
What time is Roscommon v Meath on today in the All-Ireland SFC and is it on TV?
With Kerry in this group, it was always likely to be a battle for the remaining two spots and the winner here will go a long way towards nailing down second.
Roscommon barely fired a shot in Killarney and were likely placing more emphasis on this game, which is absolutely must-win. Meath made an important statement against Cork after losing the Leinster final but probably lack the consistency to go to Hyde Park and win.
Verdict: Roscommon
Where is the game being played?
The game is being played at Dr Hyde Park in Roscommon.
What time is throw-in?
Throw in is at 6pm.
Can I watch the game on TV?
No, the game is not live on television but there will be highlights on The Saturday Game on RTÉ 2 at 10.50pm tonight.
Is the game being streamed online?
No, the game will not be streamed.
Betting Odds:
Roscommon: 10/11
Draw: 7/1
Meath: 6/5

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
'Winning ugly' may serve Leinster better than blowouts
Hugo Keenan admits that Leinster won ugly against Scarlets but getting over the line in nervy contests may serve them better at the business end of the BKT URC. Just a couple of weeks ago, head coach Leo Cullen wondered about "some of these blowout games, I'm not sure what we necessarily have learned from a few of them". He was referring to the Champions Cup wins over Harlequins (62-0) and Glasgow Warriors (52-0) that did little in the way of preparing them for the dogfight that was coming down the line against Northampton in the semi-final. The 76-5 victory over Zebre a week later was of similar worth in the long run. So Cullen will be able to take some solace from the fact that Leinster were able to prevail in tighter affairs against the Warriors two weeks ago and the Scarlets, 33-21, on Saturday. URC half-time: Leinster 15-14 Scarlets - Scarlets go the length of the field at the end of the first half. Updates: LIVE: — RTÉ Sport (@RTEsport) May 31, 2025 Captain Jack Conan called the performance "inaccurate" and said they "just forced things a little bit of over-eagerness." Full-back Keenan, named player of the match, said: "It's all about getting the job done, getting the win. "It wasn't pretty, it wasn't perfect, we were ill-disciplined and a little bit scrappy, especially in that first half. "That's sometimes what it's about, winning ugly a little bit." Leinster led by just a point at the break but grabbed two tries in the third quarter to stay out of reach of Dwayne Peel's side, who had won their regular season tie at the end of April. "There was a heavy downpour at the start of the second half and we had to manage the game a bit better," added the Ireland full-back (below), who scored the fourth try. "Jamo [Gibson-Park] and Sam [Prendergast] and the lads put us in the right positions and kept them at arm's length, which was important," "In these knockout games, you can't really be taking high risks and playing rugby all the time." RTÉ Rugby analysts Jamie Heaslip and Donncha O'Callaghan were unimpressed by the Leinster showing, which sets them up for a semi-final meeting with defending champions Glasgow this Saturday (2.45pm, live on RTÉ2 and RTÉ Player). Heaslip called it "lacklustre"; while "rudderless was O'Callaghan's verdict. Hooker Dan Sheehan was asked about how the squad was dealing with the fall-out from the Saints defeat. "It's been up and down but I think we've done a good job of sticking together, trying to block out as much outside noise as possible," said the Ireland front row, who will go on the Lions tour. "I think mentally we're in a good spot, we're looking after each other well and I think that's all we can do. "We'll rip into our prep now for Glasgow during the week and go again." The Scottish side have lost nine of their last 11 games against Leinster, including both games this season. Head coach Franco Smith believes his team, who impressed in the 36-18 win over Stormers on Friday, are better set for another swing at Leinster. "You must put the Leinster games in perspective," he said. "The first one, we were in the middle of the season, there were a lot of injuries in that period. There were so many out at that certain stage. "The expectation [on Leinster] was massive because they hadn't played their top team since the Six Nations. "Everything worked for them. Nothing went well [for us]. "If that happens with Leinster, they could put international teams away like that. That's what we took from that. "The next time, we were more ready for the challenge. Hopefully that will help us this time."


Irish Examiner
an hour ago
- Irish Examiner
Leo Cullen: 'It's knockout rugby, what matters is getting through'
URC: Leinster 33 Scarlets 21 Alone they stand of Ireland's four provinces, again, and yet this URC quarter-final defeat of an honest but limited Scarlets side only heightened the suspicion that something is just not clicking for Leinster this season. Leo Cullen was happy to have 'won ugly' by the end of a game that they won by four tries to three and a dozen points against a side that played 20 second-half minutes with 14 men, but this won't do again. Not nearly. Keep playing like this and either Glasgow Warriors or one of the two South African sides in the other semi-final will do for them before this playoff run is out and it will be a fourth year on the trot without a trophy to decorate their efforts. Leinster had 65% possession and 70% territory on Saturday and they still couldn't shake off their Welsh opponents at any stage – this despite a whirlwind start that had them 12-0 to the good after just ten minutes. The perception abroad is that the men in blue are gettable. Scarlets head coach Dwayne Peel inferred as much afterwards when he spoke about how they felt a screw could be turned if they just hung in there long enough. Mental concerns may well be feeding into the mechanics. The much-vaunted Jacques Nienaber blitz defence was shredded by Northampton Saints in that Champions Cup semi-final and Scarlets highlighted areas of concern again here. Leinster had to make only one-third as many tackles as Scarlets but they succeeded with only 65% of them. The evidence was apparent to the naked eye in the ease with which space and two scores were found for the first and third Scarlets tries. The theory goes that Leinster's dominance through the regular season might be working against them when push comes to shove and they are untested in terms of arm wrestles and jeopardy come the knockout stages. Cullen seems to buy into that. He picked out their last two league ties, against Zebre and Glasgow, when they had little or nothing to play for and compared it to the 'cup rugby' that Scarlets had been playing long before this quarter-final. 'Sometimes that creates a little bit of bad habits when you play games like that,' he said. Whatever about the vibes inside the dressing-room and on the field, the atmosphere at the Aviva Stadium on Saturday spoke for the sense of drift that has enveloped the province with less than 13,000 punters paying in. The loss to the Saints has clearly fed into that, so did the Bank Holiday. Cullen also posited how supporters still need to get their heads, and their calendars, around a season that now stretches so far into June. Added into this is the fact that, regardless of concerns over the team's efforts, the expectation was that they would breeze past the Scarlets, that there would be another, bigger, day to tempt people to open their wallets. Cullen is mindful of all that, too, but he understands the need to rally the troops. 'It shouldn't be a drudge,' he said in trying to generate excitement for the semi-final to come and highlighting the danger posed by Glasgow. That said, he is not using a subdued crowd as reason for any struggles. 'No, no, no no. I don't want to use that at all. We played here in front of empty stadiums in Covid and I would much rather have what we had there [on Saturday]. In no way am I giving out here, in no way… 'We'll just keep beating the drum. We are asking supporters to come out here again next Saturday. It is short. We had a two-week lead-in and this is one week so it is more challenging again.' Glasgow are, lest we forget, reigning URC champions and they did it by beating Munster in Limerick in the last four and then overcoming the Bulls in Pretoria. Leinster beat them 52-0 in the last eight of Europe but only 13-5 in the URC earlier this month. The Irish province is still capable of routing an opponent, but liberal seeds of doubt have been sown deep into their psyche in recent weeks and if that Scarlets team can push them so close then Glasgow, Bulls and Sharks will be sniffing blood. 'It's a knockout game so what matters is just getting through,' said Cullen. 'People tend not to remember the detail as in what actually happens in these games. We just need to go through.' Leinster: H Keenan; J O'Brien, J Osborne, J Barrett, J Lowe; S Prendergast, J Gibson-Park; A Porter, R Kelleher, T Clarkson; J McCarthy, J Ryan; R Baird, J van der Flier, J Conan. Replacements: S Penny for van der Flier (29); D Sheehan for Kelleher and RG Snyman for Ryan (both 46); R Slimani for Clarkson (58); L McGrath for Gibson-Park and J Boyle for Porter (both 66); M Deegan for Conan (68) and Snyman (74); C Frawley for Keenan (75). Scarlets: B Murray; T Rogers, J Roberts, J Williams, E Mee; S Costelow, A Hughes; A Hepburn, R Elias, H Thomas; A Craig, S Lousi; V Fifita, J Macleod, T Plumtree. Replacements: M van der Merwe for Elias (51); K Mathias for Craig (58); I Lloyd for Costelow (59); M Page for Rogers and S Wainwright for Thomas (both 65); J Taylor for Hepburn (67); D Davis for Macleod and E Jones for Hughes (both 75). Referee: H Davidson (SRU).


Irish Examiner
an hour ago
- Irish Examiner
Undercooked? Understrength? What shape will Kerry be in come knockout fare?
All-Ireland SFC Group 2: Kerry 1-28 (1-7-14) Cork 0-20 (0-3-14) The concern for Kerry is no longer the extent to which they'll be undercooked and insufficiently scrutinised when pitching up at Croke Park for an All-Ireland quarter-final. The concern now for Kerry is who'll be available when they pitch up at Croke Park. Diarmuid O'Connor's return lasted one game. A groin issue that flared up during the win over Roscommon sidelined him on Saturday and will keep him sidelined for the Meath fixture. Beyond that, who knows. What is known is how shy of championship minutes the midfielder will be whenever his second return materialises. Paudie Clifford's return lasted 31 minutes. After kicking possession into Paul Geaney on the half-hour, Clifford turned to the sideline and raised his hand. He was whipped a minute later. A hamstring problem, we were informed after. Having sat out the Roscommon win because of injury, you'd have to question why he was risked here if not fully right coming back in. Paul Geaney (shoulder) wasn't long out to the line after him, Barry Dan O'Sullivan (knee) already there since the 21st minute after departing very gingerly. Mark O'Shea replaced O'Sullivan and deputised impressively. He won an early second-half Kerry kickout that ended in a Killian Spillane point. He won a Cork kickout that ended with David Clifford converting from outside the arc. He forced Ian Maguire to overcarry for a free Seán O'Shea converted from outside the arc. The problem for Kerry is that they are now threadbare on midfield options and heading in that direction where the half-forward line is concerned. Say that injuries mean Joe O'Connor and Mark O'Shea are the midfield pairing for the Meath game. Read More As it happened: Kerry blow Cork away with impressive second half display Seán O'Brien is then the last remaining bench option behind them and he hasn't seen action since being introduced late in the second half of the Munster semi-final six weeks ago. One wonders if at any point between now and the end of this championship Jack O'Connor will have the opportunity to put out a half-forward line of Joe O'Connor, Paudie Clifford, and Seán O'Shea. Of course, the manager is choosing to view the injury situation as glass half full. 'Mark O'Shea came on and gave us a great platform in the middle, caught some great ball. You lose one man, another man comes in and grows. That's great for the morale of the panel,' said Jack. 'Killian [Spillane] came on at half-time, kicked two great scores. Tony [Brosnan] came on and kicked a great two-pointer. Dylan [Geaney] showed his class when he came on. We needed all them lads.' David Clifford of Kerry celebrates after scoring his side's first goal. Pic: David Fitzgerald/Sportsfile The first half was a gut check in places for the visitors. Of course, it would have been far more of a gut check if they hadn't been gifted the buffer of an early goal. The irony that after a week in which Micheál Aodh Martin's long kickouts to an overloaded left flank were heavily criticised, it was a short restart to Brian O'Driscoll, intercepted and finished by David Clifford, that undid Martin and Cork. A Clifford point, from another lost Cork restart, assisted in pushing them 1-4 to 0-2 clear on 12 minutes. Playing into a near gale, that was a significant cushion to have constructed. As the half wore on, the Cork restart stabilised. Its Kerry counterpart, meanwhile, wobbled. Five consecutive Shane Ryan restarts were lost. They were not punished, though. Mark Cronin and Mattie Taylor drilled goal chances straight at Ryan. Taylor was later foiled by a Jason Foley hand as he went to pull the trigger. Colm O'Callaghan swung Cork back in front approaching the hooter. Brian Hurley, after the hooter, landed a crowd lifting two-pointer. 0-13 to 1-7 at the break. A three-point lead, such were the elements, was never going to be sufficient. And so that point of view was quickly proven right. The third quarter began with yellow cards to Jack O'Connor, David Clifford, and Brian Hurley, and black to Joe O'Connor and Paul Walsh. The latter four cards were for an unseemly episode that broke out on the way back to the dressing-rooms at half-time. Kerry were back out long before Cork, learned of Joe's black and so had more time to redraw their shape. The third quarter was then taken over by referee Derek O'Mahoney and orange flags. Kerry had kicked seven two-pointers in their six games before Saturday. They kicked seven here in the second half alone. Five of them came in a third quarter that saw an 11-point swing. O'Shea and Clifford swung over frees from outside the arc for Cork breaches of the three-up rule, the kickout mark, and dissent following the awarding of a Kerry free. The latter two, the same as the Cork free brought forward 50 metres following a Seán Walsh kickout mark, were questionable and completely lacking in common sense. Their resources further thinned and a third consecutive double-digit victory recorded, Kerry remain in pole position for direct progress to the last eight. Cork, winless since April 5 and winless in five of their last six championship outings, have 70 minutes against Roscommon to rescue their summer. Scorers for Kerry: D Clifford (1-8, tp, tp free, 0-2 frees); S O'Shea (0-9, 3 tp frees, 0-3 frees); T O'Sullivan (tp), P Geaney, T Brosnan (tp), K Spillane (0-2 each); G O'Sullivan, P Clifford, D Geaney (0-1 each). Scorers for Cork: B Hurley (0-7, tp, tp free, 0-2 frees); M Cronin (0-5, 0-4 frees); P Walsh (0-3, tp); C Óg Jones (0-1 free), C O'Callaghan (0-2 each); R Deane (0-1). KERRY: S Ryan; T O'Sullivan, J Foley, D Casey; B Ó Beaglaoich, M Breen, G White; J O'Connor, BD O'Sullivan; G O'Sullivan, P Clifford, S O'Shea; D Clifford, P Geaney, M Burns. Subs: M O'Shea for BD O'Sullivan (21 mins, inj); D Geaney for P Clifford (31, inj); K Spillane for P Geaney (HT, inj); T Brosnan for Burns (59); T Morley for Ó Beaglaoich (66). CORK: MA Martin; S Brady, S Meehan, D O'Mahony; B O'Driscoll, M Shanley, M Taylor; I Maguire, C O'Callaghan; S Walsh, P Walsh, S McDonnell; C Óg Jones, B Hurley, M Cronin. Subs: S Powter for Meehan (43); R Deane for McDonnell (50); C O'Mahony for B Hurley (60); L Fahy for Taylor (65); E McSweeney for P Walsh (66). Referee: D O'Mahoney (Tipperary).