
Armagh v Kerry live stream: How to watch the All-Ireland clash online
Armagh and Kerry collide in a repeat of their All-Ireland semi-final clash from last year at Croke Park on Sunday. The game is the final quarter-final of the weekend and follows the earlier meeting of Galway v Meath.
The Orchard County defeated the Kingdom by 1-18 to 1-16 after extra-time in that semi-final clash last year and another close match is expected on Sunday afternoon.
Armagh v Kerry is being shown live on RTE Two, whose coverage starts at 1.15pm prior to the meeting of Galway and Meath. Both games can be streamed online via the RTE Player in Ireland and on GAA+ for those outside the country.
Sean O'Brien has been named to start for Kerry in midfield alongside Joe O'Connor as Mark O'Shea drops to the bench.
Both Paudie Clifford and Paul Geaney have also been named on the bench after missing the Meath loss, but at least one of them is expected to start.
Meanwhile, Micheal Burns and Graham O'Sullivan are listed at wing forward again, with Conor Geaney named inside in place of Killian Spillane.
Tadhg Morley and Mike Breen, the Kingdom's two first choice number sixes aren't in the squad and neither is Tony Brosnan, with Breen and Brosnan both sidelined with injuries.
Gavin White is named at number six, but is likely to move to the wing. Brian Ó Beaglaoich could start in the middle.

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Irish Examiner
24 minutes ago
- Irish Examiner
Royal run to last four could not have been foreseen
All-Ireland SFC quarter-final: Meath 2-16 (2-0-16) Galway 2-15 (2-2-11) Promotion from the League's second division was beyond Meath, Louth denying them top-tier membership on the final day. Little has been beyond them since. Dublin, Kerry, and Galway have all been bettered and stunned in this unforeseen Royal run to the second last weekend of the championship. They have been and continue to be the summer's brilliant bolter. In this championship of saturated storylines, the overlooked boys from Division 2 have had the audacity to challenge the Clifford-O'Shea axis and Jimmy's noise-making for the headline act. Remember now, it was only two years ago that Meath wore second-tier championship clothes. Their Sam Maguire return was no return at all. The Dubs whipped them by 16 points in Leinster, with the subsequent All-Ireland group series starting and finishing without a single Meath win. The four consecutive defeats spawned an off-season of Colm O'Rourke being squeezed out. Not a quiet or subtle squeezing, mind. A fine basket of dirty laundry was duly washed in public view. From there to here was not logically foreseeable. And don't forget we had further noise and off-field distraction when two of Robbie Brennan's selectors, Joe McMahon and Martin Corey, mysteriously departed on the eve of championship. Again, from there to here just could not be contemplated. Meath arrived into HQ yesterday as 16-year quarter-final strangers. Their opponents were chasing a third semi-final appearance in four years. The opening exchanges suggested no difference in experience. Meath, in fact, were the more assertive and more dominant. Their issue was their finishing. After 16 minutes, the scoreline read 0-1 apiece. Of Meath's opening six points attempts, only Seán Coffey was successful. Of the other five, Jordan Morris was thrice wide, Keith Curtin was also off-target, and Conor Duke was short. As the scoreline suggests, the early action was cagey and careless . And so we are making the editorial decision to fast-forward all the way to the 50th minute. We may or may not come back to what we skipped over. Very little of it was exciting, less again was memorable. The last quarter was show stealing. It took Kerry registering 0-14 from 13 shots to relegate the closing spell of the day's opening quarter-final to second spot on the Sunday podium. The drama overflowed. Momentum lurched. So too did the lead. Galway gone, Galway back, Galway crisis averted, to, finally, the Galway gift that paved Meath progression. Jordan Morris pointed off a 50th minute Galway kickout not retained by the men in maroon. It was the second Meath point of the second period they'd engineered from a spoiled Galway kickout. It was the second point in a 1-3 Royal burst. A minute later, Conor Gleeson denied Morris' goal drive. Ciarán Caulfield subsequently kicked wide. The westerners were taking on water and yet Meath were keeping their ship afloat with these chances not taken. Then, in a stunning two minutes, they pressed down hard on Joyce's ship and his time as Galway manager. Daniel O'Flaherty turned over, sub Conor Gray uprooting the green flag. Meath profiting off Galway turnovers - 2-6 in total - was the story of the game, even if the headline will be Meath progressing to a first semi-final since 2009. That progression appeared sealed as early as the 54th minute. Meath won Gleeson's kickout following the goal, Morris thumping the ball back over. 1-12 to 0-9. Four minutes was all that Galway required to temporarily torpedo those semi-final dreams. Enter Damien Comer, re-enter Galway. 2-3 between the 56th and 59th minute. The returning Comer had a hand in three of the four scores. He won the free for a Shane Walsh two-pointer. He won the sideline that began a sequence of passes that ended with fellow replacement Cillian McDaid shaking the net. He won the equalising free that Rob Finnerty converted. The sensational overtaking movement was completed by Liam Silke. Nerve held at the end of another delicious run of defence splitting passes. All this in 10 minutes and still another 10 to run. Gleeson, for the third time, produced a fantastic save to deny the soccer-style effort of Morris. The subsequent 45 was kicked wide by Meath 'keeper Billy Hogan, the second of three he would miss in the second period. Gleeson went short with the restart. Johnny McGrath turned over. Matthew Costello to Morris. Goal. Meath back in front. 2-13 to 2-12. Cathal Hickey and Morris swelled that lead to three as Walsh kicked wide and Paul Conroy's two-point effort fell short. Conroy's sole other involvement was to slip and lose possession. A harsh final chapter for the current footballer of the year. Walsh's second orange flag reduced the margin to the minimum with 90 seconds remaining. Meath held possession from the restart. They were exceptionally strong under their own restart. The out-of-retirement Bryan Menton was superb in this department. They held on. They carry on. Galway's taxing schedule is well documented. Tired bodies and tired minds were not the root cause of this unexpected exit. The non-policing of Morris and needless turnovers did them. Self-inflicted defeat. Again. Scorers for Meath: J Morris (1-6); M Costello (0-4, 0-1 free); C Gray (1-0); D Keogan, S Coffey, C Duke, B Menton, E Frayne, C Hickey (0-1 each). Scorers for Galway: (0-5, tp, tp free); R Finnerty (0-3, 0-2 frees); L Silke, C McDaid (1-0 each); M Tierney, M Thompson (0-2 each); S Kelly, J Maher, D Comer (0-1 each). MEATH: B Hogan; R Ryan, S Rafferty, S Lavin; D Keogan, S Coffey, C Caulfield; B Menton, A O'Neill; M Costello, R Kinsella, C Duke; J Morris, E Frayne, K Curtis. Subs: C Hickey for Curtis (42); B O'Halloran for Lavin (temporary, 46-49); C Gray for O'Neill (46); B O'Halloran for S Rafferty (56), S Rafferty for Lavin (60); E Harkin for Duke (temporary, 64); C McBride for Menton (67). GALWAY: C Gleeson; J McGrath, S Fitzgerald, J Glynn; D McHugh, S Kelly, C Hernon; J Maher, C Darcy; L Silke, M Tierney, P Cooke; M Thompson, S Walsh, R Finnerty. Subs: P Conroy for Hernon (42); C McDaid for Cooke (43); D O'Flaherty for McHugh, D Comer for Tierney (both 51); K Molloy for Kelly (64). Referee: M McNally (Monaghan).


RTÉ News
38 minutes ago
- RTÉ News
Kieran McGeeney rues 15 minutes he'd "like to forget"
Kieran McGeeney reflected on a 15 minutes he'd "like to forget" after Armagh were overwhelmed by Kerry in the second half of the All-Ireland quarter-final. All appeared to be going swimmingly for Armagh five minutes into the second half, a burst of scores from Rian O'Neill, Darragh McMullan and Oisín Conaty pushing them into a five-point lead. However, 15 minutes later, their campaign was on life-support and the game almost done and dusted. Kerry racked up 0-14 without reply, with just two two-pointers included in that haul, as Armagh were unable to secure possession from their own kickout. "It was probably a disappointing 15 minutes, that's what turned the tide," McGeeney told RTÉ Sport afterwards. "They (Armagh players) never stopped fighting so you have to give them credit. It was just a 15 minute period where Kerry were devastating and we just couldn't get our hands on the ball in the middle. "I think it was 11 out of our 13 kickouts (in that spell) that we lost. If you do that in this game, you have to commit for it and then you leave holes in behind. "Seán (O'Shea), no matter what he hit, was putting them over and everybody else was joining in. "It's a 15 minutes you'd like to forget. But it happens in sport. We've done it ourselves against other teams, so you just have to take it on the chin and move on. "For the first 45 minutes we were very well on top, but the only time to be on top really is at the end." Of that 15 minute spell, when Armagh were unable to gather possession on their own kickout, McGeeney shrugged that there was little that could be done on the sideline. "Listen, that's what we (the public) want. We just want to be able to kick the ball out and make it 50:50. People find that more exciting. That's the game and Kerry were better at it today that us. "I suppose we kept kicking it to the wings. If I could pinpoint the reason for you, we would have stopped it. We were too tied onto the sidelines. They were quicker on the breaking balls at that stage. "It was just their ability to punish. Seanie had just one of those days. He couldn't miss. That's just what happens. "And then three or four goal chances on our side that we miss. It's frustrating but we've all been around sport a long time. Outside of the Dublins and Kerrys, we lose more than we win." In the same seat 10 minutes earlier, his Kerry counterpart Jack O'Connor had taken aim at his team's critics. Kerry were in the rare position of underdogs amid an air of fatalism following their loss to Meath, but McGeeney said he didn't pay any heed. "Not really, it was the Kerry boys that were talking them down, so we wouldn't pass much remarks. "That's what Kerry do. My in-laws are from there. I would hear it direct. "Everyone was saying they weren't a team - National League champions, Munster champions, the highest scoring forward, the highest scorers going into it (the game). "Eamonn (Fitzmaurice) and the boys can write that stuff. But no one really believes it." McGeeney, after years of hard-toil and near-misses, helped deliver the county's second All-Ireland title 11 months ago. With their title defence done, the manager was in fairly reflective mood. "Listen, they've won an All-Ireland. They're only one of two (Armagh) teams in 140 odd years that have won it. They can hold their heads up high surely. "They've been one of the most consistent teams over the last three or four years. You get a few years to push at the top and you have to make the best of it. "Between Dublin and Kerry, they've won 50% of All-Ireland finals. So, you're up against a huge thing. "It's going to be a disappointing for them today. But they've got an All-Ireland medal in their back pocket. "And I'm sure those younger fellas there, and most of the squad, will want to push on and get another one." As for his own position at the end of 11 years in charge, McGeeney showed no indication he was getting tired of it. "I sit down every year and it's always about players. It's all about players, first and foremost, and what they want. And how much they want to push on. "My appetite for football has always been the same. I love it. I enjoy it. Despite the abuse. "It's just one of the things, like. I don't know. Maybe it's an addiction."


RTÉ News
an hour ago
- RTÉ News
USA swat Girls in Green aside in scorching Cincinnati
USA 4-0 Republic of Ireland The Republic of Ireland fell to a second successive 4-0 friendly defeat against the USA in sweltering conditions at the TQL Stadium in Cincinnati. Outclassed in high altitude against Emma Hayes' world No 1-ranked side in Denver last Friday morning, this was always going to be another very difficult task for an Irish shorn of their strongest players. They got off to a rocky start when Lynn Biyendolo broke the deadlock in the 11th minute, but they did have some bright moments as the half wore on. Any hopes of an unlikely recovery melted however when Izzy Rodriguez made it 2-0 a few minutes before the break. On the turnaround, the Americans punished tired Irish legs with Yazmeen Ryan and the electric Alyssa Thompson wrapping up a convincing victory. Ireland will rest up now before October's Nations League promotion/relegation play-off against Belgium when the likes of Katie McCabe and Denise O'Sullivan should return to offer a welcome injection of quality. 11 mins: USA 1-0 Ireland The Irish exposed down their left-hand side as a USA move ends with Lynn Biyendolo scoring #rtesport 📺 💻 — RTÉ Sport (@RTEsport) June 29, 2025 Temperatures tipped into the 30s for the 17th meeting of these countries. Ireland had lost all 16 previous encounters so optimism was not high, particularly given the unforgiving humidity. Boss Carla Ward made four changes, bringing in Abbie Larkin, Tyler Toland, Saoirse Noonan and Marissa Sheva. Meanwhile Emma Hayes went with a completely different USA XI, entrusting a youthful outfit eager to take their chance to impress. It didn't take them long to do damage. Razor-sharp one and two-touch football carved the Irish open, with Emma Sears tearing down the right channel and clipping in a great ball that Lynn Biyendolo confidently volleyed high into the net. With their tails up, the USA kept on coming. Croix Bethune slashed a left-footed effort a couple of yards wide from just inside the area; then Lynn Biyendolo's goal was ruled out because Yazmeen Ryan had fouled Jessie Stapleton in the build-up. A 25-minute water break helped the Girls in Green. They came out of that huddle fresher, purposeful. Emily Murphy and Abbie Larkin were the two brightest sparks, both showing neat touches and good pace to get their opponents backpedalling. One Murphy-triggered attack saw Noona feed Kyra Carusa, only for the striker to slam her shot into the sidenetting. Ireland were getting a foothold, however - as was the case in Denver - the USA nabbed a killer second just before half-time. HT: USA 2-0 Ireland Debutant Izzy Rodriguez makes it 2 after Courtney Brosnan initially made a fine save #rtesport 📺 💻 — RTÉ Sport (@RTEsport) June 29, 2025 Emma Sears was initially denied at point-blank range by a tremendous Brosnan save but the goalkeeper's parry dropped nicely for Izzy Rodriguez, who knocked home the rebound. Ward introduced Lucy Quinn, Hayley Nolan and Megan Connolly for the second half, switching to a 3-5-2 formation to try and subdue the hosts' flying wide players. It did not have the desire effect. Olivia Moultrie, just 19 years old, pulled the strings as the USA constantly pushed and probed. Brosnan batted away a Biyendolo shot; Croix Bethune had an attempt charged down inside the area; then Moultrie surged forward and drilled one past the post. A third goal felt inevitable, and it came in the 66th minute. Substitute Sam Coffey started the move, releasing Ryan through the centre. Sears did well to race onto Ryan overcooked pass and pick out Moultrie, who teed up the marauding Ryan to slide home a nice finish. Ireland enjoyed a few sporadic counters in the opening half but they could offer nothing in the game's later stages. Visibly shattered, they sat back and soaked up the pressure as best they could. When Anna Patten went off for Ruesha Littlejohn, the Aston Villa centre-half immediately headed into the dressing room to find an ice bath. 86 mins: USA 4-0 Ireland Only on the pitch a few minutes, Alyssa Thompson again finds the net v Ireland #rtesport @FAIWomen 📺 💻 — RTÉ Sport (@RTEsport) June 29, 2025 The sight of Thompson coming off the bench would have further demoralised the visitors. She terrorised Ireland in Denver, and duly got herself among the goals again with four minutes to go. A smart Emma Sears ball over the top caught Ireland flat - Thompson killed it with a good first touch and then smashed home an emphatic low finish. Hometown hero Rose Lavelle came on to the delight of the natives for the closing stages, but this game had long been done and dusted by then. Ireland will head for home happy to get a rest, and hope some harsh lessons have been learned before focus turns to those important autumn dates with the Belgians. USA: Mandy McGlynn; Emily Sams, Jordyn Bugg, Tara McKeown; Lynn Biyendolo (Capt), Croix Bethune, Sam Meza, Izzy Rodriguez; Olivia Moultrie, Emma Sears, Yazmeen Ryan