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Sligo will ‘come back stronger' once they ‘rectify silly mistakes' says Anna McDaniel

Sligo will ‘come back stronger' once they ‘rectify silly mistakes' says Anna McDaniel

Sligo Champion
Today at 22:30
When you talk about Sligo's promising young talent, the name of Anna McDaniel looms large.
The talented dual star teenager took the fight to Antrim in Sunday's TG4 All-Ireland Junior Championship semi-final like a veteran in the second half and landed two fine points and was desperately unlucky not get a goal in the second half.
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Gerry McLaughlin
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Neil McManus shares thoughts on Cork's half-time debacle
Neil McManus shares thoughts on Cork's half-time debacle

Extra.ie​

timea day ago

  • Extra.ie​

Neil McManus shares thoughts on Cork's half-time debacle

The second-half of this year's All-Ireland hurling final will forever live in the heads of Cork players and fans as they wonder how did it all go so wrong. The Rebels were leading Tipperary by 1-16 to 0-13 when half-time rolled around but Pat Ryan's side endured a shocking second-half where they managed to only score two points and fell to a 3-27 to 1-18 defeat. Nobody expected the second-half to be so poor from Cork and many have speculated since what happened at the break that tore the side up completely. Neil McManus at the Marie Keating Foundation event. Pic: Andres Poveda While appearing at the Marie Keating Foundation Celebrity Golf Classic on Thursday, former Antrim hurler and television pundit Neil McManus shared his thoughts on Cork's mindset leaving the dressing room and how it all went so downhill. He said: 'It's really hard to know. What I can say from looking in from the outside, whenever you're positioned right on the pitch doing the punditry, you really get a feel for the physicality. 'You might not be able to have the aerial view which allows you to unpick the game tactically, but from the physicality point of view, it was all coming from Tipperary. Tipp ran riot in the second-half. Pic: Piaras Ó Mídheach/Sportsfile 'They were winning the physical stakes. They were so aggressive and they wore Cork down. 'My question would be did Cork concentrate a bit too much on the tie? 'Rather than thinking 'we have to win the battle here before this game of hurling even breaks out'. Cork players huddle before the GAA Hurling All-Ireland Senior Championship final match between Cork and Tipperary. Pic: Stephen McCarthy/Sportsfile 'You felt for them because not only myself but every paper, every TV station that I watched or read had backed Cork because they had been the best team in Ireland up until that point. 'But you only get crowned as being the best in Ireland if you win that game and you can say it's the best ambush ever but Tipperary are All-Ireland champions and that'll be stinging with Cork now.' It was the first time the sides had met in the final and Cork will not want to relive it. In the first-half, it had been a pretty even battle, the difference being Tipperary's nine wides to Cork's five. However, the second half was just astonishingly one-way traffic. Tipperary dominated possession, hitting 1-05 before Cork managed a point and another 2-05 before they got their second, and last score of the game, in the 66th minute. Rebels star Eoin Downey was also shown a second yellow card for fouling John McGrath with 15 minutes left, which only made matters worse. Although on the other side of the country, McManus went on to share some hope for the future of Antrim hurling. He remarked that their under-19 and 20 sides are looking 'very strong' but a problem still exists with the minor and under-16 sides that lack the strength needed to compete with the big guns. Antrim were relegated from the Leinster Senior Hurling Championship this year after a poor season. McManus is hoping that with enough young stars coming through the ranks, they will be able to rise back up as quick as they possibly can.

'I found it made me almost miserable at times' - Players and managers embrace new Gaelic football rules
'I found it made me almost miserable at times' - Players and managers embrace new Gaelic football rules

The 42

time2 days ago

  • The 42

'I found it made me almost miserable at times' - Players and managers embrace new Gaelic football rules

IF THERE WASN'T so much God-damned Catholic guilt in the GAA about scoring tallies, celebrating scores, recognising scoring achievements (witness the long-promised and entirely under-delivered statistical bank that has been on the way for years), then Luke Loughlin would be shining his shoes and airing out his tux for an individual award in the coming months. The Westmeath man has a unique distinction. In league and championship action this year, the Downs forward clipped over 24 efforts outside the scoring arc. In the absence of any official recognition, The 42 bravely steps in to crown him the '2024 King of the Orange Flag.' Probably not a title that might travel well north of the border. And he'll have to come to the office for a picture, some lukewarm coffee and awkward, interrupted conversation. We'll sort him out with a plaque. Maybe. Settle down Clifford, you'll get your turn. The standout game for him and for the new rules came in the Tailteann Cup when they played Antrim in Mullingar. He scored an astonishing 1-17; his goal coming from the penalty spot, no fewer than five two-pointers and three of those coming from open play. Towards the end they had a free from around 60 metres. He thumped it over and there was even time for a late 'hooter-beater'. His personal tally would have been enough to draw the game alone. 📊 1-17!?!? 5 two-pointers. 3 from play. Luke Loughlin put on a scoring masterclass as @westmeath_gaa powered past Antrim in the Tailteann Cup. Ridiculous numbers! 🔥Witness the evidence below⏯️ — The GAA (@officialgaa) May 13, 2025 Always a supreme two-footed footballer, Loughlin has spent his career frustrated by defensive systems. So much so that he sat down with county hurling manager Seoirse Bulfin last winter to explore a switch of codes. By the end of his club hurling season with Clonkill, he felt he was on a par with most hurlers in the county. 'I always hemmed and hawed about playing hurling,' he says. But the year I had, I felt I needed a change. The football was making me miserable. You were giving so much time and it was just not working out. 'That was a major factor; not playing well, not winning, especially with Westmeath, we were so close in so many games and I felt I needed something different.' He continues: 'When you spend so much time doing something and it is not going well, it affects other areas of your life. I found it made me almost miserable at times. I was fed up, basically and then it was seeping into every part of my life and I felt I needed a change, basically. 'I decided that I was going to be 30 and if I had any chance of doing this, it would be while I was still relatively able to run fast to give myself any chance.' Two things changed his mind. He had a fine club football championship with the Downs, that ended with a penalty shootout defeat to St Loman's after a replay. And then incoming county football manager Dermot McCabe called to his house and sold him his vision and his backroom team including Mark McHugh. And the new rules, of course. Loughlin pushed back a little and mentioned he wouldn't be around for the first session as he had a Hyrox event. McCabe said he would see him at the next session after that. And the reports from the first session from his county teammates was that they had never trained as hard, which was sweet music to Loughlin's ears. 'I remember practising with the arc. We did a drill and had the arc there in The Downs and we were fit, so we were flying playing ball. There was still an uncertainty of the rules and what they were going to be like,' he says. 'But I remember standing just inside it and someone handed me the ball. I thought I was like LeBron James taking a step back and hitting a two pointer. And I missed it!' They met Louth in the league opener and a fisted goal by Sean Reynolds finished a smash and grab for the Wee County. That pattern soon became familiar to Westmeath as they managed just one point from seven games despite being close in all of them. Even at that, Loughlin finished that game with 0-12 to his name. Two two-pointers from play, one from a free, three frees and three from play was a sparkling afternoon's personal effort. When he considered it, he played all of the championship the previous year and had a total of 0-11 for his efforts. 'I wasn't thinking this was going to happen every week,' he says. Advertisement 'Then the next game we played Monaghan, they were obviously favourites but I ended up getting 10 in that game. I thought, 'Jeez, there's something in this…' 'The space, the chances, the two-point frees, I started to do a lot of work on the two-point frees as I knew I was going to get a lot of those chances in games and they could affect us coming down the stretch, as the ball was getting brought forward 50 metres. 'The third game against Cork, I just scored one point. It was one of those games, I had loads of chances but even looking back I had an off-game. But the space, the ability to kick the ball in… Give it to the shooter: Luke Loughlin. Leah Scholes / INPHO Leah Scholes / INPHO / INPHO 'What I found was, even when there was a slow attack, if I looped around, you were going to get a one on one somewhere. It was like playing as a forward in hurling. If you lose a ball, you know you are going to get another ball in two minutes. And that's the way I looked at football now. You were always going to get another chance.' Asked to rate his enjoyment of Gaelic football now on a scale of one to ten, he doesn't hesitate. From feeling miserable about it in last year's close-season, he puts it at a ten. Sure, you might still find the odd grumble here and there and some of the 'rule enhancements' from the Football Review Committee required finessing as the year went on. But essentially, the changes to date have worked. There is more room for the expressive players to do their thing. Crowds are more engaged. Interest is up. Some county managers have made telling comments. Jim McGuinness wasn't wrong when he pushed for more substitutes to be allowed in games. But after the All-Ireland final he made a startling admission that, 'The control is gone.' It makes it, well, more of a 'game' in the truest sense. The incoming Sligo joint-manager, Eamonn O'Hara, has a panoramic view of it. Over the last few years, he has been hoovering up county championships with his home club Tourlestrane before going back-to-back in Leitrim with Mohill. Then, he's been covering games as a pundit for RTÉ and now he faces into coaching a new game with his managerial partner, Dessie Sloyan. He feels brand new. Eamonn O'Hara. Bryan Keane / INPHO Bryan Keane / INPHO / INPHO 'Ah Jesus, yeah. It's class, it's class,' he says. 'The year just gone, there's some naivety to it in some cases, but it has been class. 'The big midfield battle is back. The big midfielder himself is key. The break ball expert, the Paul Galvin as I call it, is important.' What he says next though, is an insight into the challenging art of coaching for managers now that the rule enhancements have bedded in. 'It's funny, I was chatting a lad, he is 21 and we were talking about the midfield and foraging for ball and he was completely lost in what I was saying,' O'Hara explains. 'They have been coached and played and have no idea what some of this stuff, about metrics for breaking ball. They haven't had to do that. 'They will realise that breaking ball is an art, it's timing, watching the flight of the kickout, the guys going up and the timing to go. 'I'm excited about all of that.' It finally happened for Lee Keegan a few weeks back. The man who made his name as an attacking half-back for Mayo in their glorious rampage through a decade of championship campaigns was playing a game for Westport in the Mayo leagues when a huge chunk of turf opened up for him. He straightened his shoulders up, dropped the ball and let fly. The umpires raised an orange flag for a two-pointer. The new rules lifted his heart. 'I have to say though, scoring it was an absolutely brilliant feeling. I felt like a kid again, when you do something new,' he says. 'I felt like it was a brand-new thing, 'Do we celebrate this, or just play on or what?'' Caught up in his reverie, he danced back to his position still celebrating internally. His marker and former county team mate Stephen Coen smiled and snapped him out of it by remarking, 'You know, the kickout is coming.' And Keegan's experience is one that you can find wherever you go now. 'I am actually really enjoying it. I am quite old school, I love one-on-one combat, me versus your guy and whoever comes out is the better man on the day,' says Keegan. 'For me, I think we have that back a bit. I found I was losing my grip on how to defend. I think defenders forget how to defend to some extent because you always had that wall in front of you. Lee Keegan in action for Westport. Evan Logan / INPHO Evan Logan / INPHO / INPHO 'Nobody was doing a man-marking job and if you did, you had three men helping you. I find now, particularly with the club game, it is man-on-man, you have to defend. 'But also, what I like about it is that it has given our attacking guys a bit more excitement. They get more ball, quicker ball. There are times to slow it down, but it has opened up a new avenue. I see a lot of guys smiling, playing the game.' Mayo and Keegan are an interesting case study. For years, their All-Ireland clashes against Dublin were often the saviour of several drab championships, endured rather than enjoyed. The reason for that, is Mayo would engage Dublin in a man-to-man contest rather than retreat into zonal marking. Some cruel observers saw this as their innocence and/or tactical naivety. It was never that simple though. Mayo watched Dublin dismantle defensive system with their loop-arounds and back-door cuts. They could have just joined the queue. The easy response to that was that it only got the job done once, in the 2021 All-Ireland semi-final. You can argue that if you like, but nobody else got as close to Dublin when they broke all records. 'We felt we had players who could go toe to toe for long enough with them,' says Keegan. 'That's for me, how you earn your bread and butter. If you are marking one of the best forwards in Croke Park, in the most unforgiving places, if you can do that, you are doing your job.' To conclude, we go back to the start when we ask about how uptight GAA culture has historically been about scoring. Up until Joe Brolly, the only acceptable score celebration had been to shuffle back towards your position and await the kickout. Those that broke from the norm, the John Mullane and Eoin Kellys and Owen Mulligans, are celebrated for their difference. In 2025, the most exciting player in Gaelic football decided to Hell with all that. David Clifford was a whirl of fist pumps and warm waving; whipping the crowd into a frenzy like a Revivalist preacher. It all felt that with the rule changes in the season gone by, that the world of GAA could relax. Loosen the belt one notch. Celebrate the sheer full-fat effect of a two-pointer. And now it's the club player's turn. Go on lads. Back yourselves. Check out the latest episode of The42′s GAA Weekly podcast here

Niamh O'Neill loving life back in title-winning Tyrone fold
Niamh O'Neill loving life back in title-winning Tyrone fold

RTÉ News​

time3 days ago

  • RTÉ News​

Niamh O'Neill loving life back in title-winning Tyrone fold

After watching on from the outside as they lost to Leitrim at the same stage of the competition 12 months ago, Niamh O'Neill was back to play a starring role for Tyrone in their TG4 All-Ireland intermediate football championship final triumph last weekend. Following a two-year stint in Australia – during which time she played Gaelic football for Sinn Féin in Melbourne and Australian rules with Casey Demons in the VFLW – O'Neill returned to the Red Hand panel earlier this year. Previously the Tyrone captain in 2022, she wasn't initially part of the set-up when their Lidl National Football League Division One campaign began at home to Meath on 26 January. Yet she subsequently re-emerged on the inter-county scene and while a hamstring injury did reduce her to a substitutes' role for an extended period, she registered 1-05 off the bench when Tyrone defeated Westmeath after extra-time in a gripping All-Ireland intermediate semi-final. The Sperrin Óg star was then restored to the starting line-up for last Sunday's second-tier showpiece against Laois in Croke Park and proceeded to amass an impressive tally of seven points in a 2-16 to 1-13 victory. "Obviously at the start you're just not too sure of what to do, whether to go back or not. I was back home probably a month before I decided to reach out and see if I could go back. I hadn't really trained much when I had first come home. I didn't want to go in unfit or anything," O'Neill explained. "I did my own thing for a wee while and then reached out to Darren (McCann, Tyrone manager) after I went and watched them play Armagh in the league. Just reached out to see if it would be okay to come back in and see how we get on. "It has been brilliant, it hasn't really felt like I've been away. The championship itself, maybe it was a wee bit frustrating because I had hurt my hamstring. I was only really coming on off the bench, but I managed to get myself fit enough to start the final, which was great." O'Neill found herself experiencing a familiar emotion upon full-time last weekend as she is one of a select few within the Tyrone squad to have been part of their previous TG4 All-Ireland intermediate football championship final success back in 2018. Facing a Meath side that contained six players who started Sunday's All-Ireland senior showpiece against Dublin, O'Neill was introduced as a 12th minute substitute and scored 1-03 in an emphatic win for the Ulster outfit. Despite acknowledging she'd have preferred if Tyrone had remained in the senior championship after returning to the top tier in 2019, O'Neill stressed it was "a brilliant feeling" to climb the Hogan Stand steps once again and she believes it could do wonders for the younger players within the Tyrone set-up. "It's a funny one because whenever you win the intermediate once, you kind of don't really want to be back there, if that makes sense. Any time you win in Croke Park, there is very few people that get to say they've done that. It's obviously a brilliant feeling that way, but it is a bit of a funny one when you've won it before. "It's not really a title you want to be winning all the time, without sounding ungrateful. It is brilliant, given we have a very young group there coming through. A lot of girls that played there, they're only between 19 to maybe 23. They're very young. "To get that sort of taste for success at that level is brilliant. Hopefully they can sort of bring that ambition into their football now for the next few years and see where we go." In addition to featuring for Tyrone in the All-Ireland senior football championship from 2019 to 2021, O'Neill also sampled life at the top grade of the LGFA during her earliest years on the Red Hand panel. First introduced to their senior set-up as a 16-year-old in 2012, O'Neill was a regular starter when Tyrone's run in the Brendan Martin Cup came to an end three years later. There were some mixed results for O'Neill and the county throughout those previous campaigns, but she is hopeful the current group of players can cement their senior championship status in 2026. "When I first came in, I think we were sort of in a period of transition as well. Girls were retiring and different things like that. I think after we won it [intermediate] in 2018, we handled ourselves well in senior for a couple of years. "Then again you've people leaving and going to travel. Hopefully now this time we can get a bit of stability and keep a core group together. I've no fear really of playing senior championship. Obviously you want to stay in it, that's the first target, but hopefully stay in it and compete in it would be the dream." Although last Sunday's All-Ireland intermediate final brought an end to a hectic season for Tyrone, O'Neill made a return to training with Sperrin Óg two days later in preparation for a club encounter on Thursday. This represents a swift reintegration to the local scene for O'Neill, but as she explains, county stars regularly line out for their clubs throughout the year in Tyrone. "They're not letting us away for too long. Straight back in and there'll be club games now I'd say every Thursday and Sunday for the next month. In Tyrone we play our club league. Obviously they put games off whenever we get to a certain point," O'Neill added. "Tyrone are one of the very few counties I would say that have their county players playing for their club the whole time. I played our first league game, but then I obviously hurt my hamstring against Down [in the All-Ireland series]. Thankfully the club were very understanding and nobody pressured me into playing if I wasn't able to. "Because they're obviously conscious that we were doing quite well with county and that you wanted to give as much as you could to the championship. Thankfully not too much pressure on me, but now that it's over, I'd say that will be done!"

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