logo
Donegal hold off Leitrim to save their senior status in relegation play-off

Donegal hold off Leitrim to save their senior status in relegation play-off

The 429 hours ago
Donegal 2-15
Leitrim 1-12
EVA GALLAGHER WAS in flying form for Donegal at Kilcoyne Park in Tubbercurry on Saturday as the O'Donnell County secured their TG4 All-Ireland senior football championship status with a relegation play-off victory over Leitrim.
While Gallagher broke the deadlock with a fine point inside the opening 60 seconds, Leitrim squeezed in front courtesy of unanswered efforts by Muireann Devaney (a late addition to the starting line-up) and Ailbhe Clancy.
Yet Kilcar attacker Gallagher soon followed with her second point of the game, and when Katie Dowds fed Susanne White close to goal on nine minutes, the latter fired smoothly into the bottom left-hand corner of the net.
Following traded scores between the influential Gallagher and Leah Fox, Donegal stretched six clear when Gallagher, Dowds and Mia Bennett split the uprights in quick succession.
However, after Laura O'Dowd (older sister of Dublin midfielder Eilish O'Dowd) cut Leitrim's deficit in half with a 19th-minute goal, Fox's second of the day left just two points between the teams.
Gallagher (her fifth of the half) and Clancy raised further white flags for their side as the action progressed, before Jodie McFadden fired home a second Donegal major on 24 minutes.
This propelled James Daly's Ulster side towards a 2-7 to 1-5 interval buffer and with Niamh Boyle, White and Bennett all on target, they enjoyed a whirlwind start to the second half.
Advertisement
Donegal remained in the driving seat after Gallagher and the ever-dangerous Devaney bagged two points apiece at either end of the pitch, but 2024 TG4 All-Ireland intermediate football championship winners Leitrim weren't prepared to go down without a fight.
In the space of eight minutes inside the final-quarter, Jonny Garrity's side outscored their O'Donnell counterparts by 0-5 to 0-1 – the impressive Devaney bagging four points to compliment a single contribution from Fox.
They subsequently received a potential lifeline when Devaney was fouled inside the small square on 58 minutes, but her resulting penalty was saved low by Donegal netminder Clare Friel.
This could have been the spark they needed to turn the tide in their favour, but with Gallagher and White knocking over late points for their opponents, Leitrim ultimately couldn't avoid a return to the intermediate championship for 2026.
Scorers for Donegal: E Gallagher 0-9, S White 1-2, J McFadden 1-0, M Bennett 0-2, K Dowds, N Boyle 0-1 each.
Scorers for Leitrim: M Devaney 0-7 (6f), L O'Dowd 1-0, L Fox 0-3, A Clancy 0-2 (1f).
DONEGAL: C Friel; S McFadden, A Temple Asokuh, S McFeeley; B McLaughlin, E McGinley, C Gillespie; R Rodgers, M Bennett; S White, K Dowds, F McManamon; E Gallagher, J McFadden, N Boyle. Subs: R McColgan for Rodgers (36), A Caulfield for Gillespie (40), E Boyle for McFadden (45), A McGranaghan for Bennett (52).
LEITRIM: M Guckian; J Maye, C Tyrrell, E Quigley; D Beirne, C Owens, R McIntyre; N Tighe, A Quinn; A Gilmartin, V Egan, A Clancy; L Fox, M Devaney, L O'Dowd. Subs: S Quinn for Egan (40), C Dolan for A Quinn (46), L McKeon for Quigley (52), E Shanley for Beirne (54).
Referee: Philip Conway (Armagh).
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Seventh All-Ireland final beckons for Kerry's self-styled football outsider
Seventh All-Ireland final beckons for Kerry's self-styled football outsider

The 42

time5 hours ago

  • The 42

Seventh All-Ireland final beckons for Kerry's self-styled football outsider

MENTION TO JACK O'Connor that he is heading for his seventh All-Ireland final, and he throws it on to the players. 'This group have been in a few finals like. They were here in '22, '23…,' he begins. 'They were here in '19, sorry — '19, '22, '23 — so this will be their fourth final, most of those boys. 'Paul Murphy, Paul Geaney were there in '14. And '15. So there is a good bit of experience in the group, yeah.' And what it means, of course? 'Sure of course it counts. Where it counts more than anything is in the build-up to it. You know to avoid getting carried away in the euphoria of the thing, and keeping the main thing the main thing, if you know what I mean. 'Keeping your priorities right, and keeping the focus on arriving here in your best physical and mental condition. To play the game rather than the occasion.' If there is one thing he laments, in what he calls the 'old days', it was the month of a lead-in to the final. But that can't be helped either. The season starts with the bang of a gun and teams have to put their head down to make the early yards. There's barely a chance to get the head up and see where everyone else is. All you can do is take nothing for granted, and Tyrone are not a side that O'Connor has learned to take for granted. Advertisement O'Connor shakes hands with Peter Teague. Tom O'Hanlon / INPHO Tom O'Hanlon / INPHO / INPHO 'Tyrone had some big results that almost went under the radar. They beat Donegal above in Ballybofey, very few teams do that. I don't think it was picked up too much in the media,' said O'Connor. 'Beat Dublin here; I don't care what they say about Dublin, Dublin are still a hard team to beat here in Croke Park. They would have come into this game with a lot of confidence and there was lot a noise about our game, which meant Tyrone were coming in under the radar. 'I thought that showed early on. I thought, in the first 15 minutes, Tyrone were the better team. They settled quicker and had us in a lot of bother on breaking ball around the middle of the field. As soon as we got to terms with that, I thought the game changed and David's goal settled us.' The kickout count was heavily in Tyrone's favour before Kerry arrested that. In the second half, Tyrone simply couldn't cope. A good part of that was the man sitting beside O'Connor in the press briefing. Gavin White won three break balls from Niall Morgan's kickout in the third quarter alone. 'No better man than this man here,' said O'Connor of the Dr Crokes man. 'That was the thing that was killing us early on. There was a bit of a disconnect between Shane's kickouts and fellas getting to the pitch of the breaks. We spoke about that at half-time and that was a big factor in the second half.' This win was less of the Catherine Wheel spectacular of the win over Armagh, but it could have been even more impressive. It doesn't feel like a performance is being magicked up out of nowhere. 'It was a more rounded performance because I thought that spell against Armagh was a bit freakish. It was like they just couldn't get their kickout away and we kept the ball up that end of the field,' said O'Connor. David Clifford celebrates. James Crombie / INPHO James Crombie / INPHO / INPHO 'I think this was a more rounded performance because Tyrone are very big around the middle of the field, Kennedy and Kilpatrick are big men and they have a lot of targets, and Morgan has a serious weapon of a kickout. The two boys (O'Shea and O'Brien) plugged away great for most of the game, and then Joe finished up midfield and what a game Joe had. Powerful game, he is getting better all the time.' Kerry supporters have had all sorts of things thrown at them. Occasionally, outsiders paint a pretty vulgar picture of their assessments of players. But this team seem to be reaching for a deeper connection. You can see it in David Clifford most of all. He has been appealing for greater turnouts of fans, and when he plundered his first-half goal here, made a huge show of trying to raise the decibel level among the Kerry support. It's working. 'I mean it was no secret that Armagh seriously outnumbered us here at this stage last year,' said O'Connor. 'And I know I got stick for it but I said at the time that they were a factor in the game. And I don't think anyone could dispute that. '(The) Kerry crowd were a factor today big time. So delighted with that. The support travel in huge numbers. 'And long may it continue. I mean these boys are giving everything for the cause. And they're playing good football. So they deserve to be supported. And we're delighted that, you know, I don't have the language to describe it. 'But it's working both ways, you know. They're getting energy from the crowd. And the crowd are getting energy from the players.' Meanwhile, O'Connor noted at the end of his press conference that Paul and Conor Geaney, along with Tom O'Sullivan, will be in a position to make a contribution in the final. * Check out the latest episode of The42′s GAA Weekly podcast here

Sligo Rovers take northwest derby to put an end to Derry City's unbeaten run
Sligo Rovers take northwest derby to put an end to Derry City's unbeaten run

Irish Times

time6 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Sligo Rovers take northwest derby to put an end to Derry City's unbeaten run

Premier Division: Sligo Rovers 2 (P McClean 19; W Wawero 45+1) Derry City 0 Paddy McClean scored against his hometown club Derry City as Sligo Rovers extended the buffer between themselves and bottom side Cork City to eight points at The Showgrounds in Sligo. Wilson Waweru scored the Bit O'Red's insurance goal as Rovers deservedly handed Derry their first defeat in six league outings. The result means the Candystripes remain nine points off leaders Shamrock Rovers with one game in hand. In the sizzling Sligo heat, it was the hosts who were the more impressive from the off. Rovers should have taken the lead six minutes later, but centre half Ollie Denham nodded Owen Elding's cross from the left past Brian Maher's post from two yards out. Sligo did make the most of their next visit to the well as Derry switched off at a 19th-minute corner. Jake Doyle-Hayes's set-piece landed on the foot of the unmarked McClean, who finished past Maher for his first goal since his return to the Showgrounds last month. READ MORE Elding kept his side ahead on 23 minutes when the young attacker swept Hayden McCann's header from Michael Duffy's corner off his own line moments before the water break. Rovers managed two first-half goals last week against Shamrock Rovers and did it again here courtesy of another defensive mishap when Maher spilt Ryan O'Kane's cross at the foot of Waweru, who was left with a simple finish into an open net. Sligo called on goalkeeper Sam Sargeant early in the second period and the he met Duffy's low drive with a strong left fist after the in-form winger's run brought him all the way into the opposing penalty area. Tiernan Lynch's side went at the home side in waves but robust defending from a young Rovers outfit kept them at arm's length. Derry introduced some of the league's best attacking talents with the likes of Adam O'Reilly, Danny Mullen and Robbie Benson sent on throughout the second half. But a Mullen effort on the turn, which Sargeant tipped over, was the closest they came to a consolation. SLIGO ROVERS: Sam Sargeant; Conor Reynolds (Daire Patton, 90), Ollie Denham, Paddy McClean, Will Fitzgerald; James McManus, Jake Doyle-Hayes; Owen Elding, Jad Hakiki, Ryan O'Kane (Kyle McDonagh, 76); Wilson Waweru (Francely Lomboto, 61). DERRY CITY: Brian Maher; Hayden Cann, Mark Connolly, Sam Todd; Ronan Boyce (Seán Patton, 84), Shane Ferguson (Danny Mullen, 61); Sadou Diallo (Robbie Benson, 72), Carl Winchester; Gavin Whyte (Adam O'Reilly, h-t), Michael Duffy; Liam Boyce (Alex Bannon, 61). Referee: Rob Hennessy. Attendance: 2,877.

Ireland hit tonne in Test mismatch against Portugal
Ireland hit tonne in Test mismatch against Portugal

RTÉ News​

time7 hours ago

  • RTÉ News​

Ireland hit tonne in Test mismatch against Portugal

Ireland recorded their biggest ever Test victory, scoring 16 tries in a complete mismatch against Portugal in Lisbon. Shorn of 17 squad members on Lions duty, interim head coach Paul O'Connell's charges ran riot against a Portugal team out of their depth and looking nothing like the outfit that impressed at the 2023 World Cup. The final score read 106-7 to the visitors, who led 54-0 at the break, with debutants Hugh Gavin and Shayne Bolton scoring twice each, and fellow new cap Alex Kendellen getting on the scoresheet. Leinster wing Tommy O'Brien added another two on his second cap, while Stuart McCloskey, Thomas Clarkson, Craig Casey, Cian Prendergast (2), Calvin Nash, Ciarán Frawley and Ben Murphy also crossed with the final score coming from a penalty try to break the tonne for the first time ever. Out-half Jack Crowley landed 12 conversions on the night. After passing a relatively stiff test in difficult conditions against Georgia in Tbilisi last weekend, Ireland would have hoped for more of a challenge from Os Lobos, ranked 18th in the world, as the sides met for the first time. But it was more akin to a middle of the road training session than a full-blooded contest as Ireland scored off their first possession through Ulster centre McCloskey. The tries came thick and fast at the sun-kissed Estádio Nacional do Jamo, the venue where Celtic won the 1967 European Cup, with Portugal, who lost captain Tomás Appleton to a nasty leg injury in the 21st minute, outclassed throughout. By that point the score was 28-0 with Connacht's Gavin scoring after a lineout move in the 22, with Tommy O'Brien and Shayne Bolton running in tries that started in the Irish half. Portugal full-back Nuno Sousa Guedes had a try disallowed for a forward pass before Ireland crossed again, this time O'Brien coming off his wing to take a pop pass from Crowley. Leinster prop Clarkson ran over for another moments later after Casey tapped a quick penalty in midfield and Bolton grabbed his second following up on a hopeful punt with two Portugese defenders falling asleep in the backfield. With the TMO communications failing midway through the half, there was some confusion with the match clock but there was still time for Gavin, who was promoted to the starting XV when Jamie Osborne was called up by Lions coach Andy Farrell on Friday, to bash over for his second. It was more of the same on the resumption with captain Casey finishing off good work by Bolton and Munster flanker Kendellen, one of three debutants. Prendergast, who missed out last weekend due to a stomach bug, got Ireland's tenth try, taking Tom Ahern's pop pass on the short side after a smart lineout switch between Gus McCarthy and Jack Boyle. Simon Mannix's charges did manage to avoid a whitewash when flanker Nicolas Martins took advantage of a break by winger Manuel Cardoso Pinto to score, out-half Hugo Aubry converted. Ireland emptied the bench but there was no let-up for the hosts, who beat Fiji and drew with Georgia less than two years ago. Nash finished off in the corner when Ireland moved the ball quickly from a scrum, while he turned provider for Frawley moments later. Prendergast added a second with a fine assist from Casey, while Kendellen powered over for his debut try soon after. Portugal brought down a tryline-bound maul in overtime with referee Adam Leal awarding a penalty try to bring a miserable evening for the hosts to an end. The winning margin surpassed the 83-3 victory over USA in New Hampshire back in 2000 with 106 points and 16 tries also records for the senior team. Ireland next return to the Test arena when they take on New Zealand in Chicago on 1 November. Portugal: Nuno Sousa Guedes; Simão Bento, Vincent Pinto, Tomás Appleton (capt), Manuel Cardoso Pint; Hugo Aubry, Hugo Camacho; David Costa, Luka Begic, Diogo Hasse Ferreira; Antonio Rebolo de Andrade, Pedro Ferreira; David Wallis, Nicolas Martins, Diego Pinheiro. Replacements: Abel Cunha, Pedro Santiago Lopes, Martim Souto, Guilherme Costa, Francisco Almeida, Vasco Baptista, António Campos, Gabriel Aviragnet. Ireland: Jimmy O'Brien; Tommy O'Brien, Hugh Gavin, Stuart McCloskey, Shayne Bolton; Jack Crowley, Craig Casey (capt); Jack Boyle, Gus McCarthy, Thomas Clarkson; Tom Ahern, Darragh Murray; Ryan Baird, Alex Kendellen, Cian Prendergast. Replacements: Tom Stewart (for McCarthy 52), Michael Milne (Boyle 52), Tom O'Toole (Clarkson 52), Cormac Izuchukwu (Murray 60), Max Deegan (Baird 52), Ben Murphy (Casey 60), Ciarán Frawley (McCloskey 52), Calvin Nash (O'Brien 52).

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store