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Railway Union make history as they beat Loreto again to retain Champions Trophy

Railway Union make history as they beat Loreto again to retain Champions Trophy

Irish Times04-05-2025

A 2-1 victory over Loreto in Banbridge on Sunday saw Railway Union become the first club to win the Champions Trophy two years in a row. Railway won the competition for the first time last season by beating the same opposition, their success securing them a place in next season's European Hockey League, with Loreto going in to the second level of that competition.
While Railway needed a last-minute penalty stroke from Róisín Upton to win last year's final, this time the Limerick woman gave them a first-quarter lead from a penalty corner. And Emma Smyth doubled that advantage soon after when she sent a reverse strike past Elizabeth Murphy after the Loreto goalkeeper had saved Katie Mullan's initial shot.
There was no more scoring until 11 minutes from time when Caitlin Sherin converted a penalty stoke for Loreto, but despite being a player down in the closing stages, after Mullan was green-carded, Railway held on for a deserved victory.
Railway had beaten Ulster Elks 2-0 in Saturday's semi-finals, while a double from Emily Kealy sent Loreto on their way to a 2-1 win over Old Alexandra. The sides have been the chief contenders for all three of the season's major prizes, Loreto having beaten Railway to the Hockey League title. And next Saturday, they meet in the Irish Senior Cup final. Some rivalry.

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Luckless Drogheda ladies come up just shy again in water polo's Irish Senior Cup Finals
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Irish Independent

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  • Irish Independent

Luckless Drogheda ladies come up just shy again in water polo's Irish Senior Cup Finals

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‘Bit humbling going from the Olympics to being the very worst player on a team that has 14-year-old girls on it'
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Irish Independent

time24-05-2025

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‘Bit humbling going from the Olympics to being the very worst player on a team that has 14-year-old girls on it'

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West Indies' Matthew Forde equals fastest ODI half-century record before rain earns Ireland share of spoils at Clontarf
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West Indies' Matthew Forde equals fastest ODI half-century record before rain earns Ireland share of spoils at Clontarf

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