Latest news with #Knocknagree


Irish Examiner
04-07-2025
- Sport
- Irish Examiner
Two pointers key for Knocknagree's second half comeback to clench Division Two title
McCarthy Insurance Group Division 2 FL final: Knocknagree: 0-17 (0-4-9) Carbery Rangers: 0-11 (0-0-11) Orange flags proved crucial as Knocknagree came good to see off Carbery Rangers in the McCarthy Insurance Group Division 2 Football League decider at Ballyvourney on Friday evening. John Fintan Daly's side trailed by a point at half-time, but four two-pointers in the second half went a long way to securing the victory. They were slightly the better team overall though in what was a very disciplined performance against a Carbery Rangers side who were free scoring during the league campaign. After 10 magnificent wins on the bounce in all competitions, the West Cork team's amazing run comes to an end, but they will learn a lot from this one. It was played in difficult weather conditions and a greasy pitch. The conditions played a huge factor especially in the opening quarter. It was a case of fine margins, no score on either side but plenty of wrong decision making and wayward shooting. The first score didn't arrive until 17 minutes in when Cork senior footballer Eoghan McSweeney pointed followed 50 seconds later by a super Killian Cronin effort. The lively Ciarán Santry got Carbery Rangers up and running with a white flag with 12 minutes to the break as the game did pick up slightly in intensity after a pedestrian start. Matthew Dilworth and an Anthony O'Connor free put Knocknagree in a good position, 0-4 to 0-1 clear after 22 minutes, but the Rosscarbery-based outfit rattled off five unanswered points. Conor Twomey and Daragh Hayes with two each and a close-range John O'Rourke free. Seamus Hayes' team ahead going into first-half added time. There was very little between the sides though and another Dilworth effort left just a point between the teams at half-time, 0-6 to 0-5. Not for the first time this year, Eoghan McSweeney kicked a great two-pointer a minute into the new half as Knocknagree nudged in front. Knocknagree were slightly better, they kicked two of the next three points to lead 0-9 to 0-7 after 40 minutes. The teams then swapped frees, Anthony O'Connor converting for Knocknagree while John O'Rourke did likewise for his team. The O'Rourke brothers, John and Peadar, both pointed to draw Carbery Rangers level at 0-10 each after 51 minutes. Knocknagree's ability to land two-pointers were crucial, they put three together through Eoghan McSweeney and then two from Michael McSweeney to lead by six points with four minutes left, 0-16 to 0-10. It wasn't Carbery Rangers' evening, sub Paul Hodnett saw his effort come back off the crossbar before Mark Hodnett did convert a free, but Anthony O'Connor had the final say when he clipped over a free. Knocknagree's fairytale journey continues given they were a Junior A team in 2017. Scorers for Knocknagree: M McSweeney (2 2pt), E McSweeney (2 2pt) (0-5 each), A O'Connor (0-4 f), M Dilworth (0-2), K Cronin (0-1). Scorers for Carbery Rangers: J O'Rourke (0-4, 0-3 f), D Hayes, C Twomey (0-2 each), M Hodnett (f), P O'Rourke, C Santry (0-1 each). KNOCKNAGREE: P Doyle; N O'Connor, K Buckley, G Looney; K Cronin, D O'Mahony, T O'Connor; David O'Connor, T O'Mahony; M McSweeney, Denis R O'Connor, E McSweeney; P O'Connor, A O'Connor (c), M Dilworth. Subs: D Moynihan for David O'Connor (15-17, temp), D Twomey for P O'Connor (42), D Balasco for M Dilworth, R O'Connor for T O'Connor (both 52), D Moynihan for T O'Mahony (55). CARBERY RANGERS: P Shanahan (c); C Daly, T O'Rourke, P Óg Hill; S Linehan, Jerry O'Riordan, J Hodnett; B Hodnett, J O'Brien; P O'Rourke, J O'Rourke, C Twomey; M Hodnett, C Santry, D Hayes. Subs: P Hurley for C Santry, P Hodnett for D Hayes (both 43), James O'Riordan for T O'Rourke (46), C McCarthy for J Hodnett (51). Referee: J Ryan (Macroom).


Irish Independent
26-06-2025
- Sport
- Irish Independent
If Cork manager John Cleary's time is up, could John Fintan Daly's time be finally now?
If John Cleary decides to call it a day as Cork football manager, could an outspoken Knocknagree man, with an impressive managerial cv, be the next man up? Corkman Where to for Cork football now? The Rebels season came to an end – some might say an inevitable end – against Dublin last Saturday, a three-point loss drawing a line under a season that promised much but failed to deliver much. If success is measured by wins and silverware, then the Cork footballers' year was a failure. They didn't win promotion out of Division 2 (again), they didn't reach the Munster final (again), they didn't get back to the All-Ireland quarter-finals. The played 13 games across the National League, the Munster Championship and the All-Ireland Championship, winning six and losing seven: that's a 46% success rate.