
Sligo name Eamonn O'Hara and Dessie Sloyan as joint managers of football team
Sligo
senior footballers.
The former Yeats County team-mates have been handed a three-year term, subject to annual review. Coolera Strandhill's Con O'Meara will be the head coach, with ex-Donegal footballer Eamon McGee also part of the backroom team.
O'Hara is considered one of Sligo's greatest ever players and won an All Star in 2002. In 2007 he scored the winning goal to earn Sligo a famous Connacht SFC final victory over Galway.
He won eight county titles with Tourlestrane as a player, and later as joint manager of his home club he helped lead them to five successive senior Sligo crowns between 2016-2020.
READ MORE
He managed Mohill to back-to-back Leitrim titles in 2023-2024 and is currently in charge of the Boyle senior footballers.
Sloyan represented Sligo from 1996 to 2006 and was previously a selector during Kevin Walsh's spell at the helm from 2009 to 2011. The Easkey man guided his home club to Sligo and Connacht junior titles in 2019.
Sloyan managed the Sligo under-20 footballers to a maiden Connacht title at that grade in 2022.
Meanwhile, Limerick's Tom Hennessy has been appointed Sligo senior hurling manager for a two-year term with an annual review.
Hashtags

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


RTÉ News
an hour ago
- RTÉ News
'This is just the start for us now' - Grace Moore keen to build on Scottish triumph
Ireland flanker Grace Moore is confident that Saturday's Women's Rugby World Cup warm-up win over Scotland in Cork was just the start of the latest chapter of this team's story. Speaking to RTÉ Radio after the game, Moore felt a strong pre-season led to a strong opening performance. "It's been a long pre-season, but we have worked so hard and after each block we have just come back even stronger and even better. "This is just the start for us now", said the Saracens forward. She added, "we need to play against opposition to see where we're at, to put our practices into games and the only way is up from here. "We are going to keep learning, keep growing together and we have a big year of rugby ahead of us." Ireland got off to a shaky start in the game, finding themselves 14-0 behind as the clock struck the 30th minute mark. However, Scott Bemand's squad dug themselves out of the hole with a real conviction. "Rugby is not always a perfect game and yeah, the start wasn't great, but we came together and we stuck in it together", explained Moore. "We pulled each other out of those deep places, we got out of our purple patches, and we grew as a team together throughout that game." Ireland were defeated by the Scots in the Six Nations back in April, and were keen not to make it a repeat. Moore's back-row partner Brittany Hogan understood the value of grinding out the victory. "Our games against Scotland are always a good hard hit out. A hard-earned win there today. It's nice to have our training come into fruition", explained the Ulster star. "We were a little bit rusty in the first half hour, you can see that with how we were playing, but after that we upped the physicality and really got into the game." The 26-year-old added, "nothing can prepare you for the intensity of a test match especially when two sides have the base of just hard work. "The game was very hard in the first half, it always is in the first 20, but Scotland came out very hard and very fast. It was very intense". It was the closing stages of the second half that swung the game for Ireland, with Sadbh McGrath and Méabh Deely (above) crossing the whitewash to reduce the deficit. Hogan felt this momentum change stemmed from a reversion to the basics. "We wanted to make sure that we switched the momentum around {before half time}, and we did. We used our power; we used our lineout and started dominating some scrums. Things started going our way", she told RTÉ Sport. "We were able to keep the ball in the 22, whereas before we were making a couple of mistakes. Things were just coming right, and we were starting to settle into the game, and we worked out for those metres". Ireland will aim to keep the 'Green Wave' of support going when they host Canada in the Affidea Stadium in Belfast next Saturday. To get an impressive opening performance and a victory was crucial. "It's so important to all of us [to get the win] especially because we had the loss in the Six Nations against Scotland. It was so important for us to make sure we go the win and that we earned the win", said Hogan. "We had a full last 50-minute performance and ahead of the World Cup, and Canada next week, we needed that. Canada are second best in the world at the moment and they're going to be a very hard outfit." "We're all guns blazing towards next weekend and hoping to keep our performances continuing on the upward trajectory." There is no doubt that the sky is the limit for this squad, and despite injuries in key positions, the squad morale is soaring, and Grace Moore and co are ready for the challenge, "we are going to keep learning, keep growing together and we have a big year of rugby ahead of us."


The Irish Sun
2 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
Michael Breen pokes fun at Sharlene Mawdsley as he jokes National Championship medal ‘actually belongs to Buggy'
MICHAEL BREEN joked Sharlene Mawdsley's National Track & Field Championships medal "actually belongs to Buggy" after her viral moment following the All-Ireland final. The 26-year-old became social media famous when a video emerged of her 2 Sharlene Mawdsley won the senior women's 200m during day one of the 153rd National Track & Field Senior Championships Credit: Sam Barnes/Sportsfile 2 Sharlene Mawdsley of Newport AC, Tipperary, shows her medal to her partner, Tipperary hurler Michael Breen Credit: Sam Barnes/Sportsfile Breen, who Alongside a photo of the couple after the race with the defender holding her medal, he joked: "Excuse me, this actually belongs to Buggy" She shared a photo from the Templemore Athletics Track with the caption: "Swapping the streets of Thurles for the track today" alongside three laughing faces. Read More on Sharlene Mawdsley Mawdsley outlasted fellow Irish Olympian Sarah Lavin to claim a gritty 200m national medal on Saturday at the Morton Stadium. The sprinter powered to victory at Morton Stadium in windy conditions as she clocked at time of 23.55 seconds' Most read in Sport 'I knew today was going to be a really hard task and to come out on top, I'm absolutely thrilled. 'Sarah was ahead of me, and I was just saying to myself, stay calm, stay strong, and dig deep, and thankfully I ended up winning the title. 'It was a pity about the wind, but it was close to a PB and that'll give me great confidence heading into my last race before worlds on the 16th of this month.' That final warm-up race will be in the 400m in Berne, Switzerland. But Mawdsley will first return to London to train with her coach after withdrawing from the 400m heats in Dublin. She added: 'My summer so far, look, it has been mixed, I missed a good block of training and that's hard to come back from - but the support I've had got me through that race today.' While her place in the 400m relay squad for the World Championships is secure, the 26-year-old isn't sure whether she'll take on the individual event too. She concluded: 'I haven't actually decided; I know I won't say no to the relays. "I'm always the first one in, but we'll see about the individual. It has been a tough year. "We'll see closer to the time.'


RTÉ News
3 hours ago
- RTÉ News
Hannah Tyrrell still providing an exhibition in efficiency for Dublin
The former Irish rugby international out-half has been more than just scoring for her team, she's also provided her fair share of assists. She has assisted the impressive Niamh Hetherton for 0-03 - and together the duo are providing a serious aerial threat in the full-forward line. Those three assists came in the Leinster final, against Leitrim and then against Galway. Tyrrell also set up Rowe for a goal against Leitrim, and popped a pass for Chloe Darby to raise a white flag in the last eight win over Cork. From frees, play, scoring and creating, even off limited touches, the pace-setter in the race for the Golden Boot award is so hard to handle because of her remarkable efficiency. An FAI Cup, Six Nations rugby and All-Ireland football winner, Tyrrell has already done it all. But based on this season's form she's pushing for more.