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Monaghan take full advantage of two-pointers to ease past Clare
Monaghan take full advantage of two-pointers to ease past Clare

The 42

time3 days ago

  • Sport
  • The 42

Monaghan take full advantage of two-pointers to ease past Clare

Monaghan 1-25 Clare 1-16 MONAGHAN BEAT CLARE on Sunday afternoon to set up a straight shootout with Down for an automatic place in the All-Ireland senior football championship quarter-finals. Gabriel Bannigan's side kicked no fewer than six two-pointers — three from Jack McCarron, two from goalkeeper Rory Beggan, and one from David Garland — as they ran out nine-point winners in Clones. Advertisement Clare played the first half with a strong wind at their backs and led by double scores at the break, 0-14 to 0-7. But the Banner were then held scoreless from the majority of the second half, Conor McCarthy's goal nudging Monaghan into 1-12 to 0-14 lead. The Farney had added another five points to lead 1-17 to 0-14 by the time Clare finally registered a score through Mark McInerney. But Monaghan kicked on for home as McCarron and Beggan kicked two-pointers to close out their victory. Monaghan now sit second in Group 3 behind Down by virtue of their slightly inferior scoring difference, while Clare have a fortnight to prepare for a win-or-bust meeting with Leinster champions Louth. Check out the latest episode of The42′s GAA Weekly podcast here

Monaghan turn seven-point deficit around to beat Clare in Clones
Monaghan turn seven-point deficit around to beat Clare in Clones

Irish Times

time3 days ago

  • General
  • Irish Times

Monaghan turn seven-point deficit around to beat Clare in Clones

All-Ireland SFC: Monaghan 1-25 Clare 1-16 Group 3 of the All-Ireland SFC will boil down to a top-of-the-table decider between Monaghan and Down , plus an effective knock-out clash between Louth and Clare , following a real game of two halves in Clones. Producing a reaction to their heavy loss to Down, Clare made a mockery of the prematch odds by building up a double-scores half-time lead with the wind at their backs, but Monaghan outscored them by 1-18 to 1-2 after the restart to remain behind the Mourne men on score-difference heading into the final round of the group stage. Monaghan could afford to kick 14 wides and still get the win, helped by 0-8 from Jack McCarron, a goal by Conor McCarthy. Monaghan manager Gabriel Bannigan felt his side had been 'flat' in the first half after beating Louth the previous weekend, but they got a significant impact from their subs as they eventually went through the gears. READ MORE Bannigan noted that too many of his players 'weren't at the pitch of it' for the first half, but they were 'a different animal' in the second, with their subs bringing 'a lot of energy and drive'. Monaghan had started brightly with early points from Conor McCarthy, Ryan McAnespie and Mícheál Bannigan, while Daniel Walsh kicked Clare's only score of the first 13 minutes. But the Banner grew into the game in some style towards the end of the opening quarter. Clare's frequent raids down the right flank led to two-pointers from Conor Meaney (two), Eoin Cleary and Mark McInerney, which propelled them into a healthy lead. Clare's Conor Meaney celebrates scoring a two-pointer. Photograph: Andrew Paton/Inpho Dessie Ward ended 13 scoreless minutes for Monaghan, who also saw corner-forwards Jack McCarron and Stephen Mooney open their accounts late in the half, but Aaron Griffin replied to leave Clare in command at half-time, 0-14 to 0-7. Monaghan began the second half with much more purpose, as McCarron kicked 0-5 inside the first 10 minutes, including a brace of two-pointers, before McCarthy scythed through to drill home the opening goal, edging them ahead for the first time since the early stages. David Garland also found his range from outside the arc and was joined on the scoresheet by fellow subs Aaron Carey and Andrew Woods, with veteran Darren Hughes joining them in making an impact off the bench. Clare took 23 minutes to get their first score of the half from McInerney, but Peter Keane's side gave themselves a glimmer of hope when a point from Dermot Coughlan was swiftly followed by a palmed goal from Aaron Griffin. Monaghan's cushion was down to four on 66 minutes, but Rory Beggan converted a pair of two-point frees late on to see the hosts finish with nine to spare. MONAGHAN: R Beggan (0-2-1, 2tpf, 1'45); D Byrne, K Lavelle, R Wylie; D Ward (0-0-1), R O'Toole, K Duffy; M McCarville, G Mohan; S O'Hanlon (0-0-1), C McCarthy (1-0-1), R McAnespie (0-0-1); M Bannigan (0-0-3, 1f), J McCarron (0-3-2, 1 2-pt-f, 1f), S Mooney (0-0-1). Subs: A Carey (0-0-1) for Lavelle (ht); D Hughes for Mohan (inj), D Garland (0-1-0) for Mooney (both 41 mins); C McNulty for McAnespie (52); A Woods (0-0-1) for Duffy (61). CLARE: É Tubridy; R McMahon, R Lanigan, M Doherty; A Sweeney, I Ugwueru, F Kelleher; B McNamara, D Walsh (0-0-2); C Meaney (0-2-0), D Coughlan (0-0-1), S Griffin; M McInerney (0-1-2, 1f), E Cleary (0-1-0), A Griffin (1-0-3, 0-1f). Subs: J Stack for McMahon (56 mins); E Cahill for Walsh (63); D Nagle for Sweeney (67). Referee: J Henry (Mayo).

What time and TV channel is Monaghan v Clare on today in the All-Ireland?
What time and TV channel is Monaghan v Clare on today in the All-Ireland?

Irish Daily Mirror

time3 days ago

  • Sport
  • Irish Daily Mirror

What time and TV channel is Monaghan v Clare on today in the All-Ireland?

Monaghan are expected to back up their victory over Louth from last week when they host Clare in Clones on Sunday. Gabriel Bannigan's men are massive favourites to beat the Banner County following their 1-23 to 4-8 victory over Louth last weekend. Meanwhile, Clare began their All-Ireland campaign with a 3-27 to 1-16 hammering at the hands of Down. Here's what you need to know about Monaghan v Clare: The match takes place at St. Tiernach's Park in Clones on Sunday, June 1. The action is scheduled to get under way at 4pm. The match is not being shown live on TV and is not being streamed live online, but you can follow updates with our live blog. Monaghan win: 1/20 Clare win: 11/1 Draw: 20/1

Monaghan overpower Leinster champions Louth as Gabriel Bannigan's men make statement start in All-Ireland series
Monaghan overpower Leinster champions Louth as Gabriel Bannigan's men make statement start in All-Ireland series

The Irish Sun

time24-05-2025

  • Sport
  • The Irish Sun

Monaghan overpower Leinster champions Louth as Gabriel Bannigan's men make statement start in All-Ireland series

MONAGHAN manager Gabriel Bannigan felt the full championship intensity of the All-Ireland series as his side saw off Louth by six points in their Group 4 opener at Newbridge. He said: "Proper championship game here today. Super venue, crowd on top of you, and Louth on the crest of a wave. We had to be at the pitch of it straight away — and we were." 2 Monaghan were too much for the Leinster Champions as the coasted past them by six-points on Saturday 2 Monaghan manager Gabriel Bannigan and Louth manager Ger Brennan after the clash in Newbridge Monaghan laid down a real marker, and the final scoreline arguably flattered the Stephen O'Hanlon gave Monaghan the perfect start with a goal inside two minutes. A jaded Tommy Durnin, formerly of Inniskeen Grattans, delivered a superb diagonal ball to set up Sam Mulroy for Louth's opener, and then followed up himself with their second goal. But Bannigan wasn't impressed by the defending from his side in that first half. READ MORE ON GAA He said: "We were disappointed with the goals they got. They had five scores in the first half — two goals and two two-pointers — and that kept them in the game. They got goals like that in the Leinster final too." He added: "We were three up at half-time. I was disappointed there wasn't a bigger gap to be honest — but we targeted a big third quarter and we got that." Before Ryan Burns' two two-pointers, Micheál Bannigan bookended Monaghan's bursts of scoring. Six unanswered points before the break gave them a 1-11 to 2-5 lead at the interval. Even with Louth off colour, they stayed in touch, but Monaghan's bench and broader squad stood tall. Seven points on the bounce in the second half confirmed their grip on the game. Most read in GAA Football After Mulroy's second goal, Bannigan's side responded with a ruthless streak that sealed the win. Every time Louth threatened, Monaghan answered. Mulroy finally converted a penalty, having missed several frees, but it came too late. Louth couldn't find the sustained momentum they needed. Dara McDonnell and Conor Branigan made an impact off the bench for Louth, but they'll need to find more bite before facing Down in Newry next weekend. Monaghan's own sub Jack McCarron slotted calmly over to stretch the lead further and underline the gulf in class. There was a ragged finish to the match, with black cards for Donal McKenny and Killian Lavelle. Both managers were involved in a sideline clash well before Durnin's late goal. Louth boss Ger Brennan addressed the incident post-match. He said: "We shook hands afterwards," and admitted: "There was a bit of a hangover after the Leinster celebrations in that performance." Monaghan now host Clare in Clones next weekend, with a chance to take control of the group and edge closer to a favourable All-Ireland knockout route. LOUTH 4-08 MONAGHAN 1-23 Scorers Louth: Niall McDonnell; Dan Corcoran, Emmett Carolan, Donal McKenny; Conall McKeever, Daire Nally, Craig Lennon; Bevan Duffy, Tommy Durnin 2-0; Ciaran Downey, Sam Mulroy 2-2 (1-0 pen, 1f), Conor Grimes; Ciaran Keenan, Kieran McArdle, Ryan Burns 0-5 (2 two-pointers, 1f) Subs: Ciaran Byrne 0-1 for Downey (HT), Dara McDonnell for McArdle (HT), Liam Jackson for Corcoran (40), Andy McDonnell for Duffy (42), Conor Branigan for A McDonnell (55) Monaghan: Rory Beggan 0-4 (2 two-pointers); Ryan Wylie, Killian Lavelle, Dylan Byrne; Dessie Ward 0-3, Ryan O'Toole, Kieran Duffy 0-1; Mícheál McCarville, Gary Mohan; Ryan McAnespie, Stephen O'Hanlon 1-3, Conor McCarthy 0-1; Micheál Bannigan 0-6 (1 two-pointer, 1f), Andrew Woods, Stephen Mooney 0-3 Subs: Cian Mulligan for Beggan (blood sub, 26–28), Jack McCarron 0-2 (1f) for McAnespie (45), Ciaran McNulty for Woods (49), Davy Garland for Mooney (59), Darren Hughes for McCarville (64), Karl O'Connell for Ward (69), Jason Irwin for O'Hanlon (70) Referee: Brian Keon (Galway) Up Next Monaghan: vs Clare, Clones, Saturday, May 31 Louth: vs Down, Páirc Esler, Newry, Saturday, May 31

Monaghan bring Louth crashing back down to earth in Newbridge
Monaghan bring Louth crashing back down to earth in Newbridge

Irish Times

time24-05-2025

  • Sport
  • Irish Times

Monaghan bring Louth crashing back down to earth in Newbridge

All-Ireland SFC Round One: Louth 4-8 Monaghan 1-23 The slow, crashing sound heard around Newbridge on Saturday evening was nothing more than Louth falling back down to earth. It happens when a team is out a fortnight after winning their first Leinster football title in 68 years, but a wisely drilled and super clinical Monaghan contributed massively to that downfall. That Louth finished within six points in the end certainly gives them reason and hope for their remaining two games against Down and Clare, given they were in danger of being run completely ragged here. Their four goals put some respect on the scoreline, when in reality they were left chasing this game throughout. On a grey, damp evening in Newbridge, Louth's home-from-home, Monaghan promptly took the game to them and never looked back, the excellent Stephen O'Hanlon, one of their eight scorers, rattling the Louth net after two minutes. Although Louth did draw level twice, the last time being on 13 minutes, Monaghan's physicality and ceaseless work-rate eventually wore them down. That physicality never ceased either, both teams finishing with 14 men after Donal McKenny from Louth and then Killian Lavelle were black-carded in the last 10 minutes in separate incidents. READ MORE Louth manager Ger Brennan also got up close and personal with his Monaghan counterpart Gabriel Bannigan in the second half, but insisted afterwards there was nothing untoward in that, and they shook on things afterwards. Brennan did admit there was something of a hangover after their moment of Leinster glory, beating Meath in Croke Park just 13 days ago. 'Well we didn't know until the game started, and now we know,' said Brennan. 'And now it's done, and we have to pick ourselves up and focus on Down in Newry seven days' time. 'The better team won, so credit to Monaghan. We continued to fight, even when things weren't going well, so proud of the lads. 'But we were probably at a four out of 10 today, overall, and again that's just down to the bit of a hangover after the Leinster final, and down to Monaghan too. But ultimately we couldn't get up to the energy levels that we demonstrated before, and once those energy levels are off, everything else can kind of show up. 'We'll just have to pick ourselves up very quickly and go hard again against Down next week.' Louth's Sam Mulroy celebrates scoring a goal. Photograph: Ciaran Culligan/Inpho Monaghan's performance was near-complete: Rory Beggan chipped in with two two-point frees, Michael Bannigan adding one from play, the half-back line of Ryan O'Toole, Dessie Ward and Conor McCarthy utterly dominating things too. Stephen Mooney started and scored three from play, Ryan McAnespie also showing his worth off the bench. 'I thought it was an excellent performance' said Bannigan, whose Monaghan team had already pushed Donegal so hard in the Ulster quarter-final. 'Okay, we wouldn't be happy conceding four goals, but Louth are full of confidence. We knew we'd get our fill of it today, but I thought to a man, all over the pitch, I was very happy with them, a proper championship performance. 'It was great to get off to the good start, we knew Louth would come back in the second half. We've a threat coming from all over the pitch, the men who came in as well. So very happy with how the squad is shaping up. Clare will come all guns blazing next Sunday, and that was a tough, tough game, so we have to get out bodies right for next weekend.' Louth finished with nine wides, another measure of their shortcomings, and without two second half goals – a penalty by Sam Mulroy on 53 minutes, and a second goal by Tommy Durnin two minutes from time – the damage would have been a lot worse. Monaghan started with glaring intent, holding up possession from the throw-in and moving the ball steadily around, before O'Hanlon moved into position after two minutes – firing at goal from close range. Niall McDonnell did well to get a block on it, but couldn't prevent the ball from spilling into the net. Mulroy's opening free came off the upright, and Louth also looked a little nervy Mulroy. however soon made amends after six minutes, fetching a peach of a pass from Tommy Durnin, turning and burying his shot past Rory Beggan. Still Monaghan were enjoying the greater spread of possession. Beggan stepped up for a two-point free on 10 minutes, O'Hanlon swifty adding his first from play. Louth's Sam Mulroy in challenged by Monaghan's Micheal McCarville. Photograph: Ciaran Culligan/Inpho Louth responded again on 13 minutes, Ciaran Downey's shot at goal coming off the post, Durnin racing in for the rebound, and with that the Leinster champions were level. Then they didn't score again for the next 15 minutes. In the meantime, Monaghan hit six unanswered points, including two in succession from the lively Mooney, a fine score from O'Toole, and three from Michael Bannigan, including a free. Several of Louth's efforts during that period were just off target, before Ryan Burns ended their wait for a score on 28 minutes with a mighty two-pointer, much to the delight of the Louth fans. Indeed Burns looked impressed himself, and repeated his magic two minutes later to bring Louth's tally to 2-5. One more before the break by Ward brought Monaghan to 1-11, giving them a three-point cushion at the break. When they hit the first four points of the second half, Monaghan looked to be coasting, Louth's first point of the half not coming until the 48th minute, thanks to Ciaran Byrne. When Conor Grimes was pulled down on 53 minutes, and Mulroy converted brilliantly from the penalty, the gap was back to six, but that's as close as they got as Monaghan simply reinforced their superiority from there. For Louth, Emmet Carolan and Dan Corcoran replaced the injured Dermot Campbell and Peter Lynch in the defence, and the hope is they might be back for next weekend. Louth may need everything they've got to regain that winning momentum. LOUTH: N McDonnell; D Nally, E Carolan, D McKenny; C McKeever, D Corcoran, C Lennon; T Durnin (2-0-0), C Keenan; B Duffy, C Downey, C Grimes; K McArdle, S Mulroy (2-0-2, 1-0 pen, 1f), R Burns (0-2-1, 1f). Subs: C Byrne (0-0-1) for Downey, D McDonnell for McArdle (both h-t), L Jackson for Corcoran (39 mins), A McDonnell for Duffy (43), C Branigan for McDonnell (55, inj). MONAGHAN: R Beggan (0-2-1, 2tpf, 1f); R Wylie, K Duffy, D Byrne; R O'Toole (0-0-1), D Ward (0-0-3), C McCarthy (0-0-1); M McCarville, G Mohan; S O'Hanlon (1-0-3), M Bannigan (0-1-4, 1f), R McAnespie; K Lavelle, A Woods, S Mooney (0-0-3). Subs: J McCarron (0-0-1, 1f) for McAnespie (45 mins), C McNulty for Woods (49), D Garland for Mooney (58), D Hughes for McCarville (64), K O'Connell for Ward (68), J Irwin for O'Hanlon (69). Referee: B Cawley (Kildare).

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