logo
Down pay tribute following the passing of history-making All-Ireland winner Tony Hadden

Down pay tribute following the passing of history-making All-Ireland winner Tony Hadden

Down GAA has paid glowing tribute to Tony Hadden, a forward pillar of the county's original All-Ireland trailblazers, who died last week.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Andy Moran in line to be new Mayo manager
Andy Moran in line to be new Mayo manager

Irish Examiner

timean hour ago

  • Irish Examiner

Andy Moran in line to be new Mayo manager

Andy Moran is in line to be appointed the new Mayo manager, with an announcement expected imminently. An executive meeting of the Mayo County Board was called for Monday night after two candidates for the role were interviewed last week, 2017 Footballer of the Year Moran and Armagh All-Ireland winner Tony McEntee. Moran is set to take over from Kevin McStay, who was relieved of his role last June after three years in charge. Moran retired from intercounty football in 2019 after 183 appearances in League and Championship for Mayo. A two-time All Star, he won eight Connacht SFC championships. After retiring, Moran was appointed Leitrim manager in 2021. In 2024, they were promoted from Division 4. He also took charge of the county U20s that year, leading them to victory over his native county in the Connacht U20 championship. After leaving Leitrim, Moran joined Monaghan as a coach. They reached the All-Ireland quarter-final before losing to Donegal. Mayo endured a disappointing campaign. They reached the Division 1 League final where they were beaten by Kerry before going on to lose the Connacht final to rivals Galway. A group stage defeat against Cavan ultimately cost them as they failed to progress to the knockout rounds.

Frustrated Ireland fall to France at EuroHockey Championships
Frustrated Ireland fall to France at EuroHockey Championships

Irish Times

timean hour ago

  • Irish Times

Frustrated Ireland fall to France at EuroHockey Championships

EuroHockey Championship: Ireland 0 France 1 Ireland endured an exasperating 60 minutes at the EuroHockey Championships in Mönchengladbach on Monday afternoon when they missed a host of chances on their way to their first ever competitive defeat to France. The result means that while they still have a mathematical chance of reaching the semi-finals, with Germany as their final pool opponents on Wednesday, it's highly improbable. Monday's game was decided by Mathilde Duffrène in the 49th minute when she fired home from a needlessly conceded penalty corner that was upgraded from a free after Ireland failed to retreat in time when France attempted to take it quickly. Ireland amassed 13 penalty corners, but while they tested French goalkeeper Lucie Ehrmann on a number of occasions, they failed to convert. Most frustrating was their lack of variation and the puzzling failure to make more use of Róisín Upton's drag flick skills. READ MORE There were plenty of missed opportunities from open play too, Katie Mullan guilty of wasting the best of them in the first quarter when, after hitting the post, she sent the rebound high over the bar from close range. Ireland dominated the opening quarter, winning seven corners in all – Hannah McLoughlin, Sarah Torrans and Niamh Carey seeing their efforts either saved by Ehrmann, or going agonisingly wide. But the longer they failed to turn their superiority into goals, the more confident France became, Lizzy Murphy twice called in to action early in the second quarter when Emma van der Zanden broke through. Caoimhe Perdue in action for Ireland. Photograph: Frank Uijlenbroek/Inpho Soon after, an increasingly ambitious France – ranked eight places below Ireland – looked to have taken the lead when Paola Le Nindre picked out Catherine Clot at the left post from a penalty corner, but Clot's sweep past Murphy rose above the backboard so the effort was disallowed. Ireland continued to create chances, Mullan failing to get a touch on Carey's bullet of a ball across the face of goal, but their general play was poor and hurried, with strings of misplaced passes and an over-reliance on trying to thread balls through the centre of a packed French defence. They had more joy when they went wide, but didn't do it often enough. They had their fair share of misfortune too, McLoughlin's crisp strike from a penalty corner deflecting off the stick of a defender on to Ehrmann's pads and going wide, while Torrans had a beaut of a reverse strike ruled out after the ball brushed her foot. Caoimhe Perdue was also left cursing Ehrmann's excellent day at the office when she saved her goal-bound effort. In a desperate attempt to find an equaliser, Ireland took Murphy off with five minutes to go, but they were down to 10 outfield players again when Mullan was yellow-carded soon after for barging in to the back of a French player. Ireland have had their fair share of frustrating tournament days down the years, but this one will probably go to the top of the list. 'We're gutted,' said Mullan after. 'We had a lot of opportunities out there but we couldn't find the back of the net. The French goalkeeper was phenomenal, but our attack has to take a hard look at itself because we expect more. We had the chances but we didn't take them.' Ireland face Germany in their last pool game on Wednesday, 7pm Irish time. IRELAND : E Murphy; E Curran, H McLoughlin, R Upton, S McAuley; K McKee, S Hawkshaw (capt), C Hamill; N Carey, K Mullan, M Carey. Rolling subs : C Perdue, C Beggs, M Power, E Kealy, K Larmour, S Torrans.

France frustrate Ireland in EuroHockey Championship pool stage tie
France frustrate Ireland in EuroHockey Championship pool stage tie

The 42

timean hour ago

  • The 42

France frustrate Ireland in EuroHockey Championship pool stage tie

France 1 Ireland 0 A DOGGED FRANCE side managed to frustrate the Ireland in their pool stage encounter of the EuroHockey Championship today. Ireland dominated the opening quarter, winning seven penalty corners and hitting the post twice, but France held firm, nabbing a goal from a penalty corner of their own in the final quarter to secure the three points. Ireland were lively from the off, Katie Mullan hitting the post after an excellent pass from Emily Kealy, with her follow up shot just over the bar. Ellen Curran won Ireland their first of a flurry of penalty corners, with Christina Hamill hitting the post from Ireland's fourth and final of the sequence. A fortunate penalty corner for France soon after gave them their first chance of note in the first quarter, but Ireland did well to deny them. FULL TIME: IRL 0 - 1 FRA A tough result for our IRL Women as France edge the encounter with a goal in the final quarter. Our IRL Women will play their final EuroHockey Championship pool stage match when they face hosts Germany on Wednesday, August 13 at 19:00 Irish Time.… — Hockey Ireland (@irishhockey) August 11, 2025 Advertisement Ireland camped themselves on the edge of the French circle for the final minutes of the first quarter, winning a number of corners and penetrating the circle several times, but had to settle for 0-0 after the opening 15 minutes. Ireland's dominance continued into the second quarter, but a penalty corner for France gave them the first chance of the period. Despite finding the net, Ireland referred, and the goal was overturned as the first shot was above the backboard. Another corner for France gave them a second opportunity, which Ireland defended well. A scrappy period closed out the first half as the teams remained locked on level terms. Ireland made an excellent start to the second half, winning a penalty corner inside the first minute. Hannah McLoughlin's shot forced a good save from French goalkeeper Lucie Ehrmann. France, however, settled soon after, reinstating their deep defensive press. Ireland managed to find their way through it in the latter stages of quarter three, with Niamh Carey almost connecting with Katie Mullan on the back post, and Mullan doing well on the edge of the circle to drive in and win a penalty corner. Ireland tested Ehrmann once again from the penalty corner, but the keeper was equal to the effort. France stepped up their efforts in the final quarter, with the underdogs breaking the deadlock from their second penalty corner of the period thanks to a Mathilde Duffrene dragflick. Now chasing the game, Ireland substituted goalkeeper Elizabeth Murphy with five minutes remaining in an effort to pull a goal back. They were immediately rewarded, with Ellen Curran winning a penalty corner. Hannah McLoughlin struck from the top of the circle once again, but her effort went just wide of the far post. Ireland however, lost their player advantage soon after when Katie Mullan was shown a frustrating yellow card as she attempted to win the ball on the edge of the French circle. A penalty corner in the final minute for France gave them a chance to double their lead, but Sarah McAuley denied them on the goal-line. Ireland will face hosts Germany in their final pool stage encounter of the EuroHockey Championship on Wednesday, 13 August at 7pm Irish Time. A win in their final game could be enough to see Ireland progress to the semi-finals should Germany suffer a heavy defeat to the Netherlands in their second pool stage match.

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