Hogan's 46th-minute two-point free from 45 metres, following earlier points from Seán Coffey and Frayne, left Meath 0-20 to 2-9 ahead, but Robbie Brennan's side would only trouble the scoreboard once more. Diarmuid Murtagh kicked a couple of two-pointers, while Smith added another to leave the Rossies ahead by the bare minimum with nine minutes remaining. Kinsella restored parity, and it took a last-ditch block from Seán Rafferty to deny Ben O'Carroll after Mathew Costello had hit the post at the other end. ROSCOMMON: C Carroll, N Higgins, C Neary, D Murray; R Daly, B Stack, S Lambe (0-0-1); E Nolan, S Cunnane; D Ruane (0-0-1), C Murtagh (0-0-1, 1f), E Smith (0-3-0); D Murtagh (1-2-0), D Cregg (0-0-2), B O'Carroll (1-0-0). Subs: P Frost for Higgins (14), D Smith for C Murtagh (49), C McKeon for Ruane (49), K Doyle for Nolan (57), R Fallon for Lambe (64). MEATH: B Hogan (0-1-0, 1tpf); S Lavin, S Rafferty, B O'Halloran; D Keogan, S Coffey (0-0-1), C Caulfield; A O'Neill, B Menton (0-1-0); C Duke (0-1-0), R Kinsella (0-1-1), M Costello (0-0-1, 1f); J Morris (0-0-2), J Conlon (0-1-4), E Frayne (0-0-2). Subs: C Hickey for Duke (55), K Curtis for Frayne (59), C Gray for Menton (64), J McEntee for Lavin (65), E Harkin for O'Neill (67). Referee: P Faloon (Down).