
Cork's Alan Connolly must defy mixed omens for semi-final hat-trick heroes
'Eh . . . I don't know really. We just scored a goal, like, that was about it,' came Connolly's slightly comic response.
The Blackrock man, who bagged his fourth senior hat-trick in two seasons and brought his career tally to 24 senior goals, managed 3-2 from six shots on Saturday. His previous SHC hat-trick was against Tipperary last year; on that occasion, he scored 3-1 from five shots.
Cork supporters are understandably on 'high doh', with the Rebels favourites to end a 20-year wait for the Liam MacCarthy. But what are the omens like for semi-final hat-trick heroes? Mixed.
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The last player to manage the feat was Tipperary's Lar Corbett in the 2009 semi-final against Limerick, but the Premier subsequently lost the final to Kilkenny.
Prior to that, Niall Healy of Galway hit three majors in the 2005 semi-final win over Kilkenny, but they would lose the final, of course, to Cork.
Jimmy Barry-Murphy hit 3-1 against Antrim at the penultimate stage in 1986, and did get his hands on a Celtic Cross after a final win over Galway. Nicky Rackard managed it twice – 1956 against Galway and 1954 versus Antrim, winning one of those finals.
Minor triumph means Tyrone's treble is still on
When Johnny Mulvihill pulled off a spectacular catch and played Jack O'Shea in for an excellent goal 10 minutes into the second half of the 1975 All-Ireland minor championship final, Kerry led Tyrone by 1-6 to 0-1 and were well on their way to a historic treble.
Later that afternoon, the Kingdom defeated Dublin to claim Sam Maguire, and a fortnight later, the hat-trick was complete when they annexed the Under-21 crown, again seeing off the Dubs. It was a historic achievement which has never been equalled since – but, as flagged by The Schemozzle a while back and by GAA president Jarlath Burns in his speech on Sunday in Newbridge, it's on this year.
It felt like there was something serendipitous about Kerry and Tyrone meeting in Sunday's minor final, with it marking the 50th anniversary of that unprecedented treble. The Red Hands have already won the Under-20 All-Ireland (beating the Kingdom in the semi-final), and the two will meet in the All-Ireland SFC semi-final this weekend.
Since that minor final in 1975, Kerry and Tyrone have met in eight All-Ireland finals across the three grades; the Red Hands have won six.
Clubbable Tipp find strength in diversity
Unusually, there were players from 14 different clubs named in Tipperary's starting team on Sunday, although a late change meant that only 13 clubs were represented on the actual starting 15. That's still quite a spread, however, with the 26-man panel drawn from a total of 17 clubs.
For context, Kilkenny's starting 15 came from eight different clubs, with eight players (four each) from O'Loughlin Gaels and Ballyhale Shamrocks alone. Thirteen clubs were represented on the Cats' matchday squad.
Of the four hurling semi-finalists, the Dublin squad was drawn from the fewest number of clubs (13), with nine different clubs represented on their starting team.
Cork, in contrast, had panellists from 16 clubs, including 10 starters. The club with the most players involved in the All-Ireland semi-finals, for the record, was, unsurprisingly, Na Fianna, the All-Ireland club champions who supplied half a dozen players to the Dublin panel.
In Mayo football, what's in a name?
Two of the Mayo senior footballers have got engaged recently, as reported in the local press. This prompted a humorous typo in the Western People, which didn't do much to assuage the general sense that the county is football-obsessed.
'Congratulations are extended to two Mayo GAA players on recent engagements,' noted the long-established weekly, which is based in Ballina. 'Matthew Ruane recently announced his engagement to Mayo (sic) Mannion while Paddy Durcan also proposed to his partner, Alannah McBrien.'
Ms Mannion's first name is, in fact, Moya.
Speaking of Ballina, one of the town's most famous sons, Liam McHale, has stepped down from his role in charge of the Mayo senior ladies footballers. They defeated last year's intermediate All-Ireland winners Leitrim by 2-14 to 0-13 in Saturday's relegation playoff.
Quote, unquote
'Some of them have never even been in Croke Park, let alone played up here.' – Tipperary veteran
Noel McGrath
, speaking after the match about his young team-mates.
Number of the week: 1/30
Kilkenny's record in terms of All-Ireland titles at minor, under-20/under-21 and senior from 2016 to 2025 inclusive. The outlier was the 2022 Under-20 All-Ireland championship.
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Extra.ie
2 minutes ago
- Extra.ie
Watch: Roy Keane chokes up over old family photo
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Irish Times
32 minutes ago
- Irish Times
RDS redevelopment expected to be completed in time for 2026 Horse Show
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RTÉ News
2 hours ago
- RTÉ News
Stacey Flood: We can't be afraid of what people think of us
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World Cup qualification and consecutive third-place finishes in the Six Nations were sealed, while Ireland recorded statement wins over Australia and New Zealand. Expectations were raised, and then somewhat tempered by the injury absences of Erin King, Dorothy Wall, Christy Haney, and Aoife Wafer, who is set to miss the first two games at least. The WXV successes took place away from the spotlight, in Dubai and Canada, while World Cup qualification was secured over a year ago. But soon the attention of the country will be on the team when they take on Japan at Franklin's Gardens on Sunday at noon (live on RTÉ2). "Having eyes on women's rugby and our team is never going to be a bad thing because we want the Irish people behind us," full-back Stacey Flood tells RTÉ Sport from the team's hotel, a stone's throw from the Silverstone racing circuit, in the UK Midlands. "We want the support. "If that's us going out and putting in a good performance or not getting the performance we want, we still want support from back home. "The green wave isn't about whether you are doing poorly or good, there are going to be ebbs and flows. "Not everything is going to be the best every time. It's about getting eyes on women's rugby 'cos this is going to be such a major pedestal for women's rugby. "I think this whole tournament is going to change the game. "We want to sell out stadiums, we want great crowds, and we are not going to get that if we sit back and are afraid to put out the performance we want or afraid of what people will think of us. "The fact that it's on the same time zone, that we are a 45-minute flight away, if people get behind us, that's exactly what we are looking for." Ireland had to stew on a late disappointing defeat to Scotland at the tail end of the Six Nations, while there was a sense of getting dirty diesel out of the system in the warm-up win over Scotland and loss to Canada. "You don't want to go out the blocks too early in warm-up games, and be performing 10 out of 10," says the Dubliner. "Hopefully that's what those games are for, to learn what you need to do right and wrong, learn what you can do better. "I feel like we got what we wanted out of them, found areas we need to improve on and we have been improving on them. "We started slow in those games and that's going to be a big focus this weekend. "We didn't get into the Irish way enough, like. We took 20 minutes to get into the games and that put us on the back foot. "We were waiting for something to happen but we have to go out and make things happen." Ireland have beaten Japan in six of their seven meetings, with the defeat coming in a tour match in 2022. Ireland trained just outside Northampton, with Aoife Wafer not among the group. Scott Bemand's side open their #RWC2025 campaign against Japan on Sunday #RTERugby #RTESport — RTÉ Sport (@RTEsport) August 20, 2025 "They are so diligent and they might not be the biggest but they are so skillful," said Flood, who represented Ireland at the Paris Olympics in Sevens last year, of the first Pool C opponents. "Their kicking and passing is on a tee. They are really good jackal threats. "We know what they are good at but it's about bringing it back to our squad and what we can do in a green jersey, and not playing up too much to the opposition. "When you start changing for other people you go away from your own game. We're happy with our game and we know we can get good bang for what we are good at." While the focus is fully on Lesley McKenzie's side, there's been plenty of time for the squad to relax. There's been golf, a visit to Oxford, a visit to a guide dog centre, hurling puckabouts, Eve Higgins' TikTok lip-syncing, a card game that got out of hand, Beth Buttimer's 20th birthday party, Niamh O'Dowd clocking up the biggest fines, and watching the sun set in the beautiful surroundings of the Whittlebury Park Hotel. The mood is good, and when Flood is asked about the potential of the team, she lights up even more. "Like Dannah [O'Brien], Dalto [Aoife Dalton], a lot of the girls are 20, 21, 22. I think there is no ceiling at the minute because their rugby-playing age is so old for how young they are and they are growing within the game," says the 29-year-old. "Aoife Dalton is one of our best defenders, our best attackers and she still has so much time to grow in a high-performance environment. "Having that age profile, this team is only going to build. "A little bit of experience at the top and I feel like if we get the most out of each other the team will keep growing."