
Louth and Kildare face-off for last remaining place in race for the Sam Maguire
Set against some of the ever-changing complexities of Gaelic football, the situation facing Louth and Kildare in Tullamore this Sunday could not be more straightforward. Or the consequences of victory or defeat more telling on the rest of their 2025 season.
It's winner takes all, and no time for losers. The first prize is a place in the Leinster football final, which for both Louth and Kildare carries enough incentive on its own. Louth are chasing a third successive final appearance for the first time in over 100 years; Kildare haven't won the Leinster title since the turn of the century.
Just as, or perhaps more, importantly the winners will also get the bonus prize of securing the last remaining place in the All-Ireland senior football series and the 16 counties in the race for the Sam Maguire. While the losers will join the other 16 counties that will contest the second-tier Tailteann Cup.
It's also a repeat of last year's semi-final, which Louth won by four points in Croke Park, and with that sending Kildare into the Tailteann Cup for the first time. Louth have contested the 16-team All-Ireland senior football series since it began in 2023.
READ MORE
The winners will face either Dublin or Meath in the Leinster final, but for now all the focus is on Sunday at Glenisk O'Connor Park (2pm). Despite finishing sixth in Division 2 of the Allianz Football League, Louth's only path to Sam Maguire football this summer is to make that Leinster final given how other provincial pairings have turned out elsewhere. Same for Kildare, who topped Division 3 and lost the final to Offaly.
The 15 teams already qualified for the All-Ireland series are Armagh, Cavan, Clare, Cork, Derry, Donegal, Down, Dublin, Galway, Kerry, Mayo, Meath, Monaghan, Roscommon and Tyrone. These teams are decided principally on the placings in the two top divisions of the Allianz Football League.
Louth's Niall McDonnell saving a shot from Daniel Flynn of Kildare in th 2024 semi-final at Croke Park. Photograph: Bryan Keane/Inpho
Down qualified as winners of last year's Tailteann Cup, and could also still make the Ulster football final if they manage to get past Donegal in Clones this Sunday.
Clare, who finished third in Division 3 behind Kildare and Offaly, qualified by virtue of making the Munster football final, and will face Kerry in Killarney on Sunday week, May 4th.
Louth manager Ger Brennan pointed out some of the structural discrepancies after his team overcame Laois in the quarter-final and believes the GAA may need to look again at exactly how the All-Ireland football series teams are decided.
'We all want to play in the All-Ireland series, as do the two teams that played here, and all the other games going on around Leinster,' said Brennan. 'If you didn't finish high enough in your league table then reaching a provincial table is that bit of a carrot.
'Although it is a bit of a lopsided structure when you look at what's going to come out of Munster, and it's something they will need to look at going forward. But everyone knows what's at stake in terms of keeping Sam Maguire status and getting to a Leinster final.'
Louth manager Ger Brennan: he is in his second season as Louth football manager. Photograph: Bryan Keane/Inpho
Brennan is in his second season as Louth football manager, and the former Dublin All-Ireland winner is also aware of the history at stake on Sunday. When Louth beat Westmeath in the 2010 Leinster semi-final, that set up their first final appearance in 50 years. They last won the title in 1957.
If they beat Kildare this time around it will set up a third successive Leinster final, a feat Louth only achieved once before in history, between 1912 and 1914. They beat Dublin in the 1912 final but lost to Wexford in both 1913 and 1914.
Kildare last qualified for the final in 2022, and last won the Leinster football title in 2000. For Brian Flanagan, in his first season as Kildare manager, there were certainly positives from their 2-17 to 0-21 win over Westmeath in their quarter-final, 'just that refusal to lose', Flanagan said, and 'to give ourselves that confidence booster going into the next couple of weeks'.
Last year, while their home ground in Newbridge was being renovated, Kildare played their home Tailteann Cup games at their training centre in Hawkfield, before only a few hundred supporters.
Whoever wins on Sunday will also join Kerry, Clare, Galway, Mayo, Tyrone or Armagh, Donegal or Down, and Dublin or Meath as first or second seeds in the All-Ireland series. The draws for the round-robin groups in both the Sam Maguire and Tailteann Cup competitions will then take place next Tuesday, April 29th.
Kildare manager Brian Flanagan: he is in his first season as Kildare manager. Photograph: Leah Scholes/Inpho
The Tailteann Cup then starts on May 10th/11th, while the race for the Sam Maguire gets under way on the May 17th/18th.
New York also join in the Tailteann Cup in the preliminary quarter-final stage. Whoever loses between Louth and Kildare will be among the top seeds in the Tailteann Cup draw, along with Offaly, Westmeath and Fermanagh. Sligo, Laois, Wexford and Limerick will be second seeds, the third seeds consisting of Antrim, Leitrim, Wicklow and Carlow.
Kildare v Louth: Last five Championship meetings
2024:
Louth 0-17 Kildare 0-13 (Leinster Semi-Final)
2022:
Kildare 2-22 Louth 0-12 (Leinster Quarter-Final)
2014:
Kildare 1-22 Louth 1-7 (Leinster Quarter-Final)
2013:
Kildare 1-19 Louth 0-15 (All-Ireland Qualifier)
2010:
Louth 1-22 Kildare 1-16 (Leinster Quarter-Final)
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

The Journal
32 minutes ago
- The Journal
Spain beat France in nine-goal thriller to reach Nations League final
The 42 SPAIN STARLETS LAMINE Yamal and Nico Williams dazzled as La Roja beat France 5-4 in a thriller in Stuttgart on Thursday, to set up a Nations League final with Portugal. Yamal bagged a brace while Williams scored and provided an assist as the two wingers cut France's makeshift defence to ribbons. Mikel Merino and Pedri were also on the scoresheet for the Euro 2024 champions. Kylian Mbappe netted a second-half penalty, but Spain were 5-1 up and cruising, before Les Bleus suddenly woke up as their opponents took their foot off the pedal. France's three late goals – a Rayan Cherki screamer, a Spain own goal and a stoppage time strike from Randal Kolo Muani – were not enough. Yamal, still just 17, said Spain 'deserved to win.' 'It was a great game – at the end it was a little too close, but we played very well,' he added. Spain held on to book an all-Iberian Nations League final against Cristiano Ronaldo and Portugal on Sunday in Munich, while France will face hosts Germany in Stuttgart for the bronze medal earlier in the day. A smiling goalscorer Merino told DAZN: 'It was a crazy game. Not the best game for the coaches – nobody wants to concede so many goals – but an amazing game for the fans. 'We're going to remember this one for a long time.' France coach Didier Deschamps said 'it's a mixed bag.' 'Not everything can be thrown in the rubbish bin… but I'm not leaving with a smile,' he added. Returning to Germany, where they won the European Championship in dominant fashion a year ago, Spain seem an even more complete team, despite their late fadeout. France dangerous, Spain efficient France were more dangerous in the opening stages, with Didier Deschamps electing to channel his attack through Ousmane Dembele rather than Mbappe. Dembele, fresh from Paris Saint-Germain's Champions League triumph, created an early chance for Mbappe, but the Real Madrid superstar wasted it, electing to pass rather than shoot when one-on-one with the 'keeper. Advertisement Minutes later, Spain escaped again as Theo Hernandez's long-range effort shaved the top of the crossbar. Spain made France pay soon after, when Williams and Oyarzabal, La Roja's two goalscorers in the Euro 2024 final, linked up with 22 minutes played. After a tear down the right, Yamal threaded it to Oyarzabal, who held off three defenders with his back to goal before finding Williams, who rifled his shot into the top of the net. Spain grabbed full hold of the match just three minutes later when Oyarzabal dinked the French defence, allowing Merino to collect and hammer past an off-balance Maignan. France had the better chances later in the half, with Dembele finding space in the box three times, only to blast straight at a grateful Unai Simon. Just before half-time, the narrowest of offsides robbed Spain of what would have been an incredible third. In a clearly rehearsed free-kick play, Yamal found Martin Zubimendi behind the lines, who cut it back for Huijsen. The second half played out like the first, with France missing two big chances before Spain again scored a quick-fire double. With 54 minutes played, Yamal won and converted a penalty, taking the ball from Williams before calmly slotting home. France were reeling, but Spain's starlets had no sympathy, Williams setting up Pedri for a fourth just one minute later. Mbappe won and converted a penalty with 59 minutes played, but Yamal stepped up again to snuff out French hopes of an unlikely comeback, scoring Spain's fifth with just over 20 minutes remaining. Spain made four changes as their thoughts turned to Sunday, allowing France to score two late consolation goals. Substitute Cherki scored a long-range effort and then forced Spain into conceding an own goal through Daniel Vivian. Kolo Muani's goal came in the fourth minute of stoppage time to cut the deficit to one, but France had left their comeback too late, as Spain held on. © AFP 2025 Written by AFP and originally published on The 42 whose award-winning team produces original content that you won't find anywhere else: on GAA, League of Ireland, women's sport and boxing, as well as our game-changing rugby coverage, all with an Irish eye. Subscribe here .


RTÉ News
an hour ago
- RTÉ News
Hurling Nation: Head and heart conflicted for Munster final
Good morning Hurling Nation. A big weekend with three important games. The Munster final throws in tomorrow. Yes, a Munster final, at tea-time on a Saturday evening in early June. That will always feel unnatural. Anyway, and luckily, Cork and Limerick are a good story. The Treaty host the Rebels at the same venue they beat them by 16 points only 21 days ago. Some have gone from wondering if Cork would canter to an All-Ireland, to now writing them off. Pat Ryan knows how quickly the mood changes, and often, He also knows that things aren't as dark as they are painted. For some reason, Cork were loose and disorganised three weeks ago in Limerick. At times they gave away space without Limerick having to demand it. Five points down in three minutes, 15 points down by half-time, Limerick playing to settle the score after two losses to Cork last year and knowing a win would put Clare in deep trouble. Desire isn't always evenly shared, on that day it wasn't even close. To win tomorrow, Cork need to find energy and aggression from the throw-in. Marking cannot be Covid-style social distancing. Cian Lynch can't be allowed conduct the orchestra. There must be a way around the state-of-the-art surveillance and response unit that has Kyle Hayes at number six. The Cork full-forward line needs to show. The middle third has to be a battlefield with fire coming from both trenches this time. Cork could do all that and still lose. What's been most impressive about Limerick this year is their contunied growth. Thay have the experience. They have embedded new faces who have been on the panel for two or three years been readied for this. They have the most comprehensive team of substitutes that we can remember a top team having and they have two brains working in one with Kiely and Kinnerk. A good fight, Cork to narrow the gap. The heart even says Cork might eliminate that gap, but the head says, a storied seven in a row for Limerick. Sunday's Leinster final doesn't carry the same weight, but still, could be a serious contest. After the limp showing against Kilkenny in the first round, Galway have grown into the championship since. They weren't bothered much by Offaly, Wexford and Antrim, and then went on to Parnell Park and beat Dublin convincingly, scoring 29 points into the bargain. While Micheál Donoghue used 37 players in the national league, Kilkenny are more settled. A win on Sunday will give them a six-peat in Leinster, but won't cut too much mustard in Kilkenny. Derek Lyng knows an All-Ireland is the minimum requirement, but to be fair, he hasn't the luxury of the raw materials that his predecessor had. With an eye to the All-Ireland series, both sides would be as concerned with performance levels as much as winning the silver. The stripey ones, narrowly. Before the Leinster final, we have the Joe McDonagh Cup, a pairing that could only be more novel if the GAA had chosen to shoehorn New York hurlers in, like they diod the Lory Meagher. A few weeks back, Laois would have been the favourites here, but Kildare's progress has been rapid. After a narrow first-round loss to Kerry, they beat the big guns of Carlow and Laois to get here. The McDonagh Cup finals are invariably entertaining games. Hard to call this one, but we'll go for the cup to be passing through curragh of Kildare on Sunday evening. Sin é a chairde. Two big days, enjoy them. The feast will finish soon enough.


Irish Examiner
an hour ago
- Irish Examiner
Éamonn Cregan: Playing Cork twice is bad enough... now you have to beat them again and again
For a man who stresses he has no social media presence, Éamonn Cregan was surprised by how many people knew he turned 80 last month. But having contributed to plenty of pen pics down through the years, it wasn't going to be a secret for long just as it wasn't for his old colleague Richie Bennis when he hit the milestone last February or Tom Ryan last August. Saturday's Munster final fills him with excitement but, like Babs Keating who became an octogenarian in April of last year, he thinks it comes too soon. 'They'd want to put on their thinking caps now above in Croke Park and in the Munster Council for this to change. You can no longer have teams going out of the championship before the summer months. It's wrong. The club doesn't attract the same crowds.' Cregan is no curmudgeon. Never in his wildest dreams did he imagine he would live to see Limerick's current riches. Over a 10-season period, he won four Munster medals. For the county to be on the cusp of a seventh in as many years, well it's just utopian, he says. 'Many of this crowd lost a minor All-Ireland final (in 2014) and that was the best thing that happened to them because it showed that they weren't as good as they thought they might be. Then they progressed, and then suddenly 21s, two 21s, and then an All-Ireland. 'I was asked to speak to them after they lost that minor All-Ireland and my last sentence was to them, 'You might think this is the end, but this is only the beginning.' Now, I said that just to cheer them up because they lost an All-Ireland final. I didn't think it would come so fast. But it's a dream come true, I'm in heaven. 'I don't know whether people could understand 45 years of being in the desert, and I'm going to look back over it, and I'm saying to myself, 'Jesus, what things were done wrong in that 45 years, and what things were done right.'' It's 50 years since Cregan lined out injured against Cork in a Munster final. 'I pulled a hamstring in 1975 outside training, and I didn't even know what a hamstring was. I was being treated with vinegar and poitín. I asked, 'Will it be alright for the Munster final?' 'Ah, you will, of course, of course.' Ten minutes in, Willie Walsh turned me, and I wasn't taken off even though I told him I couldn't move. I wasn't taken off.' As someone who in championship lost to Cork (six times) more often than beat them (twice, one draw), Cregan is naturally wary of a Cork backlash after Limerick's 16-point win last month. 'They (Cork) didn't expect to be beaten the last day, and I'll give you an example of what I'm talking about. A friend of mine has a bet with three Cork fellas and it was they who suggested the All-Ireland final will be Limerick and Cork. I wouldn't even think of going that far. 'We would have expected Cork to be in the Munster final as much as Limerick played so well in the first half the last day. But playing Cork twice is bad enough. In our day if you beat them, you beat them and that was enough for you. Now you have to beat them again and again.' John Kiely's unprecedented success with Limerick might suggest they will never look outside their county for a manager again. In 12 years, they had four Cork men at the helm. Kiely himself was a selector to one of them – John Allen – but Cregan is not so sure that Limerick have reached the point of self-sufficiency. 'Not necessarily. It depends on the people being put forward. We have an exceptional group at the moment, and we were very lucky to get them. John had the background experience of being a principal in a school, plus he had been involved in teams way before. During the time of the strike, the Limerick strike. John was in charge of that second (intermediate) team and I have tremendous respect for him because of that. He took over, he knew what he had, and he went on. 'John has an exceptional group, there's no doubt, and it's a combination of all the small parts, plus good leadership. It's a very high standard, and for anybody to get to that level. Like, I was there three times, and I failed three times. It's tough going.'