
The hurling year in review: Ronan Maher leads the way for Tipperary's stunning triumph
Hurler of the year:
Tipperary
have a couple of candidates in the nuclear winter of Cork's All-Ireland fallout.
Ronan Maher
gets it here for leadership and his defensive performances, taking on and dismantling key opposition threats, in the team's gravity-defying phase, culminating in Sunday's final.
Match of the year:
Tipperary 3-27
Cork
1-18. More recency bias but this was the most extraordinary All-Ireland final. An underdog has never reared up with such ferocity, driven by such an abundance of outstanding performances. Devastatingly perfect timing.
Memorable moment:
The neutrino of 2025's universe, Croke Park on May 21st: The 34 seconds in which 14-man
Dublin
beat
Limerick
with goals by John Hetherton and Cian O'Sullivan. 'What is happening here?' cried Darragh Moloney. Answer: the reshaping of the whole championship.
Biggest disappointment:
The disparity between the provinces and not just in terms of All-Ireland domination. Leinster needs less predictability and better atmosphere. This year, even the reliable Wexford-Kilkenny fixture turned into a dead rubber. Despite a sixth title, Kilkenny ended the year in gloomy introspection.
READ MORE
In 2026 I would like to see...
The end of the McDonagh Cup anomaly, which sees preliminary quarter-finals needlessly extending the season. Promotion should mean for the following year. Jarlath Burns is pushing the idea and the hope is that it will be implemented in time for next summer.
Cork's Diarmuid Healy celebrates after the Munster final, which was filled with tension right through. Photograph: James Crombie/Inpho
Denis Walsh
Hurler of the year: Ronan Maher
's performance in the final on Brian Hayes may have tilted it in his favour ahead of Jake Morris, who was good in the final without reaching the heights of other performances this season.
Best game:
Unlike recent seasons there were no stone cold classics but the Munster final was compelling and dramatic with a heady mix of brilliance and mistakes and razor like tension.
Memorable moment:
Sean Brennan's point blank save from Aaron Gillane was the pivotal moment in Dublin's sensational victory over Limerick. A goal for Limerick then and the jig was up.
Biggest disappointment:
The Leinster championship, with it's glut of Saturday afternoon/teatime fixtures, its small crowds and predictable results was downbeat from start to finish.
In 2026 I would like to see…
Just an extra week in the schedule to give the provincial championships more room to breathe and to avoid attractive fixtures crawling all over each other.
Tipperary's John McGrath celebrates scoring his side's third goal - with his finishing Tipp would not be champions. Photograph: Bryan Keane/Inpho
Malachy Clerkin
Hurler of the year: John McGrath
. Scored 7-16 from play and did it in the biggest games – two goals against Limerick on the opening day, two against Clare in Munster, one in the All-Ireland semi-final, two in the final. Without his class, composure and deadly finishing, Tipp wouldn't be champions.
Best game:
Dublin v Limerick, All-Ireland quarter-final. Even now, a month later, it still seems so improbable. Dublin putting it up to Limerick wasn't on anyone's radar. Dublin doing so with such a key figure as Chris Crummey sent off in the first half is an outlandish notion. Yet they did it, in the shock of the summer.
Memorable Moment:
Darragh McCarthy standing his ground as Damien Cahalane bullocked towards him in the final, getting poleaxed by a frontal charge before bouncing to his feet and giving a double fist-pump when he knew he'd won his free. And then slotting said free. Summed up his defiance on the biggest day of his young life.
Biggest disappointment:
Clare's defence of the All-Ireland never got going. Unable to shake off a bad league, their only win came in the final game of Munster against a weakened Limerick team. It was all too late by then.
In 2026 I would like to see...
Dublin win Leinster. They have the players, they have the manager, the Limerick win shows they can keep pace with the big boys. So why should they have anything to fear from Kilkenny and Galway?
Kilkenny's TJ Reid with his daughter Harper after the semi-final loss to Tipperary - hopefully we see him back in action for Kilkenny again next year. Photograph: Tom O'Hanlon/Inpho
Gordon Manning
Hurler of the year:
Cork would have had more leading contenders for this award ahead of the final but
Ronan Maher
's display of leadership in the decider capped off what had been a brilliant season by the Thurles man. His versatility to move between the full and half-back lines was key to keeping Tipp's defence organised, with the team captain providing a solid platform from which the Premier embarked on a six-game winning streak.
Best game:
The Munster final was a madcap, epic game of hurling at the Gaelic Grounds. Finishing level after extra time before Cork won out on penalties, it started in sunlight and it ended in twilight. As a sporting spectacle this contest had everything – skill, drama, excitement, controversy. Both teams were out on their feet at the end, but they had truly hoisted the game of hurling upon their shoulders that day.
Memorable moment:
It will be a long time before any poll of the top five hurling shocks doesn't include Dublin's 2025 All-Ireland quarter-final victory over Limerick. Dublin were reduced to 14 men when Chris Crummey was sent off after quarter of an hour but the Dubs still somehow managed to produce a stunning performance to beat one of the greatest hurling teams of all time. In terms of memorable moments, Kildare's Joe McDonagh Cup final win over Laois is a close second to Dublin's triumph over Limerick.
Biggest disappointment:
The All-Ireland preliminary quarter-finals have become a needless blight on the championship. Kildare's season was so positive but nobody benefited from the Lilywhites losing to Dublin by 21 points. Tipp beat Laois 3-32 to 0-18 in the other prelim. It was, predictably, a wasted weekend for hurling. And only a tad more disappointing than Galway's lacklustre season.
In 2026 I would like to see...
TJ Reid in black and amber, Noel McGrath in blue and gold, Patrick Horgan in the blood and bandages. To paraphrase a popular advertisement phrase – when they're gone, they're gone. We have all been fortunate to watch three of the greats display their talents for well over a decade now but there are doubts as to whether any of the trio will remain intercounty hurlers in 2026. For all fans of hurling, let's hope they give it one more year.
Dublin's Cian O'Sullivan wheels away celebrating his goal against Limerick in the quarter-final, a result that will stand as one of the great upsets of all time. Photograph: James Crombie/Inpho
Ian O'Riordan
Hurler of the year:
The seismic shift of second-half momentum in Sunday's final showdown had the last word on this, when Ronan Maher spear-headed Tipperary's ruthless surge for glory. At the same time as the Cork contenders dropped off, Maher's leadership only added to his already all-round superb season.
Best game:
For all the unease about the Munster hurling final being decided on penalties, who could forget the longest game of the summer as it seemed to stretch forever into the first Saturday evening in June? Countless times, both teams had their opportunity to win, but Cork held their nerve when it mattered most – in the penalty shoot-out.
Memorable moment:
Any one of John McGrath's goals for Tipperary over the course of the summer could lay claim on this one, but there was something about his movement on Sunday which will live long in the memory. The way he read the ball for his second goal was pure magic.
Biggest disappointment:
More of the colour and competitiveness appears to be going out of the Leinster hurling championship, and there is no quick or easy solution. Dublin's quarter-final revolution against Limerick offers some hope for next year, but the province needs Wexford to be shining more consistently again, and for Galway to start standing up again for real.
In 2026 I would like to see...
There has been mention (whisper it Jarlath Burns) of getting rid of the All-Ireland preliminary quarter-finals, which have become something of an annual mismatch. Either way, there is unquestionably a need and want to stretch out the championship summer by at least another week or two, to give us all more time to breathe.
And finally
At the start of the year, we asked a selection of pundits and writers to
gaze into their crystal balls for the year ahead
. Suffice to say, given the season they had endured in 2024 no one plumped for Tipperary getting their hands on the Liam MacCarthy, with Cork being tipped to finally end their drought while Limerick and Clare also featured prominently. What do we know, eh…
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Irish Times
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RTÉ News
3 hours ago
- RTÉ News
Why a new team manager can be key to U20 footballers turning senior
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Each significant spike in the past 30 years has come when a new manager arrived and fresh faces were needed Other notable spikes came in 2011 (nine) - thrashed 2-24 to 0-8 by Cork in the Munster final that year, yet several were All-Ireland senior champions in 2014 - and 2017 (nine) - beaten by Galway in the All-Ireland semi-final, yet supplied several key players to the present squad. The importance of timing This is one of those occasions where the numbers do not give the context. On the surface, you'd think these spikes represented exceptional crops. However, the numbers don't capture the role of luck and timing in a young player's break. Each significant spike in the past 30 years has come when a new manager arrived and fresh faces were needed, often after senior retirements signalled the end of a managerial cycle. Páidí Ó Sé's new tenure in 1996 brought in the 1995 and 1996 crop. Éamonn Fitzmaurice in 2012 introduced the 2011 group. Peter Keane in 2019 added more of the 2017 group, although Fitzmaurice had already begun integrating them in 2018. Keane's arrival came just after more than 10 senior players had retired between 2013 and 2016. In each case, the door opened not just because of quality, but because circumstance happened to turn the key. When the door stays shut However, some years yield almost nothing. 2014, 2023 and 2024 have seen no senior starters to date. 2002, 2003, 2012, 2013, 2019, 2020 and 2021 have just one apiece. These low-yield years usually coincide with a settled, successful senior panel and management team. The 2020 and 2021 groups, for instance, have been trying to break into a team in its peak years. The starting side that beat Donegal in the 2025 All-Ireland final had an average age of 27.33, right in the sweet spot of a team's lifespan. The funnel narrows dramatically when a team is both experienced and winning. For players, this can mean years of frustration or being limited to panel roles. Some patient players eventually break through, but history shows that for many, the window doesn't open before they call it quits on their senior dreams. The last major intake came from the 2017 cohort, and they remain the spine of the current team. Between 2018 and 2022, yields have been modest (one to four players), and the 2023–2024 cohort have yet to produce a starter. This suggests Kerry could face a five year stretch with minimal senior turnover. That stability is good for results now and the current players, but bad news for those on the fringe and risky for succession planning. It can lead to sudden, mass retirements and a scramble to replace experience. This is precisely what happened at the end of the Kerry Golden Years era (1975–1986). A "famine" ensued where Kerry didn't win an All-Ireland between 1986 and 1997. How can teams deal with this replacement issue? One partial solution to replacing players still performing above the level of those coming through is an extended development squad for players aged 21 to 25. This is a group beyond the U20 grade who are kept in a structured, high-performance environment. Several counties already run similar systems, giving players above the U20 grade but not yet ready for senior football tailored programmes. Éamonn Fitzmaurice introduced a version of this during his tenure. The challenge is keeping players motivated during these "waiting years" and meeting the cost to the County Board. You are, in effect, running two senior teams. A formalised plan for this development squad could include strength and conditioning to senior standards; skills and tactical work aligned with the senior team and organised matches against other counties. A player who started in the 2019 final against Dublin told me about the last 10 minutes of that drawn game. For him, it was a blur. The Dublin players, in contrast, seemed in total control. They were in their sixth final. No young player can shortcut those experiences. Those same Kerry players now have, in many cases, four finals behind them. They carry the same assured mindset Dublin had in 2019. A newer member of the extended Kerry panel simply does not have that experience. How could they? Looking at the current age profile, the "ideal" time to be a Kerry U20 might be in three years' time, depending on the position they are vying for. But there is no ideal in sport. It is a game of cycles outside of the control of most. As much as we try to apply logic and reduce the role of chance, sometimes a player chasing the number 13 jersey is simply born in the wrong decade. Unless you're .