
Dan Kearney: Championship exit shouldn't detract from positive year for Kerry ladies
Kerryman
Today at 01:30
Semi-finals are the worst ones to lose. It's a cliché at this stage but still so true.
It is no consolation for the Kerry ladies football team that they were beaten by a better team in Saturday's All-Ireland SFC semi-final. Quite simply, Meath were firing at full capacity while Kerry were nowhere near the level that they set their standards to.

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RTÉ News
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RTÉ GAA Podcast: Tipperary the kings of Ireland, Cork stunned as day doesn't go to plan
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The Irish Sun
20 minutes ago
- The Irish Sun
Paul Casey hails Hannah Tyrrell's nerve as Dublin book All-Ireland final clash with Meath
DUBLIN'S Paul Casey hailed Hannah Tyrrell after they booked their TG4 All-Ireland final slot. Tyrrell ensured it finished level in normal time on Saturday in Tullamore before the Dubs took down Galway. 2 Dublin joint manager Paul Casey hailed Hannah Tyrrell for her impact during the win 2 Tyrrell starred for Dublin as they sealed a final place with the win over Galway The joint-manager said: 'When you get a score at the end to equalise it and bring it to extra-time, you get a little bit of a boost and you get the energy going into it. 'It's fabulous. All-Ireland semi-finals are all about winning and they're awful to lose. The girls managed to find that extra gear in extra-time, particularly that first half of extra-time, and then got crucial goals at crucial times. It was fantastic. 'There is a lot of work we need to do and lots of areas of improvement that we know won't be good enough in two weeks' time. 'We'll recover and we'll dust ourselves down. See how we are in the next couple of days and we've an All-Ireland final to look forward to.' READ MORE ON GAA The Jackies now face Meath in the final on August 3 at Croke Park and Casey knows this is another contest set to go down to the wire. He said: 'We are very familiar with each other. 'Over the last number of years we've probably played no other team as many times. 'Meath are excellent. I think they've improved massively as the Championship has gone on. We've a little bit of extra homework to do on them now, but it's great for Leinster to have two Leinster teams in the final and I'm sure there will be a massive crowd there.' Most read in GAA Football There was little between the sides throughout a fine contest but Dublin hit the front when Tyrrell slotted home a 17th-minute penalty. The sides were back on level terms when the Tribe's Kate Slevin and Roisin Leonard found their the range. RTE GAA pundit embrace Tipperary captain Ronan Maher after his epic display toppled Cork in All-Ireland final But Tyrrell replied with a pointed free on 23 minutes. Eva Noone, Olivia Divilly and Leonard all raised white flags for Daniel Moynihan's side but with Sinead Goldrick and Niamh Hetherton getting their names on the Dublin scoresheet, the teams were level at 1-6 to 0-9 at the break. It took 14 minutes after the restart before the next score arrived through the boot of Dublin corner-forward Kate Sullivan. Slevin levelled matters with a close-in free but Tyrrell responded with a similar effort to re-establish Dublin's slender lead. Galway hit back and two points from Noone edged them in front. And they looked set to prevail when sub Andrea Trill kicked over in response to a Sophie McIntyre effort. But there was enough time left for Tyrrell to force extra-time with a pointed free. The Na Fianna forward seized the initiative for Dublin in extra-time with a brace of points. Divilly registered her third of the game, before sub Orlagh Nolan found the target to put Casey's side two clear at 1-13 to 0-14 at the break in extra-time. The Dubs found themselves on course to set up a repeat of their 2021 decider against Meath when Rowe — with a soccer-style back heel — and Sullivan bagged goals in the second half of extra-time. They survived a nervous finish after Trill and Olivia Divilly rattled the net for Galway in a thrilling finale. Tribe boss Monyihan said: 'With the clock, another two minutes would have been key for us. We put them under the cosh, they couldn't get kickouts out. 'We possibly could have snuck another goal if we had another few minutes but this is sport. It can be extremely cruel at times. 'Dublin will look back on last year and say, 'Well, we've got our turn now' — but this isn't going to go away for a while for us. 'It's difficult to surmise. We went on a great run, we got back to Division 1. 'We backed up our Connacht title as well, which was great, and then had a good run leading into this. 'We felt possibly we could go all the way this year. 'It's just so disappointing that we just didn't finish that off. We'll regret that but we have to move on and think of the positives. 'We may see a few players step away after this season, which is never easy to see, but a lot of those ladies have really battled for Galway.' SCORERS – Dublin: H Tyrrell 1-6, 1-0 pen, 5f, C Rowe 1-2, K Sullivan 1-1, N Hetherton 0-2, S Goldrick 0-1, S McIntyre 0-1, O Nolan 0-1. Galway: O Divilly 1-3, R Leonard 0-5, 4f, A Trill 1-1, E Noone 0-3, 1f, K Slevin 0-2, 1f.


Irish Examiner
an hour ago
- Irish Examiner
Landers: Three things Cork got wrong against Tipperary
Mark Landers pointed to three tactical errors he felt Cork made in the demoralising All-Ireland final defeat by Tipperary. For starters, the 1999 All-Ireland winning captain felt Mark Coleman should have become Cork's extra defender once it was clear Tipperary were playing a sweeper at the other end. Speaking on Dalo's Hurling Show, Landers said: 'How come Mark Coleman wasn't freed up when we knew we had an extra man at the back? Imagine if Patrick Collins had Mark Coleman as the puckout option, that would have been a huge help. 'We weren't prepared for a sweeper. If we were, we'd have come out with a different plan second half. We didn't have a different plan. It was a case of we're going route one all the time.' Landers would also have allowed Sean O'Donoghue resume his tagging job on Tipperary forward Darragh McCarthy. O'Donoghue had dominated the duel in the league final, before McCarthy was sent off before the throw-in for an altercation between the pair in Munster. "Why wasn't Sean O'Donoghue marking Darragh McCarthy? It felt like we didn't want to get involved in any controversy, so we put Niall O'Leary on him and said that will be fine. I'd have put O'Donoghue on Darragh. He's had the better of him all year long and that would send out a message. Landers also feels that if talisman forward Seamus Harnedy was fit enough to come on as sub, Cork would have been better to start him, particularly as there were plenty of other forward options in reserve such as Shane Kingston and Robbie O'Flynn. 'He (Harnedy) proved when he came on, he was on an ocean of ball. Is he our Tony Kelly, that good a player? I think he is. Nobody likes marking him.' At the same time, flaws with the setup couldn't explain Cork's second half no-show. "Saying all that. If you put out any team, you'd expect to pick up more than two points in the second half. "It doesn't explain the non-performance. "I felt at half time we were flattered to be six points up. But six up, Tipp only have five forwards, we might be able to keep limping. It was a limping performance. At no stage did we own the game. "I thought we were doing enough to keep the scoreboard ticking over, hurling away. Dudsy Healy had been very good, Shane Barrett had been very good. Brian Haye and Alan Connolly came into it five minutes before half-time. "Did I envisage what was to come, absolutely not?"