
Mayo set up All-Ireland minor semi-final with Kerry after goalfest victory over Offaly
Electric Ireland All-Ireland MFC Quarter-Final Mayo 3-13 (3-2-9) Offaly 4-7 (4-0-7)
Mayo will be Kerry's opponents in the All-Ireland minor semi-final in a fortnight after they just about held off a powerful second half-surge from Offaly in Roscommon this afternoon, kicking the last three scores to secure the win just when it looked like the Faithful County had produced yet another miracle comeback.
Over the course of the hour, Mayo were marginally the better team, despite the absence of leading corner forward Tony Carey and midfielder Cian May - though they came dangerously close to losing their way when they tried to defend their lead rather than pushing on and driving home their advantage in the second half.
With Offaly supporters outnumbering their Mayo counterparts by nearly ten to one, it was easy to see why they would try and stifle the midlanders and defend their nine-point interval advantage, though when Mayo were at their best, they were scintillating.
They ransacked the Offaly defence to score 2-6 unanswered in the 20 minutes before half-time. In every aspect of play, they were running riot, and causing Offaly a world of problems.
The start of the game saw Ben Holmes set up Conor Hession for a goal, but Offaly replied well, employing an all-out attack approach. Every free was tapped and run at the Mayo defence, every attacker wanted to take on and beat his man, and that yielded a fine goal for Ruairí Woods and some well-taken points from Tony Furey, Dylan Dunne and Cathal Weldon.
However throughout the year, long spells of playing second fiddle in the kickout battle have haunted Offaly, and that again was to come to the fore here as Mayo starved the Offaly attack of ball and unleashed wave after wave of their own attacks.
Adam Kelly, an injury doubt leading up to the game, was dominant in the middle but the real star of the show was Dara Flanagan, operating at centre-forward. The Eastern Gaels man scored 1-3 in all, 1-2 in the first half, and created real danger every time he took possession. His tap and go free down the right set up another goal for Conor Coghill through the middle of the Offaly defence, and Mayo could easily have added to their 3-7 to 1-4 half-time lead, with Rhys Neary firing over the bar with the goal at his mercy and three wides in the closing minutes keeping the lead down to single digits.
The physical presence of Hession and Ben Holmes was also a threat, and when Mayo used the breeze to hit their two big men, they created chaos and chances, with Holmes adding two points of his own. However that threat was removed for the second half, and Mayo's running game also dried up.
As they did for the Leinster final, the Offaly supporters travelled in big numbers for this fixture and a crucial part of Mayo's gameplan for the second half would have been to remove the crowd as a factor in the contest. A goal from Furey at the start of the second half threatened to throw that plan out the window but Mayo overcame that setback and monopolised possession for long stretches, holding the ball for two and three minutes at a time on several occasions.
More often than not however, no scoring chances materialised at the end of those possessions, albeit that didn't matter as long as Offaly weren't scoring at the other end.
Then the midlanders won a turnover, Caden O'Beirne played the ball down the line to Cian McNamee, and the Rhode man beat his marker along the end line and squeezed in a goal from an impossible angle. The crowd came alive, and after the two sides traded points, another goal, this time from Dylan Dunne, sent the Faithful into raptures.
They had the wind at their backs, the nine-point lead was fully wiped out, and after Eamon Maher made an incredible mark, he was dragged down, Tony Furey tapped over the free, and they had all the momentum and energy.
That all changed on the next kickout when Eoghan Dever fielded the ball, he too was tackled, and Conor Hession traversed the black spot on the crossbar with as important a kick as he'll ever have taken in his young career so far.
Offaly still had to chase the game and they did exactly that, but three chances went astray, the closest being Aaron Daly hitting the post from 35 metres out, and as they grew increasingly desperate, gaps opened up at the other end for Ben Joyce and Oran Murphy to add the insurance points and see Mayo through to a semi-final clash with the Kingdom.
Scorers for Mayo: C Hession 1-5 (2tpf, 0-1f), D Flanagan 1-3, C Coghill 1-0, B Holmes 0-2 (0-1m, 0-1f), R Neary 0-1, B Joyce 0-1, O Murphy 0-1.
Scorers for Offaly: T Furey 1-4 (0-2f), R Woods 1-1, D Dunne 1-1, C McNamee 1-0, C Weldon 0-1.
MAYO: T Williams; C Coghill, B Langan, C Tighe; R O'Donnell, D Duffy, E Dever; A Kelly, P Garvey; R Neary, D Flanagan, C Jordan; F Ó Cinnseala, B Holmes, C Hession.
Subs: O Murphy for Holmes (40), F Ó Cinnseala for Neary (47), O McCann for Fiachra Ó Cinnseala (51), B Joyce for Garvey (54)
OFFALY: J Ryan; C O'Beirne, T Carroll, C Farrell; P Duffy, T Kelly, E Rouse; E Maher, C Duffy; C Weldon, D Dunne, A Daly; T Furey, C McNamee, R Woods.
Subs: D Stewart for Weldon (47), C Duffy for Furey (54), D Stoyanov for Carroll (57) Referee: Alan Coyne (Westmeath).

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


Irish Times
an hour ago
- Irish Times
Derek Lyng praises Kilkenny's hard work as they shrug aside Galway for six-in-a-row
Far from perfect, or the finished article for that matter, but a win is a win. Particularly in a Croke Park final. That was the gist of Derek Lyng's assessment of Kilkenny's sixth consecutive Leinster final success. The Cats never really cut loose, nor were they required to, whilst shrugging Galway aside for the second time in this season's campaign. Not even when Galway got it back to a four-point game on a couple of occasions late on did Kilkenny supporters really fear relinquishing their hold on the Bob O'Keeffe Cup. Onwards then to an All-Ireland semi-final in four weeks, but is it fair to suggest that Kilkenny haven't truly been road-tested yet? READ MORE 'I think we have been,' contested manager Lyng. 'From the start of the Leinster campaign, all we've been spoken about as is being favourites. 'We've had to put a huge amount of work into each game, and we prepare for each game like any other. It doesn't matter who you're playing. 'I think it's probably taken for granted that we're going to go out and win these games, but a huge amount of work goes into it, particularly from the players. They do it all, and we've been working very hard at that. I feel we've been tested in different games, at different stages. We lost to Wexford, and against Dublin we would have been disappointed with a spell in that game as well, as we were today. 'Look, regardless of who we're playing, we know we're going to have to find another gear or two for the next day and that's the reality of it. That's something we'll go after, and we're looking forward to that, but we took this campaign very seriously and we got our reward today. 'We're Leinster champions and that was the objective. At the same time, yeah, we know we've a lot of work to do.' Galway manager Micheál Donoghue dejected after the game. Photograph: Bryan Keane/Inpho Lyng borrowed from his predecessor Brian Cody's sporting vocabulary when describing the performance as 'decent'. 'It was about getting the result, the performance overall was decent, I thought,' he said. 'We know there's a lot of room for improvement. We go into a knock-out phase now. Everything ramps up. We have a few great weeks that we're going to have to really utilise and work very hard in, and just get our heads down to be ready for the next step.' Kilkenny's highlights reel contained plenty of moments of defensive excellence, with Huw Lawlor's soaring fetches at the back most impressive. If they are to go on and end their decade-long wait for an All-Ireland win, Lawlor's miserliness at the back is going to be required. 'It's a brilliant skill to have,' said Lyng of his full back's aerial ability. 'Somebody that can attack the ball and just pluck it from the sky like that. He was excellent and it gives a lift to everybody around him as well, that confidence that you have in a full back. 'I thought, overall, the effort, not just from Huw, but from everybody that was involved, was excellent. I thought our work-rate was very good and maybe it dipped a little bit at times but I thought a bit of resilience to take back the game under our control near the end was very positive as well.' Former All Star forward Eoin Cody missed out again and hasn't featured since the Cats beat Antrim. Lyng had positive news on that front. 'We just didn't take a chance on him,' he said. 'If he had had a setback, that would have been his year over. Eoin is actually looking very strong so hopefully the next couple of weeks will bring him on an awful lot. Hopefully we will have him the next day.' [ Leinster SHC final: Unflappable Kilkenny can contain the Galway bounce-back Opens in new window ] Galway are still alive in the Liam MacCarthy Cup race and will face a preliminary quarter-final winner in a little under a fortnight. Manager Micheál Donoghue took crumbs of comfort from the fact that when they landed some belated blows on Kilkenny in the final 10 minutes or so, they drew blood. 'In the build-up, people were saying, 'We're back, we're back' and that we have big opportunities,' said Donoghue of the pre-final talk locally. 'Look, we have huge belief and trust in the group. The disappointing thing is when you see what they did for a 10-, 12-minute period in the game ... look, that's the positives we're taking out of it and that's what we'll try and build on as we move forward.' Is Project Galway, mark II, ultimately a bigger job than Donoghue had anticipated? 'No, I wouldn't say a bigger job,' responded the 2017 All-Ireland winning manager. 'Obviously there's the disappointment of today and I suppose the narrative will be that it's probably similar to previous years and previous teams. But we know what we have in the squad and we'll try and take the positives out of it and move forward.'

The 42
2 hours ago
- The 42
Sligo and Wexford win in Tailteann Cup, Mayo reach All-Ireland MFC semi-final
Tailteann Cup Preliminary quarter-finals Wexford 5-23 Antrim 2-21 Sligo 1-27 Carlow 2-19 Electric Ireland All-Ireland minor football championship Quarter-finals Mayo 3-13 Offaly 4-7 *** Advertisement WEXFORD AND SLIGO booked the last two spots in the quarter-finals of the Tailteann Cup today with their preliminary quarter-final victories over Antrim and Carlow respectively. Wexford saw off Antrim at home by 11 points as they hit five goals with Seán Nolan (2), Ben Brosnan, Mark Rossiter, and Robbie Brooks all raising green flags. Darragh Brooks scored 0-6 for the winners, while Dominic McEnhill (1-5), Michael Byrne (0-6), Ryan McQuillan (0-5) and Patrick Finnegan (1-0) chipped in for Antrim. Sligo prevailed by five points against Carlow in Tubbercurry, with captain Niall Murphy striking 0-8 while Alan McLoughlin scored their only goal. Paddy McDonnell found the net twice for Carlow. The draw will take place tomorrow on RTÉ Radio 1 on Morning Ireland after the news at 8.30am. In Bowl 1 will be the group stage winners – Kildare, Limerick, Fermanagh, Wicklow. In Bowl 2 will be this weekend's victors – Sligo, Westmeath, Wexford and Offaly. Fixture details will be finalised by the GAA's CCCC later tomorrow and the games will take place next weekend 14-15 June. Fixtures that can't happen due to repeat pairings are Kildare v Sligo, Limerick v Westmeath, Fermanagh v Wexford, and Wicklow v Offaly. The last of the All-Ireland minor football quarter-finals took place today with Mayo defeating Offaly 3-13 to 4-7. Conor Hession, Dara Flanagan, and Conor Coghill netted for the winners, who were ahead 3-7 to 1-4 at half-time. Tony Furey, Ruairí Woods, Dylan Dunne, and Cian McNamee grabbed the goals for Offaly.


Irish Times
2 hours ago
- Irish Times
TV View: Cork freed from desire as they put an end to Limerick's Munster reign
Normal time, extra-time, cramp, penalties, despondency, rapture: all we were missing was a wink and it might have felt like Durban all over again. As Brendan Cummins put it, 'it's the kind of game where you'd want to be in the full of your health', him probably fretting about Marty Morrissey's wellbeing at that stage. 'My heart! My heart! My heart,' Marty had hollered, the Munster hurling fina l giving him palpitations. It was glorious stuff , and you'd imagine even those sport-a-phobes who'd set their machines to record Women Under Hitler's Flag for later viewing might have quite enjoyed the shoot-out at the Gaelic Grounds that popped up on their screens instead. They also got to see Dónal Óg Cusack's mind and senses being purified by a few thousand rebels trampolining on the pitch under the RTÉ gantry to the strains of Freed from Desire, Joanne Cantwell lucky to get more than a 'na-na-na-na-na, na-na, na-na-na, na-na-na' out of the fella, so exhilarated was he. READ MORE And Dónal Óg hadn't been too happy with the game going to extra-time, never mind penalties, reckoning it 'disfigured' the occasion. He had a point, of course: when even the ref's body could take no more, you knew it was all a bit too gruelling. And, need it be said, penalties are no way to decide a monumental tussle of such a kind; a replay would have been highly preferable. But still, some drama. If you'd watched the first half of Andorra v England before switching over for the hurling, there's a fair chance you would have appreciated the latter spectacle immensely more. 'The players looked bored,' said Roy Keane on ITV, but that was nothing compared to how those of us watching felt. The England fans ended up having to entertain themselves by incessantly chanting 'Starmer is a c***', giving the occasion the feel of a Reform rally, while Lee Dixon had to row back a touch on his notion that England would score as often as Leinster did at the Aviva Stadium. And that was on a regular enough basis, six tries helping them see off the challenge of Glasgow Warriors in their URC semi-final. But only 15,762 turned up to witness it all, which is somewhat adding to the notion that Leinster rugby fans are as enthusiastic about the URC as they would be about, say, having a colonoscopy. Leinster's Ross Byrne and Joe McCarthy celebrate Leinster's URC semi-final win over Glasgow Warriors. Photograph: Billy Stickland/Inpho Not that Joe McCarthy was bothered. 'We know everyone loves to hate Leinster, that definitely drives us on,' he said to the RTÉ panel after the game. 'We've a great fan base and we don't really care about the outside noise.' 'If that's what drives them on to win it, deadly – but I don't think it's true,' said Fiona Coghlan, but sure look, that 'no one likes us, we don't care' approach to sporting life often works a treat. Kilkenny would have experienced a bit of it when they couldn't stop winning All-Irelands, but it's a whole 10 years since their last triumph, so you'd imagine the feeling has worn off. And they had to contend with even more empty seats at Croke Park than Leinster had at the Aviva when they took on Galway on Sunday. Which might have led you to think that next time around they should stage Leinster URC semi-finals and Leinster hurling finals as double-headers at the Gaelic grounds, and take the Munster decider to Croke Park. According to the Google, the biggest sports stadium in the world is North Korea's Rungrado, with a capacity of 114,000. Not even that would have been enough to cater for those wishing to attend Limerick v Cork: The 2025 Sequel. It would, though, have left 80,000-ish vacant seats at the Leinster final. 'It's been a non-event,' Jackie Tyrell sighed at half-time, himself and Joe Canning agreeing that the game should have been played in, well, a more compact venue. 'Should Leinster finals really be in here?' asked Jackie. 'I know the game isn't great, but any time it threatens to spark into life, the lack of atmosphere has just sucked the life out it.' Kilkenny won't be complaining, though, the six-in-a-row complete. But in ecstasy terms, no one partied harder than Cork and their faithful after their one-in-a-row. They had, at last, been freed from the desire of ending Limerick's unrelenting Munster reign.