logo
'Massive addition to any team' - The former Down duo now in Galway Cork All-Ireland final clash

'Massive addition to any team' - The former Down duo now in Galway Cork All-Ireland final clash

The 42a day ago
WHEN DOWN LOST their All-Ireland intermediate camogie semi-final this year, former player Fionnuala Carr thought of two forwards who could have made a difference.
Relegated from senior for the 2025 season, Down were closing in on a swift return to camogie's top tier. Kerry, who had defeated them by two points in the group stage of this year's championship, stood in their way.
60 minutes from a trip to Croke Park and a chance to reclaim their senior status. However, the result remained the same in their final-four clash as the Kingdom prevailed by 3-12 to 0-16.
The margin of their defeat was five points, an amount that Sorcha McCartan and Niamh Mallon could certainly have accounted for.
But with Mallon now suiting up for Galway and McCartan a firmly established member of the Cork forward line, Down were forced to play without their assistance. It's been that way for a while now as the pair continue their camogie journeys away from home. They faced off in the 2023 championship when Mallon scored 10 points in a 3-19 to 1-10 Group 1 defeat to Cork. And they were on opposite sides for last year's All-Ireland final too in their respective Cork and Galway colours. They'll do it all again this weekend too.
'They make a big difference to the teams that they play in [now],' Carr explains. 'So, you can imagine the difference that they would make to the likes of a Down team who are quite young.
'Niamh Mallon is worth at least five, six points. Sorcha could chip in with two or three and that's a ten-point swing in a game. Not only their scoring capabilities but also their work rate and their physicality as well.'
Fionnuala Carr in action for Down in 2019. Laszlo Geczo / INPHO Laszlo Geczo / INPHO / INPHO
Carr shared a dressing room with McCartan and Mallon before her retirement from inter-county camogie in 2021. Their ability was obvious from the start.
All three were key players on the Down team that won the 2020 All-Ireland intermediate final. Their final against Antrim was played in December that year on account of the schedule reshuffle caused by the Covid pandemic, and Cavan's Breffni Park hosted the occasion.
Carr wasn't offended that her county didn't get to celebrate the end of a 22-year wait for All-Ireland intermediate success in Croke Park. She was just grateful to be able to play, and avenge the hurt of their 2018 All-Ireland final defeat to Cork.
'We had been knocking on the door the year before. We had reached an All-Ireland final in 2018, completely unknown to even ourselves, to be honest. Then in 2019, we didn't perform in an All-Ireland semi-final.
'And then in 2020, we all regrouped. It was the year of Covid, so we did a lot of work on our own with gyms and fitness. We noticed that year that we were very physically fit and very physically strong.
'We had Sorcha, we had my sister, Sara-Louise [Graffin], and we had Aimee McAleenan in a half-forward line. Sorcha must be 5'10″, or 11″. Sara-Louise is 5'9″, or 5'10″, and Aimee must be 5'8″.
Advertisement
'So, they're all strong girls and very athletic. Then you had Niamh Mallon in the full-forward line, and she was your target woman.'
Mallon finished that All-Ireland final with 2-3 from play, scooping the Player of the Match award in the process. Six years before that, she captained Down to a junior All-Ireland title at just 19 years of age, but Mallon was already an experienced player for Down.
Carr reckons she was on the squad for three or four seasons at that point, displaying skills and mental fortitude that belied her young age.
Mallon's talent was widely known within Down camogie circles from early doors. Carr can still remember the first murmurings of 'a young girl from Portaferry' who was about to make a splash in the game.
'I think Niamh was maybe only 16 at the time and you're sort of wondering, 'Does she cut it? Will she be able for the physicality? Will she commit?'
'There's so many young talented people out there but they don't commit and give the dedication whereas Niamh ticked every single box that you would want in a player.
'She's so committed and dedicated to what she does. She gives the best out of herself all the time. She's never done practicing. She's in the wall ball all the time.
'She came in then and she didn't look out of place at all. After a year or two, she was becoming one of your main focal points in an attack at 18 years of age in a senior camogie team which is no mean feat to be honest.'
McCartan comes from a dual-code background, but at one stage, football was her primary sport. A daughter of 1994 All-Ireland winner Greg, she broke through to the Down senior ladies team before an opportunity with the county's camogie team materialised.
In a 2021 interview published on the RTÉ Sport website, McCartan explained that watching Down compete in the 2018 All-Ireland final planted the seed in her mind. And when then-Down camogie manager Martina Rooney invited her in the following season, she decided to take a chance.
'At that point football was No 1 still. I went and gave it a go and I just seen the attitude that everyone brought. I was just like, 'this is serious. If I want to be involved, I have to be serious and I have to put it as a priority'. So then I did.'
Sorcha McCartan during the 2019 All-Ireland intermediate semi-final against Westmeath. Laszlo Geczo / INPHO Laszlo Geczo / INPHO / INPHO
Similar to her transition into the current Cork team, McCartan nailed her audition with Down. Carr, of course, was looking on in awe at her development from a talented dual-code specialist to a vital part of the Down attack.
'Sorcha was very young when she came into our team. Down were competing then at an intermediate level and were there or thereabouts.
'And getting a bonus addition like Sorcha makes a difference in being a one-point defeat or a one-point win.'
It was a combination of work and university commitments that sent McCartan and Mallon down diverging paths.
McCartan initially relocated to Cork to complete a college internship with the biomedical company Stryker. She maintained her commitment to Down for the 2021 campaign and that long-awaited return to the senior championship, but the arrangement was unsustainable. Along with changing county colours, she transferred from her local Castlewellan club to the famous St Finbarr's in Cork city.
This Sunday, she will feature in her third consecutive All-Ireland final with Cork. She posted 1-1 in their 2023 triumph over Waterford and added two points off the bench when they went back-to-back last year against Galway. As Cork chase the elusive three-in-a-row this weekend, McCartan continues to bolster Ger Manley's attack.
Niamh Mallon also tried to make it work when she moved to Galway for work as a sports scientist with Orreco in 2018. She called time on that challenging commute last year as she linked up with Cathal Murray's squad after joining the Sarsfields club.
Niamh Mallon collecting the Player of the Match award after the 2020 All-Ireland intermediate final. Ryan Byrne / INPHO Ryan Byrne / INPHO / INPHO
Her debut season ended with All-Star selection, a fitting tribute to her 1-21 in five championship matches including an All-Ireland final appearance which yielded one point from play. But speaking to the media recently, she admitted to struggling in a new team environment last year. She insisted that the cause was internal, rather than the product of any hostility from the those around her.
'I think that comes just from seeing the likes of the Corks and Kilkenny's and the Galways always competing at inter-county level,' says Carr.
'While it is very competitive at intermediate and you don't get an easy game, you always wonder could you have made the step up? When you are there you're seeing people who have multiple All-stars or All-Ireland medals and you're kind of looking at them in awe.
'Her being able to go in and hold her own against them and become a really important big game player. In last year's all-Ireland semi-final against Tipperary (1-3), she actually won the game for them in the end. She was exceptional.
'And then this year she got that all-important goal [against Tipperary in All-Ireland semi-final].'
The record currently reads McCartan 1-0 Mallon in All-Ireland finals as the Cork-Galway rivalry heads for another exciting chapter. Carr will be in Croke Park on Sunday, looking on proudly at her former teammates proving their worth among the best camogie players in the country.
Talents that were forged in Down are now deservedly being showcased on the biggest stage.
'Niamh is just a once-in-a-generation talent, she's so accurate and she's so brave.. Sorcha is a great target person there in the edge of the square for Cork. She's so physically strong and she's actually deceptively quick. So she's a handful for any full-back.'
*****
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Teehan and Leahy fire Offaly back to senior camogie with victory over Kerry
Teehan and Leahy fire Offaly back to senior camogie with victory over Kerry

Irish Examiner

time27 minutes ago

  • Irish Examiner

Teehan and Leahy fire Offaly back to senior camogie with victory over Kerry

All-Ireland Intermediate Camogie Championship final: Offaly 0-14 Kerry 0-11 The accurate shooting of Grace Teehan and Clodagh Leahy proved decisive in Offaly recording victory in the Glen Dimplex All-Ireland intermediate final against Kerry. With the game finely poised in the closing exchanges, Teehan and Leahy helped guide Offaly back to senior camogie once again. It was an encounter that Offaly deserved to win but made heavy weather of it in a game that never rose to any great heights. Kerry wasted a gilt-edged goal chance that would have put them a point up late on, but they made too many basic errors to have deserved victory despite the best efforts of Patrice Diggin and Caoimhe Spillane. Offaly started brightly in this tightly contested encounter, with Clodagh Leahy making an immediate impact. She opened the scoring after just 20 seconds and quickly followed up with two well-taken frees from 45 metres, giving her side a 0-3 to 0-0 lead after four minutes. Kerry responded through Diggin, who converted a 21-metre free, before Mairead Teahan extended Offaly's advantage once more. Diggin kept Kerry in touch with another free, and Jackie Horgan's fine finish after a driving run from Ellen O'Donoghue reduced the gap to a single point by the 10th minute. Kerry drew level on 16 minutes via Diggin's long-range free, but Leahy's accuracy from placed balls restored Offaly's edge. Grace Teahan stretched the lead to two before Kate Lynch struck from distance to keep Kerry in contention with 24 minutes on the clock. Diggin's fourth free of the half brought the sides level again at 0-6 apiece after 27 minutes. Offaly pushed back ahead with points from Grace Teahan and Ellen Regan, making it 0-8 to 0-6, but Kerry's persistence was rewarded just before the break when Diggin scored from play to leave the minimum between the teams at the break. The second half began slowly, with the first score not arriving until the 39th minute when Patrice Diggin levelled the tie at 0-8 apiece with a well-struck 45. Grace Teehan quickly nudged Offaly back in front before Clodagh Leahy, reliable from placed balls all day, extended the lead from close range. Kerry threatened a breakthrough when Jackie Horgan's goal attempt was saved by Emer Reynolds, with the follow-up also denied, but Ellen O'Donoghue managed to slot over a point to narrow the gap. Leahy and Diggin exchanged scores before Grace Teehan restored a two-point cushion for Offaly in the 57th minute. A long-range Leahy free in the 59th minute pushed the lead to three, and a close-range Grace Teehan free deep into injury time effectively sealed the win. Diggin's final free reduced the deficit, but Offaly's composure and accurate shooting, particularly from Leahy and Teehan, proved decisive. Kerry battled hard and created goal chances, but Offaly's defensive resilience and clinical finishing ensured they took the points in a well-fought encounter. Scorers for Offaly: C Leahy (0-7, 4f, 1 45'), G Teehan (0-5, 1f), M Teehan, E Regan (0-1 each) Scorers for Kerry: P Diggin (0-8, 6f, 1 45'), J Horgan, K Lynch, E O'Donoghue (0-1 each) OFFALY: E Reynolds; S Shanahan, A Byrne, M King; O Phelan, R Kinsella, A Liffey; C Cleary, C Leahy; G Teehan, C Maher, F Dooley; E Regan, M Teehan, K Pilkington. Subs: F Mulrooney for C Maher (33 inj), C Fogarty for M King (47), O Kilmartin for K Pilkington (50), K Kennedy for A Liffey (58), C O'Donovan for C Cleary (60) KERRY: A Fitzgerald; M Costello, S Murphy, R McCarthy; R Quinn, N Leen, A Behan; P Diggin, C Spillane; R O'Connor, K Lynch, AM Leen; E O'Donoghue, J Horgan, A O'Sullivan. Subs: S Collins for AM Leen (h/t), K Ryan for A O'Sullivan (50), E Conway for E O'Donoghue (60) Referee: D O'Callaghan (Limerick)

Late Daly goal helps Laois down Armagh to win junior final
Late Daly goal helps Laois down Armagh to win junior final

RTÉ News​

timean hour ago

  • RTÉ News​

Late Daly goal helps Laois down Armagh to win junior final

Laois are the Glen Dimplex All-Ireland Premier Junior Camogie champions, banishing the heartache of last year, courtesy of a 2-15 to 0-12 win over Armagh. It is a third defeat for Armagh in the decider since their triumph in 2020 and there were periods when it looked like they would get over the line this time. Once Laois solved the conundrum of Eimear Hayes cutting out so many of their deliveries and getting passages of play going that led to Rachael Merry and Sinéad Quinn being such a threat, they began to get a real toehold in proceedings, however. The unrelated Delaneys, Gráinne and Susie were outstanding, the latter on a day her aunt, Jovita was being honoured as part of the Tipperary jubilee team. Aimee Collier, who had endured a tough day from placed balls 12 months ago, was unerring this time around, and apart from finishing with seven points, her ball-winning and offloading when moved to the wing was pivotal. The final piece of the jigsaw was the impact off the bench, as minor recruit Amy Daly rattled the net in the 50th minute. Lucy Conroy had pointed earlier, her piledriver glancing off the upright. It was the best possible start in the game for the side managed by Pat Collier and Rob Jones, when Gráinne Delaney goaled after 54 seconds. The Camross attacker and official player of the match was set free by Susie Delaney and with her marker seemingly expecting her to cut back onto her left immediately, she drove directly into space before firing off the ciotóg to the net. Eimear Hassett pointed sweetly immediately after but a converted free by Rachael Merry settled Armagh. PJ O'Mullan's crew hit seven of the next eight points to move two clear. Merry slotted two frees either side of an excellent score from Niamh Forker to draw level. After Collier split the posts from a free at the other end, Merry's two frees were followed up by an outstanding effort from Quinn, whose mother Geraldine Haughey was All-Ireland winner in the orange and white when Galway were defeated in a replay in 1993. It was Laois' turn to hit a purple patch though with three points from inspirational skipper Clodagh Tynan, Collier (free) and Gráinne Delaney to edge their noses in front before Merry restored parity just before the interval. The Orchard outfit enjoyed the ideal resumption, Quinn taking a pass from Merry to raise a white flag and Corinna Doyle striking the game's marquee point, leaving a trail of Laois defenders in her wake under the Hogan Stand before hitting the target from wide on the right and just inside the 45. That made it 0-10 to 1-5 and just 33 minutes elapsed but that was as good as it got for Armagh as Laois found another couple of gears. An unbroken run of a goal and six points enabled them to overhaul their valiant opponents and establish enough of a lead that given the flow of play as the game evolved, just did not look likely to be reeled in. Collier, Kaylee O'Keeffe and Conroy were on target before Daly blasted to the Armagh net. There didn't look loads on, when Susie Delaney sent Collier into the corner. The tall attacker held it up well and looked around, opting for a stick-pass back out the field. It actually overshot the mark a small bit but that proved ideal for Gráinne Delaney, who had open country to use her speed. Suddenly she had created overlap and with the execution of the hand-pass to her young and diminutive teammate perfect, Daly made no mistake with only Ciarrai Devlin to beat. There was no way back from that for Armagh, and though they fought to the end, Merry converting two frees after a glorious Susie Delaney point, it was Collier that had the last say with a point from play and monster of a score from a free before the celebrations kicked into gear. Laois: A Lowry; F Scully, E Conroy, L Finaly; A Walsh, C Tynan (0-01), S Creagh; A Tynan, Líadan C Fennell; G Delaney (1-02), K Keenan, E Hassett (0-01); K O'Keeffe (0-02), A Collier (0-07, 6f), S Delaney (0-01). Subs: L Conroy (0-01) for Keenan (28); A Daly (1-00) for E Hassett (42); L Keyes for Walsh (54); S Jones for Fennell (60+1). Armagh: C Devlin; M O'Hare, G McCann, E Hayes; ML Loughran, M McCone, A McEntee; G Gaffney, C Hill; M O'Callaghan, K Convie, N Forker (0-01); R Merry (0-08, 7f), S Quinn (0-02), C Doyle (0-01).

Cork v Galway LIVE stream info, updates, from the All-Ireland Camogie Final
Cork v Galway LIVE stream info, updates, from the All-Ireland Camogie Final

Irish Daily Mirror

timean hour ago

  • Irish Daily Mirror

Cork v Galway LIVE stream info, updates, from the All-Ireland Camogie Final

Cork and Galway meet in this year's All-Ireland Camogie Championship final at Croke today with throw-in coming at 5.15pm. Cork are chasing a historic three-in-a-row feat not achieved since Wexford's run in 2010-12, Galway, meanwhile, are aiming to upset the champions and add another national title to their modest haul. You can watch today's game live on RTÉ2 with action on from the intermediate final between Kerry and Offaly coming before and the junior showdown of Laois and Down. Galway booked their place in the final with a seven-point over Tipperary at Nowlan Park at the end of June hitting 1-18. At the same venue, ten points separated Cork and Waterford in a 1-21 to 1-11 triumph for The Rebels. It's a repeat of last year's final where Cork claimed their win with a goal between the teams. 16:18 Fionn Nolan Hello and welcome to live updates of today's All-Ireland Camogie Championship final as Cork take on Galway at Croke Park. In today's other finals, Laois claimed junior glory over Armagh while Offaly currently lead Kerry in the intermediate meeting. We'll have Cork and Galway team news up next.

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