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Kate Slevin fires 1-6 as Galway LGFA qualify for second All-Ireland semi-final in a row with stylish win over Waterford

Kate Slevin fires 1-6 as Galway LGFA qualify for second All-Ireland semi-final in a row with stylish win over Waterford

The Irish Sun06-07-2025
KATE SLEVIN fired 1-6 to rocket Galway into a second successive TG4 All-Ireland SFC semi-final.
Slevin's first-half penalty put Daniel Moynihan's charges nine points clear but
Lauren
McGregor's
strike
early in the second half gave the Déise new life.
McGregor responded for the Munster side before Divilly restored Galway's seven-point cushion.
The teams shared the
next
four white flags before the break, leaving it 1-7 to 0-3 at half-time.
Galway maintained the momentum with Divilly adding two. McGregor and Bríd McMaugh reduced arrears to 1-9 to 0-5.
Read More on LGFA
Galway pulled 1-12 to 0-6 clear as Slevin (two) and Davoren tallied against McGregor's sole response. But the latter brought
Points for McMaugh (two) and McGregor left the Munster finalists just 1-14 to 1-9 behind.
But scores from Eva Noone, Slevin (two), Divilly, Slevin and sub Roísín Leonard's brace booked a semi-final with
GALWAY
: D Gower; B Quinn, S Ní Loingsigh, K Geraghty; H Noone, N Ward, C Trill; L Ward, S Divilly; L Coen 0-1, O Divilly 0-5, A Davoren 0-2; E Noone 0-2, N Divilly, K Slevin 1-6, 1-0pen, 4f.
Subs
: K Thompson for N Divilly 41 mins, L Noone for Coen 41, R Leonard 0-2 for Davoren 52, A Molloy for Trill 55, M Banek for Slevin 55.
Most read in GAA Football
WATERFORD
: K Gardiner; C Murray, R Casey, L Mulcahy; A Murray, E Murray, K McGrath; H Power, E Power; B McMaugh 0-4, K Murray, Á O'Neill; L McGregor 1-7, 2f, C Walsh 0-1, C Fennell.
Subs
: A Wall for O'Neill 19 mins, Á Power for A Murray 50, L Ní hArta for Fennell 50, O'Neill for Walsh 54, M Dunford for K Murray 55.
REFEREE
: J Murphy (Carlow).
1
Kate Slevin kicked 1-6 in Galway's win over Waterford
Credit: Piaras Ó Mídheach/Sportsfile
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'It still gives you goosebumps': Orla Byrne reflects on Meath's stunning win over Dublin in 2021 TG4 All-Ireland senior final
'It still gives you goosebumps': Orla Byrne reflects on Meath's stunning win over Dublin in 2021 TG4 All-Ireland senior final

RTÉ News​

timean hour ago

  • RTÉ News​

'It still gives you goosebumps': Orla Byrne reflects on Meath's stunning win over Dublin in 2021 TG4 All-Ireland senior final

It is almost four years since the game took place, but former Meath star Orla Byrne admits she still gets "goosebumps" whenever she thinks about the Royal County's breakthrough TG4 All-Ireland Senior Championship success of 2021. Given they had only just secured a national intermediate title in the previous season, Meath found themselves as underdogs heading into a top-tier showpiece bout against a five-in-a-row chasing Dublin at Croke Park on 5 September of that year. Yet with Byrne playing a pivotal role at right half-forward, Eamonn Murray's charges pulled out all the stops to claim a magnificent 1-11 to 0-12 victory. Meath's renewal of acquaintances with Dublin in tomorrow's Brendan Martin Cup decider at GAA HQ helps to evoke memories of this historic achievement and Byrne is hopeful the current crop of Royal footballers can produce a similar result in their latest showdown. "Every time I think of it, it still gives you goosebumps. You still nearly get emotional thinking about that day and what we achieved. I think it was because we were such underdogs. We had come up from intermediate the previous year," Byrne said. "No one had really given us a chance. We thought we had proved ourselves as to what we were capable of, but there was still a lot of doubts heading into the final. When I think back to those final few seconds and the hooter going off in Croke Park that day when we beat Dublin, it's just amazing. "I'd love to experience it again, but it was a special feeling and one I'll never forget. We all have such special memories from that time. I'm hoping the girls will be able to experience that again now on Sunday." That maiden senior championship triumph with the Royals in 2021 was made all the better for Byrne by the presence of her sister Kate on the panel for the game. The gifted siblings from Duleek/Bellewstown had experienced some difficult days in the early part of their Meath careers and this made it extra sweet when they eventually reached the top of the ladies football ladder. "There is only a year and a half age difference between myself and Kate, so we would have played a lot of underage football together as well. We played most of our careers together with Meath. I suppose it was really special that myself and Kate got to experience good days in the last couple of years of our career playing with Meath. "(We) got to enjoy the success after putting in the years of disappointment. Every year committing again and again, even though it was tough and we weren't getting much joy out of it. It was really nice to finally be able to say we achieved the ultimate dream of playing in Croke Park initially and then obviously winning an All-Ireland in Croke Park." After appearing off the bench in a Lidl National Football League Division 1 final victory over Donegal in Croke Park on 10 April, 2022, Byrne played a similar role in the same venue just under four months later when Meath defeated Kerry to defend their All-Ireland crown. However, in the wake of these successes, she ultimately opted to bring her inter-county journey to an end. Although a career break from her job as a primary school teacher at Realt na Mara GNS in Donacarney came further down the line – she is due to make a return to this post in September – Byrne acknowledged a number of factors came into play when she decided to step back from Meath duty. "After 2021, I just didn't feel ready to go because it had been such a successful year and a year that I really enjoyed. I said I'd give it one more year then after 2021. I kind of knew then, even though it was very hard. After the 2022 season, it was in the back of my head 'will I give it another go?' "I was very much on the fence for a couple of months right into pre-season. I think the time was right. It was probably a mixture of reasons. Just mainly I had put so much of my life into playing with Meath, had put a lot of stuff in my own personal life to the side. "It is only probably when you step away and you come out from it that you realise how much time you can give to other things then as well. I left in 2022, so I went back to teaching and then took my career break the following year. I'm happy and I feel like it was the right time for me to step away." While Byrne acknowledged it was a big change when she transitioned from being a Meath player to a supporter, she also feels she is able to relax more as a spectator at games. Nevertheless, she will be anxious for her former team-mates and a plethora of recent additions to the panel to get over the line in Croke Park tomorrow. The Royals have already faced Dublin at the venue in 2025 as their Leinster final encounter on 11 May was held in Croker as part of a double bill with the men's provincial showdown between Louth and Meath. Shane McCormack's outfit fell to a 2-13 to 1-12 reversal after leading for large stretches of this game, but even though there was a sense this was one that got away, Byrne believes Meath showed on that day how they are more than a match for the Sky Blues. "I know the girls were quite disappointed that day. Because I definitely think they felt they left it behind. They were dominating most of that game and I do feel like after that game and going into this Sunday, they know they have the beating of Dublin," Byrne added. "They're well capable of doing it. Just hopefully they can bring it all on the day and put in the performance they'll need to beat them. They're definitely up there with Dublin and have everything in them that they can do it on Sunday."

‘It still gives you goosebumps' – Orla Byrne hoping Meath LGFA rekindle ‘special feeling' from famous All-Ireland final
‘It still gives you goosebumps' – Orla Byrne hoping Meath LGFA rekindle ‘special feeling' from famous All-Ireland final

The Irish Sun

time2 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

‘It still gives you goosebumps' – Orla Byrne hoping Meath LGFA rekindle ‘special feeling' from famous All-Ireland final

ORLA BYRNE cannot help but think about Meath's amazing 2021 breakthrough as the Royals prepare for another TG4 All-Ireland SFC final against Leinster rivals Dublin. It is almost four years since the game took place but former Meath star Byrne admits she still gets 'goosebumps' whenever she recalls how the counties' ladies won their first senior crown. Advertisement 2 Meat beat Dublin in the 2021 All-Ireland final Credit: Piaras Ó Mídheach/Sportsfile 2 Former player Orla Byrne is hoping they can rekindle that feeling Credit: Sam Barnes/Sportsfile Given they had only secured a national intermediate title in the previous season, they were big underdogs heading into a top-tier showpiece clash with the five-in-a-row-chasing Dubs at Yet with Byrne playing a pivotal role at right half-forward, Eamonn Murray's charges pulled out all the stops to claim a magnificent 1-11 to 0-12 victory. Meath's renewal of acquaintances with the Jackies in tomorrow's Brendan Martin Cup decider at She beamed: 'Every time I think of it, it still gives you goosebumps. Advertisement Read More on LGFA 'You still nearly get emotional thinking about that day and what we achieved. I think it was because we were such underdogs. We had come up from intermediate the previous year. 'No one had really given us a chance. We thought we had proved ourselves as to what we were capable of but there was still a lot of doubts heading into the final. 'When I think back to those final few seconds and the hooter going off in Croke Park when we beat 'I'd love to experience it again, it was a special feeling and one I'll never forget. Advertisement Most read in GAA Football 'We all have such special memories from that time. I'm hoping the girls will be able to experience that again now on Sunday.' That historic 2021 win was made all the better for Byrne by the presence of her sister Kate on the Royals' panel for the game. 'Aged like milk on a windowsill in July' - Watch BBC's GAA pundits ALL predict Donegal to beat Kerry The gifted siblings from Duleek/Bellewstown had experienced some difficult days early in their Meath careers so it was extra sweet when they eventually reached the top of the ladies football ladder. Orla added: 'There is only a year and a half between myself and Kate so we would have played a lot of underage football together as well. We played most of our careers together with Meath. Advertisement 'It was really special that myself and Kate got to experience good days in the last couple of years of our career playing with Meath, got to enjoy the success after putting in the years of disappointment. 'Every year committing again and again, even though it was tough and we weren't getting much joy out of it, it was really nice to finally be able to say we achieved the ultimate dream of playing in Croke Park initially and then obviously winning an All-Ireland in Croke Park.' STEPPING BACK After appearing off the bench in a NFL Division 1 final victory over But in the wake of those successes, she opted to bring her inter-county journey to an end. Advertisement Although a career break from her job as a primary school teacher at Réalt na Mara GNS in Donacarney came further down the line — she is due to make a return to that post in September — Byrne acknowledged that a number of factors came into play when she decided to step back from Meath duty. She said: 'After 2021, I just didn't feel ready to go because it had been such a successful year and a year that I really enjoyed. I said I'd give it one more year. 'After the 2022 season, it was in the back of my head, 'Will I give it another go?' 'I was very much on the fence for a couple of months right into pre-season . I think the time was right. It was probably a mixture of reasons. Just mainly I had put so much of my life into playing with Meath, had put a lot of stuff in my own personal life to the side. Advertisement 'It is only probably when you step away and you come out from it that you realise how much time you can give to other things. 'I left in 2022, I went back to teaching and then took my career break the following year. I'm happy and I feel like it was the right time for me to step away.' ON EDGE While Byrne acknowledged it was a big change when she transitioned from being a Meath player to a supporter, she likes being able to relax more as a spectator. Still, she will be anxious for her former team-mates and the side's newer additions to get over the line in Croker tomorrow. Advertisement The Royals have already faced Dublin at HQ in 2025. The Leinster final on May 11 was held there as part of a double bill with the men's decider between Louth and Meath. Shane McCormack's outfit fell to a 2-13 to 1-12 defeat after leading for large stretches of the game. But even though there was a sense that it was one that got away, Byrne believes Meath showed that day they are more than a match for the Sky Blues. She added: 'I know the girls were quite disappointed. I definitely think they felt they left it behind. They were dominating most of that game and I do feel like after that game, they know they have the beating of Dublin. 'They're well capable of doing it. Just hopefully they can bring it all on the day and put in the performance they'll need to beat them.' Advertisement

'The winning ensured we had that time with each other' - Juliet Murphy on life, legend and loss
'The winning ensured we had that time with each other' - Juliet Murphy on life, legend and loss

Irish Examiner

time4 hours ago

  • Irish Examiner

'The winning ensured we had that time with each other' - Juliet Murphy on life, legend and loss

The bible and a basket of breakfast pastries sit side by side. Tears and treats. The same as Eamonn Ryan used to mark homework for Juliet Murphy before sending her back up the road from Ballingeary, I had my own spot of homework to do ahead of Wednesday morning's class in the Montenotte Hotel. The bible, as Juliet calls it when she sees the book tucked under my arm, is Relentless. Relentless is the phenomenally well-told story of Cork ladies football, as penned by Mary White. Relentless got a second reading this week. We searched through the yellowed pages for anecdotes and old quotes that would hopefully enhance Wednesday's conversation. Faded tales that might relocate Juliet to 20 years ago and Cork's breakthrough All-Ireland. After all, that is why we are here. To reminisce on their relentlessness. To rake through the time of their lives and the mark left. Success and its shaping. The people they were and the people they became. Club cliques to one still tight circle. The moments and memories spawned by the medals. For all the pages folded at the edge and for all the paragraphs marked with a biro, we begin with a picture. I hand over the bible, direct her attention to the image at the top of the right-hand page, and ask what comes to mind. The moment, caught expertly by retired Examiner snapper Denis Minihane, is a joyous embrace in the Hogan Stand tunnel between Murphy, with the Brendan Martin Cup in her left hand, and Eamonn Ryan. Manager and captain. Master and pupil. Friend clasping friend. History-makers. LETTING IT ALL OUT: Cork manager Eamonn Ryan hugging team captain Juliet Murphy after defeating Galway for their breakthrough TG4 All-Ireland Ladies Senior Football Final triumph at Croke Park. Picture Denis Minihane. There's silence in this corner of the hotel lobby. The tears present themselves. A steady queue of tears present themselves. I apologise. My last intention was to upset her. 'I know, I know,' she replies. Eamonn is never far away from her thoughts. This particular picture, though, she'd not come across anytime recently. The emotion stirred creeps up on her the same way their Cork team did the summit of ladies football. 'I remember that hug. We were out of picture, or so I thought. I was struggling off the pitch at that time, so it was the relief that we did it, that gorgeous feeling of achieving something that we thought for so long was beyond us. And then to share that with somebody who was making us feel so good about ourselves. 'A group that weren't even cohesive, a group that weren't just not talking about achieving, but not even challenging, not competing, not enjoying their game at that level, to then move into the realm where you want to go training, you can't wait for it. 'I often think that team was capable of winning an All-Ireland, maybe two, but nobody could have got out of us what Eamonn did and no other coach could have impacted our lives as much as he did. That hug for me represents just gratitude to him.' Gratitude for everyone else in red. No gratitude spared for herself. Not for a number of years. For a number of years, there were two of her. There was the self-assured matchday athlete. There was the Juliet Murphy who stepped onto the field knowing the role she had to fulfil and knowing she had the requisite tools to execute. And then there was the everyday individual riddled with self-doubt. Two strangers. Two opposites living in co-existence. Before she came to prominence in red, Murphy was prominent enough on local hardwood floors to earn selection in green. An Irish basketball teammate of hers from down the road in West Cork, Paula O'Neill, died tragically in 2001 following a car accident. The deceased was just 21, so too was the friend mourning the loss of a 'gas woman and brilliant basketballer'. 'She died a few days later in hospital. Those few days, I can remember it all so vividly. It was just so tragic. It was a trauma,' Juliet recalls. 'I didn't really know anyone locally that knew Paula, I had no other friends that knew her because it was the basketball scene. I just struggled with it. I probably had struggled bits and pieces with my confidence before that.' That confidence became transient. Her inner self-critic shouted louder and for longer. Doubt became a fierce opponent and even fiercer motivator. Juliet convinced herself that to succeed she needed to do more than everyone else in every aspect of life. 'I trained extra hard. Looking back now, I over-trained. But then it drove me on as well. There is that fine line, isn't there, of having the confidence to say, I am ready, and saying, no, I need to do more. And I always felt that if I could run longer than whoever I was marking at midfield, I would be giving myself every advantage. 'With Cork and the opponents you were meeting, there was always that sense of 'would you be good enough, would you be fit enough, would you be strong enough?' The challenge became greater every year because we were there to be knocked off.' The paradox was her internal silence amid the matchday chaos. The chatter and the noise checked out and disappeared. She was in her happiest room. Even an in-possession mistake was given a free pass until long after the final whistle. Her on-field persona was no front. She wasn't acting. No mask was being worn. Inside the whitewash, instinct took over and game intelligence won through. A tower of composure in the centre of the field. LUCKY 13: Cork players, from left, Juliet Murphy, Elanie Harte, Briege Corkery, Bríd Stack and manager Eamonn Ryan celebrate with the Brendan Martin cup after the 2103 TG4 All-Ireland Ladies Football Senior Championship Final against Monaghan. Pic: Ray McManus / SPORTSFILE 'I knew exactly what my role was and I wasn't going to let anyone down,' reflects the eight-time All-Ireland winner and now 45-year-old mom to Moss (6) and Sophia (5). She also mined confidence from those around her. And given the sheer spread of quality she kept company with, who wouldn't mine confidence from having in your corner Briege Corkery's engine, Nollaig Cleary's left peg, Valerie Mulcahy's penchant to never stop scoring, or the defensive nous of Bríd Stack and Angela Walsh. And that is to literally name but a few. 'You saw your teammates doing brilliant stuff and you went again. I loved that. Not long before he passed away, I was chatting with Eamonn on the phone and I was talking about football being a complete mindfulness. I was like, 'Eamonn, you are just following this white thing all around the field'. Being the psychologist he was, he said sure that's completely it. But it was. Just so absorbed and so in the flow and feeling good about what I could do. It was brilliant. 'I needed football. I needed it to express myself. I needed it to feel good about myself. I knew I had ability. I knew this was something I was good at because I was damn well sure of the things I wasn't good at. I wanted more of this. I wanted more of the thing I had ability in. That made me feel good about myself, which I needed.' TIME TO REFLECT: Eight-time All-Ireland Senior medallist and three time winning captain Juliet Murphy of Cork during a special LGFA 50th Anniversary celebration event last year in Thurles, Tipperary. Photo by Brendan Moran/Sportsfile A sip of Americano, a pastry pulled from the basket, and we go again. She starts talking about luck. There's an eye-roll from this chair. From 2005 through 2016, Cork played 66 championship games. They won 61 of them. Of the five they lost, only the solitary - the infamous 2010 quarter-final against Tyrone - was knockout. And so luck has no business intruding on this conversation. She goes again. There was luck, she insists, in the collective coming together of such like-minded individuals. Individuals relentlessly driven to keep pushing their ceiling north. 'The timing and when you come along is so important. And I know you're smiling, thinking 'ah c'mon now Juliet, there is more than timing', but there's a lot of luck involved in the decisions people make to get involved with us, and for people to stay on and keep going with the team for as long as they did. 'We were all getting such enjoyment from it that we wanted to stay on the train for as long as we could.' Subtly steering the most successful team in modern Gaelic games history was the late Eamonn Ryan. He was, of course, so much more than their manager. It was Eamonn who convinced the three-time All-Ireland winning captain to return to college and become a primary school teacher. It was he who helped lift her Gaeilge to the required level. The grinds, more often than not, took place in his 'trí na cheile mancave' in Ballingeary, but only after his wife Pat had served Juliet a bowl of homemade soup and a plate of homemade brown bread. 'The odd time Eamonn might be cranky with you, you'd kind of think he is fed up with me today, I am not getting it as quickly as I should,' she says, smiling wistfully. 'But I think he'd nearly do that on purpose to make you cop on and do a little bit more. The psychologist was always at play. 'I've kept the notebooks he wrote from that time. Eamonn had gorgeous writing, so I love looking at them. I know that he helped loads of people in terms of education and career and life choices.' She remembers him floating blissfully in the sea on various team holidays. She remembers their chat in the corner of a Castletownbere pub the Tuesday after the 2006 triumph. 'It was maybe 15 minutes, maybe longer, before everyone else came across. We had a drink together and a chat about life. It was magic.' When he passed in 2021, Covid denied all those he impacted in life and in sport a proper goodbye. For his players, it was organised that they say goodbye in a familiar setting. PANDEMIC FAREWELL: Current and former Cork players part of the guard of honour for former Cork manager Eamonn Ryan at the UCC Farm. Picture: Eddie O'Hare On Eamonn's final journey from Ballingeary to Ballinaltig Cemetery in Watergrasshill, the hearse briefly detoured to take in UCC's training ground, The Farm. The Cork ladies lined either side of the road in. The hearse stopped and they clapped. They clapped for their friend and all he'd done for them. The tears come again. There's a napkin at the bottom of the pastry basket. She rips off a piece to wipe them away. 'It felt surreal for a long time because there wasn't closure. I watched his funeral on the couch at home, it's not really a proper goodbye, and not surrounded by each other either. But look, that's only one story of how many from those Covid times?' The memories are so many. The memories are warm. On their way up to a GPA event last Friday week to celebrate the 2005 history-makers, they reminisced on how Briege missed the train to Dublin the day before the 2006 All-Ireland and so took the next train up alone. On the way home from the same GPA event, they rekindled the singsongs they so cherished during their playing days. Not everyone in their carriage was delighted to hear the Cork ladies once again belting out the hits. 'My medals are in a drawer somewhere, I have never taken them out to look at them. What I have and what we all have is our memories. We are lucky we have so many of those because of the time we were together. 'The winning ensured we had that time with each other, and don't get me wrong, loved to win, hated losing, but you can only take the memories with you.'

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